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Investigating Rocks

In Investigating Rocks, preschool teachers describe how children engaged in a variety of learning activities utilizing rocks.

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  • Transcript for the Video: Investigating…Rocks

    (This video has captions. You can turn them on by clicking the CC icon at the bottom of the video.)
    Download a transcript of this video in .pdf format.


    Patrice Ramm, Preschool Teacher: When I first said, “What do you think about investigating rocks?”
    because I observe them collecting rocks and treasuring them and wanting to do that outside.

    Patricia Gardner, Preschool Teacher: I loved the topic of rocks because I think children need to get more of an opportunity to get outside and explore things outside. This is something that they see every day no matter where they are—on the playground, walking into the store—there’s always a rock or a stone here or there.

    Patrice: So, together we sat down and we webbed rocks.

    Patricia: And then we come up with a list of standards that we need to focus on. What kind of learning dowe want to occur?

    Patrice: Then we made an activities menu: literacy activity, and a math activity, and a sensory activity,
    and maybe something for dramatic play and blocks.

    Patricia: It’s a constant communication, a constant conversation, and a constant reflection on what we’re doing in the classroom and how the needs of the children are being met.

    Initiating the Rocks Investigation (1:23)


    Patrice
    : One of the books that we had read was, “If You Find a Rock.” And in it, it tells you what you can do with a rock, different kinds of rocks.

    Patricia: And the way you label the rocks are by what you do with them.

    Patrice: You can write with a rock, you can sketch your name on another rock.

    Patricia: There’s a skipping rock; there’s a loving rock; there’s a hopping rock.

    Patrice: You can sit on a rock; you can use a rock as a treasure; you can give away a rock.

    Patricia: And whatever the rock did, that’s the kind of rock it became.

    Rock Breaking (1:52)


    Patricia: Each child was able to break open a geode. Prior to our activity we talked about what they might find inside, and the children mostly came up with colors. They talked about a texture that it might be on the inside.

    Patrice: At group time I believe Patty asked them:

    Patricia: How can we find out what’s inside this rock? What kind of tools can we use?

    Patrice: And so then she wrote down all the answers that the children were saying.

    Patricia: A hammer…You can bang it…Zianna?

    Patrice: She showed them the hammer and we talked about safety

    Patricia: And everybody has goggles to use…okay.

    Patrice: we purchased small geodes for every child

    Patricia: This is called a GEODE…it’s called a Geode. It’s a rock that has special things on the inside.
    It might look the same or it might look different than what’s on the outside.

    Patrice: We went on to the floor and wrapped the rock up and they got to break their geode.

    Patricia: It was a challenge to break the geode even for the young children, but they were able to do it.

    Patrice: And they could see what was inside and then take it home.

    Patricia: And that was something I think they took to heart.

    Child: “Woo...alright!”

    Patricia: After we did the Geodes—we were talking about the inside and the outside—we wanted to make a connection to their real world again, and we brought in some fruit, and talked about inside and outside of fruit.

    Rock Tower (3:15)


    Patrice
    : They were asked to work cooperatively and build a tower. We came over and broke up into coop groups…

    Patrice: …Three or four children in each group. And we had fairly flat, smooth rocks.

    Patricia: We wanted to see how many rocks the children could stack.

    Patrice: We’d say one child was going to put a rock on and then the next child would put the next rock
    on.

    Patricia: Did you notice how Janelle is trying to find a rock…that fits just right…alright…ok! So wait,
    so how many do we have?
    Child: One…two...three, four, five…
    Patricia: Ok.

    Patrice: A lot of the rocks they would get to a certain—maybe seven or eight rocks—and the tower
    would fall over.

    Patricia: Why do you think it’s falling down? Is there a different rock we should switch out and not
    use in our tower?

    Patricia: He put it on and kind of like tested it like he would a puzzle piece, and right away figured out that this wasn’t a best fit and then put it down and got another one.

    Patrice: They were supposed to sketch their tower.

    Patricia: Some of the children were very representational; some children chose to trace the rocks, you
    know, just trace around it. Some children chose just to draw circles, in a flat surface instead of one
    stacked on top of the other.

    It’s important when you do any kind of investigation, to get a child’s perspective on something. What gives them a record of what their learning is? And they can go back and look and it and you can talk about it…and then they can show their families.

    Nature Walk (4:36)


    Patrice
    : We went to the arboretum and this time…

    Patricia: …We wanted to go down to a stream that we walk by all the time.

    Patrice: And we thought if we could wear old shoes and boots we could go into the stream and collect
    rocks.

    Patricia: So, we walked down; we talked about the different rocks that we’ve seen. Before we even
    jumped in the water the children were taking the rocks…

    Patrice: …Big rocks, little rocks…

    Patricia: Throwing the rocks in and…

    Patrice: …See what kind of sound it would make.

    Patricia: Listen to the sounds. Listen to the sounds that it’s making when you throw the rock in.

    Patricia: They even discussed about, “Oh, gee, that’s a big rock; I wonder what kind of sound that makes?”

    Patrice: Ooh did you hear that sound?

    Patrice: “Wow, that big rock made a really big sound.”

    Patricia: So, we decided that we were just going to jump in and explore those kinds of rocks. So we did.

    Patrice: We also picked the rocks up and looked underneath the rocks.

