Showing posts with label Block Center. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Block Center. Show all posts

Monday, July 23, 2012


This clip is from the Bowling Green State University Child Development Center home page covering a FEW of the things that children gain from playing in these areas.  It covers all Learning Areas, so check it out!  I've chosen to include only the portion here on Blocks. Click on the link below for the entire article.

Blocks child playing with blocks
  • symbolic representation
  • patterns
  • symmetry
  • planning
  • balance
  • size relations
  • trial and error
  • problem solving
  • interaction of forces
  • pre-math concepts-more, less, number, etc.
  • visual perception
  • hand/eye coordination
  • classification
  • cooperation
  • self-esteem
  • completion
In construction activities, children create models that represent their internal vision of an object or event.  This is the concrete way in which children symbolize the world;  and it is a highly creative process.  When children build out of real materials the models that originate in their minds, they must draw on other abilities as well, such as creativity, imagination, aesthetic appreciation, fine and gross motor and perceptual skills, planning, language and often social interaction techniques.  As children construct something out of paper and paste, clay or blocks, they coordinate all aspects of the self.  It is this synthesizing characteristic that explains the importance of construction within our program.

Sunday, July 15, 2012

Blocks Center


 


 The blocks center is a very important part of an early childhood classroom.
 In fact, if you had to choose one center in the classroom as the most
 important of all, the blocks center would be a prime candidate for the title.
 When children build with blocks, they learn about mathematical concepts
 such as size, shape, number, and quantity. They become aware of scientific
 principles such as the force of gravity and the functioning of simple machines
 such as levers and inclined planes. They learn to think, plan, and problem
-solve as their structures take form. This center has special appeal for children
whose intelligences are strong in the visual/spatial, logical/mathematical, and
 bodily/kinesthetic areas.


Blocks play provides children with opportunities to create,
cooperate, and communicate. Social learning takes place in the
blocks center as children work together to share materials, space,
and ideas. Literacy skills develop through block play when children

various blocks experiences. Children gain eye-hand coordination and
visual discrimination skills when they group blocks that are the same
size and shape at clean-up time. Virtually everything you might want
to teach a young child can be taught through blocks play!