Finding One's Place in the World
In Class 3, the child crosses a profound developmental threshold—the so-called “Nine-Year Change”. This pivotal moment marks a shift in their growing self-awareness. Where once the child lived in a seamless unity with the world, they now begin to feel separate from it, awakening to the sense of an "I" distinct from others. This dawning inner experience—often accompanied by confusion, questioning, and emotional vulnerability—calls for new forms of learning: more practical, tangible, and meaningful.
The curriculum meets this shift with subjects that ground the child in real-world experiences—building, farming, measuring, and storytelling that explains origins. Children no longer simply absorb the world through imitation; they now actively seek to understand it, requiring both boundaries and purpose to anchor their emerging sense of self.
Thematic Foundation: Practical Life and Inner Security
Class 3’s curriculum helps children transition from childhood’s dreamlike unity into a reality of responsibility and form:
Old Testament stories offer moral structure and a path through questions of belonging and identity.
Projects in farming, building, and shelter tie the child’s imagination to the physical world, helping them see how human beings shape—and are shaped by—their environment.
Children ask, often silently: “Who am I in this world?” and “Can I trust the adults guiding me?” The curriculum responds with stories and tasks that build confidence, competence, and connection.
Language Arts
Language skills are now applied with greater structure and independence:
🌻Deepening knowledge of parts of speech imaginatively (nouns, verbs, adjectives, adverbs)
🌻Strengthening compositional writing: from creative stories to practical letters
🌻Baybayin writing connects linguistic history with cultural identity
🌻Continued speech practice and poetry support clear expression and confidence
🌻Preparation for a class play fosters collaboration and dramatic expression
Mathematics in Real Life Contexts
Math becomes functional and embodied, helping children see its role in everyday life:
🌻Measurement of length, weight, and time, evolving from non-standard to standard units
🌻Exploring value and exchange through the history of money and bartering
🌻Class projects (e.g., selling products) help internalize numeracy, responsibility, and economic awareness
🌻Mental math, applied problem solving, and an introduction to monetary value
Farming, Shelter, and Human Endeavor
As the children grow into a more grounded sense of self, they explore how humans interact with the Earth:
🌻In "Buhay sa Bukid", they learn how plants support life and how farming sustains community
🌻In "People at Work", they see the dignity and creativity of handcraft and labor
🌻In "Shelters: Bahay at Buhay", they examine how people build homes adapted to place and need, culminating in a shelter diorama presentation
These lessons tie human creativity to the land and its rhythms, offering reassurance and orientation in a world that now feels more complex.
Social and Emotional Development
As their inner world becomes more defined, children seek structure and connection in their outer world:
🌻Clear classroom guidelines and teacher authority offer safety and predictability
🌻Emphasis on class community fosters a strong sense of belonging (“we”)
🌻Projects requiring cooperation and responsibility nurture emotional maturity and resilience
Class 3 is a year of awakening, when children begin to perceive the world as separate from themselves, and start to find their own place within it. Through meaningful stories, practical experiences, and a curriculum rooted in human creativity, they are guided across this important threshold with clarity, confidence, and care.