Moving Water
- Age: 0 to 8+
- Time: 1 hour+
- Materials: Bins or buckets; water; tools for transferring water (e.g. scoops, spoons, pipettes, sponges)
- Skills: Creativity, Critical Thinking, Problem Solving, Sensory
Creativity is the ability to both imagine original ideas or solutions to problems and actually do what needs to be done to make them happen. In this activity, we offer kids a problem to solve: How can they move water from here to there?
The Guide
Step 1: Watch the Tinkergarten Home Water Works video lesson.
Hop into your My Tinkergarten dashboard to watch the Water Works video lesson. Kids can watch how Meghan and other explorers use flexible thinking and problem solving to move water, then get inspired to discover their own ways to explore and move water.
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Step 2: Set up the challenge.
Find a spot outside to set up two bins or bowls and fill one of them with water. Gather an assortment of tool that kids can use to transfer water, such as scoops, spoons, containers of various sizes, pipettes, turkey basters, funnels and sponges.
Step 3: Pose a problem to solve.
Wonder together, “How might we move all of this water from here to there?” Take a few moments to look at the tools that are available and brainstorm ideas together. Then, let kids get to work, exploring different tools and approaches.
Step 4: Support Play.
Notice aloud all of the different tools and strategies that kids employ as they transfer water from one bin to the other. As feels supportive, suggest or model a few novel and creative ways to transfer water (e.g. with a sponge, on a spoon, balancing a container on their head). Younger kids may prefer to explore the movement of water within one bowl rather than transferring from one container to another. Whether or not they choose to transfer water from one bin to another, there is much learning that can happen with scooping and dumping play.
Step 5: Add a challenge.
Once kids have transferred water from one bin to the other, welcome them to move it back using a different tool or strategy. For an extra challenge, place the bins farther apart. Or, challenge kids to transfer water from here to there as fast as they can. Time how long it takes, then try it again. Can they beat their last time?
Why is this activity great for kids?
This lesson offers kids the chance to experiment and test out many possible solutions to a problem—a key component of both creativity and problem solving. Water offers endless invitations for play for all learners because, no matter how sensitive a child is to sensory input, water is simultaneously stimulating and calming making it an ideal material for sensory play. This type of play also activates the transporting schema, one of the universal play patterns that supports brain and body development.