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Little Red Schoolhouse

1

Greenwich Village+

Little Red Schoolhouse

Lower School teachers have been thinking together about the goals we set for social studies, in particular the conceptual goals that underlie our projects, trips and written tasks. As much as in literacy or math, we design a program to reflect students’ developmental orientation. We meet them where they are, tapping into their interests and curiosity within the framework of their realm of understanding. For example, we know that the younger child learns through concrete, personal experience – a trip or interview is a springboard for extended learning as your child reflects, questions, draws and writes about an exciting experience, turning it into new and deeper understanding. As the student matures and her worldview broadens, she extracts more and more information from books and symbolic communication, linking this to direct, interactive experience. Eventually, around Third Grade, students are ready to leave what we call the ”here and now” and enter the world of “long ago and far away;” to study those things that cannot be visited directly, tasted or touched. Thanks to the experiential foundation of their earlier years, eight and nine year olds are prepared to appreciate the flow and evolution of history and to conceptualize a timeline leading from then to now.

1

Upper West Side

York Prep

2

Heschel School

3

Dwight School

4

Trinity School

5

Collegiate School

6

Manhattan Day School

7

Professional Children's School

8

Martin Luther King High School

1

Upper East Side

Nightingale-Bamford School

2

Dalton School

3

Solomon Schechter School of Manhattan

4

Brearley School

5

La Scuola D'Italia Guglilemo Marconi

6

Chapin School

7

Hewitt School

8

Spence School

1

Midtown

Browning School

2

Cathedral High School

3

United Nations International School

4

Beekman School

1

Harlem+

St. Bernard's School

1

Lower Manhattan

Stuyvesant High School