ECE Virtual Classroom Social and Emotional Development
  • Child Care Courses
    • About ECE Virtual Classroom
    • ECE Virtual Facilitators
    • Course Requirements
    • Course Instructions
    • Certificates
    • ECE Virtual Classroom
  • Select Course
    • Relationships with Families
    • Social and Emotional Development
    • Sign Language Tools for the Classroom
    • Building Community Through Circle Time
    • Easing Separation Anxiety
    • Family Activity Nights
    • Interactions and Guidance
    • Mildred D. Taylor and Cultural Awareness
    • Operation Military Families
    • Reinforcement and Redirection
    • School age Play
    • Social and Emotional Development
    • Spanish in the Early Childhood Classroom
    • Supporting Families with Special Needs
    • Supporting Self-Esteem
    • Teaching Self Expression
    • The Anxious Child
    • ​Using Literature to Support Diverse Families
    • Yoga for Young Children
  • Contact
  • Enroll in Courses
Sentry Page Protection
Please Wait...
Student Login Student Login Hi, (First Name) Member Area | Log Out
Student Login
Welcome, (First Name)!

Forgot? Show
Log In
Enter Member Area
(Message automatically replaces this text)
OK
My Profile Log Out

Teaching Self-Expression with Ezra Jack Keats

2 Clock Hour of Early Childhood Education
Picture

Ezra Jack Keats Biography

Page 2

Picture
Ezra Jack Keats was born Jacob Ezra Katz to Polish Jews Benjamin and Augusta Katz in Eastern New York City on March 11, 1916. ​
He was the youngest of three children growing up very poor in the midst of a difficult economic time in the United States. Keats was a talented artist from an early age and at around 8 years old he was hired to paint a sign, giving his father some glimmer of hope that his son would make something of himself, as he was apprehensive about Keats’ artistic focus. 
Keats continued to be a successful artist throughout school winning several awards. The day before his high school graduation, he learned that his father had died suddenly of a heart attack in the street. Keats, sadly, had to identify his father’s body and was faced with learning his father’s true feelings about his son’s artistic side. Keats later told a friend:
​“I found myself staring deep into his secret feelings. There in his wallet were worn and tattered newspaper clippings of the notices of the awards I had won. My silent admirer and supplier, he had been torn between his dread of my leading a life of hardship and his real pride in my work.” 
 
Now that Keats’ father had passed away, he was unable to attend art school even though he had earned three scholarships to do so. Instead he had to work to support his family in his father’s absence taking a job as a mural painter for the Works Progress Administration (WPA) and as a comic book illustrator for the Captain Marvel comic strip. He also took art classes when his schedule allowed, further honing in his craft and passion for art. In 1943 he joined the military and spent his enlistment designing camouflage patterns. It was after experiencing a great deal of anti-Semitism in the military and throughout his life that he decided to legally change his name to Keats. ​ 
Later, he would travel to Europe and his work would appear in many major publications such as Reader’s Digest and more. Eventually one of his pieces was spotted by an editor for a major publishing house, and Keats was brought on board to illustrate children’s literature. Over the course of a very long and popular career, he illustrated over 85 children’s books and wrote and illustrated 22 of his own. Ezra Jack Keats is an American treasure and has touched the lives of countless children over the years. ​ 
Picture
Picture

Course Navigation Menu

1. Course Agenda
2. Ezra Jack Keats Biography​
3. Life and Writings of Ezra Jack Keats
4. Self-Expression
5. Supporting Self-Expression
​
6. Child’s Self-Expression (1/8)
7. Teaching Respect for Diversity
8. Diversity (2/8)
9. Snowy Day Sensory Play (3/8)
10. Respect Goggles (4/8)
​
11. Montessori Pet Food Pouring (5/8)
12. Infant Animal Petting (6/8)
13. DAP Books (7/8)
14. End of Course Quiz (8/8)
15. Course Evaluation Form​
​Parking Lot
Successful Solutions Training in Child Development
Address: PO Box 727, Burley, WA 98322-0727  * www.myececlass.com
Copyright 2018.  Successful Solutions Professional Development LLC.  * All Rights Reserved. Updated May 1, 2018

Successful Solutions Professional Development LLC BBB Business Review

Enrollment Hours (PST)

Monday - Friday         7  am – 8  pm  
Saturday & Sunday     9  am – 8  pm
Holidays                     9  am – 8  pm
Telephone

(360) 602-0960 
Email

info@myececlass.com
Registrations that are submitted after enrollment hours will be processed the next morning.  You will receive an email with your log-in information to access the course within an hour after we open the next business day.
#WashSTARS #WashingtonInservice #MERITtrainer #ECEcoursesonline #CDAtraining #CDASpecialist #OhioODJFS #OhioProfessionalRegistry #TexasWorkforceRegistry ‪#childcarecourses #inserviceforchildcare #preschoolteacher #starstraining #infantteacher
  • Child Care Courses
    • About ECE Virtual Classroom
    • ECE Virtual Facilitators
    • Course Requirements
    • Course Instructions
    • Certificates
    • ECE Virtual Classroom
  • Select Course
    • Relationships with Families
    • Social and Emotional Development
    • Sign Language Tools for the Classroom
    • Building Community Through Circle Time
    • Easing Separation Anxiety
    • Family Activity Nights
    • Interactions and Guidance
    • Mildred D. Taylor and Cultural Awareness
    • Operation Military Families
    • Reinforcement and Redirection
    • School age Play
    • Social and Emotional Development
    • Spanish in the Early Childhood Classroom
    • Supporting Families with Special Needs
    • Supporting Self-Esteem
    • Teaching Self Expression
    • The Anxious Child
    • ​Using Literature to Support Diverse Families
    • Yoga for Young Children
  • Contact
  • Enroll in Courses