Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Kiddie Carpenters

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Kiddie Carpenters

    if the doomsters are half right, hope one of these kids lives near you . . . .

    Kindergarten Shop Class



    By JULIE SCELFO

    IN honor of President’s Day last month, Deb Winsor, a carpenter with a workshop in Brooklyn, led a crew in the construction of an 8-foot-wide model of the White House, complete with north and south porticos and two dozen hand-painted windows.

    After reviewing the plans with the workers, Ms. Winsor, 50, supervised them as they laid out two-by-fours for the front and back walls and then hammered the studs and plates together with three-inch nails. Next, she watched as some of them raised the walls and sheathed them in plywood while others used an electric jigsaw to cut bases for the portico columns. Finally, one of the carpenters used a screw gun to attach a flagpole to the roof and secure the pediment to the freshly painted facade.

    At quitting time, the workers removed their protective headphones, put their tools back in their holsters and cleaned up their work stations. Then they gathered up the wooden toys they had made during break and ran to the door to greet their parents.

    “Good job today,” Ms. Winsor hollered cheerfully at Oscar Markowitz, a 5-year-old boy with orange hair, flushed cheeks and a big grin, one of a dozen children (including the reporter’s son) participating in a weeklong camp she was holding at Construction Kids, her workshop on Flatbush Avenue.

    “Tomorrow we’ll build a log cabin,” she added, as a 9-year-old boy walked by on handmade stilts.

    Ms. Winsor started Construction Kids two years ago, after she conducted a one-day building project at her son’s preschool and was deluged with requests from parents and teachers for more. And while it might seem like something fairly unusual — teaching young children to use power tools — it is one of about a dozen such programs across the country that allow children to hammer and drill to their hearts’ content.

    Just as legions of Americans in cities and suburbs have discovered the joys of working with their hands — building their own chicken coops or brewing artisanal vinegars — many are now encouraging their children to do the same, by giving them the opportunity to learn how to handle a hammer as well as they use an iPhone.
    At the nonprofit Eliot School of Fine and Applied Arts in Boston, children from 4 to 17 are designing furniture and learning joinery techniques in woodworking classes and an off-site program taught at local elementary and middle schools.

    The Randall Museum, in San Francisco, has had a children’s woodworking program for two decades, but in recent years it has doubled the number of its classes and added one for preschoolers.

    The three-year-old Makeville Studio in Gowanus, Brooklyn, which bills itself as a “hands-on lab for craft, building, art and invention,” added a workshop building last year so children as young as 6 can take classes.

    Kids’ Carpentry, an “after-school math enrichment program” that has quietly served Northern California for nearly 30 years, just opened a branch in Minnesota, has added a new program in Berkeley, Calif., and is preparing to bring its woodworking classes to six more cities in the Bay Area by the end of the year.

    And so many parents have been trying to get their children into the Tinkering School, a sleepover summer camp in Montara, Calif., where children 8 to 17 build sailboats and treehouses, that the program recently opened in Austin, Tex., and plans to expand into an entire K-12 school in San Francisco in September; programs in Chicago and Buffalo, N.Y., are in the works for 2012.

    “There is an awakening going on for sure,” said Doug Stowe, a longtime woodworker and educator in Arkansas, who was named a Living Treasure there in 2009 for his efforts at preserving and teaching the craft. Since he started a blog five years ago called Wisdom of the Hands, named after the program he founded in 2001 at Clear Spring School in Eureka Springs, Mr. Stowe said parents, educators and woodworkers from around the country have been contacting him for advice on starting projects and classes in their communities.

    “Up until the early 1900s, there was a widespread understanding that the use of the hands was essential to the development of character and intellect,” said Mr. Stowe, 62. “More recently, we’ve had this idea that every child should go to college and that the preparation for careers in manual arts was no longer required.”

    Somewhere along the way, he added, “we have forgotten all the other important things that manual training conveys.”

    PREVIOUS generations may have learned to use tools at their fathers’ or grandfathers’ workbenches, but today’s parents often need woodworking classes themselves before they can pass along the knowledge.

