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An excerpt from the elementary biology album that reminds us why we use generic shapes in the botany cabinet, as opposed to leaf names specific to a particular region:
Once the child gathers a large body of
knowledge from sensorial exploration, she can then begin to order and classify
it.
An example of how this happens is by
giving the child the name of the new shape rather than just giving the name of
the plant from which the leaf comes. For example, the child can see that this
plant has obovate leaves and so does this plant. That plant over there has
sagittate leaves. When you give the name of the leaf shape, you give the
children a tool to classify leaves and plants alike. Just giving the names of
the plants, does not provide a basis for ordering and classification. This base
of information is also built up through the use of nomenclature material in the
primary. The nomenclature material is used by children who are reading and also
those children who are not yet reading. Through the use of the nomenclature
material, children learn the names of plants, parts of plants, names of animals
and names of parts of animals. Eventually, all of this information can be
ordered and classified. Another source for building up the child’s store of
information comes from the stories, the poems and the songs that the teacher
introduces about plants and animals.
All of this work becomes a foundation
from which the children will launch with her work in the elementary.
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