Early Elementary Program

 
 

Brightworks’ integrated curriculum is a dynamic approach that allows students to pursue learning in a holistic way, without the restrictions often imposed by subject boundaries.

We ensure that our school is ready for children, versus children needing to be “ready for school.”

Often lost in a traditional program are student agency, the ability to make connections, the importance of collaboration, nuanced communication and problem solving skills.

At the early elementary level, Brightworks uses neuroscience and educational research as its guide to holistically develop future-ready students who have the knowledge, skills attitudes and values to succeed.


Academics are embedded into the experience and learning is documented

In the water arc, we made tin foil boats and predicted how many pennies it would take to sink them, then we tested it out. William’s boat held the most pennies before sinking: 82!

In the early elementary years, we document learnings to provide a record of process, reveal connections between events, review past experiences, plan future experiences, and make learning visible to children and families. Documentation is in the form of dictation, art, photography, video or observation notes.

Documentation functions to identify a child's strengths and thinking at the time. Teachers use these findings to scaffold each child's learning.

Over time, we track general learning expectations for our students and share this information with parents in family conferences throughout the year. Ultimately, our goal is to foster natural curiosity and the ability to make connections between each traditional subject area in a playful, interdisciplinary way.


Building curriculum aligned skills through exploration

Play-based learning is essential to learning, yet it is often neglected in favor of academic-focused education approaches. In this period of development, active, play-based learning approaches can transform the educational experiences of children and strengthen learning motivation and outcomes.

Here is how we do it:

  1. We start with a theme.

  2. We explore ideas, examine relevant materials, and experience it firsthand.

  3. Collaborators bring in provocations, stories, books, experts, writing challenges, science experiments and numeracy exercises that harness students curiosity to simultaneously build skills and deepen the student’s understanding of the theme.

  4. Students and Collaborators work together to create something for the community that shows their learning.

  5. We share the student’s project with the community.

This dynamic allows children to be active agents and composers of meaningful learning experiences, while Collaborators support and guide children to become conscious of their own learning.

Early Elementary Outcomes by Subject

Outcomes by subject serve as landmarks to reference along the learning journey.

Click each below to learn more about each:

 

Learning In Action:

Exploring Fire

Mud