Blog three - Crayons
By: Michelle Wheatley
Date: 23/03/2013
Here's a little video tip, great for recycling old crayons within the centre or at home. Also a great little activity to get the children involved.
In my centre we are very fortunate to have all our arts and crafts resources available to both the children and teachers at all times. Each room in our centre has an art corner where the shelves are stocked with anything from paper and paint to collage materials and resources to paint with. Each room has been given a pot of 100 crayons and we are lucky enough to have these made available to our infants.
Arts and crafts is a main interest to our children in our toddler room (2 years old) where I do spend some of my time when our head teacher is out of the centre. When I was last in this room (a little over three weeks ago) the children had been creating self portraits of their whole bodies. The permanent teacher in the room had found a roll of paper that we were able to roll out on the ground and then have the children lye down on this and trace them. After the children and I had finished cutting the traced bodies out they all spread their pictures out and used the crayons we had in the rooms to draw on these bodies. I noticed the younger group in this room used a lot of colour and mainly had little scribbles. The older children however still used a lot of colour but coloured in certain areas with certain colours. The children had made sure they had filled as much of the area they were colouring with a crayon before moving onto the next colour and the next space on the body. (I wish I was able to get a photo of the finished products before they went home to parents). We created learning stories on each of the children during this activity, we did a group learning story as well as individual learning stories for the different learning each child accomplished.
Ministry of education (1996) states that "Children gain experience in using communication technologies such as crayons, paintbrushes, pencils, calculators, books, and computers" (p.97). The children have a cupboard fill of art materials in this particular activity and they have chosen to use the crayons to draw on their own bodies. The children in this room have developed a sense of independence because they have had the resources made available and have made a choice which resource they would like to use and what colours they would like to use. I think as their teacher I have facilitate their learning by providing them with a range of resources with the space to go through with this activity and encouraged them to make decisions on their own. MacNaughton and Williams (2009) states that "As a teaching technique, facilitating refers to the process of making children's learning easier. Facilitation therefore, refers to all the things staff do to make children's learning more possible, such as scheduling, selecting materials, organising space, and interacting verbally and non-verbally with them" (p.81). Each child told a story with their drawings, even though they may look like scribbles on a piece of paper to some people, i like to take children's artwork seriously. Because the children that I happened to be working with talked full sentences I was able to ask them open ended questions. It was a great opportunity for me to get to know some of these children individually and expand on the children's language and social skills. MacNaughton and Williams states that "Asking questions to children provides them with an opportunity to think and to use language in a functional manner by allowing them to report observations, describe experiences, and make predictions" (p.153).
On a final note Gonzalez-Mena states that "A toddler's scribbles aren't just scribbles; they are age appropriate art" (p.427).







