An Advisory
Teacher in the London Borough of Newham wrote in English Four to seven (2011) about children creating verbal stories
and later written stories using ‘small world materials’ - small figures and
other articles that are manipulated by hand. The children prepare a setting, wooden trees, fences etc.
or use a pot plant in the classroom to place varied animals in it. They use
small transport vehicles, train tracks, roadway plastic sheets, small fluffy
toys and lego pieces.
This is a wonderful hands-on way for
pre-school, reception and year one, new English language learners and children
who are delayed learners to talk about stories and then if appropriate write
their created stories. (Many elements of modern education have been adapted from Montessori theories and
practices. Oral language long before written language is an important element of Montessori practice).
The books are
then shared with peers and adults; children take the books home to read.
Of course,
the Advisory Teacher, also, either read stories or shared stories
(literature-based learning) with children who in turn innovate on these
stimulating pieces (for example, J. Crebbin’s The
Train Ride, Pat Hutchin’s Rosie’s
Walk, J. Oke’s The naughty bus).
The Advisory
Teacher found that children’s verbalizations were transferred into writing
stories, they chose a setting and characters, developed a sequence of events
which were similar to the published story. They drew on their prior experience
of stories and revisited photographs on the laptop which they built upon. Book
language was used, using vocabulary and key words from stories with these new
words being rehearsed. Other learning evolved. One child remarked how animals
do not talk, so the Advisory Teacher introduced thinking bubbles. Another child
brought to mind how zebras do not live in the rainforest, but solved his own
problem and having the zebra visit.
What is
great was that the activity is open-ended. The children can participate at
their own level; children benefiting from seeing good peer modelling of
language and social play. Some children initiate more role-play or storytelling
to direct and extend themselves. Often they place themselves or their friends
in the stories they create.
Older,
advanced-in-writing children can use the scenes they create to write their own ideas, matching the Powerpoint
slide with the appropriate idea and inserting all those wonderful functions
found on Powerpoint.
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