tinkering – Early Math Counts https://earlymathcounts.org Laying the foundation for a lifetime of achievement Mon, 30 Dec 2019 23:23:15 +0000 en-US hourly 1 183791774 Tinkering-Practical Strategies for Hands-On Math Learning https://earlymathcounts.org/tinkering-practical-strategies-for-hands-on-math-learning/ https://earlymathcounts.org/tinkering-practical-strategies-for-hands-on-math-learning/#comments Wed, 20 Dec 2017 06:49:17 +0000 http://earlymathcounts.org/?p=10131 posted by Leslie Layman

At Harry S Truman College, where I serve as coordinator and adjunct faculty in the Child Development Department, we recently had the opportunity to create Early Childhood Education lab spaces. The most unique of our labs is the ECE Tinkering Lab. T lab serves as part woodshop, part methods lab, and part technology lab and is used to support early childhood educators to deepen and fine tune their practice.

Some of the tools available to students in the tinkering lab.

Much like a good early childhood environment, the lab is not focused on getting anything in particular done. It is set up to be safe, inviting, playful, and to support early childhood professionals to have meaningful experiences during which they learn by doing. You can try, fail, and try again and then reflect upon your process. A lot of our courses use the tinkering lab, but it is very often used by our Science and Math for Young Children and our professional development workshops. In retrospect, it seems so obvious that if hands on learning works for children than it must also work for adults, but even as someone who helped planned the Tinkering Lab and many of it’s activities, I am constantly surprised by the magical, early childhood style learning that takes place in it. My students literally create and learn  things that I could not have imagined when I was planning my lessons.

It reminds me of the way in which young children construct knowledge. You cannot tell a child the laws of gravity, but you can watch them as they drop an object over and over again working like a scientist; making hypothesis, testing them, taking data, and coming to conclusions. This is also the case for math. Children learn math by interacting with it in meaningful, playful, everyday experiences; not through abstract lessons and memorization.

It can be hard to think about how a three year old might experience math as an everyday part of their play. I like to think of math as a language with which we make sense of our world and communicate ideas to others. Tinkering, or just messing about with things to see how they work, is an engaging way to integrate playful math into the classroom. It also relates to some of my favorite concepts of Mitch Resnick’s (Author of Lifelong Kindergarten) : low floors/high ceilings and hard fun. Tinkering is a low floor/high ceiling activity because while there is no limit to how simple the activity can be made, there is also no limit to how complex it can be either. Tinkering also embodies “hard fun” the idea that we learn best, work hardest, and enjoy ourselves most when we are being challenged doing something we are truly passionate about.

A professional development participant struggles with what to do next on her project.

Think about a class that wonders what is inside their broken toy? Why doesn’t it work? Can we fix it? If you let them take the toy apart they learn about geometry and shape, they will likely organically begin to sort and classify the pieces, they will learn about number as they find there are multiples  of the same piece inside, and they will learn about size as they try to find the right screwdriver for each screw. Even better if you and the children don’t know what will be inside. This is where that  learning magic happens; you couldn’t have anticipated the result.

After predicting what might be inside, students take apart a broken laptop.

Another of my favorite tinkering activities that brings hands on experiences to math is a build your own marble run. A cheap and easy way to do this is to get pegboard from a local hardware store and then cut wood cooking skewers down into small pieces. You can give the children recycled materials, pvc pipe, paper, and other found materials to build the marble run and let them balance it on the dowels, tape it, or clip it together with clothespins.

Alumni, faculty, and their children worked together to build this marble run.

This particular activity is one of my favorites because the math: angles, geometry, calculations of speed and distance, etc., is embedded in the fun, children get very excited by watching the marbles. It is also very frustrating. Letting children sit with this tolerable frustration of tinkering with something that doesn’t work exactly as they would like builds not only the content knowledge, but also the self regulation and motivation skills that young children need opportunities to practice. I like to give older children (and adults) a specific challenge.  I might ask them to make the marble go very, fast or make a noise. I also like to have the children work in pairs or small groups. There is nothing that builds friendships and relationship skills better than getting through a frustrating project together and being proud of the outcome.

To me this is the hardest part of the instruction, trusting yourself and that you have set the learners up with the confidence, prerequisite skills, materials and environment that they need and then really stepping back and letting them learn. Really let them get stuck and figure something out on their own. This is why I often plan learning activities to which I don’t know the correct answer, because then I can’t spoil the learning for anyone else by just telling them what to do. The other difficult thing about this type of teaching is that it requires a lot of planning. You have to know your learners, know yourself, and constantly be on the lookout for that just right experience that is going to give a child the opportunity to craft knowledge for themselves at the exact moment when they need it.

That’s just what I would hope for early learners future success with math as well. That the skill that they needed to solve a problem would be there for them in the exact moment that they really need it.

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Another Thought About Tinkering https://earlymathcounts.org/another-thought-about-tinkering/ https://earlymathcounts.org/another-thought-about-tinkering/#comments Thu, 26 Jun 2014 14:24:47 +0000 http://www.mathathome.org/blog1/?p=2838 One of the best ways I know to incorporate the “Tinkering Philosophy” into an early childhood program is through a really nice woodworking area.  Woodworking is one of those practices that many teachers feel very uncomfortable with.  I see this when I visit programs. Rarely, do I see a woodworking table open and available for the children, although many programs have them (they are usually piled high with other stuff-clearly not in use, not unlike a lot of water tables…that’s another story for another day).

Allowing children to build and create using tools and materials IS tinkering.  As long as nobody is telling that what they have to do or make, and they have the freedom and autonomy to explore on their own, they are tinkering.

The best way to get comfortable with this, is to create easy-to-follow directions for safety.

All tinkerers must wear safety goggles at all times while tinkering.

All tinkerers must wait for a grown-up to come and supervise the use of tools.

Only 2 tinkerers allowed at the table at a time.

All tinkering tools must remain on the tinkering table.

That should do it.  Now the children can explore the tools and materials safely and while doing so, they are problem-solving, estimating, designing, sorting, and measuring.  Tinkering is a direct route to early math.  Yeah!

 

 

 

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One-Minute Tinkering Video https://earlymathcounts.org/one-minute-tinkering-video/ https://earlymathcounts.org/one-minute-tinkering-video/#respond Wed, 18 Jun 2014 14:20:15 +0000 http://www.mathathome.org/blog1/?p=2826 This one-minute video explains the philosophy of  “Tinkering” far better than I ever could.

Check it out.

 

 

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Tinkering https://earlymathcounts.org/tinkering/ https://earlymathcounts.org/tinkering/#respond Thu, 12 Jun 2014 10:27:52 +0000 http://www.mathathome.org/blog1/?p=2814 Tinkering is a bold and exciting approach to curriculum that assumes several basic truths about children.

1.  Children are smarter than you think they are.

2.  Children are born problem-solvers.

3.  Children are capable.

4.  Children have great ideas.

5. Children learn from failure.

6. Children are competent.

It also assumes several basic truths about early childhood teachers.

1.  ECE teachers trust children.

2.  ECE teachers believe that children are capable and competent.

3.  ECE teachers believe that there is value in failing and trying again.

4.  ECE teachers are flexible about their expectations of children’s products.

5.  ECE teachers can step out and allow children to experiment on their own.

6.  ECE teachers know that with appropriate supervision, children can use many adult tools.

7.  ECE teachers believe that children are inherently curious.

Next week I will tell you a little bit more about Tinkering and ways you can include it in your program.

 

 

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