Page SIA THE MICHIGAN DAILY Thursday, June 13, 197/4 Studen t-designed equipment sparks children's imaginati By KAREN KASMAUSKI Wanted: Creative University students to build fantasy ma- chines for creative little kids; manual labour, irregular hours, guaranteed frustration and no pay. At least 15 students, sopho- mores to graduates, would have answered such an ad. They were participants in an experi- mental course offered winter term under the sponsership of Professor James Chaffers of Architecture and Design and John Thompson, a researcher in the School of Education. Dave Stockson, an architec- ture student participating in the class, said the students, work- ing in teams of two to five, se- lected a daycare center to work with. All centers were non - profit, for low income families. All lacked large playground equip- ment. The students' goal was to ob- serve the children at play, then, try to devise a piece of play equipment which best suited the preschoolers and enhanced the ideal philosophies of the cen- ter. Marge Carter ,at the Corntree Center, felt the students had been quite successful in what they came up with for the cen- ter - a circle of stumps. "Our focus here is on a real free ex- ploring atmosphere. We like having multipurpose equipment to be used according to what kids think of it," Carter said. Creativity is the key word at Corrtree. The staff there likes to see kids "work out their own activities and problems." The consideration given to the wide range of motor skills pres- ent in children in the designing an dspacing of the stumps also pleased Carter. "There are some groups of stumps for those without much coordination and others are widely spaced for kids with more dexterity," she explained. "Kids are en- couraged to use what is appro- priate for them." Jacqueline Hargraves of the High Street Day Care Center #agrees that the equipment de- sign was successful. "It's built on so many different levels. Kids can really use their imag- ination and stretch it," she said. The complexity. of the equip- ment built there "makes it more interesting," Hargraves s a i d. "They can get in and do any- thing they want. Some hide in there and you don't even know they're in there. I don't think anything could replace it.' Despite its numerous succes- ses, the Project did have a few disappointments. E I a i n e Aubin of the Child Care Action Center in the education school relates, "Things got a little messed up with this center. The person who was supposed to design for us had trouble get- ting material." The center had to settle for a design created originally for the Model Cities Day Care Cen- ter. Maria Tenorio, a member of the Project Community staff, explained why the centers did not always get what was de- signed for them. "One of the main problems is the course started without any money. The student, in order to build, had to work out the best getting supplies." T could ask the centet or the community fa materials, or pay thing himself. "The University sponding," Tenorio the student need to b ential courses. Just we've had proves sity is not fulfili mitment to studss and desires." Project Commoi' sity student org: deals with comelo: and involvements soring a bucket drie in front of locI funds collected sill equipment still built. Not all of the ing centers hose y their equipment. Photo by KARE KASMA