Article

Playing in the sand – naturally

Ron King, M.Arch. | June 2012

The beauty of sand is one of the few manipulatives that truly allows children to explore their imaginations, it’s a material found almost everywhere on earth, and children love playing in it.

They can dig to China, find “fossils,” hunt for gems, make roadways, build mountains, create waterways, build sand castles, dig tunnels, and discover hidden treasures. If they mix sand with water, they can make shapes of almost any kind.

two children playing in a large sandpit

But look at all the others things they learn on their own, without a teacher, just by playing in a pile of sand!

  • Sand has what is called a “slump” characteristic, so when poured, sand will form a mound, the slopes of which vary in angle depending on the size of its granules and the dampness of the sand.
  • On a sunny day, the surface of the sand will be hot, but when children dig down, they find coolness.
  • When sand is wet, it changes colour. And when wet sand gets very cold, it freezes solid.
  • When sand is wet, it can be shaped, and the finer the sand, the more intricate the shapes can be.
  • When water evaporates from a structure made with sand, it collapses.
  • When too much water is added, structures don’t hold their shape.
  • Sand is comprised of many tiny particles of various sizes and colours which children can sort and collect.
  • Sand, like other fine materials, slips through the small cracks in their hands, so children learn to clasp them together more tightly when trying to contain fine materials.
  • Sand is portable, so children find many ways to move it by pushing it, pulling it, putting it in and pouring it out of containers, carrying it by hand, shovelling it, moving it by dump truck, and pouring it out of funnels.
  • If children try building a bridge using sand, they learn that it won’t support itself and that they need something with more “structural integrity” like a stick or a piece of wood.
  • Sand can be portioned and divided, and added and subtracted. More is heavier, less is lighter, and to get more, you take more, and keep adding until you have just the right amount, a decision in itself.
  • Sand can bury or “hide” things, like treasures, which can be found later.
  • Sand particles get into everything: pockets, fingernails, sneakers, hair, lunchboxes, and classrooms. Sand makes a floor very slippery.
  • But in the wintertime, sand on ice makes it less slippery.
  • When it rains, rivulets can move sand, and make beautiful, smooth patterns.
  • But if children try making a sand dam, they soon realise it won’t hold water.
  • Dig deep enough on a beach, and children find water; deeper still, they’ll discover that their holes collapse.
  • Children learn to control their bodies in different ways when they’re kneeling on the sand, sitting and twisting, or turning and reaching.
  • When children are barefoot, their feet and bodies have to adjust in surprising ways to accommodate the ever-changing surface of sand.

If our firm were designing a Natural Playground for a childcare centre, school, or community, this list would comprise the “design parameters” for a free-form, sand play area. Similar parameters would be developed for every other aspect of a Natural Playground, because they’re the ultimate outdoor classrooms that should challenge and inspire children while teaching them lessons about themselves and about nature.

Topics
Sand and water
Age
Early years
Use
Professional development