The first day of
the After School Program and the weather is lovely. We ease into the afternoon with tales of
summer. Potluck with families at Ryder
Park!
We have outdoor fun
raking leaves, building fairy houses, playing tag and role playing. We build structures and cavort in the woods
and on the grass, gather on the play structure and teach each other football
and soccer techniques. Later we walk
around the grounds to find a good place to start a garden as children offer
suggestions for plants they’d like to include and the type of birdhouse we’ll
need. Milkweed pods are fascinating;
discussion begins about the monarch butterflies that need them for food, then
about planting seeds and their germination requirements, and we start a compost
heap for snack and lunch scraps. “The
Victory Garden Kids’ Book,” by Marjorie Waters, and “Gardening with Children,”
a Brooklyn Botanic Garden guide, inspire us.
Art Studio is
open. Children create popsicle stick
people, a mini-art studio, and a Zen plate, using glass beads, shells, and
feathers to create assemblages. Older
children help younger friends learn to use glue sticks for projects. Read Aloud is “The Goat in the Rug,” about a
Navajo weaver and her goat, Geraldine, whose fleece the weaver cleaned, combed,
dyed, spun and wove into a rug. One
child tells of watching spinners and weavers in Morocco last year, another
tells about his grandmother spinning and knitting. They all are enthusiastic about trying a
future weaving project.
A sensory adventure
begins: Children open each of 15 bags to feel, smell and taste dried herb
samples from a local garden, then guess what each might be. A key is used to identify each sample, and we
talk about what the terms annual, biennial, and perennial mean. Some take samples home, some make perfumes by
grinding herbs and adding water. Dolls,
fairy houses and button characters are big art activities, and reverse painting
on glass in picture frames is intriguing.
Enthusiasm for Legos and blocks and animals continues.
Big picture artists
work with a 5 gallon bucket of water, paint rollers and brushes on the blacktop
while other children practice a play, do exercises, or play on the
structure. Later we read “A Bad Case of
Stripes.”
We enjoy working
with clay, though processing our disappointments--acknowledging regret,
promise, hope and validation of their effort--that, since the clay wasn’t
wedged it wouldn’t be fired. Our
compromise is a photo of each child’s piece, and consensus to deconstruct clay
pieces in a pail of water. Outdoors, in games of keep-away, Dr. Evil and other
fantasy play, children freely running back and forth across the play-lot and
into woods, give the impression of fluttering, floating flocks of birds! They practice with soccer balls, play
softball, catch, hand-clap games, build structures, have conversations on the swings,
take walks in the woods.
Some learn the safe
use of sticks as digging tools, and many blend using natural materials--grasses,
dirt, stones, flowers, cross sections of branches--with ropes and the play
structure. There are acts of compassion
between children, one lending a sweater to a chilly child... Indoors the children explore the magnet
table, create fusible bead forms, draw in sketchbooks and work on larger
drawings and paintings. We start reading
“Voyage of the Poppykettle.” Children
are enthusiastic about starting an Engineering & Architecture Club—a topic
for everyone to discuss at Morning Meeting.
The woods are
temporarily off limits as we wait for the arborist to take down a dead and
leaning tree, so after the rain, we do some puddle engineering. Once we rinse off the mud, we get our hands
into the wet clay! The children smack and splat and play with the reconstituted
clay from last week, in effect kneading it into a uniform consistency,
introducing them to the idea of wedging.
On a no woods, no
mud puddle day, we plant saplings donated by a guest arborist, and we finish
our day with indoor play of make-believe in the wizarding world and with
PlayMobile and plastic figures.
The woods are open
for business! We set tree markers to
guard our saplings and visit the fabulous Nevelson assemblage in the
woods. More catch and soccer, swinging,
adventures on the play structure, red wagon rides (and spills), imaginative role
playing and, the favorite, wizarding. We
read a portions of “Katie says: The Volcano is a Girl” and “Cheetahs.”
And, finally, a beautiful,
sunny day! Kick ball and football, wagon
rides and scraped knees. We talk of
color and light and pretend to build campfires when the days become chilly.
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