light houses for childcare

4

Click here to load reader

Upload: denise-mac-giolla-ri-athlone-institute-of-technology

Post on 06-Jul-2015

234 views

Category:

Education


1 download

DESCRIPTION

Light houses for Chidcare

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Light houses for Childcare

Approaches to Childhood learning – Individual Activity

Name: A E

Date: 5/11/2014 Week number: 8 Name and Picture: Lighthouse

Materials used:

Crayons Paper plate

Black marker

Red and white paper

Tin foil

Scissors

Pritt stick Time plan:

5 minutes to gather materials

20 minutes to carry out

5 minutes to tidy up

Room and/or equipment requirements: Flat table

Chairs

Scissors

Page 2: Light houses for Childcare

General Aim of activity – To make a lighthouse out of a cardboard tube

Specific Learning outcomes of the activity To use fine motor skills sticking glue onto paper strips and putting them

on the roll

Co-ordination to put on the strips straight onto the roll

Steps for making or doing activity:

1. Gather what is needed 2. Get an adult to cut out strips of red and white paper 3. Carefully glue the strips onto the cardboard roll. 4. Colour in the paper plate to look like the ground, grass and water. 5. Use a black crayon or marker to draw on windows and a door. 6. Lastly roll a piece of tinfoil for the top to look like the light.

How will the child/ren benefit from the activity?

Working individually

Learning colours

Learning about what a lighthouse does

Developing their “Hand Eye Coordination” putting the strips onto the lighthouse

Age group/s: (development level) Suitable for 4 years and up

How would you make the activity more inclusive?

I would have the stripes cut out and the children would just have to stick them on the cardboard roll

Page 3: Light houses for Childcare

How would you adapt the activity to suit outside/inside? This could be brought outside by bringing large round building blocks to

stack up to make it into a lighthouse. Simplify this activity:

1. Colour in the plate 2. Stick strips onto the roll 3. Put tinfoil as the light on the top and draw windows with a marker

Variations for the activity: How could you vary the activity?

Instead of doing white and red stripes, you could let the children decide what colour they did the stripes.

The Learning outcomes linked to Aistear

Exploring and thinking

Identity and Belonging

Well-being Communicating

Aim 1; 1, 5, 6 Aim 1; 3, 5, 6 Aim 1; 3, 4,6 Aim 1; 2, 6 Aim 2; 1, 4, 6 Aim 2; 2 Aim 2; 1, 3 Aim 2; 1, 4, 6

Aim 3; 1, 2, 4 Aim3; 2, 3, 5 Aim3; 1, 4 Aim3; 3, 5 Aim 4; 1, 2, 3 Aim4; 1, 2, 6 Aim4; 1, 3, 4 Aim 4; 2, 6

Safety concerns If the children cut out some of the strips that they cut themselves

Paper cuts

Could the activity link to an external activity?

I got the idea from doing the book seen in the picture. The book is called “The Lighthouse Keepers Lunch”.

The story would be read to the children before making the lighthouse so they children understand what it is, a lighthouse does.

If I was doing this with a class, I would do it near the Summer time, around the time that the children would hear about going to the seaside and the beach.

The topic is quite broad as you could even go into teaching them about sea creatures e.g. dolphins, sharks etc.

Extensions for the activity:

History: Local studies/explore some feature of local environment/purpose of construction/ Continuity and change over time

Geography - Human environment/ features of the built and natural environment – Maps, the globe

Page 4: Light houses for Childcare

Interactions with children: Ask children questions such as:

What do ye know about the sea?

What do you think a lighthouse does?

Have you ever seen a lighthouse before? Problem solving element?

Starting in the middle of the roll with gluing on the stripes or starting at the top/bottom

Using crayons or paint for painting the paper plate

Evaluation of activity: What did think of the activity? I enjoyed the activity and teaching in to part of my class

I was able explain how each part looked like a lighthouse e.g. tinfoil is the light

The group I was teaching told me they enjoyed the activity Additional information: (images, books, articles, video links, websites etc.)

Book – The lighthouse keepers lunch Summary of your personal learning in points (at least 4) from doing the activity;

I learned how to teach an activity to group of 6 in my class

I learned how to apply aistear to an activity

I am confident answering questions about the activity

I found I was not nervous while completing the peer teaching