If I had influence with the good fairy who is supposed to preside over the christening of all children I should ask that her gift to each child in the world be a sense of wonder so indestructible that it would last throughout life, as an unfailing antidote against the boredom and disenchantments of later years, the sterile preoccupation with things that are artificial, the alienation from the sources of our strength.
-Rachel Carson
Atop a hill at the center of our outdoor classroom at the Fiddleheads Forest School in Seattle, Washington, is a sprawling fairy village. Scramble up a looping pathway past a few western red cedars and a bed of native Mahonia and evergreen elderberry and you’re there. It’s a little metropolis, complete with gardens, a town circle (much better than a square, according to the students), a movie theater/restaurant (depending on who’s giving the tour), and even a towering “Space Needle” in honor of our city’s most prominent landmark. The place grows and changes with each passing week. Children collect items from the surrounding area and put them carefully and purposefully around the village. The fairy village has been central to the life of our classroom since it came into existence, and the educational opportunities it affords the children make it worth exploring.
Imaginative Play and Possibility
But whether or not the children believe in fairies is often unimportant. Once they have encountered something that is potentially magical, the role the students embody in their imaginative play becomes that of an individual who believes in fairies and is attending to their happiness. Discussions about the existence of fairies can wait for another time, because the game is afoot.
The Child’s Domain: Self-Directed Skill Building
So much of the world is off-limits to children, but the fairy village is their domain. Annie Quest, a social pragmatics teacher who spent years running fairy camps in the green mountains of Vermont, explained the attraction for her as a child: “I felt small, [and] fairies are small, but they’re very powerful. They’re much tinier than people, but they can turn anything in nature into things that are useful for themselves.” In some ways, the most magical element of the fairy village is its ability to give children the sort of control over a whole world that they so often struggle to achieve in their own lives. In the land of fairies, only the children decide when it is bedtime.
The precision required to build these little homes encourages concentration and fine motor development. Because the work is creative and self-directed, the children are likely to engage far longer than they might with a traditional fine motor work. The author Tracy Kane echoed this in her own experience, remembering how “One boy brushed his dog for a week to create a soft floor for the fairies.” Activities such as scooping, pinching, threading, weaving, and tying are inherently a part of construction, and as the children’s skills are refined, so are the finished products that they create.
Over the past two years, the fairy village at our school has mirrored the development of the children around it, transforming from a pile of objects that the children gathered from around the classroom into a true “village” in which the residents are constructed from twigs, twine, and small bits of cloth. For the 3-year-old child, a finished product may look more like a pile of sticks to the untrained eye, whereas an older student of 4 or 5 will regularly take on a more elaborate design, knotting twine and weaving bark through posts for walls. Often the older students will support the younger ones, perhaps by demonstrating how to twist a stick like a drill to get it into the ground properly or helping to dig around a particularly difficult rock.
Sharing Spaces and Negotiating Differences: Science and Belief
The fairy village is a shared space. The children must negotiate the space with one-another, and understand that other children may differ in the ways they want to use that space. The disagreements that inevitably arise from working together in a small area offer opportunities for the children to practice conflict resolution. They learn that, to enjoy the fairy village, they must be flexible and they must share their ideas and plans with the others who are working with them, and they come to terms with the fact that weather can sometimes create more havoc than an uninformed peer.
Too often in early childhood education, we feel compelled to moderate or inhibit debate among young children, but in my experience, I have discovered that it is impossible to teach conflict resolution without allowing students to practice differences of opinion. When children freely express their own ideas and are encouraged consideration of other’s, they develop a sense of self while simultaneously building empathy. Whether or not they “believe,” the process of searching for, discussing, and constructing elaborate new dwellings for these imaginary creatures wherever we go is enthralling. It is the shared journey, the tiny discoveries, and the potential of the unknown that lie at the heart of this experience and make it so compelling. As Quest put it, “If you believe in fairies they are real. If you don’t believe in fairies they are real fun.”
Loose Parts and Construction
Anything in nature can become a part of a fairy village, and from an educational standpoint, this is part of the allure. As Kane explained to me, “Fairy houses get children outside looking at natural materials in new ways. Sticks and bark become walls and roofs. Stones make strong foundations and acorn caps are a perfect size for dishes.” There is enormous cognitive benefit to allowing children to imagine how the natural elements around them might fit into their creation.
With that in mind, we collect objects from the surrounding environment including stones, sticks, and fallen moss or lichen from trees (we teach the children to only collect items that have naturally fallen on the ground so as not to disturb the surrounding ecosystem) and combine them with driftwood, pebbles, and seashells combed from the nearby Puget Sound. Stumps and tree circles provide platforms for display.
If you search online for fairy villages, you can easily find intricately detailed—and sometimes exorbitantly priced—fairy sculptures for sale. But these objects each have a specific purpose, and most are not meant for handling by tiny fingers. Cognitively, the potential of dynamic, open-ended materials like those found in nature far outpace those of the store- or Etsy-bought kind.
Of course it’s difficult to resist the desire to provide the children with beautiful, complete forms. Whenever I am tempted to do so, I try to remind myself of something that Tanck expressed during a panel on nature play, the lesson she said took the longest to sink in: “If everything about the features we provide is already ‘done,’ there's nothing left for children to do but destroy it.” In contrast, she and her team discovered that, “When a feature looks started yet unfinished, it becomes an open-ended invitation for creativity, imagination and productive energy to flow. The results are magic to watch.” So often in preschool, I find that my most important role is to know when to get out of the way, and the fairy village offers a perfect opportunity to simply sit back and observe.
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Back at Fiddleheads, the students are contending with changes to a fairy farmer’s market they constructed the month before at a nearby nurse log. “Somebody knocked it over,” remarks a student. “Or else a squirrel wanted to get the seeds to give to its babies?” suggests another. “Maybe it was the fairies!” cries a third. There is a pause as they consider the options in front of them. “Well,” one of the older children points out, “the fairies are going to need more food. We have to get everything for them!” Within minutes they’ve scattered, darting down the hill, pausing here and there to collect a lawn flower or hemlock cone. The children are focused, they have purpose, and they are absolutely full of joy. This task, in this moment, is as important as anything they can imagine, and the possibilities are endless.
About the Author
Kit Harrington is the co-director of Fiddleheads Forest School at the University of Washington Botanic Gardens in Seattle, Washington. In addition to her administrative capacity, Kit lead teaches and develops curriculum and school philosophy. She will be presenting a workshop on teaching flexible thinking and self-regulation in the outdoor classroom at the Nature-Based Preschool National Conference in Elachee, Georgia, in August.
Resources for Further Exploration
Books
Fairy Houses, Tracy Kane
A story about a little girl who builds a fairy house on an island in Maine. Reinforces care for the environment, use of natural materials and nature connection.
Fairy Houses…Unbelievable!, Tracy Kane and Barry Kane
Gorgeous photographs of fairy houses. We laminated a copy and the children use it for inspiration, rain or shine.
How to Find Flower Fairies, Cicely May Barker
A beautiful, intricate pop-up book. We love the creative way the authors use the pop-up book format to encourage children to peer into, under, and around objects in their environment.
The Giant Golden Book of Elves and Fairies, Jane Werner and Garth Williams
Annie Quest’s favorite childhood fairy book.
If You See a Fairy Ring: A Rich Treasury of Classic Fairy Poems, Susanna Lockheart
Combines the poetry of Robert Graves and Laura Ingalls Wilder with skillfully rendered illustrations that change as readers turn the page.
On the Web
Creating a place for Nature Play
Let the Children Play Theory of Loose Parts
Fairy Fun – 40+ fantastic fairy ideas