Childhood Map

Discover the amazing things 5-year-olds are learning — from climbing and jumping to friendships, feelings, and first words on a page. Each skill comes with fun activities you can try together.

Understanding the World & Scientific Thinking

Exploring, investigating, and making sense of the natural and social world through observation, inquiry, and reasoning.

Sources (7)
  • UK EYFS (Understanding the World)
  • Head Start ELOF (Scientific Reasoning)
  • Montessori (Cultural Studies)
  • HighScope (Science & Technology, Social Studies)
  • E.D. Hirsch ("What Your Kindergartner Needs to Know")
  • Singapore NEL (Discovery of the World)
  • Finland ECEC (Exploring and Interacting with My Environment)
5 Subdomains
Observation & Scientific Inquiry10 Natural World Knowledge Cause and Effect Tools, Technology & Simple Machines8 People, Culture & Community
Tools, Technology & Simple Machines

Using tools for investigation and daily tasks, and beginning to understand basic technology and how things work.

Examples & Achievements

  • Uses tools purposefully (scissors, tape, stapler, hole punch, magnifying glass)
  • Explores how simple machines work (ramp, lever, pulley, wheel)
  • Uses a tablet or computer for age-appropriate learning activities with guidance
  • Understands basic concepts (on/off, open/close, swipe, tap) for digital devices
  • Builds simple structures and tests how they work

How to Measure

  • Uses 5+ common tools appropriately and safely
  • Demonstrates how a ramp or lever works using materials
  • Navigates an age-appropriate app or program with minimal assistance
  • Teaching Strategies GOLD Objective 28 (technology)
Sources (4)
  • HighScope
  • Head Start ELOF
  • Singapore NEL
  • Finland ECEC
8 Exercises
Snip Stories Magnifying Glass Detective Constellation Punch Cards Ramp Race Lab Pom-Pom Catapult Crew Bucket Brigade Pulley Cardboard Wheels Workshop Tablet Quest
Bucket Brigade Pulley

Building a simple fixed pulley using string and a smooth bar, then using it to “deliver” small loads — discovering how a pulley flips the direction of a pull.

  1. Set up a horizontal bar — a tension rod across a doorway, a closet rod, a broomstick across the backs of two chairs, or a sturdy tree branch outdoors.
  2. Drape a long string (1.5–2 m) over the bar. Tie one end to a small bucket or sturdy paper cup with a handle. The other end is the “pull.”
  3. Place small toys, pretend “groceries,” or wooden blocks in the bucket. The child pulls down on the free end to lift the load.
  4. Notice together: “When you pull DOWN, the bucket goes UP. The pulley flipped the direction!”
  5. Try heavier loads (a stack of 3 books). Send a “delivery” up to a sibling or stuffed animal sitting on a higher chair. Reverse: lower the bucket gently to pick up a new load.

Variation: add a second pulley (a thread spool taped or tied to a stick) for a two-pulley system that lifts heavier loads more easily. Use the pulley to “rescue” stuffed animals trapped on a “mountain” (chair). Run a horizontal pulley laundry-line between two chairs.

Requirements

  • Space: A doorway, hallway, or outdoor branch with about 1.5 m of vertical clearance
  • Surface: Any
  • Materials: 1.5–2 m of string or thin rope, small bucket or paper cup with handle, horizontal bar (broomstick, closet rod, tension rod, tree branch), small loads (blocks, toys); optional thread spool for an upgraded pulley wheel
  • Participants: 1 adult + 1 child for setup; child operates and can play with siblings or parents
  • Supervision: Light to moderate — adult supervises rigging; dismantle the rope after each session

Rationale & Objective

The pulley is one of the six classic simple machines and a staple of HighScope, Reggio-inspired, and outdoor early-childhood programs (Tinkergarten; Playvolution HQ; Little Bins for Little Hands). For a 5-year-old, a fixed single pulley most clearly demonstrates that a pulley redirects force — pulling down to lift up — which is a powerful “aha” moment about how machines extend human power (HighScope KDI 53; Head Start ELOF Scientific Reasoning). The activity also builds gross motor pulling strength, bilateral coordination, cause-and-effect reasoning, and persistence through repeated trials, and offers rich dramatic-play context (delivery service, rescue mission, mail system) that fuels long engagement.

