
Table of Contents
About Enclosing Schema
Enclosing schema involves creating enclosed spaces for objects or filling enclosed spaces with objects. According to Laura England in Schemas: A Practical Handbook, “Children exploring an enclosing schema will often create enclosures around other objects, themselves or during mark making. Children will explore enclosure by building structures, creating dens and by barricading themselves into spaces.” (England, Laura. Schemas: A Practical Handbook. Bloomsbury Publishing. Kindle Edition).
While exploring enclosing schema, kids, “order, combine, place and bridge things to form enclosed spaces.” Those spaces may be left empty or filled with objects like plastic cows or pine cones. They may also explore how those cows or pine cones will get in and out of the enclosure (Louis, Stella; Beswick, Clare; Featherstone, Sally. Understanding Schemas in Young Children (Featherstone Professional Development) (p. 30). Bloomsbury Publishing. Kindle Edition).
Suggested Loose Parts
Here’s an incomplete list of loose parts that support this play schema:
- •Acorns
- • Aluminum Foil
- •Backpacks
- • Baskets
- •Beads
- •Blankets
- •Blocks
- • Boards
- • Bottle Caps
- •Bowls
- • Bricks
- •Bubble Wrap
- • Buckets
- •Bungee Straps
- •Burlap
- • Buttons
- •Cans
- • Cardboard Boxes
- •Cardboard Sheets
- • Cardboard Tubes
- •Cars & Trucks
- •Chain
- • Chalk
- • Clay
- • Coins
- • Composite Decking
- •Construction Paper
- • Cookie Tins
- • Corks
- •Corn Stalks
- •Cotton Balls
- • Cow Bones
- • Craft Sticks
- •Crayons
- Cushions
- Dirt
- Dish Cloths
- Doorknobs
- Dress Up Clothes
- Egg Cartons
- Envelopes
- Fabric Bolts
- Felt
- Garden Hose
- Grass Clippings
- Hollow Blocks
- Jars & Lids
- Jump Ropes
- Keys
- Kitchen Storage Containers
- Lace
- Leaves
- Logs
- Marbles
- Markers
- Milk Crates
- Mud
- Netting
- Newspaper
- Paint
- Paper Towels
- Pebbles
- Pencils
- Pens
- Picture Frames
- Pillows
- Pine Cones
- Plastic Animals
- Play Dough
- Plywood Sheets
- Poker Chips
- Pool Noodles
- Pots And Pans
- Purses
- reeds
- Ribbon
- Rope
- Sand
- Sandbags
- Seed Pods
- Sewing Bobbins
- Shells
- Shoe Boxes
- Sponges
- Sticks
- Stones
- Straw Bales
- String
- Tape
- Thread Spools
- Tires
- Towels
- Traffic Cones
- Tubing
- Tumbling Mats
- Wading Pools
- Wagons
- Wire
- Wooden Pallets
- Yarn
Have an idea I should add to the list? Share it in the comments or contact me.
Examples
Some examples of this play schema in action:
Exploration of enclosures and enclosing schema play have been around for quite some time. In about 1915, these kids enclosed themselves in a termite mound someplace in the Blue Mountains west of Sydney, Australia.

Kids will use cardboard boxes, baskets, purses, and other containers to enclose items–or themselves.

Some children exploring enclosing schema may display interest in play revolving around jail or being locked up or trapped.

The same little girl made these four creations, exemplifying a paper-based interest in enclosing schema.




It’s important to assure kids can access both things to enclose and enclose with as they explore enclosing schema.

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I’d love to hear your thoughts on improving this entry and suggestions for additional glossary additions in the comments below. You can also contact me with comments or concerns.
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Author
Jeff Johnson is an early learning trainer, podcaster, and author who founded Explorations Early Learning, Playvolution HQ, and Play Haven.


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