
Kindergarten
Trillium Lakelands DSB offers both Junior and Senior Kindergarten programs, where our youngest students learn how to work and learn co-operatively with others. Registration for new Kindergarten students occurs in January-February but parents are welcome to register their children at any time of the year. Please pick up your detailed parent information package, available at your neighbourhood elementary school.
Kindergarten Registration
Registration week for the 2009 - 2010 school year
is January 25 to January 29, 2009.
Please contact the school in your attendance area for further registration details.
School phone numbers may be found in the schools section of this website.
To register your child in Kindergarten please bring:
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French Immersion Programs: French Immersion Programs are offered at the following schools: Haliburton: Stuart W. Baker Elementary School and J.D. Hodgson Muskoka: Monck Public School and Riverside Public School Lindsay: Leslie Frost Public School For more information please contact the school in your area. Registration forms will be available at each location and must be returned as soon as possible Potential French Immersion students may register at their local school for JK or they may register for JK at the French Immersion School in their area. After March 31st, registration of out-of-area JK students at French Immersion schools will only be permitted if space is available. |
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Getting Ready for Kindergarten
Parents as Partners Note: Reading with your child has been proven in research to have an impact on future academic success. |
| Learning and Growing in the “Kinder-garden” The word kindergarten comes from German and literally means “children’s garden.” It’s a place where your child will grow and learn. Here are some of the things you can expect from your child’s kindergarten class. The Learning Environment The kindergarten classroom reflects the developmental needs and Ontario curriculum. It is alive with activity centres, artwork, toys, learning spaces, creative materials, books, letters and words, dress-up clothes, puzzles, games, and much more. Every day, the teacher will spend time with the class as a whole group, and will also spend time with students in small groups and one-to-one. The teacher will read stories, and the whole class will learn rhymes, chants, and poetry. There will be drama, music, and art to encourage self-expression. Children will learn through directed play and physical activities will occur both indoors and outdoors. In kindergarten, children learn best through active experience involving exploration and discovery. Teachers combine subject areas to create learning opportunities that resemble real life experiences. There are times when children are expected to sit quietly and listen, but most of the time kindergarten classes are filled with sound and activity. Teaching happens through mini-lessons that are engaging and appropriate for this level. The teaching is enlivened with rhymes, chants, and poetry. There will be drama, music, and art to encourage self-expression. Children will learn through directed play and physical activities will occur both indoors and outdoor. |
| Dress for Success in Kindergarten – the label is everything! • Choose clothes, jackets, shoes, and boots that are easy to put on, take off, and fasten. • Kindergarten children learn best when they are experimenting, exploring, discovering, and getting messy. Choose clothes that are durable and easy to clean. • In the course of the day, your child will sit on the floor, jump, run, walk, bounce, stretch, bend, and sit in a chair. Choose clothes and footwear that will be comfortable during all of these activities. • Outdoor play is an important part of the program. Your child needs outdoor clothing for all types of weather. Label everything with your child’s first name and the first letter of last name (e.g. Jane M.) |
| Directed Play is the Way Children learn best when they are having fun. Playing, experimenting, doing things, taking on different roles, imagining, pretending – these are all important learning techniques. When children are playing in the kindergarten class, they aren’t taking a break from learning, and their teacher isn’t taking a break from teaching. They are playing with purpose and are learning academic skills such as reading, writing, math, and science. They also learn problem-solving, creative thinking, and essential social skills through interaction with others. Of course, kindergarten classes also have learning activities that you may think are more typical of school. Teachers do direct teaching with the whole class, such as identifying letters of the alphabet and their sounds, demonstrating numbers and illustrating science facts. Together, the class looks at the calendar every day as a way of learning about concepts such as days of the week, seasons, weather, counting, and special occasions. Students also spend time putting pencil to paper – printing letters, words, and numbers. At this age, play is an important way of learning. As children play, they are learning about the world and how it works, about other people, and about themselves. |
| Listening Listening is a complex skill. Help your child to understand and practice the steps involved in listening: • Stop what you are doing • Look at the person who is speaking • Don’t talk or move around when the person is speaking • Think about what the person is saying • Repeat what the person has said to be sure that you understand |
Play is your child’s homework |
Ontario Kindergarten CurriculumThe Ontario Kindergarten Curriculum is an outline of learning expectations (knowledge, skills and attitudes) that children should develop by the end of the two year Kindergarten program. The learning expectations represent the first steps in a continuum of programming from Kindergarten to Grade 8. This document and further information is available at: http://www.edu.gov.on.ca/eng/curriculum/elementary/kindercurrb.pdf (Curriculum document) |