About Us

My photo
Offering a small school atmosphere for the Corvallis-Philomath community since 1984

Tuesday, June 7, 2011

Practical Life Fun in the Summer Sun

In the Montessori environment, we have an area of curriculum we call Practical Life. This includes activities that help us to care for our space and ourselves and it is really the heart and soul of a primary environment. Kids of all ages enjoy these activities. We see 3-year-old kids washing chalkboards in the morning and then we see our oldest kids, 6 and 7 years of age washing them in the afternoon, too! The youngest kids do it to develop themselves and the eldest are usually doing it to support and nurture the life of the classroom. They see the chalkboards are dirty and want them clean! However, I got the impression today, which is our 2nd to the last day of school, that this older boy I saw washing chalkboard after chalkboard, that he was doing it rather out of nostalgia. Perhaps I am reading too much into it, but this boy is about to graduate. I know he loves our school, loves practical life activities and perhaps realizes that this is his last opportunity to wash chalkboards here at school.

The developmental skills that are honed in activities such as scrubbing, sewing and preparing food are many. They help a child to order her mind as she gathers the necessary materials, places them just so and follows the sequence of activity necessary for success. She learns to coordinate her movements, both large and small, develop her balance and kinesthetic sense as she reaches and stretches and she synchronizes her visual and motor skills. She learns to care for her environment and show love to the things in it, both living and non-living. We believe that the act of polishing the leaves of a plant help us to feel an intimacy with plants that can extend to the whole botanical world. Cleaning our guinea pig's cage or brushing the dog builds connection with the animal world. When we show care for an inanimate thing, like when we polish a brass plate, we are showing respect for the earth which provided the raw material to create it and to the human being who spent a part of his precious time making it.

Practical Life activities also really lend themselves to getting a child into concentration. If the work meets that child's needs, she will repeat and repeat the activity. Her attention may be called away, but she will return to the task with focus. She will conclude by cleaning up her work space and returning the tools to their proper places with a calm, centered energy. She feels so satisfied because not only did she accomplish something outside of herself, but within herself, she has somehow grown and met a developmental need. She is unaware of this, of course, but a keen observer of the child can see the peace that follows such exertion.

If you provide for your child a small bucket, a sponge, scrub brush, a bar of soap, a washcloth or handtowel, you have all you need for various scrubbing activities. Using the process of wetting, applying soap with the scrub brush, rinsing and drying, one can clean all kinds of things. A child can wash the deck or porch, patio furniture, picnic table, Big Wheel, scooter, bicycle, automobile tires and wheels, dirty garden boots, the front steps, the sidewalk, etc. Give her a spray bottle of vinegar/water and let her wash the sliding glass doors. A little petroleum jelly will shine her patent leather Mary Janes and your favorite purse. Give your son the juicer and some lemons, limes and oranges and make some Summerade! Children love juicing. It really lets them exert themselves. Children love to put maximum physical effort into a thing. They'll move a stack of firewood from one side of the yard to the other, then will move it all back! A wheelbarrow of heavy bricks is such fun to push. A wagon full of rocks is great fun to pull. Sweeping and raking is also enjoyed by children. The list is endless!

Place these tools where your child can access them easily. If they don't know how to use them, demonstrate one of them today and one tomorrow. They will probably make use of them. If not, try again another day. Remember, the purpose of all this is not the end result. Your windows will be streaky, your woodpile will be less neatly stacked than if you did it yourself and you may need to wipe the excess Vaseline off your patent leather purse. But your child will be developing themselves mentally and physically and will feel like he/she is contributing to the well-being of your family. I wish you all a glorious summer. I plan to keep blogging, but away from the children, I may lack inspiration!

Best Regards,
Doni

No comments:

Post a Comment