A frequent topic on discussion boards is for
someone to post a picture of an interesting loose part or material they’ve
found and say, “What should I do with this?” There are always some people who respond with craft ideas - that the adult should take the wood circle or rock
or cork and paint letters, numbers, faces, or attach objects together in a way
that the adult is using the materials to create a toy for the child. Then
there are always others who respond that that the adult shouldn’t do anything and
“Just put it out and see what the children do.”
Intentional teaching and scaffolding creativity are somewhere between those two points.
Wooden circles with letters written on them aren’t as open ended as plain wooden circles. Writing a letter, or number, or design on a piece of wood or a rock changes that object into something more specific. Objects painted with faces and costumes are dolls, just like any factory made doll that could be ordered from a catalog. There’s still plenty of ways that these materials can be used creatively, constructively, and interestingly, in classrooms - but as soon as the adult permanently makes the material into something else, some of the open ended possibilities disappear.
We humans respond to objects by their context.
If you’re served a bowl of liquid with spoon, you’d probably assume it’s soup.
If that same liquid was served in a glass, you’d assume it’s a beverage. If
that same liquid were poured in a tray with a brush, next to a piece of paper,
you might think of painting with it. If it were in a pitcher, you might think
of pouring it. The same process of examining contextual cues is what guides
children’s planning and decision process. If I see a container with a spout, I
think of pouring. If I see a ramp, I think of rolling. If I see a tube, I think
of what could go inside. More important, is what I don’t see, because if
the materials I need aren’t in my environment, I can’t put my ideas into
action. We’ve all seen children struggling to gather pebbles or shells when
they don’t have pockets, and as adults we’ve usually stepped in to find some
container. The goal shouldn’t only be for children to figure out what to do on
their own. The goal should be for us to be partners with them in their
discovery. Our job is to listen, observe, and when needed and welcomed, to
help.
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