At our morning gathering, I ask the children where they want to go play and what they are going to do. I think I need to change my question to 'what are you want to create today since it works for all areas.
Anyway, Em decided she wanted to build another Ball Machine. Here is her creation:
The following is our conversation about the machine:
E: First, it jumps inside to get paint [left side].
Ms. Erin: Why do they get paint?
E: It get purple and black. It goes down here with the other balls [points to ramp and circle]. These balls are inside they home. They got to close they home so they all fit.
Ms. Erin: What happens over here? [points to four squares]
E: They go back up here and get more paint.
Here is her drawing, painted with watercolors (MUCH more detailed than the first):
The following is her work represented with three dimentional objects using her drawing as a reference. Set out a plethora of collage materials she could choose from to create with:
Her final product:
Em is definitely interested in the balls being painted, so I plan to continute from that angle.
Showing posts with label ball machine. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ball machine. Show all posts
Tuesday, September 14, 2010
Friday, September 10, 2010
the ball machine, part I
E and Em were working collaboratively in the block when I came to see what they were building. I asked if they would like me to take a photograph of their structure and they agreed it was a good idea. Then I asked them what it was called and E said it was a Ball Machine.
Ms. Erin: Can you tell me about the different parts of the Ball Machine?
Em: "The ball goes in here [points to the right side]. Then it gets paint [points to the middle, right]. This is where it comes out [points to the left]."
E was engaged elsewhere after that so I asked him about the machine the next day showing him the photograph of the ball machine. Here is what he had to say:
E: "The balls go in the holes so you can win. That’s the sixteen [points to the right side]. You get a present if it goes in there. If it goes over the holes you lose. Sometimes you shoot the balls then you win. That’s the flat [points to the middle]. If you land on the flat everyone loses. That’s where the ball comes out [points to the left side]. The one that loses gets a present too."
Ms. Erin: What kind of present?
E: "A big thing; a bike with no wheels. It goes. It’s a game."
Ms. Erin: Do you think you could build this structure again?
E: "No. The balls will be mad at us. We have to build another machine that’s not the same."

I brought them paper and markers and asked if they would like to draw a picture of their structure, pointing out some basic shapes.
This was very quickly done with little attention given to details. I wasn't sure if this was due to a lack of interest in the subject, the medium, or something else altogether.
The next day I showed them the photo of their Ball Machine and asked them individually to tell me more about what the machine does.
Em: "It takes the ball out and put it back in. The ball do tricks. The ball can do kickball. You turn on the ball machine and put the ball in it. It makes it purple and green and black."
Ms. Erin: Can you tell me about the different parts of the Ball Machine?
Em: "The ball goes in here [points to the right side]. Then it gets paint [points to the middle, right]. This is where it comes out [points to the left]."
E was engaged elsewhere after that so I asked him about the machine the next day showing him the photograph of the ball machine. Here is what he had to say:
E: "The balls go in the holes so you can win. That’s the sixteen [points to the right side]. You get a present if it goes in there. If it goes over the holes you lose. Sometimes you shoot the balls then you win. That’s the flat [points to the middle]. If you land on the flat everyone loses. That’s where the ball comes out [points to the left side]. The one that loses gets a present too."
Ms. Erin: What kind of present?
E: "A big thing; a bike with no wheels. It goes. It’s a game."
Ms. Erin: Do you think you could build this structure again?
E: "No. The balls will be mad at us. We have to build another machine that’s not the same."
_
The following day I decided to see if E and Em would be interested in painting their drawing with watercolors. Em was interested. E was absent.
Hoping to bring more details of their work to their attention, I printed out the image of their final structure onto transparency paper and placed it in the light studio on the overhead projector. E was absent again but Em was interested.

When she got to her image, I find it interesting that Em decided to draw her face from memory instead of tracing the image projected with arms protruding from her head.
Em's final drawing:
_
I would love to hear comments and observations about where to go from here.
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