Friday, July 31, 2015

THOUGHTS ON TANGENTIAL

Axiom #7 on the right-hand column of this blog states: Children will always devise new and novel activities and explorations with the materials presented that are tangential to the apparatus itself.  Why is that so important?  Because there is a whole universe of play that happens in the area around the apparatus that is not part of the apparatus itself.  If I were to focus only on what the children do with the apparatus, I would overlook important actions that expand my notion of what play means for children and the subsequent questions about such play.

With the Pegboard Platform there was plenty of engagement with the apparatus itself.  For instance, here is a short video of a child using the platform for making something special: "rock-sand-snow ice cream.

Rock, sand, snow ice cream from Thomas Bedard on Vimeo.

Notice that the child in the video is responding to another child's inquiry about what she is making. Often as adults we ask that same question, but it seems more genuine coming from another child. Her response actually makes me wonder if she knew what she was making or she is making it up on the spot in response to his inquiry. In any case, she is quite animated when she responds as if to confer her blessing on her own creation.

What is not apparent from the video is that part of her creation began away from the table on the shelves that hold the play provisions for the sensory table.  It is there she carefully adds the rocks.

Is that tangential to the apparatus?  Probably not, but it does expand the play beyond the apparatus itself creating movement in her operations from the platform, to the shelves and back to the platform.  What does that tell me about the nature of her play?  How important is it to be able to move between areas for her play?

Here is an example of an operation that is tangential to the platform apparatus.  This child has appropriated the floor space between the sensory table and the shelves for her operations.  She has three containers of different sizes and shapes.  She is very intent about transferring the sand between the containers.
It's true, she has acquired the sand from the table, but she definitely does not need the apparatus for what she is doing.  Given all that is going on around her and the apparatus in the table, why does she choose the floor for her play?  What would happen if there were no table and just a reservoir of sand and all types of containers?  What would that play look like? How do the boundaries created by the table and the shelves help define her play?

Here is another example of tangential play.  After transporting a lot of sand into the Five-gallon Pail, this boy decides to see if he can lift it.  Why?   
A child testing his own strength is not part of the apparatus.  It is, however, important for the development of his muscles and joints. The appeal of his particular physical challenge is that he is its author; it is authentic.  It is also contagious.
Where does the quest for a physical challenge come from and why is it necessary?  What makes it contagious?

Here is one final example of tangential play.  There are always stools for the children to use around the sensory table.  Ostensibly, they are there for the children to step up to extend their reach.  For some reason, one of those stools was turned upside down when a child with a plastic teapot full of sand happened upon it. The upside-down stool offered an invitation for this child to pour sand into all the little squares on the underside of the stool.
  
As far as tangential play goes, this one is off the charts.  Who could have planned this set of joint circumstances: a stool turned upside down exposing open squares and a child experimenting with the flow of sand from a plastic tea pot?  Did the pattern of the squares pique his interest? Did the flow of the sand in a stream create the opportunity to target his pouring so he could fill individual squares?   What was this child thinking?

I am left with questions: Does tangential play by its very nature house one of the universes of play that is spontaneous, serendipitous and creative?  If so, how do we provide the space and time for it? If so, how do we give it its due?  With any given setup, how do we shift our focus from "what the children should do" to "what they can and will do"?  How does it differ from the play of a child with a plan?  Do the two types of play coexist?  Can and do they feed off of each other?




Saturday, July 25, 2015

PEGBOARD PLATFORM 2

In March of 2013, I introduced the Pegboard Platform.  This is an apparatus made with a piece of pegboard the corners of which are embedded in sturdy cardboard tubes.

I re-introduced the same apparatus this year in May.  I did add one element to the original structure: a cardboard tube set on an incline from the platform. Sand poured into the tube emptied into a tub at the end of the table.

One of the more fascinating aspects of this apparatus is the flow pattern of the sand as it is poured over the platform.  Watch. 



The video clearly shows the uniform pattern of the sand.  It also shows that the child with the scoop watching from below interprets it as snow falling.  We are in Minnesota, after all, so the child knows snow.

The addition of the small cardboard tube created another range of play specifically around that incline. For instance:

They poured the sand down the tube.

They pushed the sand through the tube.

And at times, they plugged the tube.

There was one operation that gave me pause.  The operation involves increasing the flow of sand through the tube by banging on the tube.  Watch.



How do children know that hitting the tube increases the flow of sand through the tube?  Is it inherent body knowledge?  Is it trial-and-error?  Do they simply imitate what they have seen others do?

