When
preparing our environment for the beginning of term 1, we collected some
beautiful sunflowers, with long curvy stems from a local grower, and placed
them in the middle of our kindergarten room.
Sunflowers
are an amazing flower, they seem to hold a certain power to capture, mesmerise
and fascinate children. I can only wonder why; perhaps it is because each
flower was taller than all our children, or perhaps it is their sunny, almost
face like heads? Nevertheless, when the first day of term arrived, and our
children enthusiastically entered Mairtown, I noticed once again how many were immediately
drawn, almost instinctively to the stunning sunflowers.
For many of
our returning children, on seeing these beautiful flowers, they began to do
something we value greatly at Mairtown, they began to draw what they could see
(observational drawing). This type of drawing is a tool we use all the time,
and the children at Mairtown soon become comfortable and familiar with doing
(and also seeing others) engaged in this wonderful method of learning.
When students draw pictures of things they see,
it enhances their observations of these things (Haydock)
Another aspect
of learning that I value hugely as a teacher are ‘thinking skills’. When working
with children, I always aim to support each of them in their own thinking. Nothing
excites me more when I’m working in a small group and I see and hear children
explaining things to one another, offering creative ideas, suggesting
alternative interpretations or devising a plan; that is when I know they are
all engaged in the language of thinking.
It is when
children are thinking that they are more likely to show commitment and interest
to their work or play, this is when they find more meaning as they begin to make
connections between home, kindergarten and everyday life, and perhaps most
importantly they begin (with lots of thinking practice) to display a positive
attitude towards thinking and learning. An attitude that demonstrates they are
open-minded, not closed-minded; curious rather than bored; and interestingly that
they have just the right amount of appropriate scepticism, for instance of not
being satisfied with ‘just the facts’, but wanting to understand more, rather
than being gullible.
I know I
will have written this before but, what I believe is critical, is encouraging
children ‘how to think’ as opposed to ‘what to think’. Gone are the days in
education that children should believe something because a teacher told them
too, rather in today’s ever-changing society it is important to teach children
to ask questions, to analyse information, to recognize facts, to be critical in
their thinking processes – a skill that they will use successfully throughout
life.
So, how do
you teach children to be critical thinkers. There are known to be three steps. Expect it: We encourage children to
defend their ideas and to answer their own questions as they wonder. Model it: As a teacher, I role model my
own thinking and often say to the children ‘I don’t know the answers, but let’s
play around with some ideas’ to show that it is the thinking that is more
important than the answer. And lastly reward
it: When good thinking happens, I always praise it ‘I Love how you are
thinking really hard about that idea’.
So how does
this all relate to our beautiful sunflowers? We are still very much at the beginning
of our work with these amazing flowers. Some children, as I have mentioned are
using drawing to help with their thinking, others come to join in discussions
that are taking place, while others quietly examine the sunflowers with their
senses, looking and smelling – but hopefully I can encourage all of them to
start to think deeply about the flowers.
Some tools
I use when working with the children to encourage thinking are some simple
questions: What do you already know about sunflowers? What can you see when you
look at the sunflowers? What do you think? and what do you wonder when working
with the sunflowers?
With these questions,
you can almost visibility see the children’s thinking progress. As the children
talk to me I can often see how they are making connections between new ideas
they are having and their prior knowledge. It also encourages them to take
stock of their friend’s ideas, to puzzle some of their thinking through and to
reflect back on what they are learning.
Beautiful sunflowers from HydroHealthy |
As I
mentioned we are at the very beginning of this work, and as always, I will be
guided by the children as to the next steps of their learning. I will continue
to work at the children’s pace, listen to their interests and curiosities and
allow the children over the next few weeks to guide where our thinking and inquiry
will take us.
However, I
would love to share with you a little bit of our early thinking to date, along
with some of the stunning art work that is being produced along the way.
Me: What do you know about sunflowers?
Lilly: I
know they are a flower
Matthew:
And they are yellow.
Basuru: I
know they have lots of seeds in the middle and the leaves are green.
Ezra: I
know lots as I have planted sunflowers at my place with grandmamma. You start
with a seed, then it’s in the dirt. They need sun.
Consider art as a ‘thinking tool’ (Robertson,2000)
Me: What do you notice as you look at the
sunflowers?
Basuru: I
notice there is a white thing in the middle of the seeds, I wonder what that
is? And I notice they have spikey things coming out the back, and when you
touch the stem it feels like salty.
Max: The
stalk is spikey.
Ezra: No,
it’s not spikey its soft. And I notice this one must have drowned because it
all downy (the flower was beginning to die) and that these have no seeds, they
are different to the ones at my place. And some are taller than me and some are
not.
Freya: I
notice there is black in the middle, with little spikey points around it, and
there are leaves hanging and they are in a vase of water.
Matthew: I notice
it’s a circle and the petals are like bananas and the leaves are really big
with lines on them.
Max: I
notice the drops of water (in the centre of the flower).
What do you think when you look at the sunflowers?
Max: Well,
I think about that water. I think it has the water from the water up the stalk,
up to the petals and up to the face.
Alfie: I’m
thinking they make me feel happy as they make me smile heaps.
Aya: I
think that sunflowers can make you feel too. I feel excited and a bit happy
when I see sunflowers and I think about all the sunflowers that have been
picked.
Me: What do you wonder?
Freya: I wonder
why that bit (points to a part where a leaf has been cut off) looks all yucky,
but the flower looks pretty?
Lachlan:
Why does it look sad?
Basuru: I
wonder lots. I wonder why inside it’s a pattern I think, like jewellery
diamonds. And I wonder what’s under that middle. And I wonder what these things
are on the leaves (the veins), they look like a rib cage and I wonder why they always follow the sun?
Lilly: I
wonder if sunflowers are dangerous?
Alfie: I
wonder why the petals are a little bit down, I think it might be the wind, and
I wonder what the lines in the petals are, I think it might be for water.
Wonder is an
important motivator for life long learning (Wilson 1997).
I hope that
you too can see the power of thinking and how this assists children in their
ability to deepen their knowledge and to make connections and discoveries about
the world in which they live. Who knows where we will take our sunflower work next?
This will all depend on the fascinating wonderings of our children.
A huge big thank you to HydroHealthy for supplying us with such inspiring sunflowers. Nicola and Murray run a wonderful local business selling lots of delicious homegrown and homemade produce. Check out their Facebook page here.
Hei konā
mai,
Christine
Another beautiful, inspiring post, as always. Thank you!
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