Tuesday, November 15, 2011

Creativity: Rock Sculpture Garden




Our original idea was to bring nature into the classroom. We thought the natural materials, aesthetic appeal of each rock (so different and unique from the next one), and open-ended nature of the garden would resonate with our little group of preschoolers. We imagined the children sitting in the garden creating all sorts of things. We couldn’t wait!


We set up the garden. Nothing happened. Children spent a few minutes touching the rocks, then lost interest. Until a day or two later…




Liam (5) asked us the rock names all morning. He loved the story of how lava rocks came to be.

At one point, Liam put the rock on his lap and said, "It is very still." Then he sat there, still as can be.
 
“This one looks like a heart!”
-Samantha (5)
Samantha was one of the first to start making designs and patterns. She was so respectful with the rocks, placing them carefully and deliberately on the wood.

We moved the rock garden outside.  That’s when it took on a life of its own.



“We are building a fire here.” –Varun (4)
The children piled rock on top of rock to build fires. They added sticks. Clean-up was quite a chore, but the children were ecstatic.

“Lava will be coming out soon from this volcano.” –Bryan (4)
Children built a giant mountain of rocks. Lava rocks represented the lava exploding out of their volcano.

“This egg is about to hatch. See the crack? There is a dinosaur baby inside.”
-Ameya (4)
Initiated by Rais, the story of the dinosaur egg unfolded, as children tended to their little egg, which was every day just on the brink of hatching. :) 

“We are looking for a treasure. It is a cave treasure hunt.”
The magical quality of the dolomite rocks, so shiny under the sunshine, and the smooth salmon bay rocks, inspired treasure hunts and full-scale excavations. 



“It is Minnie Mouse. These are her ears. Her eyes. Her nose. Her mouth.” 
-Maitreyi (4)


“That is Minnie’s tail! And her hair and arms.”  -Natalie (4)
“And her legs too.” -Diya R. (3)
 The rock depiction of Minnie Mouse, over the span of several weeks, got more and more complex as the children added details. They created a full Minnie Mouse body, complete with a mouse tail.






The interest in creating with rocks inspired using other natural materials to create great works of art.
Rais (5) worked many days to get to this point: A depiction of Rais and his elder brother, Imran, with swords. 




Rais independently collected varied materials, all natural, from our playscape. He then thought about how to use them in creative ways. A lot of visual spatial reasoning work, thinking about body proportions, etc. went into his multiple-day creation.

We could go on and on and about the endless creativity the children showed, as well as the child-initiated collaborations and discussions that occurred. Rocks were even sorted and classified and their similarities and differences discussed. Oh, the discussions!...


 -SS