I am always curious about what other practitioners may try to build after reading about the many different apparatus I build at my sensory table. About three weeks ago, I was pleased to get a note on my SandAndWaterTables Facebook page from Shelli at Explore Inspire EC.  She invited me to look at her version of the Pegboard Platform.  Check out her construction here.  For me, the best thing about her apparatus is that it is different than mine.  She found a totally different solution for holding the pegboard above the table.

And if you read this blog and do try to build apparatus for your sensory table, please feel free to share. Who knows who you might inspire.

Saturday, July 18, 2015

SNOW SAUCER SANDBOX

In Minnesota, we have a fair amount of snow in the winter.  One of the great winter activities is sliding down hills on all kinds of apparatus from sleds to toboggans to even cardboard boxes. One of those contraptions is a snow saucer.



It is a plastic disc with handles.  It is bowl-shaped to ride above the snow.




Did you know the the snow saucer can be utilized in the summer, too?  Put some sand in it and set it on a table and you have an impromptu sandbox.

I did not set this up.  My wife set this up for our grandson.  For me, though, it was pure genius. First, it provides a comfortable level on which to work.  The saucers are set on summer tables that are 17 inches off the ground.  Perfect for a two and a half year old.  Second, the two saucers are connected with an improvised bridge made from a piece of gutter screen.

I did add one feature to the sandbox: a box into which my grandson could transport the sand from the saucer sandbox.
Axiom #1 on the right-hand column of this blog states that children need to transport whatever is in the table out of the table.  In the picture above you can see a pile of sand on the grass that was dumped there before I found something for my grandson to dump it into.  When I told him he should have something to pour into, he actually suggested using the blue pail seen in the saucer. It was a good suggestion, but I wanted something bigger to catch as much of the sand as possible.  The first thing I found was a box destined for recycling.

It was immediate and temporary and worked out quite nicely.  I am always a bit surprised at how well this works; maybe it has to do with offering the child a target for his actions.   

And there seems to be an added attraction of dropping things from heights.

The advantage of this temporary solution is twofold:  It satisfies his need to transport sand out of the table and, when he is all done, the sand can be easily poured back into the saucer sandbox.

When all is said and done for the day, the saucer sandbox contraption is easily put away and covered.

This quirky type of genius must run in the family.  Earlier this summer, my daughter made a water table of sorts out of a snow sled.  My grandson looks pretty comfortable in an industrious sort of way with his chair partially in the sled water table.

I am kidding when I say this quirky type of genius must run in the family.  There are countless examples of others in the blogosphere combining ordinary objects into something new.

This post is a celebration of how the ordinary can be transformed into something else that is ordinary. Two ordinaries, of course, make something that is extra-ordinary.

Saturday, July 11, 2015

MAKING SENSE OF AN APPARATUS

The last two weeks I have written about the same apparatus: Piggyback Inclines.  Here is the apparatus.

This is what you need to know about this apparatus.  Children can pour corn into the apparatus into 8 different holes: #1 goes into a gutter tube that is woven between the two inclines; #2 empties straight into the top incline; #3 leads to the white cardboard tube that goes through the top incline and ends up in a second table; #4 is the open end of the top incline; #5 is the open end of the bottom incline; #6 is a window cut in the top incline; #7 is another window cut in the top incline; #8---which you don't see---is a third window cut in the top incline on the other side.

On the other hand, the corn exits the apparatus in only three places: #1 is the white cardboard tube that empties into the adjacent table; #2 is the open end of the bottom incline box; and #3 is the end of the guttering which is woven through the two incline boxes.

How do the children make sense of this apparatus?  How do they make sense of the space created by the apparatus?  How do they make sense of the materials such as the cardboard, corn and containers?  How does interacting with the apparatus inform the child about him or herself?  

Children make sense of the apparatus in dialogue with the apparatus.  Some might call this exploration or experimentation, but it is more complex and intimate than simple exploration or experimentation.   The apparatus invites children to use their whole body to join with it to make it come alive.  In return, the apparatus offers unique challenges both physically and cognitively back to the children.  Think of it this way: If there is no child, the apparatus has no actuality.  That also means, that the dialogue will change depending on which child or children take up the invitation.

One of the ways they make sense of the space is to explore all the spaces offered by the apparatus. Some of those spaces are not so evident at first glance. For instance, there is a big space right underneath the incline and there is a more constricted space under the base of the apparatus.  
There is even a space that would escape most of us, but not a child.  It is the space between the catchment boxes.  The child pictured below is using that space to hold his pot for his particular operation.

Their are even tangential spaces that the children appropriate for their operations.  Two such spaces are the shelves that hold the containers and implements and the five-gallon bucket ensconced next to the table.
Since the materials are many and varied with this apparatus, let's just look at how children make sense out of a set a materials, in this case, containers for holding or transporting the corn.

