Monday, November 30, 2009

Turkey Handprint.. a classic!

Materials...

Paint
Marker
White construction paper

Directions...

Paint your child's palm and thumb brown. Paint the rest of the 4 fingers in different colors. Have the child open his/her fingers and place the hand on a white construction paper. Next you can have the child draw in the legs, eyes and the beak for the turkey!

If you would like to use other materials.. You can use just brown for the palm and thumb to make the hand print. Then you can use different colored feathers vs. the colored fingers. You can use a googly eye vs. the markers.. Get creative and have fun making the turkey!!

Measurement Hunt!

Materials...

masking tape (blue works best, but any color tape will work)
Ruler
Clipboard
Paper
Pencil

Directions...

Go around the house and put masking tape on 10 different items, using different lengths of tape.
For example, use 10inch masking tape on the door, 5 inch masking tape on the side of the table, 7 inch masking tape on the leg of the chair, etc. Make sure you place the tape straight so it can be easily measured. Number the sheet of paper from 1 to 10 and place it on a clip board. Encourage your child to go around the house and find 10 items labeled with masking tape. Then he or she has to write the name of the item and the length of the masking tape on the item. Give them a 12inch ruler to use.

If this is the first time your child is learning to use a ruler, be sure to demonstrate and help out with the activity so they get a clear understanding of how to line up the bottom of the ruler with the bottom of the tape to get an accurate measurement!

Have fun on your scavenger hunt!

Sunday, November 29, 2009

Patterened Holiday Card!


Materials...

Pencil
Scissors
Weaved paper from the previous activity
White construction paper
Stapler

Directions...

Trace a heart shape on your weaved paper from the previous days activity.
Cut out the heart carefully while you staple the edges along the way.
Fold the white construction paper in half and glue your heart on the cover.
Open up your card and encourage your child to write greetings to a loved one.
If your child isn't big enough to write, have them tell you what they would like to write and you can write it down for them!

Have fun!

Christmas colors weaving pattern


Materials...

Construction paper (1 red, 1 green)
Scissors
Card board (cereal box works well)
Stapler

Directions...

Cut the construction paper in about half inch thick strips.
Cut out the card board to match the length of the strips.
Staple a green strip horizontally and then a red strip about half an inch apart.
Next staple green, then red until you run out of space. Staple on top and the bottom of the strips.
Then you can demonstrate how to use the remaining strips to weave going under and over the previously stapled strips of paper to make a pattern.

In the next blog we will turn this activity into a Christmas card! So hang on to your patterned creation!

Make your own ring toss game


Materials...

Heavy duty paper plates (as many as you like, we used 5)
Scissors
A soda bottle filled with water for weight. (we didn't have an empty soda bottle so we used it with soda still in it!)

Directions...

Cut the middle parts of the paper plates. And you are ready to play! Place the soda bottle on the floor and toss the plates trying to go on the soda bottle! Take turns and have fun!

A good way to make the game fair is to place a small tape on the floor to mark where each player needs to stand behind before tossing the rings!

Playdough Fun!



Materials...

2 cup flour
1 cup water
1/4 cup salt
1 tbsp oil
bowl
food coloring (optional)

Directions...

Help your child measure each ingredient and pour into the bowl. Then mix all the ingredients into play dough. If you have food coloring, you can choose to put it in now, or you can separate the dough into smaller pieces so you can add different colors to each piece. Next just have fun with your dough. You can roll it, pound it and make lots of fun shapes!

Enjoy!

Thursday, November 12, 2009

Alphabet Train! (Uppercase and lowercase letter matching!)





Materials...

Printer
Scissors
Cardboard
Glue
Laminating paper (optional)
Velcro (optional)

Directions...

Print the images above. Glue them on cardboard to make it durable.
Laminate them if you wish. Cut out the train and glue them together.
Cut out the letters and if you wish to use Velcro you can put that
behind the letters and on the train next to the other letters. When
you are done assembling the train give the cut out letters to your
child and have them find the matching uppercase or lowercase letter
and place it next to its matching letter!

I like to laminate and use the Velcro so I can put up the assembled
train on the wall and the letters stay on it nicely.

Enjoy!

If you need any help downloading the images or if you have any questions
please feel free to email me! Thanks!

Feed the fish rhyming words!



Materials...

Printer
Scissors
Card board (cereal boxes work well)
Glue
Laminating paper (optional)
Velcro (optional)
Pair of dice

Directions...

