Collaborative Totem Poles

Cooperative building activities provide one of the most valuable learning experiences available for young children.

totem

Play such as this stimulates learning in all domains of development, including intellectual, physical, and social-emotional and language.

totem1

In fact, current research shows that this type of instruction is fundamental for later cognitive success in mathematical and critical reasoning skills.

totem2

For this activity, we constructed totem poles out of boxes.

totem3

Students worked together in small groups, constructing elaborate totem poles that they enjoyed knocking down!

totem4

Advertisement

The Double-Hulled Canoe

Polynesia began with the voyaging canoe. More than three thousand years ago, the uninhabited islands of Samoa and Tonga were discovered by an ancient people called the Polynesians. With them were plants, animals, and a language with origins in Southeast Asia; and along the way they became a seafaring people.

canoe

Arriving in probably a few small groups, and living in isolation for centuries, they evolved distinctive physical and cultural traits. The islands of Samoa and Tonga became the cradle of Polynesia, and the center of what is now Western Polynesia.

canoe6

Following their discovery of the West, Polynesians began exploring eastward (during times when winds shifted away from the prevailing easterlies) and discovered the Tahitian and Marquesas Islands.

canoe1

From these centers of diffusion, explorers reached outward as far as Hawaii to the north, Easter Island to the east, and New Zealand to the southwest. The Polynesians’ primary voyaging craft was the double canoe made of two hulls connected by lashed crossbeams.

canoe4

The two hulls gave this craft stability and the capacity to carry heavy loads of migrating families and all their supplies and equipment, while a central platform laid over the crossbeams provided the needed working, living, and storage space.

canoe2

Sails made of matting drove this ancient forerunner of the modern catamaran swiftly through the seas, and long steering paddles enabled Polynesian mariners to keep it sailing on course. To help your little ones learn more about this, we created and played with our own double-hulled canoe!

canoe3

Your little ones enjoyed stacking their Polynesian people (in our case, superheros and princesses) onto the “canoes” to see how many they would hold. After their vessels sunk, they would laugh and do it all over again!

Kona Coffee Play

The coffee industry of Hawaii is the only significant coffee industry in the United States of America (excluding territories).

coffee6

coffee

While Hawaii is a relatively small producer of coffee, it is well known for its Kona varieties that can be harvested year-round.

coffee1

To learn more about Kona coffee, we scooped and created our own (pretend) coffee drinks out of Hawaiian coffee grounds.

coffee2

Sensory activities (such as these) facilitate exploration and naturally encourage young children to use scientific processes (such as measuring, observing and describing) while they play, create, investigate, and explore.

coffee3