By Kathryn Wong and Sarah
Note to the Reader: We opted for too many pictures because the kids are SO cute!
On Tuesday, February 12, 2013, the teachers at the French preschool
and kindergarden (the maternelle) went on strike leaving four McCropder
children unoccupied for the entire day – a day, it must be noted, when
their parents did have school. And so that afternoon, the
co-collaborators Aunt Sarah and Miss Kathryn held the first day of
l'école McCropder!
Our schoolhouse consisted of the kitchen and living
room area in the single's quarters. It was very sweet to see the four of
them coming in through the doors, armed with backpacks, ready to go to
school. We congregated with the four kiddos – Elise, Micah, Abi, and
Maggie – downstairs and discussed the anomaly of Rules and what they
mean and why we have them and what it looks like to follow them. It was,
perhaps, a little difficult to determine what actually sunk in, for the
energy levels were rather high and the attention spans a bit low as
should be fully anticipated from healthy, growing children.
We
were more or less able to follow the lesson plan – practicing letters
and spelling names, singing songs, counting objects inside and outside,
learning about opposites, practicing shapes, and reading (an exceedingly
odd) French story about fish... (we later found out that the parents
had been listening in on this part of school...hopefully after hearing
all about fish wearing hats and going shopping and taking care of their
pet shrimps and other such nonsensical things they still believe that
their children received a good education that afternoon!)
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Spelling names and jumping on the alphabet mat |
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Kathryn reading a book about opposites (French and English! |
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Sarah reading the exceedingly odd French book about fish |
The children
then did an excellent job of creating a story about two fairies living
in a magical forest named Grace and Emily who were captured in a bag by
the villain Mimi and there they suffered until they finally sent out a
magical note to their friends, and although the note was led astray by a
storm of epic proportions, it at long last was discovered by the
intended recipients and Grace and Emily were saved! For a suspenseful
conclusion, Mimi went through several stages of becoming good and going
back to being bad again, and eventually we concluded with a good Mimi
who also turned into a fairy. It was a joy to watch their vibrant
imaginations, captivated in a second by the mere concept of a magical
forest, tearing through this story, words tumbling out of their little
mouths almost faster than they could speak. Towards the end, they were,
perhaps, ready to be done with the whole school thing, and so we ended
our afternoon of school with a rousing game of run/hop/crab walk/walk
backwards/walk sideways/crawl down the hall and back again. All in all,
it was deemed a successful day, and fun was had by tout le monde!
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Proudly displaying the poster board story they wrote. |
The
following day, all seven of the McCropder children came over to the single's for a Valentine's Day party while the parents enjoyed
some Valentine's Day time of their own. The Fader girls contributed some
festive, valentine's day décor, and several families brought heart
cookie cutters and thematic sprinkles for the occasion. The event got
off to a somewhat rough start with little Ben McLaughlin who was quite
distraught for reasons still unbeknownst to us. After a good deal of
wailing, he perked up at the prospect of making cookies, and the rest of
the day went just swimmingly!
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Prepping the table with flour for cookie dough and cookie cutters |
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Uncle Carlan's storytelling |
The making and decorating of the
heart sugar cookies was deemed a success (no small undertaking with
seven children ages seven and under) and while they baked, the kids
listened (for the most part with rapt attention) to Uncle Carlan tell
the story of twins searching for their lost parents. The cookies were
decorated perhaps not in an entirely conventional style as there were
only so many adults to stop the children from digging into the frosting
and gulping it down in spoonfuls and shaking sprinkles on the table (not
the cookie), licking up said sprinkles, and then repeating the process.
Once the cookies were finally all frosted and sprinkled, everyone was
given permission to eat two cookies each. Somehow at the end of the
feeding frenzy, there weren't many cookies that made it out alive, and
the math didn't quite add up with each kid eating two cookies. But such
is life. The pizza lunch (sans plates or silverware. We're all about
dish conservation and all that.) was greeted with enthusiasm and
delight, and creativity let lose with the plethora of Valentine's Day
cardstock and stickers and foamy shapes supplied by Aunt Sarah. Fun
abounded in great quantities.
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Valentine Crafts |
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The race is on for Valentines candy! |
With still a good ninety-minutes
left before the return of the parents, Miss Kathryn ran outside and
created a scavenger hunt of Valentine's Day candy. It was a day of
sunshine and warm breezes, and it was a joy to watch the kiddos tearing
back and forth across the school property searching for their sugar
hearts. Ben and Sammy, having not quite gained the same kind of mobility
as their siblings ran excitedly behind the rest of the pack, needing to
turn around quite frequently as the rest of the group tore past them,
around them, and through them. Anna and Elise in particular were fans of
the game, and long after the other children had lost interest, they
continued to ask Uncle Carlan to hide and hide and re-hide their heart
lollipops. We stayed outside until it was time for them to go home. Soon
they began to show signs of fatigue – Sam slouched over his swing,
almost asleep, and so full of sugar (sorry, parents!) and hopefully some
good memories to boot, thus ended Valentine's Day with the McCropder
kids.
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Anna is an awesome cookie maker and cookie decorator |
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Elise perfected the heart shaped cookie. |
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Ben (much happier) |
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Work is more productive with the tongue out |
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Abi enjoyed many, many, many sprinkles. |
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Pizza and friends - Life is Good! |
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Yummy! |
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Before any of the 4 adults noticed, Ben enjoyed multiple spoonfuls of frosting. |
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Micah spelled his name with cookie dough - creative genius! |
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Sammy joined us in time for pizza. |
2 comments:
Wow. That's impressive. I mean, yeah, I knew you were amazing people, what with the learning a foreign language and moving across the world to help transform a nation through health care and all that. But SPRINKLES with TODDLERS!?!?! I had no idea that you all were that kind of amazing. Making AND decorating cookies? With FROSTING?!?!? To some (old) people reading this post, this will summon up sweet memories of their own long-ago projects with their little ones. But having had attempted the building and decorating of graham-cracker "gingerbread" houses a mere 2 months ago with my own brood, I have a rose-colorless view of this event. Heck--I even strategically planned it around the two-year-old's naptime to keep the mayhem at bay.
Props to the McCropder singles--MAJOR props. Now that you have survived through this event, you are ready for anything. :)
I am so impressed with your creativity and energy! You could come be a mentor to me on how to entertain my grandkids! :-)
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