Categories: Teacher's Desk

Leverage 7 learning zones to boost children’s conceptual understanding

Imagine you enter a preschool or early primary setting, and find children at a water tray table actively pouring rose-coloured water from one container to another…

<p>They have access to tubes&comma; funnels&comma; straws&comma; and other containers of all sizes from thimbles to a 400ml measuring jug&period; The activity is fun and absorbing&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Now ask yourself why it’s there&quest; And there are many answers&period; It could just be that a teacher found the bits and pieces in a crate neatly labelled &OpenCurlyQuote;water play’ in the storeroom&period; At the end of the week&comma; the activity is disassembled and placed back in there&period; The play is an interlude and not connected to anything beyond the immediate sensory enjoyment&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><strong><em>Free play<&sol;em><&sol;strong> like this is a highly valuable learning zone allowing children to observe and experiment with materials&comma; and which gives them control over their own time and space&period; But if left at that&comma; their learning won’t spiral upwards and their opportunity to master important concepts may be lost&period; The thing is that by five years of age&comma; our human brains are already 90 percent formed and so these years are critical for learning&comma; especially conceptual language learning&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Even though concept formation would seem to be the core work of early educators&comma; play is such a key theme in early years’ frameworks that some teachers suffer decision paralysis about how and what to teach young children&period; They are regularly warned not to engage in a top-down curriculum&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<h4><strong>If kids need to play&comma; how do we teach them&quest; <&sol;strong><&sol;h4>&NewLine;<p>The fear is that as we scale up the cognitive expectations&comma; we drag children away from what they want to be doing&period; Of course&comma; we want children to be motivated and follow their own interests and goals&period; But we also want them to learn stuff&comma; so structured learning is vital&period; What is needed is a framework of presentation modes that respect the roles of both student and educator&period; This article proposes seven different learning zones within which teachers can confidently monitor and present learning content&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Agile teachers<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Preschool and early primary teachers are adaptive and able to present content to children in different ways at different times&period; They can follow the child&comma; but they can also attract the child to follow them&excl; Within education settings teachers regularly change their proximity to the child&period; Maya Angelou&comma; the US author&comma; and philosopher says&comma; &OpenCurlyQuote;When we know better&comma; we can do better’&period; Imagine an agility wheel which&comma; like a pie graph&comma; maps seven different zones&period; Each zone denotes a different learning relationship between the teacher and the student with different degrees of involvement and direction&period; Sometimes&comma; in the larger triangles of the agility wheel&comma; the child has more freedom to follow his or her own goals and there is less or no direct mediation from the educator&period; In the smaller zones&comma; or triangles&comma; the teacher mediation is much closer and the content more directive and specific&period; Teachers can assess what they need to teach and plan a particular method in advance&comma; or in a moment they can dramatically pivot from what they are doing to employ an alternative zone&comma; technique and strategy&period; In each zone the role of the educator and the student is clearly defined&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<h4><strong>What are the 7 zones&quest;<&sol;strong><&sol;h4>&NewLine;<ul>&NewLine;<li>Free play<&sol;li>&NewLine;<li>Mediated play<&sol;li>&NewLine;<li>Embedded concepts<&sol;li>&NewLine;<li>Concept clarity<&sol;li>&NewLine;<li>Closed-ended mobilisation<&sol;li>&NewLine;<li>Open-ended mobilisation<&sol;li>&NewLine;<li>Auto-generative creativity<&sol;li>&NewLine;<&sol;ul>&NewLine;<p>The water activity above can help to explore the zones&period; Perhaps the teacher didn’t randomly select it&period; Rather&comma; the water play is part of a well-planned project on the value of water as a life source on our planet and it is the start of an intensive and structured investigation&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>The next stage of the project will not be to pack it away&comma; but to ask children to tell us what they are doing and share their ideas about the water&period; In this <strong><em>mediated play<&sol;em><&sol;strong>&comma; the teacher is closer in proximity and assesses the level of children’s vocabulary&comma; asks questions&comma; and might even add more materials&period; But the flow is still in the direction of the child’s exploration&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Adding to the initial water investigation&comma; new activities are provided elsewhere in the room&period; In these activities materials are purposely selected to surface <strong><em>embedded concepts<&sol;em><&sol;strong>&period; There might be melting ice and a place to draw or write on a small blackboard using only water and a small paint brush&period; The information about states of water which freezes or evaporates is not directly taught but is latent in the activity and ready for children to wonder about and discover&period; New vocabulary is made available in the immediate context&period; This vocabulary includes content words like evaporate&comma; condense&comma; volume&comma; liquid&semi; but also process words like plan&comma; predict and compare&comma; alerting students to their thinking processes&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>At a stage when the experimentation and discovery are advanced&comma; we enter a zone of <strong><em>concept clarity<&sol;em><&sol;strong>&period; The logical relationships are so well understood that students can confidently articulate them&period;  The educators <strong><em>mobilis<&sol;em><&sol;strong><em>e<&sol;em> the information in either <strong><em>closed-ended<&sol;em><&sol;strong> tasks&comma; where the outcomes are known and predictable&comma; or <strong><em>open-ended<&sol;em><&sol;strong><em> challenges<&sol;em>&comma; where children might solve small &lpar;or large&rpar; problems in variety of ways&period; And they can explore them in movement&comma; mathematics&comma; dance&comma; music&comma; science and stories&excl;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p> An example of a <strong><em>closed-ended mobilisation<&sol;em><&sol;strong> might be a maths challenge to find out precisely how many small containers of water are needed to fill a large one&period; There is only one answer&comma; but there is learning along the way&comma; because if the small ones aren’t filled to the brim&comma; they aren’t full&comma; and the correct outcome won’t be reached&period; But an <strong>open-ended <&sol;strong>project to make a raft so that some toy animals make it safely across the pond&comma; might result in many wonderful inventions&comma; solutions&comma; paintings and stories&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Throughout the 7 zones children’s mastery of concepts is scaling upwards&period; Their knowledge is being connected both within and across the different activities&comma; experiences&comma; discussions&comma; and challenges&period; After all that&comma; they go back to free play&comma; but this time&comma; they use all the knowledge they have mastered along the way&period; When they create something that you haven’t planned or even imagined&comma; using the collaborative learning that has been consolidated&comma; the students enter the realm of <strong><em>auto-generative creativity<&sol;em><&sol;strong>&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>So not one or two&comma; but seven learning zones&comma; give teachers permission and options to add important learning to free play&comma; but also to make formal learning look and feel like play&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<h6><em>Lili-Ann Kriegler &lpar;B&period; A Hons&comma; H&period; Dip&period; Ed&comma; M&period;Ed&period;&rpar; is an education consultant and author of Edu-Chameleon&period; Lili-Ann’s primary specialisations are in early childhood education &lpar;birth-9 years&rpar;&comma; leadership and optimising human thinking and cognition&period;  Her current part-time role is as an education consultant at Independent Schools Victoria and she runs her own consultancy&comma; Kriegler-Education&period; Find out more at <&sol;em><a href&equals;"https&colon;&sol;&sol;kriegler-education&period;com"><em>https&colon;&sol;&sol;kriegler-education&period;com<&sol;em><&sol;a><&sol;h6>&NewLine;

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Lili-Ann Kriegler

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