Showing posts with label Autumn Activities. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Autumn Activities. Show all posts

Sunday, November 1, 2009

Tot School – Nov. 1, 2009

image
{M is 38 months old}
I am going to start with some of our activity shelves from this week:activity shelves 
M loves doing anything with a dry-erase marker and/or a clipboard.  Who knew it would be so easy to get him interested in something?
I found a rhyming match page here.  M drew a line from the items on the left to the rhyming match on the right:rhyme matchThen we used the same card to match beginning sounds.  We talked about the distinction between words that have the same sound at the beginning and words that rhyme.  These are not easy concepts for a 3 year old to understand, and I think I probably should’ve used this page for just one or the other concept, not both.
He did another visual discrimination card where he first circled the tallest item in each row, then circled the shortest item in each row.  These were also found here.tallest and shortest
He also did some same / different cards with sports balls and fruit:same different balls same different fruit These were pretty easy for M – he simply circled the “different” object in each group.  He loves doing things like this and I like to include something I know will be easy for him.  A little ego-boost never hurt anyone. ;)  These were also found here.  Also, just a note… I found these mini dry-erase markers at Target; they are a bit shorter than a normal-size crayon and I’ve noticed they really encourage him to use a proper tripod grasp when drawing with them.  We’ll be using these more from now on.
I grabbed the very last “Make Your Own Monster” kit at the Target Dollar Spot, and put it on a shelf for M.  He was not as interested in this as I expected him to be.  He was acting very silly about it, and once he discovered the glitter glue, well, that was it.  All he wanted to do was put glitter glue everywhere. :)build a monsterHe made two monsters (we call them “silly creatures” because monsters are a bit much for him lately):5 
Our theme for the week was pumpkins, and our letter was P.   M created the P pages for his ABC book:blog pics 001You can read more about it in this post.
I put 4 cardstock pumpkins in an activity box for him along with a glue stick and some shapes cut from yellow construction paper.  I printed the shapes from Making Learning Fun.  M decided to work on this project without me, and without asking for any directions (it was supposed to be for creating jack-o-lanterns).  I found him like this:build a jol (1) Just haphazardly gluing shapes to the pumpkins. :)  So, we talked about the shapes, and we talked about the different sizes of the pumpkins – tall, thin, short, wide, small and large.  I showed him how to use the shapes to make a jack-o-lantern, but he decided to do his own thing.  That’s ok, I’m really trying to make this more fun for him than anything else.  And he learned more this way than he probably would’ve if he’d done it the *planned* way.  Here’s how they turned out:build a jol
He did a pumpkin shadow match activity:pumpkin shadow matchThe inspiration for this idea came from this post at Izzie, Mac & Me.  He really enjoyed this one – it was just challenging enough, but still easy enough for him to do with no help.
We read a fun poem with pictures:picture poem I found the poem online and just copied it into a Word document with some pumpkin pictures I created from an online coloring page.  (I know this poem was on someone’s blog; unfortunately I just copied it right then and forgot to save the blog url to my handy dandy idea spreadsheet.  If you had this on your blog, let me know so I can link to it!)
We also did the always fun “Five Little Pumpkins” poem with the flannel board. 5 little pumpkins
We baked yum, yum, yummy pumpkin muffins:pumpkin muffins (1) pumpkin muffinsThey were heavenly.  I wish you could all have one!
More P activities….
M practiced Pouring to a line:pouring water to a line
And we played the Penny Drop Game:penny drop This was definitely the “hit” of the week.  I posted more about this game here!
We read The Biggest Pumpkin Ever by Steven Kroll.image and looked through some pumpkin life cycle cards from Montessori for Everyone. (Sorry no pics of ours!)  We put them in order and went through them a couple of times.
We learned some new pumpkin and halloween poems, but most of them were flops, ha.  The one M did like was “Pumpkin, Pumpkin” from childfun.com:
Pumpkin, Pumpkin
Sitting on a wall. (child sits)
Pumpkin, Pumpkin
Tip and fall. (child tips over)
Pumpkin, Pumpkin
Rolling down the street. (child rolls around on floor)
Pumpkin, Pumpkin
Trick or Treat!!!
We also did a couple of pumpkin and Halloween crafts…
M made a pumpkin mosaic:pumpkin mosaic
And we made a tea light holder together, using red and yellow tissue paper:
 tea light and color mixing with tissue paper
That’s it for us! 
For more Tot School posts go here.
Have a beautiful day! :)