    Patricia: What happened when we flipped it up? What was left in the sand?

    Patricia: Look what happened when I picked up this rock. I made a big hole. See, that rock was
    here, and now I have all these tiny rocks.

    Patricia: One of the children grabbed a stick…

    Patrice: To pry this big rock up…

    Patricia: Because he was unable to do it with his fingers.

    Patrice: He was using it as a tool to get that rock up to see what was underneath.

    Patricia: It’s taking something that’s familiar to them, that’s in their environment, and giving them a
    chance to just look at it just a little bit differently.

    Nature Talk (6:00)


    Patricia: When we come back to the classroom, we like to reflect on what we did and see what the
    children learned.

    Patrice: We took some samples back from the stream, the rocks from the stream.

    Patricia: We talked about the different kinds of describing words…

    Patrice: …Color, shapes, whether it was smooth or bumpy.

    Patrice: What do you notice about all these rocks? Every rock that I pull out. What do you
    notice?

    Patricia: And somebody said it’s wet and it’s sandy.

    Patrice: What is a describing word for that rock?
    Child: A mossy covered rock!

    Patrice: What they looked like and what they smelled like.

    Patricia: Ooh, what shape rock is that?
    Child: Looks like a Pizza!
    Patricia: Looks like a pizza.
    Patricia: Tell me one thing about our trip down to the stream to look at rocks in the water.

    Patricia: One of the children talked about the big rock and how it was…

    Child: “A Boulder!”
    Patriciaand Patrice: “It was a boulder.”

    Patricia: Everything about it excited her, and it got her more comfortable to share some more words with her peers.

    Rock Painting (7:00)


    Patricia: There’s a large rock that groups can ask permission to paint.

    Patrice: And we called to get permission to paint it.

    Patricia: We generated ideas from the children about what colors they wanted to paint the rock.

    Patrice: And then we tallied up, and we came up with blue, because we’re the Blue Room.

    Patricia: So we went over and we painted the rock all one color, all one color blue.

    Patrice: And they made a sketch of what they wanted to put on the rock.

    Patricia: And the children came up with many, many, many wonderful ideas.

    Patrice: Whether it was a butterfly or their name or they all had, you know what they wanted to put.

    Patricia: And then the second day the children were able to choose whatever colors they wanted.

    Patrice: And they brought their sketch with them and the second time we went over they painted their
    sketch on the rock.

    Patricia: Tell me about what you’re doing there?
    Child: A butterfly.
    Patricia: You’re making a butterfly.

    Patricia: There’s a lot of opportunities for when we do those activities for self-regulation, and that’s a
    huge, huge skill for children to have.

    Child: You’re doing good with that guy!

    Patricia: This was a true test if they could control their body and I thought our children just thrived.

    Patrice: Do you want to try yellow?

    Patrice: We didn’t have pink and everybody wanted pink but I said…

    Patrice: What makes pink?
    Child: Red and white.
    Patrice: Excellent. So I’m going to put a little bit of red. Will you do the mixing?
    Child: Yeah.

    Patrice: And then we ended up mixing all the different colors so they could get the colors that they
    wanted.

    Child: It’s making TEAL!

    Patricia: I thought they did a phenomenal job.

    What We Learned (8:34)


    Patricia: As the investigation went on, we realized how much more we could do with it. It was one of those investigations where it was like Ooh! Ooh! Ooh!

    Patrice: It just got bigger and bigger. We could do more than we thought we could with rocks; we had
    rocks in every center. We painted rocks and made them markers for our garden, and we have a stone
    wall in our garden.

    Patricia: It spurred a lot of scientific exploration, a lot of math a lot of literacy; we came up with describing words.

    Patrice: Sorting and counting and going from smaller rocks to bigger rocks.

    Patricia: It just gets you excited, gets you engaged, gets the children engaged.

    Patrice: They treasured the rocks. It was something that they could keep and take home and have
    forever, so I think that’s why they enjoyed it and how much I enjoyed it and how much our team
    enjoyed it.

    Patricia: It made me happy though, as a teacher, to see the children so excited about something that we were doing in the classroom.

    ©2015 Center for Early Childhood Education at Eastern Connecticut State University
    May be reprinted for educational purposes.

  • Executive Producer: Julia DeLapp
    Director/Scriptwriter: Ken Measimer
    Student Production Assistants: Nicole Ricard
    Music Composer: Ross Page (Eastern student at time of composition)
    Animation: Nick Napoletano
    Featured Teachers: Patricia Gardner, Patrice Ramm
  • The video is part of a series documenting how teachers and children explore topics in depth as part of their Investigations curriculum.

    The Investigations curriculum was developed by university faculty and teachers and administrators at Eastern's Child and Family Development Resource Center. Based somewhat on the project approach, the curriculum is centered around engaging projects—called investigations—on topics that are selected by children, teachers, and families. As children investigate a topic–in learning centers, small collaborative groups, whole group activities, movement and music experiences, outdoor observation, or field trips—they acquire critical competencies identified in the Connecticut Early Learning and Development Standards and the standards of national professional organizations.

    Four strategies support children’s investigations: play scaffolding, collaborative learning projects, evidence-based arrangement of learning centers, and portfolio assessment.

    Learn more about the Investigations curriculum.