    Christopher Landy, 42, a television lighting designer in Brooklyn, dealt with what he jokingly calls an “early midlife crisis” by learning construction at Makeville Studio. “It’s very relaxing and it’s a great release from work,” said Mr. Landy, who is using his new skills to build a workshop at his weekend home in Columbia County, N.Y.

    When he realized there were classes for children, Mr. Landy enrolled his son Max, 9, who has since built a lamp, a castle, a crossbow and a Harry Potter-inspired wand, among other things. Then Max’s sister, Samantha, 6, saw how much fun her brother was having, and now she takes a woodworking class, too.

    “They truly love it,” Mr. Landy said. “It’s been a great creative outlet for the whole family.”

    Other parents see woodworking as a way of counteracting the passiveness of logging on and tuning out. Brian Cohen, a former music industry executive in Brooklyn, co-founded Beam Camp, a “summer art and building” camp in Strafford, N.H., in 2005, after seeing how much time his children’s classmates were spending with their iPods and laptops. Children from 7 to 16 spend a month there, devoting part of their time to building a single sophisticated project — geodesic domes in the shape of virus protein shells, for instance, or parade floats with kinetic sculptures — with the help of professionals from various fields.

    “My partner and I saw that kids were spending too much time interacting with perfect interfaces,” said Mr. Cohen, 45. “We felt that we needed to provide an experience by which they could understand how perfection is achieved — and, more specifically, how that perfection is achieved by working through problems with your hands.”

    Louis Hyde, 13, an eighth-grader in Brooklyn, has attended Beam Camp each of the last three summers and plans to go again this year. “I did not ever really imagine there was the potential to make things on the scale that we made them,” he said. “When you finish this gigantic thing at the end of camp, it just feels so good. And you know that you were an active contributor to it.”

    FOR veteran tinkerers, part of the satisfaction of teaching children woodworking comes from sharing the joy of turning a pile of scraps into something functional or beautiful.

    Gever Tulley, 49, a computer scientist and longtime woodworker, founded the Tinkering School in 2005 after he and his wife noticed, he said, “that more and more of our friends’ children were requesting to come over to our house for the weekend because they knew that I would give them a hammer and put them to work.”
    “One day, I suddenly realized I had a responsibility to these children,” he continued. “If I didn’t give them an opportunity to start building things and making things that express their own imagination, they might not get one.”

    During the first summer, he helped eight children build a wooden roller coaster with 120 feet of track. Last summer, the 12 children in each session built an entire village, where they slept for two nights, out of nothing but wood and string.

    “Children are inherently exploratory,” Mr. Tulley said. Years ago, he added: “they were only limited by their imaginations. Now, they seem to be limited by parents.”
    To be sure, many parents and educators are concerned about the inherent dangers in teaching very young children skills that require very sharp tools.

    The Boy Scouts of America, for example, recommend that 6- and 7-year-old Tiger Cubs use ice-cream sticks and soap, rather than knives and wood, to learn carving.

    Renée Fairrer, a spokeswoman for the group, explained: “We don’t think that most young people at that age have either the proficiency or the knowledge to use a knife. We want to get them comfortable with eye-hand coordination using an item that will not hurt them, i.e., a Popsicle stick, on a material that is soft and pliable, before going on to more advanced carving activities.”

    Gary A. Smith, director of the Center for Injury Research and Policy at the Nationwide Children’s Hospital in Columbus, Ohio, agreed that there is reason to be concerned. He cited research that shows that the most serious woodworking injuries are from table saws, although they are relatively infrequent. “When we look at the numbers, and you compare those, for example, with something like bicycling or car crashes or things that are much more common, woodworking doesn’t reach the same level,” Dr. Smith said.

    The message he would give parents: “Be really careful because of the power and potential seriousness associated with power saws and woodworking. Be mindful that your child needs to have the maturity, decision-making ability, the coordination to be able to do that safely. It should be done under trained supervision. And what’s even more important is that the type of saws they use should have automatic stopping technology.”

    While the teachers and administrators interviewed for this article agreed that the dangers were real, they all said that no child had ever sustained serious injuries in their classes. As Mr. Cohen, of Beam Camp, put it: “Tetherball is more dangerous than the shop.”

