In my room students have been building whatever they can imagine using a variety of materials: different types of blocks, Legos, straws, marble runs, Magformers, etc. The only rule is that you find someone in a different class to work with and, of course, that you clean up after yourself when you are done.
Students pick any material or combination of materials they would like and get to work. The best part about this exercise is seeing the creativity and collaboration develop between middle schoolers and preschoolers and all ages in between. It is also fascinating to see how one material can be used in many different ways or capture the imagination of a whole group. Last year, I saw some amazing marble run creations materialize; this year the building straws have reigned supreme.
We had a straw arch, a building that just about reached the ceiling, and creations that started with two kids and drew most of the group into the building process before the period was over. I loved seeing Pre-K students ask tall middle schoolers to help balance them on chairs, and fifth graders helping kindergarten and second-graders solve design challenges. ("This ramp isn't working!" "Have you tried this?")
As Ms. West (Ladybugs teacher) said in her blog, there's magic in the air during these classes. The room is quietly buzzing with ideas and imagination at work. There's a lot of social learning around sharing and working collaboratively, and it is amazing to me how little teacher interaction is needed to solve issues when kids are truly engaged in creating -- they work most of the problems out themselves in the interest of completing their project.
There's also an incredible amount of spontaneous math and science learning that happens. Different kids had fun calculating how many cubes were in each straw shape and the different ways to figure that out, thought about gravity, thought about the relative strength of different shapes, thought about angles and the ways shapes fit together. In the last class, one student constructed a model of the solar system using marbles and different pieces from different sets, including a plastic cup representing the rings of Saturn.
First Friday classes are always fun, always enriching, and also enlightening. It's one of my favorite days at school, and I don't think I'm the only one who loves it!
A little organizational challenge from one group of students to the next.
Some serious concentration can be required.
This one almost reached the ceiling. note the extra support at the base.
Simultaneous building from he top and bottom.
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