Unit 2 Building Structuresand Exploring Shapes
Unit 2 Building Structuresand Exploring Shapes
Unit 2:
Building Structures and Exploring
Shapes
This unit was developed by the Bremerton School District in partnership with the Office
of Superintendent of Public Instruction and funded through grants from the Boeing
Company and EPA Region 10 to support Early Learning STEM Education.
The Early Learning STEM units are designed for educators, teachers, and childcare
providers to use with children between the ages of 3-5.
Common Misconceptions
A shape can only look one way. Young children can become stuck on the idea
that a shape is only a shape if it looks the same. For example, they may believe
that a triangle with the point down is not a triangle, or that a long skinny
rectangle and a shorter fat rectangle cannot both be rectangles. You can avoid
this misconception by having many different types of the same shapes and
talking about similarities and differences. When asking children to identify a
shape, ask them to tell you how they know what the shape is.
Target Books
Nonfiction (Informational Text):
Design it! Build it! by Susan Ring
o Real-life illustrations are used to describe characteristics of different types
of structures and the process of building. Questions about the design and
necessary characteristics of various structures are included.
Fiction:
The Shape of Things by Dayle Anne Dodds
o Colorful cartoon images illustrate different shapes that can be seen in
everyday life. Rhyming text names the key shape, and then adds
additional information to turn that shape into an everyday life item such as
a house or egg.
Hot Rod Hamster by Cynthia Lord
o A hamster sets out to build a hot rod, selecting different characteristics
that will meet his needs for speed, size, and color
Key Vocabulary
Length – How long something is
Height – how tall something is
Weight – how heavy or light something is
Build – to put things together and create something
Materials – things being used to build
Shape – the way something is formed, circles, squares, and triangles are all
shapes
o Beginning Shapes
Circle
Heart
Oval
Rhombus (commonly referred to as a diamond)
Rectangle
o Advanced Shapes
Crescent
Cube
Cylinder
Hexagon
Octagon
Pentagon
Pyramid
Sphere
Design – A plan of the shapes, sizes, colors and building materials needed to
create something
Model – A small copy of a structure
Structure – A building or something built of parts arranged in a special way
Support – To hold up or keep something from falling
Tower – Tall structure or building
Bridge – A long structure to go across and above something like a river or road
Before Reading
Introduce key vocabulary.
Take a ‘picture walk’-look through the pages and talk about what they see and
think the story may be about; when appropriate, have children make predictions
about what they think may be happening on a page.
Record predictions that children make during their picture walk.
Record what children already know about the topic, a circle map can be an
excellent recording tool - examples are at the end of the unit.
During Reading
Make comments about personal connections, either between you and the story
or the children and the story.
Ask questions that are:
o “On the page”- basic level questions that have yes/no answers or can be
answered by looking at the page.
o “Between the lines” - a higher level of questioning that requires children to
recall information in order to answer.
o “Beyond the book” - an advanced level of questioning that requires
children to take information they have previously heard and make
reasonable predictions based on known information.
A bookmark that contains key vocabulary and a variety of types of questions
specific to each book is included with the unit. It is recommended that you print
the bookmark and keep it with your book copy to serve as a reference guide
when engaging with the book with young children.
Book Extension
Build a house or building for a stuffed animal or doll using different materials
such as blocks, boxes, containers, toilet/paper towel tubes, sticks, leaves, etc.
o Have children select an object they will be constructing a house or other
building for. Some examples might include building a house for a doll or
toy animal or a garage for a toy car or airplane.
o Have children study different buildings and see how different needs are
met. Ask questions such as:
“How are houses for people different from a dog house?”
“How are those different from a garage or a shed?”
“What things will their object need-a wide doorway to get in, or a
chair to sit on?”
Discussion Points
Encourage children to talk about why they are doing something a certain way.
Prompt them with questions about block placement – putting heavy blocks on the
bottom vs. the top. Ask about the materials they used.
Talk about the changes they are making as they build their structure. Why did
they stop making it so tall and instead build longer walls? If they tried making a
roof from the cardboard tubes and changed to strips of paper, why did they
decide to try that instead?
Guide problem solving steps between the children. Call attention to specific
elements that one child has succeeded at and another is having difficulty with.
For example, “Sam, I noticed that Jada was able to stack the blocks so her
building doesn’t fall. Maybe you could ask her to show you how she did it?” This
will encourage cooperative play and using peers as resources rather than the
adult being the sole source of information.
Block Area
Have multiple types of building materials available.
Encourage the children to describe the materials they are using and what their
structure looks like; compare and contrast the different materials and resulting
structures; create hypotheses on why a structure continued standing or collapsed
and follow up to see if their hypotheses were correct. Examples include:
o “What do the blocks feel like? Look like?”
o “How are the wooden blocks different from the foam blocks?”
o “Which block would you prefer to make a house with, newspaper or
blocks?”
o “Why do you think the house fell down? What would happen if you used
the big flat one instead of the tiny square?”
Have whiteboards or laminated papers and wipe off markers so children can
draw their design prior to or post construction.
Have materials such as cove molding, PVC pipe (cut in half or left whole), or
tubing for children to create ramps, tunnels, and other more complex structures.
Meal/Snack Conversations
Using crackers and peanut butter or frosting, build structures. Talk about the
shapes, how they are sticking together, what types of structures they built.
Compare the shapes of the different foods. Are they the same or different? Are
there different sizes of shapes?
Use shape cookie cutters to cut slices of cheese or bread, or use child-safe
knives to cut into different shapes. It may be helpful to have models posted
nearby for children to reference.
Dramatic Play
Hardware store – have a variety of child safe tools, bolts, screws, washers, PVC
pipe, and scrap wood available for ‘purchase’ at the tool shop, and use the tools
to build or fix objects around the classroom
Architect’s Office – children use different writing implements and tools (rulers,
stencils, etc.) to draw blueprints on graph paper. Children can use the blue prints
to build the desired design. Have sample blueprints and pictures of buildings and
houses available to serve as inspiration for children.
Construction Zone – children can use different tools and materials to build a
structure based on a blueprint. Change out the blueprint once the structure has
been built. Encourage cooperation and problem solving between children.
Assistive Technology
Assistive Technology is the use of strategies, adaptations, and/or materials which are
created or commercially available to enable participation in activities that otherwise
would not be accessible. While these strategies are designed to assist those with
disabilities and/or other barriers to learning, they can be implemented with all children,
including those who are not native English speakers. Assistive technology can also
provide additional visual and technological support.
Acknowledgements
Big or small
Round
Shapes
Different shapes
Straight lines
moves
when you heavy
can
blow on it
use to
make
walls
paper
build a blocks
house
rectangle
can cut shape
thick
it