Sunday, November 30, 2014

The One with December Plans: Week One

Here comes Christmastime! I can't even believe the year has flown by so fast! This month I have the typical letter/shape/number/color, but I tried to also incorporate lots of fun crafts. Our family specifically doesn't celebrate with Santa, but feel free to incorporate him in if he is part of your family traditions.

Here's December's printable calendar! 
-------------------------------------
Objectives:
Letters: J, K, L
Color: White
Shape: Triangle
Number: 10
Theme: Christmas Trees, snowman, nativity (or substitute/add Santa if desired!)
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Jj Dot Art*
Directions: print file. Allow child to decorate the uppercase and lowercase J. (You can use circle stickers, dot stampers, play dough pieces, or pom poms) Read Dr. Seuss's ABC book, and discuss which letter is "Big J" and which one is "Little j" Hang paper on fridge for the week to reference. 


Triangle Popsicle Tree
Directions: paint 3 popsicle sticks green. Glue the sticks together into a triangle shape. Describe the attributes of a triangle (3 straight lines, 3 corners). Decorate the sticks to look like a Christmas tree using craft supplies (glitter, buttons, pom-poms, sequins, etc).


Manger Handprint
Directions: paint your child's hand brown. Add straw and a baby Jesus for decoration. It looks like a cute little manger! Tell the story of Jesus' birth! (This would be a great keepsake for grandma!)

J is for Jellyfish Snack
Directions: poke lots of uncooked spaghetti sticks into hot dog pieces. Boil the hot dogs (with sticks attached) until the pasta is tender. It looks just like a jellyfish! It's a fun lunch! Talk about how jellyfish starts with the letter J.

(picture coming soon!)

White Snow Pictures
Directions: use white crayons/chalk to draw snow on a black piece of paper. (Kids think it's so fun how you can't see the white crayon on white paper, but it shows up on black paper!)

Mitten Sort*
Directions: print file. Cut apart pictures from page 2. Mix up the small pieces and allow the child to sort them onto the corresponding color of mitten. Describe the colors of each mitten as you match.

Play Dough Christmas Tree Counting
Directions: cut Christmas tree shapes out of play dough with cookie cutters.  Roll a die to see how many ornaments to put on the tree. Use pony beads (or any other small decorative items) as ornaments in the game.  "Let's count the dots on the die! There are six dots! Let's put 6 ornaments on the tree!"


Printables here!
December Calendar
J Dot Art
Mitten Color Sorting

Sunday, November 23, 2014

The One With November Plans: Week Four

Hi!
This week is short and sweet! I'm sure that you all will be busy with family and other things this week, but I wanted to offer up a few ideas to keep the kiddos occupied. You can always do any old activities that you missed this month as well. 

Turkey Shape Sort*
Directions: print file. Cut apart the feather shapes on page 4. Mix up the feathers. Invite your child to sort the feathers and add them to the correct turkey. 
Printable here!!! 

Hand Turkey
Directions: It's an American tradition. Trace your child's hand and make it into a turkey shape. Discuss what they are thankful for and add it to the feathers/fingers. Voila! A sentimental craft that family loves. Feel free to spice up this craft however you'd like! There are tons of variations. 


Ice Cream Cone Cornucopia Snack
Directions:  (to make the end of the cone curly)Dip the end of a sugar cone in hot water for about 30 seconds.  Then, put the soaked cone into the microwave for 20-30 seconds to make the wet point soft a pliable. Roll the soft end around a clean pencil or wooden spoon, and hold to set.
OR
you can just leave the tip pointy!  Serve with fruit or other snacks inside for a fun treat!


Cranberry Bog Activity
Directions: provide your child with a bag of cranberries ($2 in grocery stores around here!) and a tub of water. Allow them to scoop and dump the water and cranberries with various kitchen tools. I found that small tablespoons and large slotted spoons worked the best. We also used these tools, which we LOVE. 

We discussed how the cranberries floated, and how real-life cranberry bogs work (in very very simple terminology, ha!) They scooped and dumped for a long time! 

Love you guys! Excited for December's plans! :)

Sunday, November 16, 2014

The One with November Plans, Week Three

Week 3 is up! Here is the November calendar of activities if you haven't printed it yet! 

This week we are learning about the letter I. An important note about vowels is that you should teach the short vowel sound first. So /i/ makes the "ih" sound, as in iguana, igloo, etc. 


