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When Children Play With Blocks

What it means when a child builds a symmetrical structure.

When children play with blocks we can almost see how they think. We can see that they choose particular places to put specific blocks, such as this young five year old named Ria who decides to use rules of symmetry to make her block structure.

Notice how Ria caps the two ends of a wooden dowel with a cube on the right and on the left. She continues this rule of making the two sides equivalent by adding a vertical dowel on the left and another on the right. In other words, she has a plan or a rule. She works from this rule and makes choices, rather than picking up blocks at random and placing them at random.

She continues to use this same rule: what ever she puts on the right she then puts an identical block on the left. But notice that sometimes she starts on the left with a new block pair; and sometimes she starts on the right side first. Watch.

Why is it important to note that she builds symmetry in two different ways, sometimes starting on the right and sometimes on the left?
Imagine that you could only drive your personal car, say a 1997 Toyota. What would this mean about your level of understanding the basic principles of driving. If your ability could not generalize to most any car, even one with the steering wheel on the right side of the car, then one would have to say that your knowledge was more of a motor skill than an a conceptual understanding. In like manner, what if Ria could only make symmetrical structures by beginning the matching pairs with a placement to the left? The fact that she can make symmetrical structures either way means that “symmetry” is a concept that she understands and is not simply a sequence of motions that she plays out the same way every time.

Next Ria caps her structure with a flat block. This placement sort of says, “My structure is complete” (at least for a moment). And at this point she gives her structure a function, “It makes spaghetti.”

We can learn how children think by watching how they build, as we have watched Ria make equivalent sides to her spaghetti machine.. And sometimes they help us understand by telling us their reasons. Listen to Ria explain why her structure “has to be” symmetrical.

She used the phrase “has to be.” We should always pause when we hear this phrase. So often it implies that the child has a rule or an understanding that is so well integrated with many other facts that it would be difficult to consider the current fact as wrong. So, when we hear children say “it has to be” they often mean “given everything else that I know about this domain, the current fact is necessary, or else all the other facts would have to be wrong as well.” In this case Ria is saying, “Given that most machines that work have balanced parts, and given that this is a machine, then it too has to have balanced parts.” [Click here for further explanation]

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