Sunday, October 12, 2025

Marigolds and Dandelions in Kindergarten


I was inspired by a visit many years ago to a Quaker school in which the classrooms were named for important and inspirational Quakers. I immediately felt the desire for my own elementary school division to do the same... 

Fast forward years later and that didn't exactly happen. However, I did do something in my own class. We became the Foxes and the Fells. (We often need to split into half groups - hence the two names.) There was double meaning in that designation. We have George Fox and Margaret Fell and we have the animal which would eventually go on to become the school mascot (fox) and the little rocky outcropping in England that Fox stood upon Firbank Fell (fell). Later, my teaching partner would add the "Fell pony" (fell) as a way to give both groups an animal. 



I loved my little Foxes and Fells. 





Fast forward many more years and the school adopted Star the Fox as the school mascot and suddenly foxes were a little too "on the nose." Additionally, we split our larger classes into smaller classes so I left the Foxes and the Fells behind with my former teaching partner and moved to a new class and the possibility for new branding...

After way too much thinking, I settled on Marigolds and Dandelions. While not immediately connecting to Quaker history, this new naming connects in a more powerful way. It describes a way of being for my young students. It names our big class testimonies in flower format.



Here is how I describe that to families and caregivers:

Marigolds and Dandelions

This year, your children will join (my teaching assistant) and me as Marigolds and Dandelions in room #107. 


Why Marigolds and Dandelions? 


Marigolds are flowers that are excellent companion plants - we grow marigolds near other plants because they help protect against harmful critters. If you plant a marigold beside another plant, that plant will likely thrive - it will grow big and strong and healthy. It is supported and protected by the bold, sunny marigold. That makes a beautiful metaphor for who we will strive to be in room #107 - people who support each other and help them thrive while we bloom. 


Dandelions are equally cheerful and also persistent and resilient. They grow through the cracks in a sidewalk, they stand in small bunches in a carefully tended green lawn (their own form of activism). They remind me of my childhood (how about you?), made into flower crowns, pulled apart gleefully, and rubbed on our chins - playful! We make wishes on dandelions once they produce their fluffy white seed heads. Those little fluffs float and fly and spread throughout our yards and communities. Another powerful metaphor for who we hope to be - sunny, resilient, joyful, and hopeful beings who will spread it around! 


Feel free to become “marigolds and dandelions” with us this year.


And that is the story of how we became Marigolds and Dandelions in kindergarten.


Do you name your class? What do you call your students?


No comments:

Post a Comment

Marigolds and Dandelions in Kindergarten

I was inspired by a visit many years ago to a Quaker school in which the classrooms were named for important and inspirational Quakers. I im...