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
Observation & Scientific Inquiry

Noticing details, asking questions, making predictions, and conducting simple investigations.

Examples & Achievements

  • Observes closely and describes what they see in detail
  • Asks "why" and "what if" questions about natural phenomena
  • Makes simple predictions ("I think the ice will melt faster in the sun")
  • Conducts simple experiments with support (sink/float, magnet testing)
  • Compares observations to predictions ("I was right — it did float!")
  • Uses simple tools for investigation (magnifying glass, ruler, balance scale)

How to Measure

  • Makes a prediction and tests it during a simple science activity
  • Describes 3+ observable details about an object or event
  • Uses a magnifying glass to observe and describe small details
  • Head Start ELOF Scientific Inquiry indicators
  • Teaching Strategies GOLD Objective 24 (scientific inquiry)
Sources (4)
  • Head Start ELOF
  • HighScope
  • EYFS
  • Montessori
10 Exercises
Sink or Float Lab Five Senses Snack Investigation Ice Melt Race Nature Detective Field Journal Mystery Feely Bag Magnet Mission Sprout Watch (Bean in a Jar) Wonder Question Jar Shadow Tracker Mini-Beast Stakeout
Five Senses Snack Investigation

A close, slow observation of a single food item using all five senses, one at a time. The child becomes a “food scientist” describing what they notice before they’re allowed to eat it.

  1. Choose one food at a time — apple slice, popcorn kernel (pre-popped), orange segment, cucumber round, pretzel stick, dab of honey on a spoon. Place it on a small plate in front of the child.

  2. Walk through the senses one at a time, with a pause for each:

    • Look: What color is it? What shape? Is it shiny or dull? Are there spots, lines, or seeds?
    • Touch: With clean fingers, is it smooth or bumpy? Soft or hard? Cold or warm? Wet or dry?
    • Smell: Hold it near the nose (not too close). What does it remind you of? Strong or faint?
    • Listen: Tap it on the plate, squeeze it, snap it. Does it make a sound? What kind?
    • Taste: Last. Take a small bite. Sweet, sour, salty, bitter? Crunchy, chewy, smooth?
  3. The adult writes down or sketches the child’s exact words on a “Food Scientist Report” — one row per sense.

  4. After the report is done, the child gets to eat the rest as the reward of finishing the investigation.

Variation: compare two foods side by side (“How is the apple different from the pear?”). Or do a “mystery food” version where the child closes their eyes for the first four senses and only opens them at the end.

Requirements

  • Space: A table or tray
  • Surface: Wipeable; place a small plate or cutting board for the food
  • Materials: One single-portion food item (pre-cut, age-appropriate, allergen-checked), a small plate, a paper "Food Scientist Report" with five rows, a pencil/crayon for the adult to scribe, optional small mirror for the "look" step
  • Participants: 1 adult + 1 child; also works in a small group with the same food for everyone
  • Supervision: Close — adult handles all cutting and serves age-safe pieces; supervises the tasting step

Rationale & Objective

Sensory observation is the developmentally appropriate gateway to scientific reasoning at age 3–6 (Eshach & Fried 2005; Gelman & Brenneman PrePS). Isolating one sense at a time builds the noticing → describing → comparing chain that underlies all later inquiry, and dramatically expands descriptive vocabulary (NAEYC’s 2023 Young Children article on linking science and language showed science-investigation talk produces the largest vocabulary gains of any preschool routine). The activity targets HighScope’s Observing KDI head-on, supports Teaching Strategies GOLD Objectives 24 and 17 (vocabulary), and gives the child the felt experience of being a real investigator with a real instrument — their own body.

Progress Indicators

  • Early: uses one or two generic words (“good,” “yummy,” “yucky”); rushes to taste; can’t describe smell or sound; treats the activity as a snack
  • Developing: gives 1–2 specific descriptors per sense with adult prompts (“red, round”); can wait through the four senses before tasting; begins to use comparison words (“like a ball”)
  • Proficient: produces 3+ specific descriptors per sense without prompting; uses similes (“smells like grass”); compares to other foods spontaneously; sustains attention through all five senses
  • Advanced: predicts taste from look/smell (“I bet this will be sour”) and checks; notices contradictions (“it looks soft but feels hard”); describes sub-features (“the red part is shinier than the green part”); generates comparisons across multiple foods over days

