This
is the place to be on Saturday, Nov. 4, for parents, childcare providers,
early childhood teachers and others interested in early childhood
development.
That’s because we’re is hosting a
free workshop from 8:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. that day titled “The
Developing Child: What Parents, Providers and Teachers Need to Know.”
Four concurrent sessions dealing with various
topics of early childhood development — from movement-based
learning and literacy to music and nutrition and even a session
about helping children through stressful times — will be presented,
and participants may choose to attend two in the morning and two
in the afternoon.
The highlight of the event, however, will be the
morning’s keynote address by Don Monopoli, a member of the
acclaimed children’s entertainment group The Learning Station.
Founded in 1985, The Learning Station is a nationally
recognized recording and performing company that captures the attention
of young audiences by using music to teach valuable life lessons
to children.
The event’s closing address will deal with
physical developmental red flags, and the first 25 attendees who
elect to participate will follow the conference with a training
course for CPR certification or recertification.
In addition to the valuable information provided
by the keynote and closing address — both of which will be
presented in the Memorial Gym — and the morning and afternoon
topical sessions — which will be held in either the gym or
South Hall, lunch and educational resources will also be provided.
Attendance to the conference is limited to 300
participants, with reservations being taken on a first-come, first-served
basis. The deadline for registering is Tuesday, Oct. 24.
The event is being funded by a portion of a $200,000
grant distributed by the state Attorney General’s office as
a result of a class-action lawsuit against a vitamin manufacturer.
The vitamin settlement grant has also helped our
School of Human Ecology perform a child nutrition study and allowed
the department of exercise science, physical education and wellness
to construct a motor development lab for children.
Those two academic units are teaming up with several
other university-affiliated organizations to provide “The
Developing Child” workshop, and organizers are encouraging
school systems to offer in-service credit hours to teachers of young
children who participate.
For more information about the event, call Sue
Bailey at 3157 or Pat Jordan at 3811.
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