From June 2013

Start and Operate a Family Child Care Centre

Training opportunities from YMCA Child Care Resource and Referral:

Registration is underway for CCRR summer training!

Several spaces are still available in upcoming workshops, including:

Learning in the Forest, Thursday July 4th, 7:00 pm—9:00 pm  and
Sign me  a Story, Wednesday, July 10th, 7:00 pm – 9:00 pm

Call us today at 604.931.3400, extension 0 to register for these, or other CCRR training opportunities.

To download a complete training schedule visit our website at http://www.vanymca.org/childcare/ccrr/workshopstraining.html

START AND OPERATE A FAMILY CHILD CARE CENTRE

The Childcare Program is recognized by Fraser Health Region Licensing Department and the BC Family Child Care Association.

This “Good Beginnings” course is recognized by licensing officers and equips you with the information and skills needed to start your own family child care business. The Good Beginnings: Professional Development for Family Child Care Providers is divided into 12 lessons, for a total of 36 hours of training. The Good Beginnings Course will also guide you to create the policies and procedures necessary to develop your business, introduce you to a network of Family Child Care Providers, and provide you with resources and contacts specific to your family child care business. Fluency in written and spoken English is necessary.  You must attend all the sessions.    A certificate will be issued following satisfactory completion of this course. Workbook included in course fee.

Course BV#79   11 Tuesdays starting Sept 24th   6:30-9:30pm   plus
Saturday October 19th starting 9:30am-3:30pm

Facilitator: VICKI LEPPER                     COURSE FEE: $325

New Westminster Continuing Education
information and registration call 604-517-6345

(Fall registration will start Tuesday Sept 3    9:00am sharp)

Classes will be held at the:

New Westminster Secondary School
835 Eighth Street
New Westminster BC

(CE office closes for the summer. June  28 is the last day and then re-open Sept 3 for registration)

 

 

Play Your Way Through Childhood

Leap frog

Nancy Saraiva

There’s a trend making its way back into the world of parenting. The trend is good old fashioned play.  According to the BC Ministry of Education, play is so important that its significance in children’s lives is recognized by the United Nations as a specific right.

Play has been turned upside down from the days when kids would be out playing kick the can or street hockey or making forts at the neighbourhood park, to today, where more often than not, play refers to something that involves a child sitting in front of a screen. Scheduled lives have become the norm as parents chauffeur their kids from activity to activity hoping their kids will develop into the next child prodigy.

So what happened to play and how do parents allow kids to just…play? The first step is to understand the benefits play has in child development. BC’s Early Learning Framework states that in playing, children express, explore, combine, and extend what they have learned about the sights, sounds, smells, and textures of the world around them; and about their own and other people’s thoughts, feelings, ideas, and sensations.

“Strong social skills, a rich imagination and an increased capacity for problem solving and creative thinking are among the typical traits I would connect with children who have regular opportunities for unstructured play with their peers,” says Erika Warkentin, a New Westminster kindergarten teacher.

Upon dissection, it’s easy to see the underlying benefits of free play. With role playing exercises, children learn to consider other people’s perspectives, learn to develop self-control and they develop their negotiating skills in planning. Simple games with blocks and toys enhance brain and motor development. Dress-up play nurtures children’s imagination and social skills.

“Children start life with an incredible capacity for being creative and it is wonderful to observe the children who have had regular opportunities to nurture and develop these skills,” continues Warkentin.

Though there are benefits to the structured classes, it’s important to find a healthy balance and ensure that play is scheduled into their daily lives. Stepping out of ‘adult life’ and into imaginative play is a great opportunity to bond and it’s a tried and true de-stressor. Unstructured play gives adults a wonderful window to peek in and watch the creativity brewing in their little heads. Besides, Mister Rogers wouldn’t lie when he said, “Play is often talked about as if it were a relief from serious learning. But for children, play is serious learning. Play is really the work of childhood.”

 

Rec and Read Summer Program

New Westminster Community Schools presents ‘Rec and Read’ for students who’ve completed grade one or two:

Explore new worlds through books. This program will include Special Guest readers, music, games and active outdoor activities that will reinforce reading skills. Rec & Read is for students who have completed grade 1 or 2 and may benefit from some extra time with reading. Field Trip Thursdays will include a walking trip to Grimston Park, weather permitting.

Details and Registration: Rec and Read flyer

Fraserside Camping Bureau

The New Westminster Summer Camping Bureau offers financial assistance with registration fees for summer camps to low income families living in New
Westminster. The camps themselves often provide a reduced rate to campers registering through the camping bureau.

Who can Participate: Low income families living in New Westminster

Contact: Camping Bureau Coordinator 604-522-3722 (114)

Hours of Operation: Tuesday – Friday 9 am – 5 pm (the day after the long weekend in May to mid August)

Location: Fraserside Camping Bureau, 768 Columbia St., New Westminster

Summer camps can be anything from a half day, week long soccer camp to a 2-week overnight wilderness camp.

 

 

 

Who can Participate: Low income families living in New
Westminster
Contact: Camping Bureau Coordinator 604-522-3722 (114)
Hours of Operation: Tuesday – Friday 9 am – 5 pm (the day
after the long weekend in May to mid August)
Location: Fraserside Camping Bureau, 768 Col

Free Kidz Fun at Pier Park starts next week!

FREE, drop-in programs start at Westminster Pier Park start next week!

Brochure:  Pier_Park_Summer_Brochure_

Highlights:

Team Yellow Tuesdays- Fun and Games Theme Days
3 – 12 years
1:00 – 2:00 pm
Tuesdays- July 9 Art Smarts and Aug. 6 Sports Day
(weather permitting)

Park Night- Outdoor group games and activities. Held rain or shine.
3 – 12 years
6:30 – 8:00 pm
Wednesdays- July 4, 18 & Aug. 8, 22

Music & Movement with The Stage New Westminster
All Ages
11:00 am – 12:00 pm
Saturdays- Aug. 3, 10 & 17
Rainy Day option-2nd floor of River Market

Music & Drama with Music Box
All Ages
11:00 – 11:30 am
Sundays, July 7, 21 & Aug. 11, 18, 25
Rainy Day option-2nd floor of River Market

Youth Drop-in with a City of New Westminster Recreational Leader
Grade 6 – 12
12:00 – 3:00 pm
Wednesdays – July 3 – Aug. 28
(weather permitting)

More: http://www.newwestpcr.ca/parks/westminster_pier_park.php