Safety Notes

  • Always check allergies first — peanut, tree nuts, egg, dairy, soy, wheat, fish, shellfish, sesame are the FDA top-9 allergens. Confirm with parents before any group session
  • Choking hazards: the AAP lists whole grapes, popcorn, whole nuts, hard candy, raw carrot rounds, and large hot-dog rounds as high-risk for children under 4–5. Cut grapes into quarters lengthwise; avoid popcorn for under-4s; cut carrots into thin strips, never coins
  • Strong-smelling items (lemon, vinegar, mustard) should be sniffed at a distance — caution against deep inhalation
  • Adult does all cutting; child never handles a knife
  • Hand-washing before and after; sanitize surfaces between children
  • Skip the activity if the child has a fresh mouth ulcer, illness, or strong food refusal that day — coercive tasting damages food relationships

Hints

  • Playfulness: give the child a paper “Food Scientist” badge or chef hat. Use a magnifying glass for the “Look” step — kids feel like real investigators
  • Sustain interest: rotate themes weekly — fruit week, crunchy week, breakfast-foods week, foods-from-far-away week. Pin completed reports on a “Lab Wall”
  • Common mistake: doing all five senses simultaneously, which overwhelms working memory. Slow it down — one sense, then the next. Also: never correct the child’s perception (“No, it’s not sour, it’s sweet”) — that invalidates their data and the activity loses its point
  • Limited space: needs only a plate and 5 minutes. Perfect for a kitchen counter, lunchbox unpacking, or a restaurant wait
  • Cross-domain: compare two foods — Venn diagram (classification); count seeds, lines, segments (numeracy); name the food in another language (language); draw what was eaten (visual art)
  • Progression: 1 food, adult scribes → 1 food, child draws → compare 2 foods → blind-tasting where one of four senses is hidden → predict-and-check (“I think this will smell sweet”) → keep a food-investigator journal across weeks

Sources

  • Gelman, R. & Brenneman, K. (2004). "Science learning pathways for young children." Early Childhood Research Quarterly, 19(1)
  • Eshach, H. & Fried, M. N. (2005). "Should science be taught in early childhood?" Journal of Science Education and Technology
  • NAEYC (2023). *Young Children* — "Let's Talk: Linking Science and Language Learning in the Preschool Classroom"
  • NAEYC (2013). *Spotlight on Young Children: Exploring Science*
  • Worth, K. (2010). "Science in Early Childhood Classrooms: Content and Process," ECRP/SEED publication
  • HighScope Preschool Curriculum — Science and Technology, KDI Observing
  • Head Start ELOF — Scientific Reasoning (P-SCI 1, 2, 4)
  • Teaching Strategies GOLD Objective 24 (scientific inquiry), Objective 17 (vocabulary)
  • UK EYFS — Communication & Language ELGs; Understanding the World (Natural World)
  • AAP / HealthyChildren.org — choking hazards and food allergen guidance for under-5s

Childhood MapUnderstanding the World & Scientific ThinkingObservation & Scientific Inquiry

Five Senses Snack Investigation

A close, slow observation of a single food item using all five senses, one at a time. The child becomes a “food scientist” describing what they notice before they’re allowed to eat it.

  1. Choose one food at a time — apple slice, popcorn kernel (pre-popped), orange segment, cucumber round, pretzel stick, dab of honey on a spoon. Place it on a small plate in front of the child.

  2. Walk through the senses one at a time, with a pause for each:

    • Look: What color is it? What shape? Is it shiny or dull? Are there spots, lines, or seeds?
    • Touch: With clean fingers, is it smooth or bumpy? Soft or hard? Cold or warm? Wet or dry?
    • Smell: Hold it near the nose (not too close). What does it remind you of? Strong or faint?
    • Listen: Tap it on the plate, squeeze it, snap it. Does it make a sound? What kind?
    • Taste: Last. Take a small bite. Sweet, sour, salty, bitter? Crunchy, chewy, smooth?
  3. The adult writes down or sketches the child’s exact words on a “Food Scientist Report” — one row per sense.

  4. After the report is done, the child gets to eat the rest as the reward of finishing the investigation.

Variation: compare two foods side by side (“How is the apple different from the pear?”). Or do a “mystery food” version where the child closes their eyes for the first four senses and only opens them at the end.

Sensory observation is the developmentally appropriate gateway to scientific reasoning at age 3–6 (Eshach & Fried 2005; Gelman & Brenneman PrePS). Isolating one sense at a time builds the noticing → describing → comparing chain that underlies all later inquiry, and dramatically expands descriptive vocabulary (NAEYC’s 2023 Young Children article on linking science and language showed science-investigation talk produces the largest vocabulary gains of any preschool routine). The activity targets HighScope’s Observing KDI head-on, supports Teaching Strategies GOLD Objectives 24 and 17 (vocabulary), and gives the child the felt experience of being a real investigator with a real instrument — their own body.