Wednesday, 1 February 2017

What Happened to Little Sean- An Inquiry into Giant Tiger Snails

YY observing Little Sean and some chewed up paper last year.
11 January 2017
What happened to Little Sean?

Mid-last year, the children discovered a snail in the garden and named it ‘Little Sean’.

The children observed Little Sean, creating observational drawings and discovering interesting traits like how Little Sean had feelers that would go in (disappearing completely) and pop out.

When Little Sean’s poo poo was found to be white in colour and papers in the room began looking a little chewed up, with a photograph of a snail appearing to be eaten up around the edges, the children made a story of how the snail in the photograph was Little Sean’s girlfriend and he would only eat around the photograph. Many stories came out of that!

Little Sean remained in the garden through the year and each time the children went inside, they would look for him.

In Janaury this year, during our first class, LJ and EJ created snails using playdough and little oranges in the atelier.


This play dough activity had been set up to explore mandarin oranges in light of the festive season but the children had their own ideas!

Upon going to the garden, Little Sean’s shell was found. However, inside the shell there was just brown water. There was also a strong smell coming from within the shell.

The children began to hypothesize what might have happened:

“Little Sean came to water already”, LJ (2 yo)

“The snail is here. He go for a walk on the floor maybe. Little Sean wee wee”, NA (4 yo)

“I think Little Sean became water. I think he’s been there for a long long time”, XY (4 yo)

“The shell. Got no more Little Sean. He went out on the forest and the wolf howl and eat Little Sean”, EJ (4yo)

What happened to Little Sean?




Clay representations of snails from their memories of Little Sean, images and videos. 



18 January 2017
Our New Snail Friends

Uncle Sukati who comes in once a week to tend to the garden brought us not one but EIGHT snails! 
Observing slime

Today, we sat down around the snails and we named them. Uncle Sukati told us that snails like it to be a little wet and they don’t like it to be too hot. NA remembered this information and when the snails did not come out from their shells, she said “it needs the water!” We sprinkled some water and LJ grabbed some leaves for them and...... most of them came out! 



“She came out already!” V (2 yo)

“It come out! It so big!” A (3 yo)

In order to name them, we had to figure out how to tell them apart. One of the snails looked different from the others.



“He’s very long," XY (4 yo)

The rest looked similar to Little Sean and XY found in our book that they seemed to be ‘Giant Tiger Snails’.

O got a ruler and began to measure the snail which she said looked the biggest.

“I think he’s 8 or 9,” O (5 yo)

This got us all going with distinguishing between the snails by size.



The largest snail was 7 cubes long and it was named ‘Mi Mi’.

Followed by ‘Ji Mi’ (6 cubes), ‘Spider Man Shell’ (4 cubes), ‘Shrek’ (3 cubes), ‘Kung Fu Panda’ and ‘Batman’ (2 cubes).

The snail that looked a bit different was named ‘Victoria’. Her shell was 2 cubes long but could extend her body much longer.

Here are some observations made by the children:

“Snail. He cold.” V

“He’s eating the leaf!
I draw Mi Mi come out.” XY

“He’s licking the other shell," O

“This one’s moving!
I saw Spider Man moving.
It’s coming out to eat the leaf.
He’s drinking the water. He’s licking.
My one is dancing.” LJ



“I saw it climbing up and around!
Why Kung Fu Panda is not coming out?” E (4yo)

“This is the leg.
This is the shell.
Slime.” NA 


19 January 2017
Who's the Biggest of Them All? +
What's in a Shell?



Today, we created a graph to show the relative sizes of our snails.
We had to recognize and sequence the numbers given to us and then we tried to remember how many cubes our snails were. Then we placed our numbers on the graph to compare the sizes of the snails.
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.
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Among the questions the children had about snails were these two:
What is the snail’s shell for?
What is inside the shell?

We did some line drawings to show what we thought might be inside a snail's shell.


Leaf. Heart”, XY

“This is the heart. The blood flows here. This is the part of water. Where the water flows. This is the part where his parts of his body makes the lungs…and the sound hong hong hong.” O

"There’s a sound. Ra! Ra!” EJ

“This is the body,” LJ

“Noise. This is noise. Noisy night. And they got heart shapes,” NA

A Visual Representaion of Our Learning


To be continued......






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