Fostering An 'Attraction' To Learning
Fostering An âAttractionâ To Learning
By Larissa Lytwyn
Head Oâ Meadowâs second grade students recently celebrated their first-ever Magnet Fair. Designed by the schoolâs five second grade teachers last summer, the event was inspired by last fallâs highly successful Dinosaur Day.
Each color-coded class circulated between the five classrooms for five unique lessons centered on the use of magnets.
âThe magnets really reflect the different themes each class is working on,â explained second grade teacher Karen Blasko. Her program âWill A Magnet Attract This?â had students measuring a small magnetâs attraction to various materials, including tin foil, rubber, and cloth. The students had to predict whether or not the magnets would attract the material and then record whether they actually did or not.
Second grade teacher Sara Washicko taught âFace to Face,â in which students learned whether different magnets, differentiated through color, would âattractâ or ârepelâ each other. Students colored in the different combinations of magnets that drew or repelled each other with crayons. âItâs a great, hands-on activity,â said Ms Washicko. âThe students are having a lot of fun.â
Teacher Christine Wharton directed another activity, âHungry Hounds.â Ms Wharton explained that the class used magnets to âsendâ a construction-paper cutout of a dog from its house to its bone. Other activities were âFloating Magnets,â in which students balanced magnets on pencil tips, and âFish Nâ Clips.â In âFish Nâ Clips,â teacher Karen Tomanio guides students into evaluating different levels of attraction through a magnet attached to the end of a pole. âThe students see how a greater number of small paper clips will prove a stronger attraction than one or two larger clips,â she said. The information is used to construct charts and bar graphs.
The studentsâ data from all five activities are recorded into a single journal. âThe activities are great,â noted math and science specialist Gail Maletz. âWe use not only science, but math, too.â
âThe Magnet Fair really integrates all of the lessons weâre teaching [the students] right now,â said Ms Blasko. âEvery year we have a different theme. I think magnets was a great idea to use this year!â
