Staff News

Cynthia Rodgers leaves April 7th on a mission trip to the mountains of China. She will be gone for two weeks as she works with widows and orphans. Yolanda Webb will be the substitute teacher working with Danielle in the Researchers Class.

Kudos to Heather Marshall and Cindy Ligon who will both be presenting workshops at the Nashville Area Association for the Education of Young Children’s Conference on April 8th.

Over the past couple of months, Zoe Matthews and Chantel Thompson led a wonderful BUBBLE project with many of our older babies. On April 16th, the children’s work will be on display as part of The Child’s Guide to the City, at Mr. Bubbles Teahouse in the Arcade. Expect to learn more in the coming weeks as our staff continue to make developmentally appropriate learning visible throughout our community.

Safety Note

Upon pick up in the afternoons, it is important that children stay with parents until they have safely departed the building. Recently, pre-schoolers have run off from parents and made it all the way to the lobby before being escorted back to mom and/or dad. As a staff at McKendree, we enforce the rule “only grown-ups open doors” to both prevent this from happening and to make sure that the little ones playing in the atrium are not knocked down by the preschool hall door.

Thanks for your help in keeping everyone safe by making sure that your children are with you at all times.

Birthday Time: Who is Ready for a Parade?

Time sure flies when you are having fun. This month McKendree celebrates 26 years of caring for young children and their families in downtown Nashville. We opened our doors in early April, 1990 with seventeen beautiful children and have been busy ever since.

Every year in April, and usually during the nationally recognized Week of the Young Child, we celebrate another year by throwing a party and having a parade. Yep, a parade. Metro police officers escort us around several city blocks and we circle back to the atrium where we all gather to sing happy birthday, and eat cookies before lunch (such decadence!) Please mark your calendars now for Friday, April 15th and plan to join us at 10:30 a.m.; e will head out on our adventure soon after. The whole celebration takes about 45” to an hour.

If you have a little one, bring a stroller. All of the “big kids” will walk with the security of an adult’s handholding. The police will block intersections for us and we will amaze and befuddle the passersby who try to figure out what we are up to. At least one preschooler will ask, “Where is the parade?” and be confused when we explain that WE are the parade.

Watch for a sign-up sheet on the atrium door asking for folks to bring cookies and expect parking details soon. If it rains, we will do something fun in the gym. Pray that it doesn’t rain!

License Renewal Time

This month we are preparing for extensive audits of our day care operations. Expect a series of inspectors to be visiting to verify we meet all day care regulations. On May 4th, classrooms will be randomly selected for in depth observations for our big Assessment. Stay tuned for more on how you can help us on that stressful day.

Cindy and Betty Change Roles

Late last year, Betty Witt moved from the classroom (after 25 years) and into a full-time administrative position as our Assistant Director. This change was long in coming. Although Betty served as the in charge person in Cindy’s absence for many years, Cindy was a solo administrator. The addition of our Constructivist Preschool classroom created the revenue needed to change the center’s infrastructure so that we could add more teacher support and administrative support.

Cindy and Betty continue to define the assistant director job description but some distribution of administrative/managerial tasks have been determined. Betty is managing staff scheduling, arranging substitute coverage, and arranging extra planning time for teachers. Additionally, she is tracking staff PTO and coordinating payroll with the church. Betty is also posting child care payments and handling deposits. Much of her work is the more technical “back of the house” work, whereas Cindy’s function includes planning and visioning, supervision and coaching, program development and training, enrollment, communication and budgeting.

The addition of this new position also allows Cindy to participate more fully as a leader outside of the center. She now sits on the board of the Tennessee Association for the Education of Young Children as the Development Chair, serves on the planning team for the TAEYC Conference, is a mentor for the Community Foundation’s emerging substitute service, ChildcareMatters, and is a frequent trainer and leader in the early childhood community.

The bottom-line is that McKendree’s program benefits from this new position and from this fresh distribution of labor and resources.