A couple of weeks ago, I introduced the Citiblocks into the toddler classroom. These blocks are small, wooden, thin, rectangular pieces that are all the same size. I placed a cloth box full of these blocks in the center of the rug one morning, wondering how the toddlers might explore them.
J immediately noticed the box of blocks, took just two blocks out of the box and placed them together, one block stacked on top, perpendicular to the other one. Immediately J exclaimed “Airplane!” holding the blocks together and moving his object through the air.
Later in the day, T and J explored the blocks together,
creating what they called “A house.” They added more and more
blocks to the structure while talking about who lived in this house.
Later in the day, T and J explored the blocks together,
creating what they called “A house.” They added more and more
blocks to the structure while talking about who lived in this house.
T also worked with the Citiblocks on her own, lining the blocks up in a specific way and adjusting blocks to exactly where she wanted them to be.
The blocks became something different, a road or a path, something for his feet to explore instead of his hands.
At the end of the day, we cleaned up the blocks together, creating a familiar, orderly environment, ready for more exploration the next day.
At the end of the day, we cleaned up the blocks together, creating a familiar, orderly environment, ready for more exploration the next day.
By presenting the Citiblocks in the toddler room in an open-ended way, J and T were able to explore them freely with no limits to what they could do with them. They were building fine-motor skills, developing language around the usage of the blocks, developing spacial skills, and strengthening their social skills by working together creating a common object with the blocks.
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