Chloë’s older sister, Lydia, was already in the first class in school. A week after the
meeting about schemas, Chloë’s mother sent the note at the opening of this chapter
(see Figure 3.1, p. 37).
Schemas within child-initiated play
One aspect that is significant for the development of schemas is that whilst time and
opportunities for children to explore in their own ways are crucial for schema explo-
ration, certain experiences and materials appear to offer especially rich sources of
exploration.
Painting and drawing, modelling with clay and play-dough, design/technology,
construction materials and block play offered particularly rich opportunities for
schema exploration for the children in this study. When analysed, observations of
play with these resources also had the highest percentage of cognitively challenging
minutes recorded, with art the highest (Worthington, 1996b). Sylva et al. also
found art to be the most challenging experience for children whilst Gura’s study of
block play illustrates its potential for learning (Gura, 1992; Sylva, Roy and Painter,
1980). Like the example of Naomi below, many of the observations with these
resources were of mathematical schemas. It is also interesting to note that the
resources listed above allow children to represent their thinking: this may be
significant for later representation of abstract ideas and symbols, especially in
mathematics.
Intense involvement and challenging learning
Naomi, 4:10, was with a group of children. They had had free access to clay
since entering school, during a long child-initiated play session. Today the nursery
nurse was leading a group who were exploring clay with their hands but without
other tools.
Naomi is rolling a long sausage of clay: several other children have used similar
clay ‘sausages’ to make parts of a person or animal. She joins the ends of her
sausage to form a circle and then rolls some small balls of clay that she places
inside the circle. She stands up for a moment, looks at what she has done and
then places an additional ball on the outer edge of the circle and sits down.Taking
some more clay she twists and moulds it in her hands and breaks the piece in
half, then combines the two pieces. She appears to be oblivious to the busy noise
and movement in the room around her while she rolls another cylinder. At first
the clay in her hands is short and thick but with careful attention it becomes
thinner and longer: it is about 46 centimetres long and of even thickness. Naomi
looks up briefly to see what the other children are doing, then rolls her cylinder
into a ball. Again she transforms the ball of clay into a long cylinder.
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