At the
beginning of June, something exciting happened at kindergarten. We welcomed a
new friend into our whānau, Bluey, our blue tongued lizard. One of the reasons
we wanted a pet at kindergarten was following on from looking after our
tadpoles and frogs (you can read our blogpost about them here). When we had the
tadpoles, which of course turned into frogs, we could see first-hand how the
children were experiencing many learning opportunities, including learning to
empathise as they cared for and interacted with the small creatures.
Bluey our
lizard, came to us as just a baby, and has been warmly welcomed into our
whānau. The children simply adore him. When he arrived, one of the first things
we set about doing was thinking of a name. There were many options suggested
from all our whānau and children, and after a vote – Bluey won.
Bluey is
still only a baby, so every week we take the opportunity to measure him. It’s
been amazing to see how much he has grown.
In 10 weeks Bluey has grown an incredible 13cm, from 26cm to 39cm. The
interest in Bluey along with the care and knowledge the children have for him,
continues to grow each day. From day one many were wanting to stroke Bluey,
help me make his food, and clean out his terrarium.The children have been great leaders even with their own whānau, they have not hesitated to hold Bluey, when in fact many adults were a little more reluctant!
From this... |
...to this - 39cm - and still growing! |
Shortly after arriving, Bluey had his first skin shed with us and the children were fascinated. As you can imagine there
were lots of questions and a fair amount of concern for Bluey. Was this normal?
Did it hurt him? Was he dying? Is this how he changes his clothes? These
questions lead to lots of in-depth discussion about Bluey’s skin and this is
when many children observed how he also appears to change colour. Sometimes
Bluey’s skin is orangey in colour, sometimes it’s almost grey and at times it
appears brown. Why this happens I am leaving the children to continue
investigating together. For the moment, we are playing around with our thinking
and coming up with ideas. Basuru suggested just today, ‘So I think that in the winter the stripes will be orange and in the
summer the stripes will be grey. He’s grey now because it’s summer today (it
was a particularly warm winters day), but look, if you see, Bluey also has a
lot of black on him’.
As we look
after Bluey, and I encourage the children to observe him – to see if he likes
something, does he prefer us to be quiet or noisy?, is he content?, or scared?,
we often engage in some observational drawing of him. This is a tool we use a
great deal at Mairtown. The simple action of sitting down and drawing something that is in front of us, encourages us to study this particular thing carefully
and in-depth. In the words of Kolbe (2009)
observational drawing encourages
children to make more intricate drawings than they do from memory alone, often
leading to joyful discoveries. It is part of the process of ‘learning to see’.
Here is
some of the conversation and subsequent discoveries the children have noticed
through the observational drawing of Bluey.
Elsie: I noticed that he has black on him.
Aya: I notice
that he can walk backwards and he walks only slowly.
Isla D: I see he has a blue tongue and he likes to
climb.
Adam: I can see that he has 5 fingers like me.
Matthew: I notice how much he grown, he’s bigger than
the other term.
Arlo: Yes he’s bigger, he longer, he’s very long
now.
Amelia: Look if I measure him, he's bigger than my arm now.
Amelia: Look if I measure him, he's bigger than my arm now.
Juno: He’s got stripes, all the way down to his
tail.
Isla T: But look Juno, a stripe goes the other
way on his face, and he is scaly, there are lots of scaly bits on his head.
As we
talked about what we noticed soon our conversation moved onto what we love
about Bluey?
Aria: I love his stripes.
Isla D: And I like touching him.
Nika: I love looking after him. We look after
him in his cage all the time. Sometimes we get him out so he can have a play
around.
Isla D: And a stoke.
Nika: He does like having a stroke. We also need
to give him food, I like feeding him.
Elsie: Yes, we need to do that, we give him
apples, bananas and cat food.
Archie: He doesn’t just need food. We need to keep
him warm in his tank. He has a red heater for that.
McKenzie: And he has hay to sleep on to keep him warm
and he likes to sit on his rock and watch us.
The animal is a
conduit for learning to be human: Some propose that it is only through the
animal that we recognise our humanity (Jill Bone, 2003).
One thing I
have really enjoyed watching is the growing empathy from the children that
comes from having an animal to look after. I have been so very impressed with all
our tamariki and how gentle and concerned they all are for Bluey’s well-being. It
is the children who are the first to recognise, and then remind one another, if
they are being too rough when they handle or stroke Bluey. The care,
sensitivity and responsiveness to such a small animal has been truly heart-warming
to observe. Of course, many of our
children have animals at home so may be used to looking after pets and readily
and eagerly share this knowledge, but for many the responsibility of caring and
thinking about something other than themselves, is very new.
Having a pet…gives children
the opportunity to observe, interact and learn about animals. It can be a
valuable part of a child’s education and care experience, enriching their
learning about nature, ecology and relationships (Australian Children’s
Education and Care Quality Authority).
Empathy is
such an important part of how we live and function in society, something that I
believe needs to be developed and role-modelled within our children, yet can often
be forgotten and not considered important or relevant. However, research tells
us, ‘Empathy,
the ability to understand others and feel compassion for them, is arguably the
most defining human quality – setting us apart from…other animals. Without it,
we couldn’t function in social areas such as schools… and office workplaces that
are the cornerstones of our society… it is at its simplest, awareness
of the feelings and emotions of other people. It is a key element of emotional intelligence the link between self and others, because
it is how we as individuals understand what others are experiencing as if we were feeling it ourselves. Empathy goes far beyond sympathy, which might
be considered ‘feeling for’ someone. Empathy, instead, is ‘feeling with’
that person, through the use of imagination (world.edu global education
network, 2016).
Our children at
Mairtown play a huge role in looking after Bluey, something we want to continue
to foster and encourage. They are learning to predict his needs by thinking
about matters from the perspective of Bluey, which is an amazing skill to have.
We think Bluey is one very lucky lizard
to have so many children who love him. Or in the words of Mayson ‘I love Bluey so very very much, I just have
to kiss him to let him know’.
Ngā mihi,
Christine
I love the artwork the kids did of bluey.... so very cool
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