Friday, October 30, 2009

ABC Book – Letter Pp

We worked on the letter “P” this week – it went well with all the Pumpkin activities we had planned.
M worked on his Pp collage page (I had it as one of his shelf activities):letter P (2)
And we did his Pp craft page:letter P (5)
The big P has a pumpkin glued to it with a vine running down the side.  He had a green stamp pad and used his fingerprint to make leaves on the vine.
M glued a picture of a pumpkin pie to the small p and then glued a fork on the side. :)  I thought it turned out pretty cute.
Here it is all finished and in his ABC book:blog pics 001
Here’s the collage and tracing pages:blog pics 008
Have a beautiful day! :)

Wednesday, October 28, 2009

Craft Time – Misc. Projects from Apple Week

I meant to include these in my Tot School post over the weekend.  We did these last week, but I didn’t feel any of them deserved a post of their own; it was mostly ideas from other people.
Anyway, I thought I’d share them here.  Maybe I will start doing an Arts and Crafts This Week weekly post or something… I’ll have to think about it…
So, last week was Apple week here.  M and Daddy went to the farm and picked apples from the orchard.  They brought home 8 brown grocery bags FULL of apples, and said there were tons more that they didn’t get to.  I’m thinking M will have to start a roadside apple stand when he’s a little bigger!
So we made mini-caramel apples:mini caramel applesWe put sprinkles on just a couple.  I really can’t stand sprinkles, the crunch just startles me every time, but of course M loves them.  This idea was from Michelle.  They were pretty yummy!
We also did some fall-colored cookie cutter prints with our new cookie cutters:blog pics 043 blog pics 045
This idea was from Ten Kids and a Dog.
And we made a pretty apple suncatcher:blog pics 023 blog pics 025 This idea was from Izzie, Mac & Me.
These were all fun projects!!
Have a beautiful day! :)

Sunday, October 25, 2009

Tot School – Oct. 25, 2009

image M is 37 months old

We continued with a few apple-themed activities this week that we weren’t able to get to last week…

First Two Little Apples in an Apple Tree poem and mini-flannel board:blog pics 024 M has always loved this poem! :)

We read 10 Apples Up on Top by Dr. Seuss (such a great book!!), and did a cute flannel board activity putting apples on a picture of M!blog pics 003 They are numbered 1 to 10 and size sequenced too. I have seen this in a few blogs lately, but I can’t honestly say where I saw it first. It was before I started keeping better track of that sort of thing!

We also read The Seasons of Arnold’s Apple Tree, by Gail Gibbons. With this book we used these apple life-cycle cards from Montessori for Everyone. I made them into a little flip book so there would be no end or beginning to the cycle as we went through them a few times.blog pics 001

We also did a fun activity matching apple patterns on a boy’s head. The cards and patterns are from Making Learning Fun. We made them into magnets and did them on a small pan. I saw this at Izzie, Mac & Me.blog pics 047

Notice that green visor? It was in our “pay it forward” gift package from whisperingwhispers at Children Grow, Children Explore, Children Learn. I put it in one of M’s activity containers this week and he had a lot of fun putting race car stickers on it. He wore it for a long time afterwards too! :)blog pics 038 blog pics 040

He did his first dot-to-dot page:blog pics 011 an apple! I think he did pretty well! It’s in a page protector and he used a dry-erase marker and a piece of felt for an eraser.

We did an A activity for his new ABC book too! Check it out in this post.

M also used his dry-erase marker on a zoo page from a workbook and tried drawing straight lines.blog pics 009

He got in some more fine-motor-skill practice putting this button board together:blog pics 030

And the big hit of the week was this:blog pics 052 I made some 3”x3” cards from construction paper, used a black marker to write a letter on each one, and put it in a box with some toothpicks. M picked a letter and a toothpick and, working on the carpet, poked holes along the letter. This was a lot of fun for him and was good for letter identification, letter formation, and fine motor skills (again!). We held them up to the window and saw the light shine through the little holes. I got this great idea from prekinders – that site is full of good ideas! And so many of them are super simple like this!

We learned a fun new song (tune of “The Itsy Bitsy Spider”) from preschooleducation.com:

Once a little appleseed

was planted in the ground.

Down came the raindrops

falling all around.

Out came the bright sun

as bright as bright could be

and the little appleseed

grew up to be an apple tree!

We added motions to it and M wanted to sing it several times. Preschooleducation.com is a great place to find poems and songs!

That’s it for us this week! Next week we will be having some pumpkin fun!! :)

Check here for more tot school posts.

Have a beautiful week! :)

Tuesday, October 13, 2009

Gobble Gobble!

wild turkeys in backyard sept 15, 2009
We’ve had some visitors in our backyard on and off the past few weeks… wild turkeys. :)  We live close to a creek bed and get quite a bit of wildlife, but this is the first time we’ve had turkeys just wandering around. 

Too bad my camera isn’t focusing well, the picture is a little blurry.

