Children Dreaming Big - Part Two
Sunday, November 25th, 2007A few weeks ago Maribeth wrote about the challenge of getting children to dream big. This is my second year of working with the North Star in my second grade classroom. This year I was more prepared to help the children understand what it means to “dream big,” and I was very pleased with the results.
Here are some of our BIG DREAMS for the year.
- to be an Olympic gymnast
- to go to Hawaii and live on a boat
- to dig a giant hole
- to own a jewelry store
- to make the biggest cookie in the world
- to go to all the places listed in the book, The 1000 Places to See Before You Die
- to work at a zoo
- to go to Cuba
- to be the most famous baseball player ever
- to have lots of friends
The wonderful thing that happened after the wonderful thing of discussing dreams is that I discovered there are numerous lessons and activities I can generate based on their dreams (who knew!!) For example, I was able to purchase the 1,000 places book and have it in our classroom library. I have observed the child whose dream it was to go to these places looking through the book and sharing the places with other children - instant geography lessons upon which I can build. I found a book about two children who wanted to dig a giant hole and gave it to the child with the giant hole dream - instant reading motivation. I happened to have saved a story one of my former students wrote about a giant cookie. I was able to share that with the giant cookie child. I would like to have the two children correspond. The possibilities go on, and I feel like I have gotten to know the children in a different way because they have been able to share. And, their big dreams are all such fantastic story starters I am thinking of using them for a writing project.
We have just begun posting our Featured Journeys, which show the goals, including the big dream, of three students at a time on one of our classroom bulletin boards. It is a time for those children to reflect on their year-long goals and for the class to see what their classmates’ journeys look like this year. Those who are featured also choose a motivation PHR poster that they think would benefit themselves or the classroom at the time they are being featured. (They are usually right on with their choices.) I am hoping to take the big dreams and make them part of our learning in a special way as those children are being featured for a few weeks.
At the end of the year it will be interesting to see if the children have developed other big dreams or if they have kept their original dreams. I’ll keep you posted…
Eventually it occurred to me that it might be helpful to have students identify some of their interests, strengths and talents before trying to identify their “Big Dream”. I now start the activity by having students identify the interests of the boy in The North Star, and then, based on his interests (i.e. leaves, nature, animals, floating things, building things, helping others), I ask students to speculate what the boy’s “Big Dream” might be. Students often come up with being a veterinarian, an architect, a park ranger, an animal shelter owner, etc. Students then each fill out an “Interest, Strengths and Talents” survey, and use their completed survey to help them come up with their “Big Dream”. This approach has really opened up the “Dream Star” activity in a whole new way – and has become very enlightening to students, to not only realize how many interests, strengths and talents they have, but to then think of a dream they’d never considered before… based on interests they have right here in the “here and now”.