Febmarpp 2014 web3

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FEB RUARY- M AR C H 2014

The Park Parent BOOK REVIEW: THE ELEMENT // 3 PARENTING 125 YEARS AGO // 4 AROUND THE LIBRARY // 9 CELEBRATING 125 YEARS AROUND CAMPUS // 10 THE PARKING SPACE RETURNS! // 11 DATES OF NOTE // 12

Helicopter Parenting: Learning to Fly at Higher Altitudes:

Visual Thinking Strategies: Story illustration for Ladies’ Home Journal, October 1927. Oil on canvas. 39 1/4 x 32 1/2 in. © The Norman Rockwell Estate / Licensed by Norman Rockwell Licensing Company, Niles, Illinois

in this issue:

How Park Division Heads Have Helped Me Along My Parenting Journey By DO RO THY RI CHARDS O N, Park Parent Editorial Board

I

t seems a fundamental truth that we tend to react to, rather than replicate, the parenting of our own parents. We want to be more

attentive, connected, and giving; less critical, angry, and detached. Even if we received

“good-enough” parenting, we want to be even better at it. This is not a bad thing. Every parent wants to be the best parent he or she can be.

vo l u me 46 number 4 a pu b li cat ion o f th e park sc h o o l parent s’ a sso c i ation

Yet our generation is frequently labeled “helicopter parents.” According to Webster’s Dictionary the definition of helicopter parenting is: a style of child rearing in which an overprotective mother or father discourages a child’s independence by being too involved in the child’s life. In typical helicopter parenting, a mother or father swoops in at any sign of challenge or discomfort. Apparently, some helicopter parents have learned to fly at such a low altitude as to be labeled “snow plow parents”—parents who micromanage their children’s lives in the extreme. A recent Boston Globe article (http://b.globe.com/1cTvqwQ) highlights this intensive effort to smooth out all of the bumps in a child’s path, impairing their ability to face adversity later in life. Although my professional training as a child continued on page 2

In Kat Callard’s classroom, students observed this painting by Norman Rockwell. The Stay at Homes (Outward Bound), 1927.

Teaching Through Observation, Reasoning, and Communication B y C H R I S H A RT MA N N , Park Parent Editorial Board

T

ake a look at the picture above. What’s going on in this picture? What do you see that makes you say that? What

more can you find in the picture?

In Kat Callard’s Grade II class, and an increasing number of classrooms throughout Park School, this simple protocol is the framework for an innovative approach to developing Park students’ skills of observation, reasoning, and argument. In most cases, the visual stimulus is a work of art, but the focus of the resulting conversations can take many different directions. Visual Thinking Strategies (VTS) is a rigorous, student-centered approach to learning. During a VTS lesson, students reflect on an image and translate what continued on page 6


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