Wednesday, April 3, 2013
Home Visits
Ms. Muehlenbein and I are preparing to schedule home visits for the week of April 22, 2013. We will be organizing home visits based on geographic area and contact you with your date and time by early next week. Our schedule will be Tuesday or Thursday full days and Wednesday morning.
How can we get a slinky to move?
Exploration of Movement with Slinkys
Over the course of the last two months the children have been learning about and representing motion through the use of Slinkys. At the start of their exploration, Slinky play was a brand new experience for many of the them. The idea of getting a Slinky to “walk” down the stairs was not within their mind set. They were far to interested in the way the Slinky moved in their hands. With that in mind, the next few lessons were set up to showcase the various characteristics of Slinkys.
In this lesson, the children were tasked
using a Slinky as a paintbrush. This was designed to capture the Slinky's
movements on paper. The children stretched the Slinky out across the paper and
noticed how it left behind “tracks.” They used the ends of the Slinky like a
stamp to create circles. When they were asked if they could make a “circle of
tracks,” it challenged the way they looked at Slinkys. Bending the Slinky in
specific ways was novel a idea. With a little bit of guidance and questioning,
the children were able to create a “circle of tracks.”
During the painting activity, the
retracting characteristic of the Slinky proved to be a challenge to over come;
the Slinky never stayed put. In the following lesson, the children stretched
out Slinkys to different lengths and let them go to see what happened. They
noticed that it did not matter how long or short the Slinky was stretched out,
it always came back to itself. They then took a Slinky out into the hallway to
stretch as far as it could go. They had expected the Slinky to return to
normal, but this time it did not. They noticed if stretched to far, a Slinky
will break.
The Slinky's retracting characteristic is
its most important aspect. In this lesson the children used a single Slinky to
trace shapes made of tape on the stage. The children quickly learned they
needed help from a classmate to make a shape. They did not have enough hands.
To foster peer interaction, one child was shown how to work with a partner to
create a shape. The child then passed on their knowledge to another who passed
it on as well. Eventually, the children wanted to challenge themselves, and
create a complex shape, a heart which required the use of six hands.
Now that the children had had multiple
experiences highlighting the characteristics of a Slinky, they were inspired to
rethink about Slinkys walking down stairs, by watching a few videos on Youtube.
When they were presented with a small set of stairs made of blocks, the
children knew right away how to get the Slinkys to walk down the stairs. A few
children did however try to get a slinky to walk up the stairs because of the
video seen here. They were disappointed to find out
Slinkys only go down stairs and not up.
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