{For more tips on beginning reading, click here on my post about pre-reading and alphabet skills for toddlers. This stuff early childhood teachers know, but is great for parents that aren't certified teachers!}

I Dot Art*

Directions: print file. Allow child to decorate the uppercase and lowercase I. (You can use circle stickers, dot stampers, play dough pieces, or pom poms) Read Dr. Seuss's ABC book, and discuss which letter is "Big I" and which one is "Little i" Hang paper on fridge for the week to reference. For older toddlers, teach that /i/ makes the "ih" sound. 
(I had to use a funky font in order to make the capital I look different than a lowercase L!)

Star Beanbag Toss

Directions: use painter's/masking tape to make a star on the floor. As you make the star, describe the attributes of a star (5 points, straight lines, etc) Have fun throwing a beanbag into the star. (If you don't have a beanbag, you can fill an old sock with dried beans or rice). You can make stars of different sizes! "Can you throw your beanbag into the big star?" 

Brown Paper Bag Turkey Puppets

Directions: use a paper bag as the body of the turkey. Add eyes and a beak (with googly eyes, crayons/marker, etc).  Adhere feathers to the back of the turkey (real or construction paper feathers). My girls loved this! They ran around the house playing puppets with their turkey while yelling "Happy Thanksgiving!" and gobbling.


I is for inchworm snack*
Directions: print file for snack mat. This will be my girls' first linear measurement activity! Give your child a gummy worm (aka inch worm) and teach them to lay it along the ruler. Count the numbers 1-5 and then measure how many inches your inchworm is. Allow them to take bites and re-measure as the gummy worm gets eaten. Note how many inches it is after the bites. This activity should really give you an opportunity to measure more things around the house and discuss how many inches it is. Have fun! :)


Decorate Letter I

I actually changed this to a new activity I found on Pinterest...magic appearing letters

Directions: on white paper, write big, bold capital letters in white crayon. Invite your child to paint on the paper with colored water (you can use food coloring or watercolors). They will love to see the letter appear magically! See if they can identify the letter without prompting. :) 



Sorting G, H, I*
Directions:  Print file and cut apart pieces. Label 3 different cups as "G, H, and I". Invite your child to sort the pieces into 3 different cups. 

Bonus cute idea: Put an adult sock over a regular cup and have the child pick the letters out of that cup! It is super fun to reach inside the sock-cup and pull out a letter that way! (Like my fuzzy striped sock? Eh? Eh?)


Play Dough Counting Mat*

Directions: print file. Roll a die and count the dots on top. Invite the child to place pieces of play dough as acorns onto the mat. Count the "acorns" together. Roll again and again for fun! :)


That's all, folks. Printables here:
Ii Dot Art
Inchworm Snack Mat

GHI Sorting Letters
Play Dough Counting Mat

Sunday, November 9, 2014

The One with November Plans, Week 2

It's week 2 of November! Time to have more fun with brown, stars, counting, turkeys, and the letter H! Click here to download the calendar! Print it out! 

H Dot Art *
Directions: print file. Allow child to decorate the uppercase and lowercase H. (You can use circle stickers, dot stampers, play dough pieces, or pom poms) Read Dr. Seuss's ABC book, and discuss which letter is "Big H" and which one is "Little h" Hang paper on fridge for the week to reference. 
Printable file here!

Star Stamping
Directions: Cut a potato in half. Then carefully, as to not stab your fingers off, cut a star shape into a potato. (Hint: draw a star on the potato half first, then cut! Much easier!) Invite your child to stamp stars onto paper with some paint. I chose brown since it's the color of the month. My girls loved to sing "Twinkle Twinkle Little Star" while they furiously thumped potatoes! 


Make Play Dough Turkeys:
Directions: Use brown (or any colored) play dough and assist your child into making a turkey torso. Don't worry, its basically just a blob shape. They can add googly eyes and a beak too! Allow them to poke feathers into the turkey. It's super fun! If you don't have feathers, you can always use other household objects to poke in (penne pasta, golf tees, spaghetti, dried leaves, etc) 

H Snack: Hungry Hippo Mouth
Directions: Decorate a paper plate with eyes and ears like a hippo. We will later attach a mouth. Fold a separate paper in half and cut a "D" shape in order to make a mouth. (see blue paper in pictures below!) Draw circles around the perimeter of the mouth. Allow children to place mini marshmallows onto the circles to look like hippo teeth! It's super cute! You can glue the teeth down if you want, or just let them eat the teeth afterwards. Discuss that H is for Hippo! A hungry hippo! 


