Seekers of Meaning

New Video

Over the last few weeks I have been filming the children as they explore the Art Studio. To read more about our Art studio you can go back to last weeks blog.

The children's current shared interest is construction and building houses from clay, bricks, sticks and blocks. Some of that is captured in our brand new video that you can watch here-

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4-59qb9GgdQ

 


Sticks and stone games for developing balance in children

Stick and Stone Balancing Activity

Resources – Sticks, a stone and a bowl

Implementation

Use your problem solving and fine motor skills to lay your sticks out and balance the stone so it doesn’t fall through into the bowl. As a challenge limit the amount of sticks and use a smaller stone!

Intent – Learning goals

Characteristics of Effective Learning

Playing and Exploring –

Being willing to ‘have a go’

  • Initiating activities
  • Seeking challenge
  • Showing a ‘can do’ attitude
  • Taking a risk, engaging in new experiences, and learning by trial and error

Active Learning –

Being involved and concentrating

  • Maintaining focus on their activity for a period of time
  • Showing high levels of energy, fascination
  • Not easily distracted
  • Paying attention to details

Keeping on trying

  • Persisting with activity when challenges occur
  • Showing a belief that more effort or a different approach will pay off
  • Bouncing back after difficulties

Enjoying achieving what they set out to do

  • Showing satisfaction in meeting their own goals
  • Being proud of how they accomplished something – not just the end result
  • Enjoying meeting challenges for their own sake rather than external rewards or praise

Creating and Thinking Critically

Having their own ideas

  • Thinking of ideas
  • Finding ways to solve problems
  • Finding new ways to do things

Making links

  • Making predictions
  • Testing their ideas

Choosing ways to do things

  • Planning, making decisions about how to approach a task, solve a problem and reach a goal
  • Checking how well their activities are going
  • Changing strategy as needed
  • Reviewing how well the approach worked

 

 

 

 


Feeling stones creative ideas | Inspirations Nurseries

Feelings Stones

Resources: Stones, pens/paint

For the body- Clay, mud, play dough or sticks

Implementation

In these unprecedented times we are all aware how important it is to be extra aware and look after our well being. Your children could use play dough to make a body and parents or children could draw pictures of a range of emotions on stones, so then each day your child can choose how they are feeling and talk about that emotion and the reasons why.

Intent- Learning Goals

Personal Social and Emotional Development – Managing feelings and behaviour

22-36 months

  • Can express their own feelings such as sad, happy, cross,scared, worried.

30-50 months

  • Aware of own feelings, and knows that some actions and words can hurt others’ feelings.

 Personal Social and Emotional Development – Self confidence and self awaremess

22-36 months

  • Expresses own preferences and interests.

30-50 months

  • Can select and use activities and resources with help.
  • Welcomes and values praise for what they have done.
  • Enjoys responsibility of carrying out small tasks.
  • Shows confidence in asking adults for help.

40-60 months

  • Confident to speak to others about own needs, wants, interests and opinions.
  • Can describe self in positive terms and talk about abilities.

Communication and Language – Speaking

22-36 months

  • Uses language as a powerful means of widening contacts, sharing feelings, experiences and thoughts.

40-60 months

  • Uses talk to organise, sequence and clarify thinking, ideas, feelings and events.

Impact

How did this activity go? Please use this space to record any findings, adaptions, reflections and quotes from your children. We would love you to email them back to us or share them on Tapestry, Instagram or Facebook.

 


Matching quantity to numerals | Some inspiration

Matching Quantity to Numerals

Resources: Stones, pens, numbers

Collect up all those stones you find on your walks and match them to the numbers. You can write the numbers on a piece of paper or use any numbers you have. As an extension you could continue to 20.

Intent- Learning Goals

Maths - Numbers

30-50 months

Recites numbers in order to 10.

  • Knows that numbers identify how many objects are in a set.
  • Beginning to represent numbers using fingers, marks on paper

or pictures.

  • Sometimes matches numeral and quantity correctly.
  • Shows an interest in number problems.
  • Shows an interest in representing numbers.

40-60

  • Recognise some numerals of personal significance.
  • Recognises numerals 1 to 5+
  • Counts up to three or four objects by saying one number name for each item.
  • Counts objects to 10, and beginning to count beyond 10.
  • Counts out up to six objects from a larger group

Impact

How did this activity go? Please use this space to record any findings, adaptions, reflections and quotes from your children. We would love you to email them back to us or share them on Tapestry, Instagram or Facebook.

 

 


Letter stones game

Letter Stones Activity

Resources- Stones, Pens or paint

Implementation

Go on a scavenger hunt in the beautiful sunshine for more stones. Children can practise their name by matching the letter stones to a written name card. If they already know how to form their name they can make it with the stones independently. The stones can be further used to make other names your children may know such as mummy or daddy, or a sibling’s name or even a favourite story character’s name copied from a book, e.g. Stick Man or Stanley! You could muddle up some familiar names or words for your child to form correctly. Your children may be able to copy or independently form other familiar or significant words and simple sentences using the stones, or even order the stones alphabetically.

