An ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure.
Nancy Carlsson-Paige, Adam Sweeting, Regina Bertholdo, and Mayor Joe Curtatone |
Nancy Carlsson-Paige, Somerville resident, Professor Emerita at Lesley University, and a founder of Defending the Early Years, talked about how schools are places where children learn to become citizens in a democracy and that even our youngest students can do this. She told us what it looks like:
- Learning how to be a member of a group (Hey, these blocks aren’t “mine,” everyone can use them.)
- Making decisions that benefit the whole group (How do we figure out how to feed the goldfish so everyone has a turn and it’s fair?)
- Learning about our diverse world and to respect everyone equally (How we look different, speak different languages; we are all valuable)
- Learning how to resolve our conflicts (We both want this yellow ball right now—how can we figure this out?)
Voting for favorite playground elements. |
Today our children voted, toured city hall, created artwork, saw police and rescue vehicles up close, and even listened (mostly) attentively to grownups talk about policy. High school students gave us a fanfare on their trumpets and stood to remind us of children's rights.
Reading children's rights. |
Our superintendent, Tony Pierantozzi, has led the way in Somerville by forging strong connections between our public schools and those who provide a range of services to children and families. This was evident today. We hope that the messages from the Week of the Young Child will stay with us all year as we work together to make Somerville a great place to be a child.
Fanfare for the Week of the Young Child proclamation |
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