    Michael Glass, 55, the founder of Kids’ Carpentry, who has been teaching woodworking in schools and community centers for almost 30 years, said that most of the injuries he has seen were very minor.

    “Of course, someone might hit their thumb with a hammer,” he said. “Or they might get a splinter. I can’t remember anyone ever cutting themselves with a saw. In 29 years, there’s been nothing that’s ever required anything more than a Band-Aid.”
    He added: “We’re teaching them the safe use of hand tools. It’s a slow, deliberate process.”

    Lenore Skenazy, a crusader against what she considers overprotective parenting, writes a popular blog called Free Range Kids. She believes that not teaching children basic skills because of the risk of injury defies common sense.

    “We’ve sort of been brainwashed as a culture to believe that our children are the least competent generation to roam the earth,” Ms. Skenazy said. “In almost every other era, children were there to help the family survive, so as soon as they could, they would be helping out, planting seeds, using tools to fix a cart or build a crate. What we’re talking about, it’s not like, ‘Here, son, here’s a chainsaw.’ It’s not chainsaws for children. It’s skills that children have traditionally learned.”

    Parents and teachers who support woodworking instruction for children say it also teaches them how to overcome setbacks.

    Tony Deis, the founder of Trackers Earth, an outdoor education and recreation program in Portland, Ore., that offers instruction in woodworking and survival skills like fire-building, archery and wildlife tracking, said: “When you work with wood and any other natural material, you have to work with it. You can’t just make it be what you want it to be. You have to use all the tools available to create something. It causes kids to deal with real-world results and create real-world solutions for their problems.”

    It may also offer them a rare opportunity to develop their creativity, said Abigail Norman, director of the Eliot School in Boston.

    “Children are so driven to find the right answer, to put their name on the right place on the page, to fill in the right multiple-choice question, to blacken the right dot,” Ms. Norman said. “They’re crying out for opportunities to use their creative mind to take creative risks. Woodworking and art supply that.”

    Moreover, because of shifting priorities, she added, many children are no longer exposed to woodworking at school. In the Boston area, “the era of shop class is pretty much over. Some of the independent private schools have woodworking still,” she said. But in “the public schools, we’ll go into a school for the after-school program and walk by an empty room that has ‘Woodshop’ on the door, but everything is gone from there.”

    Two years ago, Mr. Tulley, the founder of the Tinkering School, self-published “50 Dangerous Things (You Should Let Your Children Do),” an instruction manual (with safety tips) that was his effort to help parents overcome their fears of things children naturally gravitate toward, like making a slingshot, licking a 9-volt battery or hammering a nail. It hit a nerve, and led to a slew of lecture invitations and, eventually, a bona fide printing: it is being published by a division of Penguin Group in May.

    In his introduction for adults (there is a separate one for children), Mr. Tulley explains that the point of letting children do potentially dangerous things is to help them become competent people who “treat failures as feedback, which they incorporate in the ongoing, evolving solution to the problem.”

    Like most of the parents interviewed for this article, Alessandra Bogner, whose 8-year-old son, Dean, is enrolled at the after-school program at Construction Kids, reports a positive experience.

    “I like the fact that in this class we’re giving Dean this responsibility to say, ‘Hey, this is really dangerous stuff, and we know we’re giving you the opportunity to be careful, to do it right,’ ” Ms. Bogner said. “Your heart is in your throat for a minute. But they’re doing it right. And I love that.”

    Why Play House? Let’s Build One

    There are opportunities all over the country for children to learn building skills, in private classes, public school workshops and summer camps. But be forewarned: participants may come home with an expanded sense of can-do. The following is a partial list of schools and camps that offer woodworking classes for children.

    CONSTRUCTION KIDS

    Woodworking for ages 3 and up, in Prospect-Lefferts Garden, Brooklyn. Information: (646) 529-9402 or constructionkids.com.

    THE ELIOT SCHOOL OF FINE AND APPLIED ARTS

    Woodworking for ages 4 and up, in Boston. Information: (617) 524-3313 or eliotschool.org.

