What is a Co-op?
Parents are the primary educators of young children. A Co-op allows parents the unique opportunity to share in their children's early school experiences and to take an active role in their education. It also enables your child to take their first steps towards independence while maintaining a sense of security. The Co-op values a close relationship with our parents, the community and area school systems. We acknowledge that active parent participation helps broaden the developmental process of young children.
Our Philosophy
Our program, based on research and developmentally appropriate practices, is designed to meet the learning and developmental needs of preschool children. We believe that children do best when families seek out quality early learning opportunities and experiences for them and play an active role in their education.
We recognize parents and families as the first and most important teacher in a child’s life and value the individuality of each family. Children’s learning is continuous and occurs in all settings and the experiences children bring from home are valued and built upon in our school setting. Families, schools, and communities all have significant roles to play in terms of what opportunities are available to children and how well a child is able to take advantage of those opportunities. The establishment and maintenance of positive reciprocal relationships among these settings for the purpose of coordination and continuity of services serves to benefit children.
At the Aurora Co-op Preschool, expectations for children are guided by our staff’s knowledge of the processes and sequences of young children’s learning and development and the optimal conditions under which children develop to their fullest potential. Early childhood education is largely child-centered education. Children are born ready to learn. The preservation of children’s natural curiosity and motivation to learn are enhanced and enriched through sensory-rich experiences, play, exploration, and language rich environments. Play is a very important and special part of childhood. Hands-on activities create natural, authentic contexts for learning that allow children to feel a sense of mastery as they develop a more complex understanding of their world. This philosophy follows with Piaget's ideals that children should be actively engaged in their world and various environments.
The preschool years are a time of significant growth, but young children learn in ways and at rates different from older children. Young children’s development and learning is rapid, uneven, and episodic. The wide range of skills, competencies and achievements children exhibit are the result of the complex mix of the ability to learn and past learning opportunities and experiences. The domains of children’s development are highly interrelated and learning within any one domain of development affects learning in the other domains.
Young children develop in an environment of influential relationships. They flourish when adult interactions provide security, nurturance, guidance and positive encouragement. Student learning - individually, within a small group, and during a whole class activity - is supported by caring professional teachers in our classrooms. A natural and joyful concentration is the result when students are truly engaged in a wide variety of challenging and interesting activities that are appealing, appropriate, and can be adapted for individual developmental patterns.
Development and learning are inextricably tied to the health and well being of children. At the Aurora Co-op Preschool, we strive to ensure that children are provided healthy and safe physical and interpersonal environments that support positive outcomes.
Our Director
Mary Ann Aardema

Mary Ann has served as director of the Aurora Co-op since 2002. She has a Bachelor of Science degree in Elementary Education (Early Childhood Education Licensure) from the University of Akron In addition, her education includes a B.A. from Muskingum College, and post-graduate coursework from Muskingum, Lakeland Community College, and Northern Arizona University. She holds a current Child Development Associate (CDA) credential. She is a Playright Signature Teacher. Playright is a teaching strategy that provides teachers with the skills needed to implement a developmentally appropriate curriculum. She is a member of the National Association for the Education of Young Children (NAEYC), the International Reading Association (IRA), and Build Ohio. She has 20 years of experience in the Early Childhood Field. Mary Ann and her husband have lived in Aurora for 26 years. Her two sons previously attended the Co-op.
NAEYC Accredited
Our program is proud to have earned NAEYC Accreditation - the mark of quality for early childhood education programs.
The National Association for the Education of Young Children (NAEYC) created its accreditation program in 1985 to set professional standards for early childhood education and to help families identify high-quality child care and early educations programs. To earn NAEYC's accreditation, a program conducts a self-study to determine how well it meets the standards. The program is observed by independent, professional validators and then reviewed by a national panel who determines whether the program is awarded accreditation.Standards are continually being reviewed by NAEYC and programs report annually and make changes to keep up with the current standards.
Our curriculum is consistent with the guidelines of the NAEYC. Children learn through structured play and activities which are designed to encourage their physical, social and emotional and cognitive development. Our low teacher to child ratio also fosters a sense of competence and initiative in children.
Please visit their website for valuable additional information www.naeyc.org
Membership
The majority of our membership is from returning members or referrals. We think that speaks volumes about our program.
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