- A sturdy cardboard box (a shoebox would have worked well provided the coloured borders were not obscured by writing/patterns)
- A craft knife
- Marker pens
- Coloured pom poms
Sunday, 25 October 2015
Colour-Matching Drop Box
This September I started training to become a
Montessori-qualified teacher. It’s been
busy studying with a pre-schooler and a toddler at home, but I’m hoping the
course will help me to facilitate my children’s learning and to enable me to share our experiences on here with you.
The inspiration to create drop boxes came from an attempt to
apply the principle of “control of error” to the children’s activities. Control of error refers to a mechanism
whereby a child can perceive his/her own mistake when undertaking an activity
because the activity is designed according to the principle of one-to-one correspondence. A typical example of this would be a jigsaw
puzzle in which every piece is different and only interlocks with the correct
corresponding piece.
The first drop box I created was for my 2.5 year old who has
developed an interest in colours (or at least the names of colours). He would point to a red car
and say “I want the green car” and this would lead to some frustration on his
part and confusion on ours. Rather than
correcting him each time, I thought it would be more effective for him to
realise his mistake through a self-checking element incorporated into the drop
box.
I purchased a sturdy box from Hobbycraft and cut some
windows into the lid. Around the edge of
each window I created a border using eight different-coloured marker pens to
correspond to the different-coloured pom poms to be posted into the windows. One of the pom poms was multi-coloured, so I represented this with a multi-coloured border. (I added the names of the colours above each
window so that my 3 year old could also use the box and become familiar
with the words that correspond to the colours).
Inside the box across the base, I made coloured circles to correspond
to the coloured edges of the windows, so that when my son posted the pom poms
into the box, he could remove the lid and check whether he had posted the pom
poms into the correct window. To make
the self-checking element more pronounced, I could have created sections inside
the box (as I did with the letter-matching box), but as I used only a few pom
poms in this activity, they tended to fall exactly on the coloured circles,
making it obvious which window they had been posted into. The decision to use just a few pom poms
worked well as I found my son’s concentration was beginning to wane as he came
to the end of the activity.
The drop box managed to grip my son’s attention and after six or seven attempts over the course of a couple of weeks, he was able to match the
pom poms correctly and refer to the colours of objects in the room accurately.
What we used:
Click here to see our letter-matching drop box
Labels:
colours,
matching,
pre-schooler,
toddler
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