    KIDS’ CARPENTRY

    Woodworking for ages 5 to 13, in St. Paul and 17 locations in the San Francisco Bay Area. Information: (510) 524-9283 or kidscarpentry.net.

    MAKEVILLE STUDIO

    Woodworking for ages 6 and up, in Gowanus, Brooklyn. Information: (917) 873-5542 or makeville.com.

    RANDALL MUSEUM

    Woodworking for ages 3 and up, in San Francisco. Information: (415) 554-9600 or randallmuseum.org.

    WOODWORKING WITH CHILDREN

    Ages 5 to 14, in Charlottesville, Va. Information: (434) 979-1220 or kidsoutandabout.com/woodworking.html.

    TRACKERS EARTH

    Woodworking and outdoor skills for ages 4 and up, in Portland and Eugene, Ore., and the San Francisco Bay Area. Information: (503) 559-2825 or trackersearth.com.

    BEAM CAMP

    Collaborative building projects for ages 7 to 17, in Strafford, N.H. Information: (866) 894-7069 or beamcamp.com.

    TINKERING SCHOOL

    Creative building for ages 8 to 17, in Montara, Calif.; Austin, Tex., and Chicago. Information: tinkeringschool.com.


    http://www.nytimes.com/2011/03/31/garden/31kids.html

  • #2
    Re: Kiddie Carpenters

    Who knows...one day some of these kids might build their own bunker...

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: Kiddie Carpenters

      Sounds like a great program until someone pokes an eye out. What do they do for playtime, run around with scissors?

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: Kiddie Carpenters

        Originally posted by housingcrashsurvivor View Post
        Sounds like a great program until someone pokes an eye out. What do they do for playtime, run around with scissors?
        "...In his introduction for adults (there is a separate one for children), Mr. Tulley explains that the point of letting children do potentially dangerous things is to help them become competent people who “treat failures as feedback, which they incorporate in the ongoing, evolving solution to the problem.”

        Like most of the parents interviewed for this article, Alessandra Bogner, whose 8-year-old son, Dean, is enrolled at the after-school program at Construction Kids, reports a positive experience.

        “I like the fact that in this class we’re giving Dean this responsibility to say, ‘Hey, this is really dangerous stuff, and we know we’re giving you the opportunity to be careful, to do it right,’ ” Ms. Bogner said. “Your heart is in your throat for a minute. But they’re doing it right. And I love that.”..."
        When I was a kid, formal school started at the age of six, Grade One. There was no "playschool", kindergarten, "early start" programs or whatever. Families and parents [mostly stay-at-home mothers back then] were expected to raise their children through those ages. My introduction to working with tools came from my father, who taught me how to use a hand saw, a carpenters plane, a mitre box and some of his other tools starting about the age of 4 or 5.

        I learned all sorts of now-useless skills such as replacing a broken window pane held in a wooden sash with glazing points and putty [no double-pane sealed units back in those days]. Also learned a few not-so-useless skills such as how to lay out the stringers for stairs, which I put to good use as the bunker and outbuilding have between them four sets of internal stairs, all built from scratch. The knowledge I used to plumb and wire these buildings also started back then [my father was a master electrician].

        I would hope that one benefit of the organized process of introducing youngsters to tools, especially in this day of power tools [there were few of those in my fathers tool collection], is a much stronger emphasis on safety.

        People who are overly concerned about their kids learning to work with tools are probably equally concerned they may climb too high in trees, and shouldn't play any contact sports...
        Last edited by GRG55; April 02, 2011, 10:32 AM.

        Comment


        • #5
          Re: Kiddie Carpenters

          When I was around 11 we had a fund raiser for my football team, making birch log centerpieces for the holidays. The logs had to be planed on one side, which fell to me. The planer had a fence but no spring-loaded guard. When I finished a pile of logs I relaxed my vigil and inadvertently dragged my hand over the the plane bed. It clipped off half of my middle finger "in a jiffy". My father, who was also helping out, drove me to the hospital, acting somewhat nonchalant, as he ran redlight after redlight. The biggest setback for me at the time was I missed out on our championship game, which we lost 7 to 0. I was the starting QB that year. There was never a hint of not doing any dangerous things ever again. A guard would have been nice was about the extent of the conversation. Today it seems many parents would have a camel.

