
‘I notice that many of you have been upset about kicking and
chasing going on. I wonder what we can do if this happens to us.’
Melinda went on to explain that sometimes it is fun to chase
but it can be scary if the person being chased does not want to play. She asked for a few suggestions on what someone who doesn't want to be chased could do. The circle transformed- suddenly everyone’s focus was on the circle. Children started raising their hands and shouting out answers.
They began with stop, I don’t like it, and I don’t want to. Melinda then restated with the empowering statements that many of the Tumbleweeders already knew. She
went over the three statements two times.


1 - “Stop” (chasing me)
2 - “I don’t like to play” (chase)
3 - “I'm not playing with you”
Then we went on to discuss kicking. 'I see that sometimes
there is a lot of kicking on the beanbag. What are some ways that can help so
kicking doesn’t happen.' Once again the circle was alive with hands and kids
full of answers. The first one that came up was that you can ask if the person wants
to be kicked. Melinda addressed the solution that Yes, it is available to ask if
you can hit or kick at Tumbleweed but diverted back to ways so kicking doesn’t
happen. The list then grew to include all kinds of solutions. We narrowed it
down to three and reviewed them a couple of times. You can say,
1 - “Don’t kick me” (and shield your body from the
kicks)
2 - You can move your body away from the person.
3 - “I dont like when you kick me. It hurts me.”

As a preschool, we feel that academic readiness is gained by learning transitioning, behavior modeling and social skills from peers. So much of free play is filled with these moments of learning that allow kids to have fun while gaining kindergarten skills expected. It is also a great way to build self advocacy and the ability to see and relate to others- both of which are lifelong skills for any person.
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