APRIL 2026

PHOTO GALLERY | MENU/CALENDAR

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Greetings!


NAEYC WEEK OF THE YOUNG CHILD 2026

April 13th-April 17th is Week of the Young Child. This is an annual celebration sponsored by the National Association for the Education of Young Children (NAEYC), the nation’s largest organization of early childhood professionals. The purpose of the Week of the Young Child is to focus public attention on the needs of young children and their families and to recognize the early childhood programs/services that meet those needs.


NAEYC first established the Week of the Young Child in 1971, recognizing that the early childhood years (birth through age 8) lay the foundation for children’s success in school and later life. Each class will participate in the special week:


Music Monday

Tasty Tuesday

Work Together Wednesday

Artsy Thursday

Family Friday

CENTER HAPPENINGS

In celebration of week of the young child…we will be hosting dress-up days for children and staff.


Monday, 4/13—Backward/Inside Out Day

Tuesday, 4/14—Sport Day

Wednesday, 4/15—Wacky Hair Day

Thursday, 4/16—Western Day

Friday, 4/17—Pajama Day

During “Week of the Young Child,” we will have a mailbox in the family lounge where you can write your child a special note. It will be delivered to the classrooms via EFC mail and read to your child that day.

Costume Kim visits on Monday, April 27, with Ribbit for Rain and Earth Day as her theme this month. Her program begins at 9:00 am with preschoolers and 9:40 am for toddlers.

“Baby Jam” with Mr. Kyle

Infant parents and babies are invited to our second Baby Jam class with Kyle Witherow, our Kiddy Keys teacher. This will be an interactive session with you and your infant and taught by Kyle. You will learn about the importance of music for children of this early age. The session will begin at 4:30 pm on Thursday, April 23.  You will receive an invitation and we will be asking for an RSVP, so we know our count of participants. We hope that all our infant families can attend!

MN Orchestra Hall Kinder Konzert Field Trip

Monday, April 20th our Monkey (older preschool classroom) will be going to Orchestra Hall to attend a concert designed specifically for young children. Our preschoolers will be given a hands-on opportunity to explore different instruments in the Sound Factory guided by staff at Orchestra Hall. After this experience, we will be seated on stage to enjoy a narrated musical story with an ensemble of Minnesota Orchestra musicians. This year’s story is Caps for Sale. This is one of our favorite field trips and we are looking forward to attending. The bus will leave at 9:15 am and return for lunch. There is an extra $10.00 fee per child for the field trip. 


Volunteers are welcome to attend…please let Cathie and Jamie know if you would like to attend this field trip. 

FAMILY REMINDERS

Conferences

EFC will host conferences during late April and May so please watch for further information. 


Summer Schedules

With summer right around the corner, please inform us of any schedule changes or vacations that you have planned. We look forward to a great summer season here at EFC.


EFC Closed—In-service Day and Holiday

EFC will be closed on Friday, May 22, for our Staff In-service Day, as well as Monday, May 25, for Memorial Day.    

ESPECIALLY FOR PARENTS

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The 7 QI Skills

 

We shared this article several years ago, and in reviewing the archives, we thought it was worth bringing back! Many early childhood programs, including EFC's, support the notion of “whole child development.” This article has a great way of labeling the many skills that fall outside of the academic arena but are crucial to both intellectual and social/emotional development. Learn more below!

 

The following is an excerpt from the article Ready for Success: Quality Care, School-Readiness, and the Skills Young Children Need to Succeed published by Community Playthings. It discusses important school readiness skills that are a complement to the IQ skills traditionally used to measure school readiness. You can read the full article here.

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When intentionally cultivated in the early childhood setting, the following seven skills define quality care and need to be added to our school-readiness checklists:

 

ME Skills: The first of the QI Skills are ME Skills, which are defined by self-awareness, self-control, and impulse control, along with focus and attention. One of the most important things to understand about ME Skills is that the ability to be in control of one’s thoughts, feelings, and actions takes time to develop. While ME Skills such as impulse control can and should be encouraged during toddlerhood and can be practiced through such simple activities as playing games, taking turns, and reading aloud (all which require quite a bit of attention and self-control), keep in mind that young children don’t typically start to show significant signs of progress until between the ages of 3 and 5 years.