          Comment


          • #6
            Re: Kiddie Carpenters

            Originally posted by housingcrashsurvivor View Post
            Sounds like a great program until someone pokes an eye out. What do they do for playtime, run around with scissors?
            Originally posted by GRG55 View Post
            People who are overly concerned about their kids learning to work with tools are probably equally concerned they may climb too high in trees, and shouldn't play any contact sports...
            Ooops. Did I forget to add a sarcasm smilie with my post?

            My parents both worked so I was a latchkey kid. Mostly I just dismantled stuff. One time I put something together but it blew up. I was about 8 or 10, picking shards of an over-pressurized glass bottle out of my skin and cleaning up before mom came home. I had woodshop in 7th or 8th grade. While everyone was making lamps, I made a chessboard table but I've lowered my sights since then. Today I'm learning how to fix up two houses (probably my last) because I'd watched This Old House one too many times and thought I'd picked up some skills I'll likely never use again. The major accomplishment I'm most proud to have learned, thus far, is how to drive back to Home Depot three times a day.

            PS. My friends & I had a three-story tree house for a while, but the fire department kept knocking it down.

            Comment


            • #7
              Re: Kiddie Carpenters

              Originally posted by housingcrashsurvivor View Post
              Sounds like a great program until someone pokes an eye out. What do they do for playtime, run around with scissors?
              The fearfulness of our modern society has resulted in current generations not learning many valuable life skills, until they're adults on their own. I was carefully and with observation taught how to use a knife at an early age, power tools and BB guns a bit later, and more as I matured and proved my respect. Eventually as a preteen i was taught how to properly and carefully use a chainsaw, and when I was 14 how to drive a car on private land. The skills have served me all my life and I've been much better prepared for adulthood than many of my neighbors who take their first shot after a spending spree at Home Depot. As a result of this education, I also feel I respected the car substantially more than my peers when I got my drivers license which is the biggest killer of teenagers these days.

              The key is not SHELTER kids from things that are dangerous, but gradually and properly introduce them to more and more dangerous tools throughout their youth and TEACH them how to respect and work with the items in question.

              Comment


              • #8
                Re: Kiddie Carpenters

                Originally posted by housingcrashsurvivor View Post
                ...Mostly I just dismantled stuff...

                ...PS. My friends & I had a three-story tree house for a while, but the fire department kept knocking it down.
                Great stories! My mother used to tell her friends that she knew her son was going to be an engineer because from an early age I was taking apart everything in the house, including some of her appliances, just to see how they worked. As soon as I figured one thing out I would lose interest and move on to the next, and my Dad was tagged with the job of putting stuff back together again. I always wanted a Meccano set but I never got one [I don't think my parents could afford it], so instead of building things, taking stuff apart may have been my revenge :-)

                The Fire Chief was probably worried you and your friends might climb too high in those trees...
                Last edited by GRG55; April 02, 2011, 07:14 PM.

                Comment


                • #9
                  Re: Kiddie Carpenters

                  Originally posted by MarkL View Post
                  The fearfulness of our modern society has resulted in current generations not learning many valuable life skills, until they're adults on their own. I was carefully and with observation taught how to use a knife at an early age, power tools and BB guns a bit later, and more as I matured and proved my respect. Eventually as a preteen i was taught how to properly and carefully use a chainsaw, and when I was 14 how to drive a car on private land. The skills have served me all my life and I've been much better prepared for adulthood than many of my neighbors who take their first shot after a spending spree at Home Depot. As a result of this education, I also feel I respected the car substantially more than my peers when I got my drivers license which is the biggest killer of teenagers these days.

                  The key is not SHELTER kids from things that are dangerous, but gradually and properly introduce them to more and more dangerous tools throughout their youth and TEACH them how to respect and work with the items in question.
                  can't really hurt yourself with a power drill or a hammer. there is one power tool that needs special respect... the table saw. even the pros lose fingers on the things. take off the guard 'cause it's slowing you down, get tired & forget to notice that even tho you turned it off the blade is still spinning... you line up a fresh piece of wood to cut & brush the blade... zing!

