What an absolutely beautiful day it was outside today. The new snowfall made everything clean and white again, the sky was blue and the recent ice storm gave us some great chunks of ice on our playground. Of course it was cold! It is winter in the east. Of course we played outside. Children NEED to play outside everyday!
Musings on how children learn best through play and The Project Approach in action
Monday, February 10, 2014
Fight the Flu...Play Outside!
What an absolutely beautiful day it was outside today. The new snowfall made everything clean and white again, the sky was blue and the recent ice storm gave us some great chunks of ice on our playground. Of course it was cold! It is winter in the east. Of course we played outside. Children NEED to play outside everyday!
Tuesday, February 4, 2014
Tape Resist and Name Extension
A couple of weeks ago we showed them tape resist. We added masking tape, scissors and cardstock to the easel. We showed the children how to put tape on the paper across the sheet or in smaller pieces. Smooth the tape down with their hands and then paint on top of the tape filling the spaces.
Each child attempted this project with their own personality, some using a lot of tape and a lot of paint. Others using smaller pieces and creating specific designs with their work. Some were very minimalist with their painting technique while others covered every spec of white paper.
The following day, we removed the tape and shared the paintings. We talked about the colors we could see and what happened where the tape had been.
When I was hanging them up to display them, I made a sign out of tape which gave me the idea to create names. The following week we extended this tape resist exploration to the writing center where the children "taped" their names. This was difficult for some with curved lines and they had to figure our how to make straight pieces of tape curve. Ripping them into little pieces worked well. Some had to pre-write their name in pencil on the paper before taping it and others could visualize and tape straight away. A couple with long names stretched across two pieces of paper. With this activity, we suggested they try the water color paint to use a different medium with a similar technique.
With taping letters we were able to focus on some of the aspects of each letter using a different medium. Peeling off the tape from the dried paintings was good fine motor work as well.
Give it a try...bet your students can't resist it :-)
Monday, February 3, 2014
Tube Exploration
We finished up several rolls of wrapping paper around my house this past holiday season. I gave a few to my nephew to play with along with some pom poms I had at home. He enjoyed putting them through the tube and seeing how they came out. He liked leaning the tubes on the stairs to watch the pompoms roll out. So I gathered the tubes and brought them back to the classroom with me.
To create this provication center I placed several kinds of balls or objects that rolled in baskets. We had ping pong balls, golf balls, wiffle balls, pompoms and some large marbles. The tubes were several thicknesses of wrapping paper tubes as well as paper towel and toilet paper tubes.
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