Progress Indicators

  • Early: pulls the string in random directions; doesn’t notice the bucket rising; lets go and watches the bucket fall; needs constant adult guidance
  • Developing: pulls down and watches the bucket rise; loads small items with help; starts to control the speed of the lift; sustains 5 minutes
  • Proficient: smoothly raises and lowers the bucket; loads and unloads independently; describes the relationship (“when I pull down, it goes up”); plays imaginative games using the pulley (delivery, rescue)
  • Advanced: pulls heavier loads with steady tension; adds a second pulley or modifies the system; explains the pulley as a “machine that helps lift things”; troubleshoots when the string slips off the bar

Safety Notes

  • Loose strings around the neck are a strangulation hazard — never leave a long pulley string set up unattended where younger siblings or pets can play with it; dismantle after each session
  • The bucket can swing — keep faces clear of the swing zone, especially eyes
  • Loads should be soft or light — no glass, no heavy metal, no sharp objects
  • For outdoor branches, confirm the branch can support the load and won’t snap; never tie to weak or rotting branches
  • Tension rods can fall if the load is too heavy — start with light loads and a low-set rod
  • Keep the pull height appropriate — the child should be able to pull comfortably without standing on furniture

Hints

  • Playfulness: start a “delivery service” — packages from the kitchen counter to a stuffed-animal village on a chair. Children love being in charge of the system. Hand-paint a “company sign” (“Tom’s Lifting Co.”)
  • Sustain interest: change the location and the cargo each session — outdoor tree pulley one day, indoor doorway the next, two-pulley upgrade later
  • Common mistake: rigging a string that is too short — the child has to reach awkwardly. Use 1.5–2 m so they can pull comfortably at chest height
  • Limited space: a doorway tension rod and a paper cup are enough — the entire system folds into a drawer
  • Cross-domain: count the items being lifted (numeracy); name what’s in the bucket (vocabulary); take turns sending loads with a sibling (social-emotional); explain how it works to a stuffed animal (language)
  • Progression: single pulley with light load → heavier loads → reverse direction (lower carefully) → add a second pulley → laundry-line pulley between two points → solve a pretend rescue or delivery challenge

Sources

  • Tinkergarten — Pulleys Activity for Kids
  • Playvolution HQ — DIY Easy Classroom Pulley System
  • Little Bins for Little Hands — Simple Pulley System for Kids
  • HighScope KDI 53 (Tools and Technology) and KDI 51 (Experimenting)
  • Head Start ELOF — Scientific Reasoning, Cause and Effect
  • Reggio Emilia — tinkering and simple-machine investigation
  • Singapore NEL — Discovery of the World
  • TeachEngineering — Simple Machines Lesson

Childhood MapUnderstanding the World & Scientific ThinkingTools, Technology & Simple Machines

Bucket Brigade Pulley

Building a simple fixed pulley using string and a smooth bar, then using it to “deliver” small loads — discovering how a pulley flips the direction of a pull.

  1. Set up a horizontal bar — a tension rod across a doorway, a closet rod, a broomstick across the backs of two chairs, or a sturdy tree branch outdoors.
  2. Drape a long string (1.5–2 m) over the bar. Tie one end to a small bucket or sturdy paper cup with a handle. The other end is the “pull.”
  3. Place small toys, pretend “groceries,” or wooden blocks in the bucket. The child pulls down on the free end to lift the load.
  4. Notice together: “When you pull DOWN, the bucket goes UP. The pulley flipped the direction!”
  5. Try heavier loads (a stack of 3 books). Send a “delivery” up to a sibling or stuffed animal sitting on a higher chair. Reverse: lower the bucket gently to pick up a new load.

Variation: add a second pulley (a thread spool taped or tied to a stick) for a two-pulley system that lifts heavier loads more easily. Use the pulley to “rescue” stuffed animals trapped on a “mountain” (chair). Run a horizontal pulley laundry-line between two chairs.

The pulley is one of the six classic simple machines and a staple of HighScope, Reggio-inspired, and outdoor early-childhood programs (Tinkergarten; Playvolution HQ; Little Bins for Little Hands). For a 5-year-old, a fixed single pulley most clearly demonstrates that a pulley redirects force — pulling down to lift up — which is a powerful “aha” moment about how machines extend human power (HighScope KDI 53; Head Start ELOF Scientific Reasoning). The activity also builds gross motor pulling strength, bilateral coordination, cause-and-effect reasoning, and persistence through repeated trials, and offers rich dramatic-play context (delivery service, rescue mission, mail system) that fuels long engagement.