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Re: Kiddie Carpenters

                    Originally posted by metalman View Post
                    can't really hurt yourself with a power drill or a hammer. there is one power tool that needs special respect... the table saw. even the pros lose fingers on the things. take off the guard 'cause it's slowing you down, get tired & forget to notice that even tho you turned it off the blade is still spinning... you line up a fresh piece of wood to cut & brush the blade... zing!
                    The power tool that I always had the most concern about was my Craftsman radial arm saw. It always struck me that it would take only a moment of inattention to zing off the thumb of the hand holding the work against the fence - so I was always very respectful of it.

                    I replaced it with a Milwaukee 12-Inch sliding dual bevel miter saw when I started the bunker project. Digital precision, big enough to cut the compound mitres on the widest cornice moldings going into the house, fancy safety guards. By no means impossible to hurt yourself, but a bit less threatening than the older tool [which I still have and don't know what to do with].

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Re: Kiddie Carpenters

                      Originally posted by metalman View Post
                      can't really hurt yourself with a power drill or a hammer. there is one power tool that needs special respect... the table saw. even the pros lose fingers on the things.
                      Can't argue with that ... but smart engineers have even figured that one out ...

                      http://www.sawstop.com/how-it-works/brake-activation/

                      ... it stops when it contacts skin. See the video at the link.

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        Re: Kiddie Carpenters

                        Originally posted by MarkL View Post
                        The fearfulness of our modern society has resulted in current generations not learning many valuable life skills, until they're adults on their own. ... I've been much better prepared for adulthood than many of my neighbors who take their first shot after a spending spree at Home Depot. ... The key is not SHELTER kids from things that are dangerous....
                        Like fearing rain? Back at McCollege for my third time, my last class was canceled because of rain. Seriously. The instructor didn't want the kiddies driving on wet roads. The coddling continues.

                        I recall when the economy was supposedly good news articles on how employers had to learn to be gentle with today's young adults or they'd quit for another job. What a difference a day makes.

                        Meanwhile, while I appreciate gaining skills early in life (my mother sent me off to camp every summer where I learned how to sneak around the night guard on evening raids, years of guitar and piano lessons though I still can't play, horseback riding lessons though a few ruptured discs keep me on two feet today, etc.), it still takes more than skill to swing a hammer, like knowing which nail to use. So my use of tools as a kid does not seem to have decreased my trips to Home Depot for what I've long since forgotten or yet to figure out along the way.

                        Originally posted by GRG55 View Post
                        ...As soon as I figured one thing out I would lose interest and move on to the next, and my Dad was tagged with the job of putting stuff back together again. I always wanted a Meccano set but I never got one [I don't think my parents could afford it], so instead of building things, taking stuff apart may have been my revenge :-)

                        The Fire Chief was probably worried you and your friends might climb too high in those trees...
                        Funny, I could have said the same thing only with my father not mechanically inclined, my parents wound up with a bunch of stuff that worked one day but mysteriously not the next. Mom didn't tagged me an engineer but she must have thought we had gremlins.

                        I did have an erector set, the advantage of two parents working before this economy put that in vogue, and lincoln logs too. But not my own pony. My niece has her own pony and I couldn't be more jealous.

                        Got what you say about the fire chief. That or they were experimenting on us to see how much worse we'd build it each time over until we tired of it altogether.

                        Originally posted by metalman View Post
                        can't really hurt yourself with a power drill or a hammer. there is one power tool that needs special respect... the table saw. even the pros lose fingers on the things...
                        This is actually what I was thinking when reading the article. One of my colleagues where I last worked did that very thing. Three fingers there one day, gone the next. Though for me today that would just mean less arthritis.

                        Originally posted by GRG55 View Post
                        The power tool that I always had the most concern about was my Craftsman radial arm saw....
                        Thanx for that flashback to grade school wood shop. I recall being initially intimidated by a band saw.

                        Comment

                        Working...
                        X