Perfect time of year for them, isn’t it?  They are safe with us (no hunting of course within city limits), but only barely.  My husband is itching to get out his bow and arrow.  :) 

After the first sighting M seems to think it’s perfectly normal to have them around.  We grownups still run to the windows to watch. :)

Happy Fall! :)

Sunday, October 11, 2009

Tot School – October 11, 2009

Tot-School[1] M is 37 months old
We began this week by moving an old TV stand / media center to M’s reading spot. Tuesday morning I grabbed some kitchen plastic ware and filled the shelves with activities.work areaThis worked so well with M, even better than I expected. He was able to pick and choose which activities to do (or not do) and many of them were things he could do independently (which gave me a little time to check the laundry, tidy things up, etc).
We worked on putting one activity away before getting another one down, and I was ok with him quitting an activity whenever he wanted. I’m trying to concentrate on having fun more than anything else right now in regards to tot school. And M woke up with a horrible cold that morning, so I wanted to go easy on him. Just cleaning up one thing before getting another one down was enough in the way of rules for us this week!
First, he strung some pony beads onto a length of yarn, using a plastic needle. stringing pony beads
Next, matching up some paint sample strips with clips.color shades matching with clipsWe are working on learning the gradation of color shades. I thought the clips would get him a bit more interested in this. They did, but only a very little bit. He did the blue and then that was enough. This post from Shannon at Growing and Learning by Leaps and Bounds gave me this idea. Maybe next time we will work on just one color like she did.
He also did this super-fun activity that I whipped up for him over the weekend – an ABC tube with stickers to match:abc tube sticker match I simply took a cardboard tube and wrote the alphabet on it in random order, and put it out with some foam letter stickers. M would pick a sticker, then roll the tube around to find the matching letter. The idea for this came from Sophie’s mama in this post. I just added stickers! It was a big hit for M! I plan to do one with numbers sometime soon too.
M did some scissor practice pages:cutting strips
In one of the plastic tubs I placed a piece of green construction paper, scissors, a glue stick, and some pages from a toy catalog. For this activity M had to cut out any toys that had green in them, then glue them to the construction paper and make a collage.green collageHe liked the idea of this, but didn’t work on it for very long. We put it back on the shelf and he can pull it out some other time to finish it.
One of his favorite activities was this:number match and counting cardsI wrote the numbers 1 through 4 on bottle lids, then made cards to match them up with. The cards also have the corresponding number of X’s to put any small manipulative on. In this case, it was m&ms, which is why M loved it. :)
He did a little pom pom transferring with tweezers:pom pom tweezer transferHe made this into a game and I had to use his pliers. :) We would each grab a pom pom, say “cheers!” while clinking them together, then drop them into the ice cube tray. He’s a funny boy sometimes. :)
Hands down, the all time favorite of the week was this *I spy sensory tub* activity. It was inspired by the many posts in the blog world about making I spy bottles, but I knew M would never be happy just looking for small objects – he would want them in his hands where he could examine them and get to know them. So I photocopied a bunch of small objects, then hid them in a mixture of rice, macaroni, and lentils. He had so much fun with this, I was amazed.sensory tub1He did this 7 times that day. Sometimes he would hide them, sometimes I would. He was totally enthralled. Which made for a very happy mama. :)
I worked the hardest on this activity, and it was the only one M was not even mildly interested in:build a letterI’ve been seeing this book everywhere - imageand just love the idea of it… so I made my own! I cut some foam shapes to use, and made letter templates for them, which I then laminated. build a letter 2 I thought M would love this, but he was absolutely. not. interested. Ah well, we’ll try again another day! I’m still showing you because I’m just so proud of it. :)
We did one more sensory activity – packaging peanuts and water. If you get them just a little bit wet they stick together and you can create things. If you get them a lot wet they dissolve. M had fun making them dissolve. :)packaging peanuts
One day we made this pretty autumn tree:
image
And we learned more new songs and poems. First, from Preschooleducation.com:
(tune of “Twinkle, Twinkle, Little Star”)
All join hands and circle around
While we watch the leaves fall down.
See them twirling to the ground.
See them skipping here and there
See them flipping in the air.
Autumn leaves so peacefully
Falling, falling from the tree.

(I would have loved to have sung this one outside while twirling M around, but his cold and our rainy weather just didn’t cooperate.)
And a poem, from childfun.com:
Leaves
Little leaves fall gently down
Red and yellow, orange and brown. (flutter hands like leaves falling)
Whirling, whirling around and around. (turn around)
Quietly, without a sound. (put finger to lips)
Falling softly to the ground (begin to fall slowly)
Down and down and down and down. (lie on floor)
I hope everyone had a wonderful week! Check here for more tot school posts!
Have a beautiful day! :)

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