How a “Maker Space” Can Shape Your Child’s Future Success (and Make Her Super Fun at Parties!)

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How can a maker space enhance your child’s development?  Kiddie Academy of Des Peres can show you!

 

Children are natural creators— they’re born ready to make things, sometimes out of unconventional parts. A maker space is designed to tap into this natural curiosity and allow kids to try new things with no predetermined outcome.

Our classroom maker space is stocked with a variety of items such as marshmallows, toothpicks, and tongs. It challenges kids to stretch their thinking and be open to new perspectives. It’s amazing what our students will do when I hand them a cup filled with a random set of objects and ask them to build a habitat for the dinosaurs we were talking about earlier in the day! We routinely rotate the objects in the space to keep fueling the kids’ imaginations with fresh things to investigate.

This type of unstructured, but focused, play is an ideal way to have fun while learning some big concepts.

 

children at school engaging in maker space activities

 

Independence

 

Choosing how they use a maker space and its materials allows children to develop independence skills. When there’s no set of instructions, the kids take control and use techniques such as trial and error and collaboration to complete whatever project they can imagine. Every small success boosts their self-confidence and increases their ability to work independently.

 

Creativity

 

The magic of watching students use creativity and personal learning strategies to investigate a concept never gets old! For example, we may provide several tools – chopsticks, clothespins, and tweezers – and challenge the kids to use them in an art project. Some will dip the tool in paint, and others will use the object to hold a sponge to create their own masterpiece. The resulting child-led art pieces are wonderful, unique expressions of each individual.

 

 

children gathered around a maker space activity on the carpet in their classroom

 

Intrinsic Motivation

 

Creating something because you want to is a wonderful feeling, and our maker space is the perfect place to give kids that opportunity — anything goes! One of my favorite things to do is sit with the students and ask open-ended questions such as — “What sparked that idea”? or “How does that work”?  Their faces just light up as they explain their creations while also building their verbal communication skills.

 

Resilience

 

When faced with a roadblock, we want our kids to strategize and find a way to still reach their goals. I’ve noticed that students in our maker space will trade materials with each other instead of quitting on their designs. Learning how to find more resources or design another way to complete a task builds resilience. This sort of negotiation and cooperation is also great practice for the small-group learning activities they’ll continue to participate in throughout their academic life.

Parents love getting involved in our maker space, too. They donate materials and sometimes even re-create some of our classroom experiments at home. And, if anything wears out at our academy, we add it to the maker space! A recent upgrade resulted in lots of old phones the kids could take apart and use in some amazing ways. 

 

 

Creativity is the key to designing and using a maker space, and we like to get messy! For example, I may bring in a bucket of snow to examine or incorporate sensory materials to make learning new and exciting for our students.

Each day, my goal is the same — to help the kids love the process of learning! The addition of our maker space is just one of the amazing ways we do that here.

This sponsored post was written by Candace Lowry, Curriculum Coordinator at Kiddie Academy of Des Peres.