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 Grossmont College borders the city of San Diego on the east. The college and children’s center serve a diverse population, including a large number of immigrants from the Middle East, Eastern Europe and Africa.
The smallest of the original PITC demonstration programs, Grossmont cares for 26 children from 6 months through
3 years of age. They started serving two-year olds in 1989 and, with CalWORKS funding, expanded to include children from six months
to three years.
This program is all about relationships!

As part of becoming
a demonstration program, Grossmont sought
to create intimate care settings that reflect
the PITC philosophy and policies. Children
and families now stay in the same small
groups with their primary infant/toddler care teachers from
six months through the end of their third
year. The infant/toddler care teachers and children move together
to a new space at the beginning of each
academic year. In effect since 1999, this
approach to providing continuity of care
allows relationships between children and
infant/toddler care teachers and between the children’s
families and infant/toddler care teachers to develop and deepen
over time. In a nutshell, to support the
children’s development and learning,
this program engages in relationship planning
instead of lesson planning. Relationship planning is a critical
component of the PITC philosophy of care.
“Continuity
of care is the best new idea to come into
this profession in my entire 25 year career.
After the children and families get comfortable
with the care, the teacher’s job is
much easier. Personally I do not have to
spend a half a semester at the beginning
of each and every year gaining the trust
of the children and their parents. The children
I get are happy to be with me, they are
not “mourning” the loss of last
year's teacher. The parents get to know
and trust my judgement so when I have difficult
things to discuss with them it is much easier
and the child gets the needed help much
quicker. It is much better for the child
and after all, isn’t that why we are
all here?”
—Dawn Celyan, Toddler Teacher
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When the children’s
center became a PITC demonstration program,
its facility consisted of a relocatable
building licensed for 16 infants and toddlers,
and a second room within a permanent building
licensed for twenty four 24-36 month olds.
The building for the infants and toddlers
was set up as one big open room. Here’s
what the original floor plan looked like:

Before becoming a PITC
demonstration program, the room for infants
and toddlers had one door and was divided
with furniture.
Funding from the California
Department of Education’s Child Development
Division enabled Grossmont to transform
the big room for infants and toddlers shown
in the original floorplan into two small
ones. In small care spaces, the program
can offer individualized care in small groups
as recommended by the PITC. Architect and
PITC Faculty member Louis Torelli consulted
on the project and a local design firm redesigned
the space. To create two separate care spaces,
a second entrance was added as well as a
nap room and small service area for the
infant group. The space was divided with
angled full and half walls, creating an
infant room for 6 children (approximately
6 –18 months of age) and a toddler
room for 8 children (approximately 12 months
to two years). Here’s the layout now:

The new layout creates a series
of mini rooms, as in a cozy home. There
is a playroom, a bedroom, a kitchen dining
area and, a big favorite of the children
and infant/toddler care teachers, the parlor. Mirrors allow
supervision of blind spots. The new observation
room, which is used by college students,
staff, families, and demonstration program
visitors, is behind the teacher.
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| Here’s a photo
of the toddler space before the PITC-inspired
renovation. Toddlers were separated from
the infants by furniture.

Here’s the new toddler
space after becoming a demonstration program.
It has multiple levels to explore, comfortable
furniture and greater choice of play areas,
all of which are recommended by PITC as
key components of a high quality environment
for toddlers.
One
of the popular features is the window between
the two separate care spaces. Both infants
and toddlers are delighted when they eventually
discover their neighbors.
“Making the permanent division of
the Infant-Toddler classrooms has given
us the opportunity to function more independently,
created small group interactions between
teacher and infants, cut in half the noise
level and also allowed for staff support
and one on one mentoring with the new infant
teacher.”
—Marisela Cerna, Master Teacher
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| When the program turned
its attention to the two-year olds, it became
clear that these children needed a place
for themselves, apart from older children.
Prior to remodeling they were in one big
room with three-year olds. This room was
redesigned and divided into two rooms, one
for 12 two-year olds and one for 12 three-year
olds. To create two separate spaces, a bathroom
changing area and a door for direct access
to the outside space were added. Both age
groups are thriving in their intimate environments
that are specially designed for them.


The renovation project also
included outdoor play areas. Before the
center became a demonstration program, a
converted parking lot was serving as a play
yard. The goal of the renovation was to
create an outdoor garden space that provided
direct access from the classrooms and flexible
protected play spaces. Easy access to the
outdoors and fresh air promotes health and
provides infants with a greater variety
of choices and freedom to explore as recommended
by PITC.
The play yard renovation project
was a collaboration between the children’s
center and the Grossmont College Art Department.
Students added interactive art elements
including a textured rock path, and designs
taken from nature and Kumeyaay rock art.
The inclusion of the community, as this
collaborative project illustrates, is an
important theme in the PITC philosophy.
Here’s the plan
for the new outdoor environment.

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| The new wall around the
sand area was designed to also provide just
the right level of challenge for toddlers.

One of the favorite outdoor
places is a cozy hammock. Just like with
indoor spaces, it is important to create
quiet places where children can safely be
alone or with a small group of children.

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| Bamboo was planted to cover
the fence and screen the harshness of the
parking lot. The gazebo and smaller grass
area are for the younger infants. Grasses
screen this area and herbs provide olfactory
stimulation.


The small grassy area for
the infants (below left) provided a good
place to add a portable piece of equipment
to challenge this little girl. An
example of a protected play space, it is out of
the path of the toddlers with wheel toys.
The textured path (below right)
with local granite, imbedded agates and
other beautiful stones, is an example of
the kind of exploratory experience we can
give young children who spend much of their
time close to the ground.

Demonstration
Programs Home
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