ABOUT US

Our History

The Grand Rapids Early Discovery Center started as a child care center on the campus of Aquinas College in the 1980’s for faculty and staff of the college. Over time, the role of early childhood services became a focal point for examining issues in early childhood education in general, and the Aquinas College School of Education in particular. This was matched by an interest in families of the AQCDC to see their own children’s Reggio-inspired learning experiences continue into the primary grade levels. They began to look for ways to continue these opportunities and, in the year 2000, a partnership was formed that realized the Grand Rapids Child Discovery Center, a public charter K-5 school. 

The AQCDC moved to reside with the GRCDC in the St. Adalbert school building, complimenting the public charter’s K-5 grade levels with its own infant through Pre-K program, near the heart of the city in a diverse and historical setting. This brought together a public/ private relationship around the common vision to provide reform and dialogue around child education with families, professionals, and the community of West Michigan. 

In 2012, a group of parents embraced the program by forming a non-profit. The name changed to the Grand Rapids Early Discovery Center and we moved to our current location at 515 Jefferson Ave SE.

Our Logo: a process with children

Our original logo

When the center became the Grand Rapids Early Discovery Center, we wanted the image on the sign to represent the opportunities young children are provided through our programs. Unique to Reggio-inspired early learning programs is respect for the 100 languages of children, so we wanted to include the children in creating the design. Children are central to everything at the GREDC and creating a logo was no exception.  

Children were asked what they think of when considering their school and what experiences they value the most.  They began drawing themselves and their friends which provided the children’s idea of school, experiences, and the importance of positive social interactions.  The drawings were then transformed into the community of children that was on our first logo:

The flower

As the children discussed these questions they seemed to really focus on the word “discovery” in our school’s name. They began sharing the many things they have discovered through their investigations at school, “I discovered how plants grow!” shared one little girl. Upon hearing this a little boy drew a flower to represent his favorite discovery. Every day over 2 weeks, this boy re-created this picture and passed out his pictures to several teachers,  telling them how much he loves coming to his school. His flower became an integral part of our logo!

The bee

The bee on our logo was created by another student who told us, “My favorite study was the bee study when I discovered all about bees!” She drew a black and white picture of a bee, which was later colored in by her younger sister in a different classroom, making this bee the product of a collaborative effort.

The font

Often, early childhood centers will use lots of “kid” fonts. This is not the case for our logo. The fine serif font used is inspired by classic Italian typesets, similar to what you can see in many structures and monuments in Reggio Emilia. Furthermore, by incorporating fonts that remind us of the renaissance, we are making a statement about the type of work that we do: one that is student-centered and constructivist and using self-directed, experiential learning in relationship-driven environments. 

More about us...

Philosophy

The Reggio Emilia approach is an innovative and inspiring approach to early childhood education.

Curriculum

The Emergent curriculum develops from exploring ideas that are socially relevant, intellectually engaging and personally meaningful to children.

The Hundred Languages

Read the Loris Malaguzzi poem about the languages of children.

Lauren Huyck

Mentor Teacher

B.S in psychology and writing
A.A. in early childhood education
Teaching since 2010

My name is Lauren Huyck and I am the afternoon lead for the Scoperta classroom. I started as a teaching assistant when the center was still part of Aquinas in 2010. When we became the GREDC in 2012, I stayed on. In 2014, I was excited to accept the role of lead teacher.

I have a Bachelors in psychology and writing, and an associates in early childhood education. I am currently working on getting a Masters in psychology with a concentration in child development.

I love seeing the children grow and learn. There are so many developmental milestones that I get to see and experience. I fell in love with the Reggio approach and work to incorporate it in all my experiences with children. It has definitely taught me to treat children as citizens of the world.

I honestly could go on about how much I love the work I do and how passionate I feel about every child having quality care but that would take eons. So I will end with these two quotes:

“To take children seriously is to value them for who they are right now rather than adults-in-the-making.”

Alfie Kohn

If you trust play, you will not have to control your child’s development as much. Play will raise the child in ways you can never imagine.

Vince Gowmon