 

WE Skills: WE Skills are the skills needed to play well with others. They include communication, collaboration, and teamwork, along with empathy and active listening. These skills are best learned through social interactions, both with adults and with other children. Everyday activities such as making a point to name and discuss the emotions of characters in books helps children develop an emotional vocabulary and learn the valuable skill of learning to read not just books, but other people.

 

WHY Skills: Curiosity and questioning serve to define the WHY Skills. While encouraging young children to ask lots of questions—not just why, but all sorts of questions—can admittedly be a bit challenging when you’re busy or at the end of a long day, it helps to remember that WHY Skills are what help children figure out and understand how the world works.

 

WILL Skills: WILL Skills are those skills that involve self-motivation and drive, and are often described as having “stick-with-it” or “get-the-job-done” attitudes. When it comes to young children, helping develop WILL Skills in part involves giving them words of encouragement and adequate time to practice and ultimately master a skill before swooping in to help. It also involves realizing that motivating children to do something through the constant use of rewards, whether in the form of stickers or sweets and treats, is not the same thing as self-motivation and has been shown, in fact, to potentially backfire and actually impair WILL Skill development.

 

WIGGLE Skills: While you may not be accustomed to thinking of wiggling as a skill, the important thing to understand about it is that physical and intellectual restlessness go hand in hand. While we all learn about the world by physically interacting with it, this is especially true for infants and young children. While there are certainly times when it is appropriate to strap young children in (e.g. in a car seat while driving) or have them practice sitting still, expecting them to always look but don’t touch is not only unrealistic, but stands to limit their learning. What young children really need is plenty of wiggle room in which they can safely explore, poke, touch, prod, and learn about the world.

 

WOBBLE Skills: Defined by adaptability, agility, and the ability to recover from failure, cultivating WOBBLE Skills involves creating safe settings and environments in which children are allowed to fail, and then are encouraged to brush themselves off, get right back up, and try again. From a practical standpoint, this amounts to such simple everyday approaches as allowing toddlers to topple, resisting the urge to say “don’t run” simply for fear that a preschooler might fall, or helping young children problem solve when they run into obstacles rather than coming to their rescue by providing quick and easy solutions.

 

WHAT IF Skills: WHAT IF Skills are highly valued in today’s world, and represent the culmination of all of the QI Skills. They include creativity, innovation, and imagination, as well as hope. There are lots of creative activities that help foster WHAT IF Skills, from reading books and telling stories to drawing pictures and make-believe play. That said, it’s also worth remembering that young children naturally excel at being creative and imagining a world of possibilities. That means that our role in cultivating QI Skills doesn’t just involve teaching them, but rather realizing that there’s more than one way to do things and making sure we don’t train the creativity and imagination out of them.

TWIN CITIES

FAMILY EVENTS

Now-4/11 - Easter Egg Hunts, various locations

Now-4/26 - Spring Flower Show 2026, Como Park Conservatory, St. Paul

4/3 - Preschool Program: Easter Witches, Feathers, and Fun, Swedish Institute, Minneapolis

4/10-4/19 - Fleurs de Villes FLORA, Galleria, Edina

4/10-5/10 - The Right Thing To Do: The Joe Mauer Story , Stages Theatre, Hopkins

4/12 - Goldy's Run, Huntington Bank Stadium, Minneapolis

4/12 - Kids in Bloom, MIA, Minneapolis

4/18 - Earth Day Clean Up, multiple locations

4/21-6/14 - The Wizard of Oz, Children's Theatre Company



Find more local family events

Especially for Children - Eden Prairie

6223 Dell Road 

Eden Prairie, MN 55346

(952) 934-1119

efc10@especiallyforchildren.com

Center Directors

Cathie Underwood and Jamie Kittleson