Snowflake matching:
I printed the snowflakes from here, cut them into cards and M tried matching them up in our pocket chart. He did pretty well with this considering some of them were pretty tricky.
No picture for this one, but I printed some snowman grid gameboards from here, and we took turns rolling a die, then putting that number of cotton balls on our game cards. We went top to bottom and left to right. Whoever filled their card first won.
M’s cousin S came over for the day on Tuesday and we made homemade playdough. I didn’t add any coloring (it was a little off-white due to the brownish vanilla I put in it), but we did add silver glitter and vanilla extract. Yum! And pretty! I set out a tray of goodies:
There’s buttons, googley eyes, ribbons, pipecleaners, and various lids here.And the kids had a great time making snowmen:


Aren’t they adorable? And if you’re wondering which child used the pipecleaners for super-long noses… well, that would be my child, hee hee. ;)
We also used up our green playdough that was getting a little old. We used cookie cutters, glass pebbles, colored pasta, buttons, and glitter glue to decorate them. M gave these to grandparents and godparents for Christmas.
On Christmas Eve we had about 8 inches of snow dumped on us. I grabbed a couple of buckets and M played (well over an hour) with real snow and his little cars on the kitchen floor.
I’ve noticed that if I occupy him with this kind of thing, he is quite happy to play on his own as long as I’m sitting at the table, cooking, or just hanging out in the kitchen. We explored how snow melted into water and then we set it back outside. Saturday morning he remembered it and we brought it in and he played with the ice!I hope you are all having a Merry Christmas (remember, Christmas has just begun - it lasts for 12 days!!!). :)
For more tot school, go here!
It’s very simple… but we snazz it up a bit when Christmas arrives. There are pretty iridescent red berries in the middle surrounding the white candle (which won’t be lit until Christmas Eve), which is sitting on a round mirror – it’s hard to see in the picture. Also, each taper is in a star shaped holder which is also really hard to see. Hm. Just take my word for it, in real life it’s prettier than in this picture. ;)
Yep, not a single ornament is actually on the tree. I’m not sure why M has them in the “air” but I’m sure he has a good reason in that 3 year old brain of his. Next year we might use a piece of felt shaped like a Christmas tree – ornaments on a Christmas tree is easier to understand, maybe??
He calls it “The Jesus box”, hee hee. And checks it multiple times per day hoping some candy has magically appeared in it. (He gets a chocolate kiss in it each evening.)
Obviously it is not big enough for 22 more stickers. Someone judged wrong when she cut it out. So, it should be interesting-looking by the time Advent is over.
See the glitter? I wish my camera could capture it better:
He really had a lot of fun with both of these little projects, and well, it’s something Christmassy, just not the cute crafts I was hoping for. However, I am glad that we will have these to look back on as the things he wanted to do this year.


Inside the box will be a piece of candy, a sticker, a short length of yarn, the ornament of the day, and the card (for our reference):
On Christmas Eve there will be a baby Jesus to place in the manger on top of the “hay”.
We finally got around to doing another Bible story with actual activities to go with it. We’ve been reading the stories and talking about them, but I’ve just been completely out of creative ideas to go with any of them.
The first book was Whales by Gail Gibbons – an excellent book for learning facts about these creatures. 



Matthew asks everyone who enters our house, “Do you wanna see Jonah in the big whale?!?” and he flips up the flipper and there sits Jonah, on his knees praying, just waiting to be spit out. :) 
M has always loved this poem! :)
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!
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.
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
As you can imagine, this one is popular! We don’t own the book but we’ve checked it out from the library enough times to have it memorized. M loves doing this one by himself – the rhythm of the story (more like a chant), is fun in and of itself! Be sure to check out the link above – Making Learning Fun has a ton of great ideas for this story, not just the felt set!
This set is really just a grouping of clip art from kizclub. I used it last Thanksgiving to introduce M to some new words (it was so cute to hear him say “cornucopia”!), and this year I’ll use it to tell a simple story of the first Thanksgiving.
M had a small board book (Sesame Street’s Monster Faces) about feelings and it was the best one I found that labeled feelings in a simple way. There was absolutely no copyright information anywhere in the book, and since Sesame Street characters are pretty easy to obtain, I had no qualms about just photocopying the pages and attaching them to felt. These came in very handy when M was in that whiny stage around 14 months or so and we were trying to give him the words to use to describe his emotions. I’m including this one to give you some ideas for making your own felt sets!


This is a fabulous set for telling the story of Christmas! Last year M was not that enthralled with seeing the story on the flannel board, but he enjoyed playing with the figures! This year I know we’ll get a lot of use out of this one, and I’m excited!
This is one I simply threw together to go with the Bible story… I used clip art I found online and some online coloring pages too. I’m sorry I don’t have the links to any of them. I’m including it because even though it’s not as nice-looking as some of the sets, it is one of M’s favorites. He loves telling this story and he really does not care that the size of the disciples is totally out of proportion to Jesus, or any of the other minor details that bothered me about it when I made it.