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{"id":8592,"date":"2022-11-16T12:53:34","date_gmt":"2022-11-16T12:53:34","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/teachbytes.com\/?p=8592"},"modified":"2022-11-16T12:53:34","modified_gmt":"2022-11-16T12:53:34","slug":"a-preschool-on-wheels-drives-opportunity-to-immigrant-families-in-colorado","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/teachbytes.com\/a-preschool-on-wheels-drives-opportunity-to-immigrant-families-in-colorado\/","title":{"rendered":"A Preschool on Wheels Drives Opportunity to Immigrant Families in Colorado"},"content":{"rendered":"

In a valley<\/span> renowned for its world-class ski resorts and unrivaled outdoor recreation, with 14,000-foot peaks that pierce the horizon, five-star hotels, designer storefronts, and multimillion-dollar mountainside mansions, there is a fleet of short, white buses stamped with geometric shapes.<\/p>\n

Parked in the lots of schools, churches, and community centers, the buses are inconspicuous. Most passersby would overlook them, distracted by the natural beauty of their backdrop.<\/p>\n

But inside, day after day, small wonders are unfolding. Gutted and retrofitted to look like traditional preschool classrooms, these mobile spaces host 3-, 4- and 5-year-olds in the valley who, otherwise, likely wouldn\u2019t see a formal learning environment until kindergarten, by which time many of their peers are already steps ahead.<\/p>\n

The El Busesito \u201clittle bus\u201d preschool is run by Valley Settlement<\/a>, a nonprofit that delivers free early childhood and family engagement programs to Latino immigrant families in Colorado\u2019s Roaring Fork Valley. The 40-mile region stretches from the red rock cliffs and geothermal pools of Glenwood Springs to the luxury resort town of Aspen and is marked by wide social and economic disparity. El Busesito operates four buses that travel to five neighborhoods to provide bilingual preschool education for nearly 100 children in the community.<\/p>\n

Launched in 2011 as a project of the Manaus Fund, a local social justice organization, and later established as an independent nonprofit, Valley Settlement now has a half-dozen programs<\/a> that serve children and families in concert, including those for infants and toddlers, pregnant and postpartum women, and caregivers.<\/p>\n

The organization\u2014and its two-generation approach to programming\u2014was born out of conversations with more than 250 of the area\u2019s low-wage immigrant families, a population that ballooned at the turn of the century and undergirds the very attractions and amenities that draw tourists and billionaires to the valley year-round. What did they need? What were their hopes for themselves and their children? What did they wish for their futures?<\/p>\n

Only 1 percent of families with children eligible for preschool had actually enrolled them in it, organizers learned. What they needed most, what they hoped for their children, was early education.<\/p>\n

In the parking lot<\/span> of a community center in El Jebel, an unincorporated town halfway up the valley, children arrive one at a time and climb the three steps up into their 22-foot-long mobile classroom, which fills their vision with bursts of primary colors from the moment they cross its threshold.<\/p>\n

Once on the bus, after 30 minutes of free play, in which the kids flit between activities involving paint, dress-up costumes, and building blocks, lead teacher Sarai Ramirez plays music to cue the transition to cleanup, followed by circle time.<\/p>\n

\"\"
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Head teacher Sarai Ramirez, right, checks students in to El Busesito in El Jebel, Colorado on Thursday, September 29, 2022. <\/span><\/p>\n

Kelsey Brunner\/EdSurge<\/span><\/figcaption><\/figure>\n

Seated on the rug and speaking in Spanish, Ramirez gives each child a circle time job. She passes a reading pointer to Andrea, who is first up, to count the number of children in class.<\/p>\n

Long pigtails bouncing, Andrea points the wand and counts, uno, dos, tres<\/em>.<\/p>\n

Then she passes it to Felipe, who counts the number of people on the bus, teachers and journalists included, uno, dos, tres, cuatro, cinco, seis, siete, ocho<\/em>.<\/p>\n

Finally, Francisco gets the pointer and is asked to count the days of September, using a calendar on the wall, starting with the first of the month.<\/p>\n

The children glide through questions on shapes and letters, then sit down on the floor, \u201ccrisscross applesauce, spoon in the bowl,\u201d with legs folded and hands in their laps. They take turns doing deep breathing exercises with a \u201cbreathing ball\u201d that, in sync with their own exhalations, expands and contracts.<\/p>\n

Then Ramirez asks each child, one by one, how they are feeling today, readying a handful of clothespins. She will clip these onto a laminated sign at the back of the bus labeled \u201c\u00bfC\u00f3mo se siento? Emoci\u00f3metro\u201d under the emotion each child calls out: feliz (happy), rabia (angry), miedo (scared), tristeza (sad) or calma (calm).”<\/p>\n

Proudly, dramatically, thoughtfully, they each announce they are feliz<\/em>, then pull out the snacks they brought from home while Ramirez reads from a book about colors and feelings.<\/p>\n

The goal of El Busesito Preschool is to expose children to a formal education setting. \u201cIt\u2019s not child care,\u201d says Sally Boughton, Valley Settlement\u2019s director of development and communications. \u201cIt\u2019s an early learning intervention.\u201d<\/p>\n