โHey Cate, letโs do an experiment.โCate is the precocious 4 year-old. Claire, the 8 year-old, skims the book and lands on an experiment entitled โswirly coloursโ. Prior to this point, she had actively engaged Cate in the selection process by reading out the various options and asking for her opinion. As the two of them select โswirly coloursโ, Claire reads out the instructions with specific clarity and precision. Cate, eyes dutiful glued to the science book, starts listing out the โingredientsโ necessary for the experiment to be successful. They proceed to gather the tools and ingredients and set out to embark on the experiment itself. So far, if youโre keeping track, we have a formal learning asset (the book) being used in the learning cycle. We also have an older student coaching/mentoring the younger student with inclusion, engagement and affirmation. (informal learning, in my opinion) And now, things get even more interesting. Claire blurts out,
โwe need to film this and take picturesโ.I, somewhat flabbergasted, continue to watch as the scenario unfolds. Throughout the experiment, Claire snaps photos and records several videos. Cate at this point is observing, asking questions, and assisting as necessary. Claire continues to coach Cate, providing feedback and answers as necessary. The โswirly coloursโ experiment concludes, to great success. At this point, obviously the natural next step for an 8 year-old crops up.
โDaddy, Iโm going to blog about this now. Can you help me add the videos?โ she asked me.Iโm not making this up. So, over at www.clairepontefract.com, the 8 year-old documents the experiment via her blog, adds a few photos, and I assist her in publishing one of the videos and attach it to her post. I ask Claire,
โwhy do you want to publish your experiment to your blog?โHer response,
โBecause itโs fun to share, and maybe somebody will comment on it.โAnd yes, someone already has. I