 


Paint a Brown Bear
Directions: Paint your child's hand (except for the thumb!) brown. Make a handprint and add a cute brown head for the bear. Read "Brown Bear, Brown Bear, What do you see?". It's a classic! 


Acorn Counting Game: 
Directions:  Get an empty egg carton and label each compartment with a number. (You can also use a muffin tin, but my kids thought this egg carton was cool!) I labelled mine with dot stickers since I had a clear egg carton. I previously had my kiddos gather some acorns outside for this activity. I provided a bowl of acorns and some scooping tools (spoons, tongs, etc). They loved scooping their acorns into the egg carton. We counted each container 1-12. 

*Note: 12 acorns will not fit into one small egg compartment! I played a game saying,  "Can you put an acorn into the 7 bucket?" "Can you put 2 acorns in the #2 bucket?" "Can you see how tall you can stack them into bucket #5?"*      This helps with number identification. The girls loved this and wanted to play it again and again. 

That's all folks! Have a great week! 

Sunday, November 2, 2014

The One With November Plans

Hey there! I'm ready to go for November! 
I'll be the first to admit that October was a whirlwind for me, but I'm ready to get back to a partially normal schedule this month here goes!

The November Calendar is here!.
I forgot to print the October calendar for last month and put it on my fridge, and I think that was mistake #1 in my busy month. Having the calendar up in September was a good reminder and resource during the day. When my kids were going crazy (and therefore, I was going crazy) I could just look over at the fridge for an idea. I'm doing that again this month! 
_________________________________________
Here are the additional things you will need specifically for the month of October: 
(in order of which you will need them)
-coffee filter
-grapes
-clothespins
-brown play dough
-feathers 
-marshmallows
-Brown Bear, Brown Bear, What do you see? Book
-acorns (real or fake, about 20)
-egg carton
-painters/masking tape
-brown paper bags
-gummy worms
-waffle ice cream cones (just the plain cones for cornucopias)
-real cranberries (should be tons out around Thanksgiving when we need these!)
_________________________________________



G Dot Art *
Directions: print file. Allow child to decorate the uppercase and lowercase G. (You can use circle stickers, dot stampers, play dough pieces, or pom poms) Read Dr. Seuss's ABC book, and discuss which letter is "Big G" and which one is "Little g" Hang paper on fridge for the week to reference. 

Star Coloring Page*
Directions: print file. Discuss and describe the shape of a star. Count the 5 points. Sing "Twinkle, Twinkle, Little Star".  Allow child to decorate the star (markers, crayons, dot stampers, paint, or gluing down little pieces of torn paper).  Older children can trace and discuss the letters in the word "star".  Hang paper on the fridge for the month to reference. Try to find stars throughout the day!

Coffee Filter Turkeys
Directions: This activity combines water play, the color brown, and turkeys! Give the child a coffee filter and allow them to color all over it with a brown marker. (It must be a marker, not crayon.) Then, allow them to drop water all over it using medicine droppers/medicine syringes. Watch the colors run and travel through the coffee filter. Let filter dry.
Make a turkey body out of construction paper and attach it to the dried coffee filter. Fun! 

(I put my soaking wet coffee filter in the microwave for about 20 seconds and it dried! And didn't set on fire! Feel free to use other colored markers in order to make a wild colored turkey!)

G Snack-G for Grapes*
Directions: print grapes snack mat. Give your child a bowl full of grapes and allow them to place them individually on the bunch. (If younger children are having a hard time with the grapes rolling, then cut them in half.) To make this more challenging for older children, let them use tongs to place the grapes on the mat.

Brown Coloring Page*
Directions: print file.  Color the crayon brown (using crayon, marker, paint, etc) Older children can trace and discuss the letters in the word "brown". Hang paper on the fridge for future reference. Search for brown things throughout the day! :)

Sorting Leaves Printable*
Directions: print file. Cut along the dotted lines to cut apart the colored leaves on page 2. Mix up the leaf pieces. Invite the child to sort the colored leaves onto the corresponding color of leaf from page 1. For older children, you can hide the leaves around the house for them to find and race around to sort! :)
G Letter Recognition
Directions: print file. Invite children to find the letters Gg on the sheet. (use bingo stampers, crayons, stickers, etc).

Turkey Clothespin Counting:
Directions: I found an adorable tutorial and printable here to do your own counting turkeys! The printable is free! 



All the printable files are here:


Love ya!