More than three‑quarters of students from low‑income households
Data about students' economic need comes from the National Center for Education Statistics, via our partners at MDR Education.
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My students need Peaceable Kingdom board games. These materials will help my students learn to share with others in turn-taking opportunities. They will learn to cooperate with others to help achieve the games goal. They will learn at the young preschool age what it means to work with others.
We need to learn to cooperate with others to become productive members of society. This is a simple and fun way to help preschool students to learn this important skill. We will be using the board games to learn different concepts, follow simple rule games, learn to work with others, learn turn-taking skills, and use social skills to make our way through the games.
I have chosen to go with a line of cooperative games through Peaceable Kingdom. These games promote cooperation instead of the traditional "I win and you lose." For instance in the game Count your chickens the students take turns to spinning and seeing what farm animal or equipment they land on. They count how many spaces their chicken needs to move before reaching it. They also count the number of chicken have made it back to "Mother Hen's" house. There are no traditional player 1 and player 2 piece, the students all use the small chicken pieces. They are able to use social skills to work together, learn social studies skills with the farm animals and equipment, and math skills from counting the number of chickens. All of Peaceable Kingdom Cooperative games work will the same idea. If the students work together successfully, then they all win the game.
About my class
My students need Peaceable Kingdom board games. These materials will help my students learn to share with others in turn-taking opportunities. They will learn to cooperate with others to help achieve the games goal. They will learn at the young preschool age what it means to work with others.
We need to learn to cooperate with others to become productive members of society. This is a simple and fun way to help preschool students to learn this important skill. We will be using the board games to learn different concepts, follow simple rule games, learn to work with others, learn turn-taking skills, and use social skills to make our way through the games.
I have chosen to go with a line of cooperative games through Peaceable Kingdom. These games promote cooperation instead of the traditional "I win and you lose." For instance in the game Count your chickens the students take turns to spinning and seeing what farm animal or equipment they land on. They count how many spaces their chicken needs to move before reaching it. They also count the number of chicken have made it back to "Mother Hen's" house. There are no traditional player 1 and player 2 piece, the students all use the small chicken pieces. They are able to use social skills to work together, learn social studies skills with the farm animals and equipment, and math skills from counting the number of chickens. All of Peaceable Kingdom Cooperative games work will the same idea. If the students work together successfully, then they all win the game.