Intent- Learning Goals

Literacy – Reading

30-50

  • Recognises familiar words and signs such as own name and advertising logos.

40-60

  • Hears and says the initial sound in words.
  • Links sounds to letters, naming and sounding the letters of the alphabet.
  • Begins to read words and simple sentences

Literacy – Writing

40-60

  • Uses some clearly identifiable letters to communicate meaning, representing some sounds correctly and in sequence.
  • Writes own name and other things such as labels and captions.
  • Attempts to write short sentences in meaningful contexts.

Impact

Please use this space to record any findings, adaptions, reflections and quotes from your children. We would love you to email them back to us or share them on Tapestry.

 


Activity 6- Easter Stone Hunt

Resources: Stones, paint, pens

Implementation

As we don’t want to waste our eggs or have to buy a lot of chocolate at this time, why not find some large stones on a scavenger hunt and decorate them. If you don’t have pens or paint you could make berry, beetroot, paprika, turmeric and many other natural paint colours to use. If your pens or paints are limited you could just number the stones and challenge your children to find, identify and order the stones to their individual ability.

Intent- Learning Goals

Understanding the World – People and Communities

22-36 months

  • Learns that they have similarities and differences that connect

them to, and distinguish them from, others.

30-50 months

  • Knows some of the things that make them unique, and can

talk about some of the similarities and differences in relation to

friends or family.

40-60 months

  • Enjoys joining in with family customs and routines.

Maths – Numbers

40-60 months

  • Recognises numerals 1 to 5+

Physical Development – Moving and Handling

22-36 months

  • Shows control in holding and using jugs to pour, hammers,

books and mark-making tools.

  • May be beginning to show preference for dominant hand.

30-50 months

  • Holds pencil between thumb and two fingers, no longer using whole-hand grasp.
  • Holds pencil near point between first two fingers and thumb and uses it with good control.

40-60 months

  • Shows a preference for a dominant hand.
  • Begins to use anticlockwise movement and retrace vertical lines.
  • Uses a pencil and holds it effectively

Impact

Please use this space to record any findings, adaptions, reflections and quotes from your children. We would love you to email them back to us or share them on Tapestry.

 


Activity 5- Stick Models

Resources: Sticks and home made play dough  or messy but fun naturally sourced mud or clay.

Easy make at home play dough recipe: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jv73CEzY1jg

Implementation

To extend on your 2D stick shapes, have a go making 3D shapes or models using your sticks and playdough/mud to hold them together.

You may have your own ideas of what works best for you

that you can also share with us.

What would you like your model to look like?

What you will use?

How will you? What else might work? What could you do differently?

What could you add? What does it remind you of?

Can you tell me about your model?

Intent

 Characteristics of Effective Learning – Creating and Thinking Critically

Having their own ideas

  • Thinking of ideas
  • Finding ways to solve problems
  • Finding new ways to do things

Making links

  • Making links and noticing patterns in their experience
  • Making predictions
  • Testing their ideas
  • Developing ideas of grouping, sequences, cause and effect

Choosing ways to do things

  • Planning, making decisions about how to approach a task,solve a problem and reach a goal
  • Checking how well their activities are going
  • Changing strategy as needed
  • Reviewing how well the approach worked

Maths – Shape Space and Measure

22-36 months

  • Notices simple shapes and patterns in pictures.

30-50 months

  • Shows an interest in shape and space by playing with shapes or making arrangements with objects.
  • Uses positional language.
  • Shows interest in shape by sustained construction activity or by talking about shapes or arrangements.
  • Uses shapes appropriately for tasks.

40-60 months

  • Beginning to use mathematical names for ‘solid’ 3D shapes and ‘flat’ 2D shapes, and mathematical terms to describe shapes.
  • Uses familiar objects and common shapes to create and recreate patterns and build models.

Expressive Arts and Design – Exploring using Media and Materials

30-50 months

  • Uses various construction materials.
  • Beginning to construct, stacking blocks vertically and horizontally, making enclosures and creating spaces.
  • Joins construction pieces together to build and balance.

40-60 months

  • Understands that different media can be combined to create new effects.
  • Manipulates materials to achieve a planned effect.
  • Constructs with a purpose in mind, using a variety of resources.
  • Selects appropriate resources and adapts work where necessary.
  • Selects tools and techniques needed to shape, assemble and join materials they are using.

Impact

Please use this space to record any findings, adaptions, reflections and quotes from your children. We would love you to email them back to us or share them on Tapestry.


