Cognitive
4- and 5-year-olds often…
- Learn through the use of expressive imagination (e.g., dress-up), including opportunities to experiment with language and explore materials hands-on like manipulatives, clay, and sand
- Thrive in environments with consistent schedules and clear routines
- Respond to encouragement and build confidence to step out of their comfort zones and try new things
- Are developing their understanding of others’ viewpoints and abstract concepts like “fairness”
- Enjoy being read to and also conducting their own exploration of picture books
Physical
4- and 5-year-olds often…
- Release energy through indoor and outdoor physical activity
- Learn by moving large muscles and through constructive play, like the stacking of large blocks
- Learn through uncoordinated spatial awareness and may experience falls, collisions, and spills
Social-Emotional
4- and 5-year-olds often…
- Look to adults for approval and suggestions, while also occasionally questioning them
- Interpret words literally as they build their understanding of abstract concepts
- Express themselves verbally and artistically and have an active imagination
- Enjoy helping and having jobs and roles in the classroom
Note: The patterns above are research-based and draw on the experience of Bank Street teachers and those that were documented for each age by Chip Wood in Yardsticks (Wood, Chip. Yardsticks: Child and Adolescent Development Ages 4 – 14. Center for Responsive Schools, Inc.; 4th edition, January 2, 2018)
 Program Overview:
Program Overview: Children at this age often express interest and skill in recognizing letters, reading, and writing. Teachers support each child in their development and guide children as they take their next steps. Children are encouraged to express their ideas and feelings verbally in one-on-one, small-group, and whole-class interactions. Our classrooms immerse children in a language-rich environment. Reference resources include alphabet charts, name cards, labels, classroom charts, and visuals.
Children at this age often express interest and skill in recognizing letters, reading, and writing. Teachers support each child in their development and guide children as they take their next steps. Children are encouraged to express their ideas and feelings verbally in one-on-one, small-group, and whole-class interactions. Our classrooms immerse children in a language-rich environment. Reference resources include alphabet charts, name cards, labels, classroom charts, and visuals. Every day, 4/5s students bring their share of curiosity to the classroom. They also bring a tremendous amount of energy. Children soak up our math curriculum by taking attendance, using one-to-one correspondence to count out the right number of spaces at the table for snack, applying their counting skills to keep track of the number of children working in a classroom area, and playing math games.
Every day, 4/5s students bring their share of curiosity to the classroom. They also bring a tremendous amount of energy. Children soak up our math curriculum by taking attendance, using one-to-one correspondence to count out the right number of spaces at the table for snack, applying their counting skills to keep track of the number of children working in a classroom area, and playing math games. Art at Bank Street is rooted in rich explorations of materials. Painting, clay, and collage are the core materials of the 4/5s art program because they offer so many expressive possibilities for children as they grow and develop. Children in any given classroom may be in different stages of development with each material. Some children may be exploring for the whole year, while others may be designing or creating representational works. There is no timeline for artistic development and there is no need to hurry it along. In fact, the longer the child can actively explore with materials, the richer the visual vocabulary they will have to draw upon when they are ready to represent.
Art at Bank Street is rooted in rich explorations of materials. Painting, clay, and collage are the core materials of the 4/5s art program because they offer so many expressive possibilities for children as they grow and develop. Children in any given classroom may be in different stages of development with each material. Some children may be exploring for the whole year, while others may be designing or creating representational works. There is no timeline for artistic development and there is no need to hurry it along. In fact, the longer the child can actively explore with materials, the richer the visual vocabulary they will have to draw upon when they are ready to represent. The music program in the Lower School weaves together four “pillars” of music: singing, dancing, playing, and inquiry. The 4/5s experience music in their classroom and in the music room once a week. They participate in the bi-monthly Lower School Family Singing Assembly.
The music program in the Lower School weaves together four “pillars” of music: singing, dancing, playing, and inquiry. The 4/5s experience music in their classroom and in the music room once a week. They participate in the bi-monthly Lower School Family Singing Assembly.