Burning question

I’ve been doing lots of studying up on storytimes, and have discovered many great ideas and program plans.  Let me just say that up front: the three books that I’m using to educate myself have a wealth of great information and tips and suggestions, and I have learned an enormous amount.

But these books have also re-raised an issue that has bothered me in the past: the dependence on die-cut machines for library programs.  [I’m bound to offend a large number of people here, but it’s time for me to expose my snarky side…]  As the daughter of an educator who excelled at creative projects, I take issue with the use of pre-cut shapes in storytimes, which the child participants decorate and take home.  Several things bother me: the requirement to take something tangible home after a storytime, which by nature is an intangible event; the importance being placed on the end product at an age (two, three, four years old) when the child’s natural end product is not going to be pleasing to adult eyes; and the removal of exploration from the child’s artistic experience.

Mom used to talk to me about her educational theory.  I specifically remember one conversation with her when we talked about how everything is new to a young child, and that even holding an ice cube and watching it begin to melt is a fascinating educational moment for an infant or toddler.  She also advocated the use of water tables, sand boxes, and other mediums in which a child can become absorbed in the moment, make discoveries, and also mellow out by virtue of water therapy or sand therapy. 

Children have very different artistic sensibilities than adults – they’re freer, less inhibited by cultural standards – and it’s from these differences that new directions in art can be born.  For my first Create a Valentine program, I had an assortment of artistic goodies laid out for the kids, along with a huge stack of pre-cut felt hearts, with the intention that the kids would take the supplies and glue them on to pieces of construction paper and make traditional cards.  It was a shock to me, in a good way, when one girl took a funky lumpy pipe cleaner and strung several of the felt hearts on it, then looped the two ends of the pipe cleaner together to make a circular, three-dimensional, totally non-traditional Valentine. 

The storytime books that I’m reading talk a lot about how librarians running storytimes have a golden opportunity to teach parents and caregivers to present books and reading to their children in a developmentally appropriate way.  We’ve obviously made huge strides in the literacy end of things, and our storytimes have changed to reflect that, depending less upon a weekly theme and more upon stories that encourage and develop pre-reading skills in children.  In my two youngest storytimes, if I choose to include an artistic element, I’d like to make that portion of the storytime be equally appropriate for the attendees.  Why not blow bubbles, or play with clay (no end product needed or intended), or experience water play?  If and when my storytimes have a craft portion, I want it to be experiential, not judgemental.  I don’t want to burden any child at a very early age with the sense that he or she “couldn’t do” the assigned project correctly. 

I’d love to hear other opinions on this matter, maybe even get a discussion going.  Comments, anyone?

3 thoughts on “Burning question”

  1. I absolutely have to check in on this one. I TOTALLY agree with everything you said. As a former administrator in an infant / toddler program and then a classroom teacher, I really buck against the ideas of having to take something home from an event for it to have any value. I am sooooo opposed to die-cut shapes as bases for art “projects”, as I am also opposed to pre-cut foamy shapes that you glue together to make the pre-determined animal shapey thing. Kids need to learn how to use scissors. Experimentation, modeling behavior, and modification are key here. Without experience, we have kindergarteners who don’t know how to hold a book right side up and frontways, let alone hold a pair of scissors to cut. The value of “projects” for kids under 3 is so limited. Play in the water, the rice, the sand, the clay. Experience it with senses, but don’t look for a nice neat little project to send home to show mama. Lots of media are wonderful for kids to just mess around in, talk about, imitate play, experience. Pudding even. As the mother of a developmentally delayed 18 year old, I always have become a little undone around the edges when he brings home a perfectly drawn face mask, or map of the world, or christmas ornament, knowing full well that his small motor skills did not create that (he can’t zip a zipper for pete’s sake!), but his well-meaning, task oriented aid did a very nice job coloring in all the lines. There’s a well-earned pride from finishing a task that is developmentally appropriate…that is what the kid takes home from experiential play, pride. Not some predetermined, precutout piece of paper. There. I feel better now! Don’t compromise your philosophy Abs, you’re too good a teacher! -L

  2. I totally agree with you. When I first started doing storytime I noticed that quite often children are in tears because their parent won’t let them do their own activity or that the activity is a mess because they have tried to cut it out by themselves. Thanks for adding your voice to the discussion we have been having about the need to go home with a product.

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