Creating Collections
What part does nature play in your classroom? The beginning of the school year is the perfect time to create a special place where kids can see and touch natural objects. I’d call it a “Nature Nook,” but so many children associate the word “nook” with an electronic tablet, that an alternate name is simply “Nature Collections Spot.”
Your collection spot may be as simple as the top of a book shelf or as elaborate as an entire corner of the classroom. Having a special place where children can go to explore nature items lets students know “this stuff is important.”
INSIDE: Starting a Collection
Choose a monthly theme for your nature collections. The theme for this month’s blogs is “A Walk in the Woods,” and I’ve begun gathering up some woodsy items. For example, I pulled out two of my prize skulls—one from a deer, the other from a skunk. Then I added a piece of birch bark and a milkweed pod bursting with seeds, both of which I collected from a trip to Michigan. Viola! My nature collection spot has begun.
Last year, I rotated into a classroom shared with other teachers, so I didn’t have the luxury of being able to set up a permanent Nature Collection Spot. My solution was to use a plastic tote box. Each week I put one nature item into it. I gave my students clues to help them guess what was in the box, then I would do “the big reveal.” Kids could examine, touch, and hold the object I had brought in. After the kids had time to make observations, share information, or ask questions, I’d read a related story.
For example. when I brought in a wasp’s nest last year, we discussed the difference between a wasp and a bee. Then I read In the Trees, Honeybees! Afterwards, we made honey treats. Jo MacDonald Hiked in the Woods, would be the perfect book to go along with my “Walk in the Woods” collection this month.
OUTSIDE: Kids Collect
Have your students find interesting natural objects around the school grounds. Pair them up as they come back into the classroom to share and explain their discoveries. Integrate their objects into other classes throughout the week. For example, in math class have them use the objects to practice measurements. For a writing project, have them incorporate three different objects into a creative writing story. For my “woods” theme, I would have students bring in different kinds of leaves to explain the difference between deciduous and coniferous trees and introduce the concept of photosynthesis.
MORE FACTS AND FUN WITH COLLECTIONS
Teddy Roosevelt was six years old when he collected his first natural object, a seal skull. He went on to fill his bedroom with skins, bones, and living animals. He continued his collections throughout his presidency. The famous naturalist, Henry David Thoreau, was a great collector, too. Local villagers would bring him flowers, nests, and bones for him to identify—he often asked to keep some of the most interesting specimens for his personal collection. Inspire young collectors by reading aloud stories about naturalists in Earth Heroes: Champions of the Wilderness.
Get tips for creating a nature discovery center from Audubon.
Making collections is one aspect of the Naturalist Intelligence identified by Howard Gardner, author of the book Multiple Intelligences.