Bedford-Stuyvesant, Brooklyn
Bedford Stuyvesant Early Childhood Development Center (BSECDC) has been “Rooted in the Community since 1966.” A federally funded Head Start program whose mission is to provide high quality, comprehensive early education and family engagement services to families and their children ages 2 to 5 years old. BSECDC embraces a holistic strength-based approach to meet the needs of our earliest learners and their families within the Bedford Stuyvesant community.
POSITION/JOB TITLE: STATUS:
REPORTS TO: SALARY RANGE:
JOB SUMMARY:
JOB DESCRIPTION: LEAD TEACHER
Lead Teacher (UNCERTIFIED OR CERTIFIED) Full Time/Non-Exempt
Education Site Manager
$51,100 - $80,010
The Lead Teacher supports BSECDC’s mission to make a difference in the lives of children, their families, and communities through the delivery of high-quality early education and child development services that promote children’s school readiness through growth and development across all developmental domains. The Lead Teacher adheres to all federal, state, and local regulations, as well as BSECDC program policies, procedures, and administrative guidance.
ESSENTIAL DUTIES AND RESPONSIBILITIES:
● Implement a well-organized learning environment with developmentally appropriate schedules, lesson plans, and indoor and outdoor learning experiences that provide adequate opportunities for choice, play, exploration, and experimentation among a variety of learning, sensory, and motor experiences.
● Develop and implement weekly lesson plans, including plans for individualized instruction, in accordance with BSECDC’s procedures and the research-based curriculum, that include indoor and outdoor learning experiences to support physical health and development, social and emotional development, approaches to learning, language development and communication, and cognitive development.
● Recognize bilingualism and biliteracy as strengths and, for children who are dual language learners, plan and implement experiences to support English language development.
● Ensure the physical environment and lesson plans reflect the diversity represented in the children and families served.
● Implement nurturing, responsive, and effective teaching practices to ensure daily learning experiences promote critical thinking, inquiry-based learning, STEM, and reading and writing readiness, as well as children’s social emotional development and universal values of tolerance, compassion, and respect among children.
● Use positive guidance strategies to create a peaceful classroom environment where children resolve conflicts using language to express their feelings and opinion.
● Expose children to individuals of different cultural life styles, different genders, and different sexual orientation through stories, posted pictures and discussion.
● Plan and communicate effectively with all other classroom staff, including the assistant teacher, special education staff, volunteers and interns about weekly lessons, classroom activities, and other pertinent information regarding children.
● Establish and maintain collaborative relationships with families, while maintaining professional boundaries, to encourage their input and support two-way communication regarding the growth and development of their children.
● Conduct two home visits and two parent-teacher conferences per child per year.
● Create and adhere to a posted classroom daily schedule that includes sufficient time for
established routines such as nap/rest time, meal time, handwashing, toileting, and transition
through activities.
● Ensure that children are engaged in oral hygiene education through daily tooth brushing,
stories, skits, and other activities.
● Facilitate, observe, and communicate the importance of healthy eating habits through family
style meal time, including ensuring all adults eat with children during meal time.
● Conduct all screenings and ongoing assessment of the children in the class, as required, and use
data gathered to inform instruction, including individualization, and measure progress towards
School Readiness Goals.
● Monitor children’s daily attendance and communicate with the assigned BSECDC staff member
if a child needs additional supports
● Support tracking responsibilities of the daily meal count for the CACFP program, as requested.
● Maintain active supervision, group size, and ratios at all times indoors and outdoors.
● Maintain a safe and healthy environment in the classroom and on the playground, including
following all health and safety rules pertaining to food allergies, universal precautions, and
personal hygiene.
● Maintain consistent attendance to support continuity of care for children and families.
● Participate in staff meetings, in-service training, coaching, workshops, and staff development
programs, as requested.
● Ensure complete, accurate, and timely completion of all required data, documentation, and
paperwork, including child files.
● Follow all applicable BSECDC policies and procedures, including the Standards of Conduct to
safeguard children from abuse, neglect, or exploitation while in the care of the Center.
● Implement fully all applicable federal, state, and local laws and regulations as cited in the Head
Start Performance Standards, the Head Start Act, IDEA, IFSP, FERPA, ACYFIM, Department of Education and the NYC Department of Health and Mental Health Licensing Code, Article 47 NAEYC.
● Perform other duties as assigned. REQUIRED QUALIFICATIONS
● Bachelor’s Degree with a study plan toward a degree in Early Childhood Education OR ● Master’s Degree in Early Childhood Education with NY State Certification OR
● Master’s Degree in Early Childhood Education working towards NYS Certification
● Excellent interpersonal, organizational, written, and verbal communications skills
● Proficient with Google and Microsoft Office, Microsoft Word, Excel applications
EXPERIENCE
● Minimum of two years-experience working with preschoolers
PHYSICAL REQUIREMENTS
Physical demands described below are representative of only some that must be met to successfully perform the essential functions of this job. Reasonable accommodations may be made to enable qualified individuals with disabilities to perform the essential functions.
• Walk, sit, stand, climb, balance and stoop, kneel, crouch or crawl.
• Regularly lift and/or move up to forty pounds and frequently lift and/or move up to fifty pounds.
• Use hands and fingers to handle or feel objects, tools or controls; reach with hands and arms;
talk and hear.
• Specific vision abilities required include close vision, distance vision, peripheral vision, depth
perception and ability to adjust focus.
BENEFITS:
● DC 37 Union
● Competitive Health Insurance
● Retirement
● Life Insurance