Hilltop Children’s Center, a private daycare and after-school facility in Seattle, banned Legos for several months because the young builders wanted ownership of their creations. The teachers tell their story in Rethinking Schools magazine
Legos are the colorful building blocks from childhood days or maybe last week.
Hilltop Children’s Center is a private facility that charges monthly tuition of $235 or more for a child to attend after-school care. The privately paid teachers wanted the children to stop thinking, as one child reportedly did: “If I buy it, I own it.”
One article states
Playing with Legos is now governed by three rules: All structures are owned by everyone; structures should adhere to size requirements so as to not create inequity; and the plastic Lego people can only be used by a group of people, not by individuals.
The teachers next plan to explain the dangers of pay to the Center’s administrators with the goal of eliminating tuition and teacher salaries. OK, that would only happen if they really believed what they taught.