They will fill containers that are different in size and have different size openings. They also fill them differently, one with the fingers and the other with another container.  Also, one container is plastic and the other is metal.
The children will also use different size containers for pouring.  The child on the left used his left hand when he turned his container over so he could let all the corn go at once.  The boys on the right were physically challenged to simply dump the big bucket into the apparatus.
How does interacting with the apparatus inform the child about him or herself?  For one thing, a child becomes the agent of his own actions.  By pouring corn in a particular hole, he comes to see that he can transport the corn into another table with his actions.

Not only does he see himself as an agent of his actions, but he also sees how physically competent he is as he gets up and personal with the apparatus.  You have seen it time and time again in the pictures with the children climbing on the lip of the table and balancing their bodies---often times leaning up against the apparatus---to complete their operations.  Let me offer one more picture showing the physically competent child checking out where the corn goes when poured into the top incline.  This child is straddling both tables at once using the narrow lip of the small table and the cardboard tube to balance.  Oh, and he seems to be hovering over another child.

There is at least one important question I have left out of this post: How does interacting with the apparatus inform the child about his or her relationship with others?  I will not try to tackle that in this post.  However, it is an important question because school is, after all, a social milieu in which the possibilities for making sense of an apparatus like this are multiplied exponentially.  As more and different people enter--and exit--the dialogue with each other and the apparatus, new ways and forms of knowing are invented and created.  With that understanding, making sense of the apparatus has so many variables that it is important at times to stop analyzing and to relax and savor the journey.



Sunday, July 5, 2015

A NEW FEATURE TO KEEP DOWN THE MESS

Piggyback Inclines are two large chute-like boxes taped together and set over the sensory table on a pitch.  I could have aligned the boxes so they were directly on top of each other, but I decided to stagger them so the top box (1) extended beyond the bottom box (2) at the top of the apparatus. I built it so all the corn drained into the bottom box and exited the apparatus into the tub on the left end of the table. That is not exactly accurate because children also poured corn in the top hole on the right into the white cardboard tube.

I knew there would be a problem with this configuration: children attempting to pour corn into the top holes would spill a whole lot of corn.  One reason was the size of the holes; the holes were not tiny, but neither were they big.  They were about the size of the containers the children used for pouring.  Another reason was that children would be pouring into holes that were oriented on a slant. It takes a different level of eye-to-hand coordination to get all the corn in a hole on an angle.

To keep the mess somewhat contained, I took small boxes and set them over the holes.  I cut a hole in the bottom of each of the small boxes to align with the hole in the incline box.

Once the boxes were fitted over the holes in the top incline box, I used duct tape to tape them to the top box.  I also taped inside around the holes so there was no gap and the box would be held in place even more securely.

As the children poured corn into the holes in this top incline box, these small boxes around the holes served as a catchment for any of the corn that missed the hole.
Imagine, where would all that corn go that missed the hole and ended up in the catchment box?

Let's see what this looks like in real time.  Watch what happens when this child attempts to pour the corn from her little pail into one of the holes in the top incline. 


She actually seemed to miss the hole with almost all the corn.  Again, imagine where all that corn would go without the catchment box.

There was an unintended consequence to the catchment box: How do you get the corn out of the catchment box?  A question raised is a question answered.


Without any suggestion or encouragement, the children gladly scooped the corn from the catchment box to drop it down the hole.  It was like another job in a series of jobs to get the corn down the hole. 

I said this was a new feature to help keep down the mess around the sensory table.  How did it work?  It worked well.   
Were there still messes?  Of course there were still messes.  But in this case, most of the messes came from corn bouncing out of the holes in the sides of the boxes or from children transporting full containers of corn around the table.

I firmly believe you cannot have a sensory table without some kind of mess.  If the mess is too great, then it is usually not the children's fault; it is usually a design flaw.  Especially with cardboard, it is easy to make modifications.  Sometimes the process of modifying a structure happens quickly and sometimes it takes a long time to figure out how to minimize the mess. Heck, it only took me a couple of decades to figure out the catchment box.   One thing I have not done, but have resolved to do, is to bring the children into the process of minimizing the mess.

Messes are a part of life.  What happens when you spill?  Besides using a few choice words, you will clean it up.  Is it OK for a child to spill?  If it is part of life, why not?  Look at it this way: it is an opportunity to learn to tidy up.  The picture above shows a case in point: the child squatting in the bottom right is sweeping up some of the corn.   Does she get all the corn up?  No, but the effort is what counts.  A habit formed early may even cut down on some of those choice words when she spills as an adult because she will see it as an unavoidable part of life.