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Mazes in real life….
ALA Midwinter 2007, Washington Convention Center, Seattle
LA Freeways
Metropolitan Museum of Art
New York Subway System
Wisconsin Bike Trails
Queen Mary 2 Deck Plans
Heathrow Airport
Central Park
Real life mazes?
Mazes and children
• Mazes help children learn decision-making and critical thinking skills. They have to think ahead and plan steps to be taken later. They understand that there are alternative ways to solve problems.
• Mazes help children learn to judge spatial relationships. Real world applications for air traffic controllers and similar occupations.
• Working with mazes is particularly suited to boys and reluctant readers.
• Games involve mazes. Computer games like Donkey Kongand Pac Man (retro games that are coming back in style) and chess are mazes.
• Also helpful in practicing “revision.” They have to backtrack and try another path.
• For the youngest children, mazes help develop fine motor skills. Research has shown that maneuvering through mazes helps improve children’s handwriting.
Projects
• Research and discuss historical and contemporary mazes, throughout history and throughout the world.
• You can help children, and adults, make a Geometric Maze or a Random Roxie Reversing maze. I have the instructions up on my website today. (go to www.roxiemunro.com/webinar.html)
• Create a maze sketch, let children draw it with chalk on the parking lot or sidewalk, and then have them walk through it.
• Ask your patrons to think about and make a list of where maze-like environments exist in their own every day life.
• Print out the 3-goal and the four alphabet mazes from my website and have patrons solve the mazes, do the finding/counting game, and color them in.
Good websites for more information
• http://www.labyrinthos.net/f_homepage.htm (British website, lots of history, photo library)
• http://amazeingart.com/maze-faqs/draw-mazes.html (maze resources; how to make a maze, downloadable mazes)
• http://gwydir.demon.co.uk/jo/maze/index.htm (my favorite; history, particularly unicursal, and how to make a maze)
• http://www.unmuseum.org/maze.htm (mainly history and terminology)
• http://www.crystalinks.com/labyrinths.html (history, how to make amaze, modern applications)
• http://www.geocities.com/mikesmazes/ (UK maze designers, definitions, types of mazes)
Thanks!
Check out www.roxiemunro.com
To revisit parts of this WEBinar, and follow the step-by-step instructions for making the Geometric and Random Roxie mazes,
go to
www.roxiemunro.com/webinar.html