One of the obvious places you could put up a peg board is in your woodworking area.
Rather than having all of your tools all jumbled up in a box under the woodworking table, hang a simple piece of pegboard up over the table and carefully organize your tools so they all fit. Once you have them in place, lay the entire thing down on the ground and carefully draw an outline around each tool so the children can match the shape and size of the tool with the space where it belongs. This will keep your tools organized while also asking children to use their math skills to put their materials away.
One of my favorite ways to use peg boards is to hang them up at the children’s eye level and supply the children with a selection of hooks and clips so they can create their own wall project.
Next, put out a box of tubes, yarn, and pegs (the kind you have from your small pegboard collection are perfect). Show the children how the pegboard hooks work. They may be a little complicated at first, but they will get the hang of it. Explain how the hooks can be moved around the board to provide anchors for their work. Provide a few examples of how the hooks can be used with the tubes and the yarn.
This example comes from the hallway at Truman College. See how the tubes are set up to create a ball run for small balls, like ping pong balls. The balls move through the tubes and drop down to the next level. This requires an enormous amount of motor planning and spatial awareness and may take a while for children to create. Those who are very familiar with marble towers may have a greater understanding of the mechanics behind these kinds of designs. Make sure you also provide buckets or bins to catch the balls when they come to the bottom, otherwise you will have them rolling all over the classroom. Large marbles are another good option. They move a lot faster than ping pong balls so it might be interesting to encourage children to “race” the balls and experiment with speed.
Notice the addition of the upside down bottle. The wide bottom allows the balls to drop in and then they come out of the spout and back into the adjoined tube. They have also added colorful pipe cleaners; a tool that is extremely satisfying to the young child. They can be bent in any direction and are strong enough to hold stuff together. Awesome ideas.
Clothespins are another inexpensive and interesting addition you can provide. They work well when clipped onto the yarn, and if you have the multicolored variety, children can create patterns with them. They can use them to hang things off of their wall project, which sounds easy enough at first, but will require planning and estimating. Heavy things may slip so the children will have to figure out that they need to use more clips or hangs things that are lighter or smaller. There are so many uses for a board like this but leaving it as open-ended as possible creates a blank canvas on which children can work.
I’d love to hear from you about what you might add to a classroom pegboard?
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