As the preschoolers aged 4-5 years were coming back from their two weeks long vacations in Jan I thought of setting up something exciting to welcome them back: the classroom was arranged with multicolored balloons and sketch pens, waiting for them to come and apply their imagination!
As the children came in, they picked their favorite colored balloons and started playing with them. They began throwing the balloons at each other and played catch-catch for a while and noticed a bunch of loose sketch pens on the table, they picked one each and began drawing on them.
Have you tried drawing on balloons? Is it easy or hard? Does the surface present an interesting challenge or an uphill task? Would you have thought of drawing on the balloon?
S. Ma'am look what I have drawn...(pointing at the images she drew on her balloon). This is black clouds and this is rain, this is a generator...
F. That's awesome! Can you tell that to me in the form of a story?
S. The black clouds came and it started raining from the black clouds, then S gave the generator so that the lights don't go off.
F. That's great! Does anyone wants to join with S and continue the story?
(Some of them raise their hands, T gets to go as she was quick in raising her hand)
F. So T, what happens next?
T. Then a little girl came and read a story book and then she slept.
F. Great! Who wants to go next?
(E gets to go)
E. There were so many thunderstorms and she heard a twittery voice and she found so many eggs, the eggs hatch into chickens.
F. Who wants to go next?
(M gets to go)
M. Then fire comes from my head and mamma rescues me.
(Ad goes next, the facilitator scaffolds by reading to him the story so far)
F. What do you think happens next?
Ad. There was a boy playing basketball and the flood comes and pushes them all away and the ball goes far away.
J. There was flowers and the rain drops fall on the flowers and the rain stops and the flowers grows and a train comes.
Ar. There was a car that went round and round and round not realizing it's the same way and he can't go anywhere.
Av. There was a little boy playing with the ball when the flood came, the boy jumped on a tree and the tree took him to his home and the ball got washed.
( Facilitator scaffolds by reading the story so far)
V. And boy cried.
An. A boat picks the ball and gives to the boy and it's still raining and the trees are growing. The boy feels happy and plays with the ball at home and the baby birds were crying for mamma.
At the end of the activity, children had co-created a story through emergent play. The facilitator reviewed the story with them and they reflected on how the story could have progressed in a better way. They also made connections with their library books where the stories usually revolved around one character and got excited about creating better stories in the future.
P.S. Looking at their enthusiasm in creating stories, the facilitator makes a note to take this forward with them, introducing them to structure and how to create better stories in a future class. More power to them for more stories to come...
Contributed by Yashika CG, Asst. Learning Facilitator at Sparkling Mindz.