Print the first image 2 times. (For a two player game.)
Next print the other two images. Glue the pages printed on card board
to make it more durable. You can laminate them now if you choose to
do so. Cut out all the rhyming cards. If you would like to use Velcro, place
one on the back of each rhyming card and one inside all the squares on
the game card with the fish picture.

To play the game give each player the fish card. This is the hungry fish!
He will anything as long as they rhyme! Place all the rhyming cards face up
in the middle (mixed up.) Player one rolls the dice and adds their number.
For example if she rolls a 5 and a 3 she has to add the numbers and say 8.
Then the second player rolls the dice and adds their number. The player
with the highest number can take a single rhyming card from the pile and
place it on their fish card. And will have to wait until it's their turn again to
find it's rhyming pair. The player who can finish feeding their fish first wins
the game!

To make this game easier you can play with one dice and pick out rhyming
cards when you roll an even number and loose a turn when you roll an odd
number.

To make the game more challenging you can play with the rhyming cards
faced down (the game will take a lot longer.)

If you don't have dice you can play the game with the rhyming cards faced
down like a memory game.

The possibilities are endless either way the kids are learning rhyming words,
learning to take turns, and adding while they are having fun! Can't beat that!!

Enjoy!

Monday, November 9, 2009

Practice Reading Color Words!










Materials...
Printer
Card board
Laminating paper (optional)
Scissor
Glue
Dice
Directions...
Print out the bottom 3 pages above. Glue them on a cardboard. (I had a cardboard that I recycled from a shoe box so it's long. If your card board is wider you can glue the pages next to each other vs. underneath.) You can laminate them now if you wish. Next cut out all the colored circles.

Pass out 5 colored cards to each player (for 2 players.) To play the game roll the dice. If you roll an odd number 1,3,5 you loose a turn. If you roll an even number you can place one of your colored circles on a circle on the board. The player that gets rid of all of his/her cards first wins the game!
Have fun!
If you have any trouble downloading the images please feel free to contact me. I can always email over the documents! Thanks!

Thursday, November 5, 2009

Fall picture ~ puzzle!


Materials...

Printer
Scissors
Card board (cereal box works well)
Glue
Laminating paper (optional)

Directions...

Print the picture above. Glue it on the card board. Laminate if desired and then cut along the red dotted lines. You can print it twice if you wish to have the image of what it's supposed to look like. To make the puzzle challenging you can cut it up into many more smaller pieces.

You can make lot's of fun puzzles with any of your favorite pictures! Just print it out, glue it on and laminate to make it sturdy, and cut up the puzzle pieces!

Enjoy!

5 little pumpkins (putting abc's in order!)







Materials...

Printer
Scissors
Glue
Laminating paper (optional)
Velcro
Card board (optional)
Tape

Directions...

Print out all of the pages above. Glue them on the back of a card board (cereal boxes work well.) Next laminate the pages if you wish. Cut out the letters and place Velcro on the back of each letter and also in the white boxes on the pumpkins. You can tape the 5 little pumpkins display on the wall and place the small letters in a ziplock bag or envelope next to it. Have your child place one letter in each box in abc order. After your child is done, sing the 'abc' song together touching each letter to make sure you got all the letters in the right order!

Have fun!

To download the images right click on the pictures and save. If you have any trouble with the documents please feel free to let me know. I can always email over the files. Thanks!

Leaf Letter Matching - Lower Case Letter (b,f,n,g,n,d,q,t,r,p,h,k)


Materials...

Printer or Construction paper
Marker
Scissors
Laminating paper (optional)
card board (cereal boxes work well)

Directions...

If you have a printer you can save the images above on your computer by right clicking on the images. Then print them out. Next glue the page on the back of a card board (I use the cereal boxes.) If you want to laminate them to make them last longer, this is the best time to do it (before cutting.) Last step is to cut along the black lines.

If you don't have a printer. You can draw 24 squares or any other shape you wish on construction paper and write the lower case letters (b,f,n,g,m,d,q,t,r,p,h,k) inside the shapes you drew. Next glue your construction paper on the card board. Laminate if you wish. Next cut out your shapes!
To play the game you can spread out the leaves facing your child. Have them say the letter and find its match. If this is to easy you can turn the cards face down and play the game as a memory game. You can also make it more challenging by asking the child to say a word that begins with that letter and a word that ends with that letter after they find the match.

If more then one child is playing. The player with the most number of matches wins the game. If you don't like having only one winner. You can put a container in the middle and everyone can put their matches in the container with each turn. Everyone can win through out the game regardless of who had the most matches.

Have fun!

If you have any questions or need help with downloading the image please feel free to contact me. I can also email the files over. Thanks!