Our Students
Students come to Little Leprechaun Academy to learn, to have fun, and most importantly, to develop a healthy psycho-social personality. This means helping children develop healthy selfâ€concepts and positive and rewarding social relationships.
Drawing from the psycho-social developmental theory of Erik Erikson, Little Leprechaun programs are designed to foster the following feelings in children beginning with infants and moving right u to kindergarten aged children.
We help our children develop a sense of autonomy and willpower
As children enter toddlerhood,they have developed certain abilities (e.g., motor ability and coordination, language and communication abilities) that allow them to exercise independence and autonomy. At Little Leprechaun, we recognize the need for toddlers to explore and try out their new-found independence (within supportive limits). By having their attempts at independence valued and supported, young children begin to develop a sense of themselves as autonomous beings who have the ability to fulfill their own desires and goals. This feeling of autonomy lays the foundation for the emergence of initiative and purpose that follows.
We help our children develop a sense of initiative and purpose
The healthy, young preschooler sees herself as one who can initiate activities, both independently and with peers. She moves from simply exercising her independence for its own sake to focusing on interactions with the physical and social environments. She begins to set goals and take on projects, whether that be building a block structure or creating a make believe drama with a friend. Inevitably, children experience some failures as they attempt to fulfill their goals and it is the role of the Little Leprechaun teachers to be supportive of their attempts so that they begin to develop the resiliency to bounce back from failures and setbacks.
We help our children develop a sense of industriousness and competency
Once children approach school-age, they are not only interested in pursuing activities and tasks that are self-generating and selfdetermined but they are also interested in mastering some of the competencies valued by the adult world. They show increased interest in reading, writing, and working with numbers. Since they are moving from an emphasis on the processes of their activities to the products, they develop feelings of competency from completing projects and solving manageable problems.