Home School Activity 3- Make Your Own Stick Man

Implementation

Resources: Sticks

Use the different sized sticks you’ve collected to make a Stick Man.

How will you join them together?

What could you use for his eyes?

Take a photograph of your Stick Man and share it with us!

 

Intent- Learning Objectives

Moving and Handling

22-36 months

  • Shows control in holding and using jugs to pour, hammers, books and mark-making tools.
  • Beginning to use three fingers

30-50 months

  • Uses one-handed tools and equipment

40-60 months

  • Uses simple tools to effect changes to materials.• Handles tools, objects, construction and malleable materials safely and with increasing control.

Literacy

22-36 months

  • Has some favourite stories, rhymes, songs, poems or jingles

30-50 months

  • Describes main story settings, events and principal characters.• Shows interest in illustrations and print in books and print in the environment.

40-60 months

  • Uses vocabulary and forms of speech that are increasingly influenced by their experiences of books.• Enjoys an increasing range of books.

Being Imaginative

22-36 months

  • Beginning to use representation to communicate, e.g. drawing a line and saying ‘That’s me.’

30-50 months

  • Captures experiences and responses with a range of media, such as music, dance and paint and other materials or words.

40-60 months

  • Creates simple representations of events, people and objects.

Exploring and using media and materials

 30-50 months

  • Joins construction pieces together to build and balance.• Realises tools can be used for a purpose.

40-60 months

  • Understands that different media can be combined to create new effects. • Manipulates materials to achieve a planned effect.• Constructs with a purpose in mind, using a variety of resources.• Uses simple tools and techniques competently and appropriately.• Selects appropriate resources and adapts work where necessary.• Selects tools and techniques needed to shape, assemble andjoin materials they are using.

Technology

30-50 months

  • Knows how to operate simple equipment, e.g. turns on CD player and uses remote control

 Impact-

How did this activity go? Please use this space to record any findings, adaptions, reflections and quotes from your children. We would love you to email them back to us or share them on Tapestry, Instagram or Facebook.


Story Time- Open ended Question ideas

This applies to all books you may be reading with your children, not just stickman.

Looking at the Cover

Can you find the Front Cover?

What can you see on the front cover?

What might this book be about?

Can you find/point to the title?

What might happen in the story?

Parent can read the title and ask again what might happen.

Talk about the Author/Illustrator and any related books

 Inside the Book

What is happening on this page?

Can you turn the next page?

How do you think the character feels? Why?

How would you feel?

What might happen next?

Do you know what that word means?

What might happen at the end of the story?

 When Finished

Can you remember the characters in the story?

What happened in the story?

What happened to this character in the story?

What did you find out?

Did you like this book…why?

What was your favourite part?

Who was your favourite character?

Can you re-tell the story in your own words?

Do you like how the story ended?

Can you think of another way the story could have ended?

 We suggest your child listens to the story with you many times over a week and is able to look at the book/video independently when chooses to. Your child will become familiar with the story, characters, depth of the story messages, rhyme and phrases, illustrations and even letter/word recognition. Hopefully they will be able to retell the story, talk in more detail about the characters and their feelings/actions, use their imagination to change parts of the story or rhyme, draw simple representations of the characters or main events, role play the story, copy words/label pictures from the story or share retelling with younger siblings.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6FlKIjVeNY0&t=18s


Home School Activity 2: Sticks

Resources: Sticks

Implementation

We see a lot of you found sticks during your scavenger hunt, so using these sticks, encourage your children to look at the sizes of them and ask what they can see.

Support them if necessary to place the sticks into size order using mathematical language of size and length, long, short, biggest, smallest, medium etc.

Extension – using a stone, hands, Lego or what your child believes would be appropriate, (trial and error and problem solving) you could measure the sticks and record your findings with any representation suitable with your child’s ability, such as drawing pictures, taking photographs, writing digits.

Intent- Learning Objectives-

Here's what your children will get out of this activity, within their age brackets.

Maths- Shape, Space and Measure

22-36 months

  • Beginning to categorise objects according to properties such as shape or size.
  • Begins to use the language of size

30-50months

  • Uses positional language.

40-60 months

  • Orders two or three items by length or height

PSED – Personal, Social, Emotional Development

30-50 months

  • Can select and use activities and resources with help.
  • Welcomes and values praise for what they have done.
  • Enjoys responsibility of carrying out small tasks.
  • Shows confidence in asking adults for help.

40-60 months

  • Confident to speak to others about own needs, wants, interests and opinions.
  • Can describe self in positive terms and talk about abilities.

 Impact- Please use this space (or a sheet of paper) to record any findings, adaptions, reflections and quotes from your children. We would love you to email them back to us or share them on Tapestry.

Happy Measuring.

The VIN Team (Virtual Inspirations Nursery)