We made colourful icecubes yday by mixing diff coloured water. After mixing blue and red, blue and yellow, I decided to show her how adding more blue to a blue+yellow combi changes the shade with each scoop she scooped into her container (and I poured out the result into the icecube tray).
Making the different shades was fun but as usual, after awhile, everything ended up the same colour... Haha. Free water play after tt!
Showing posts with label Teaching Science. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Teaching Science. Show all posts
4/12/2012
8/15/2011
Activities to go with The very hungry caterpillar by Eric Carle
It's been quite awhile since I've found time and energy to blog... this is such an overdue post!
The good thing though is that The very hungry caterpillar is a classic so it's never too late to share what we did for the reading of this story.
I made this learning aid from here:
There are a couple of missing pieces though but it still works rather fine.
I got her to match the pieces to what she could see on the pages to practise counting:
and instead of a 'story stick' (which is how the learning aid is supposed to be made), I gave her a piece of yarn for her to thread the pieces together, following the sequence of the story:
And so it's killing two birds with one stone: getting her to practise fine motor skills as well as learning to sequence according to the story line. She did really well with the sequencing after awhile such that by the time she watched the performance put up by Act 3 in mid July, she could tell exactly what was coming up next :)
After threading all the cards, just tie a ribbon and she gets a necklace - which made the vain little one very happy. This activity can be done over and over again - something that your preschooler would request to do!
And we chose a day to make egg carton caterpillars:
My girl loves all things small and cute so instead of making 3 long caterpillars, we had 5 short ones.
Painting the egg carton was quite a highlight as it was a new experience.
After the paint has dried, just draw and cut out eyes for the caterpillars (or use googly eyes), draw a smile, pierce two holes at the top of the caterpillars' heads (to be done by an adult) and poke the pipe cleaners in.
Do you notice that there's one female caterpillar? :)
We made a symmetrical painting by first folding a piece of drawing block in half then squeezing paint randomly on it. Once that is done, press the drawing block together and you will get a symmetrical painting. After you have done the first fold, you can unfold it and press the other side of the drawing block together and repeat the process. :)
After the paint has dried, draw a butterfly and cut it out:
Alicia wasn't very interested in this activity compared to the rest of the activities but you can always give it a shot.
Another activity that might interest your preschooler would be these two dot-to-dot printables which you can download here.
We took the chance to revise the Days of the Week using the learning aid my mum made for her earlier (I made the Mandarin version):
Have fun!
7/20/2011
Activities to go with The mixed-up chameleon by Eric Carle
The mixed-up chameleon is a colourful and playful story about how a chameleon wishes to be someone else only to find out that what's best for him is really to just be himself.
We also didn't do many activities for this story as I was trying to minimise the preparation of activities. I don't really have the time and energy to make extensive learning aids for her, and since the new baby will be arriving in about 3 months time, I have decided that we will maximise learning opportunities with minimal preparation on my part - I imagine that I should be busier with the arrival of the new baby! That said, I have implemented a more proper structure for our homeschooling recently (will share that in a later post) to make things more organised for both her learning and my planning.
(i) Colour revision
Well, it's a colourful book like I said and the chameleon on the cover is just begging you to name the colours you see! Alicia enjoyed naming the colours, even without my prompting... naming the colours in Mandarin is the difficult part for her as she refuses to answer my questions in Mandarin... *sigh*
(ii) Catch a 'fly'
adapted from here (you can find other activities from the link but those may require a lot more preparation on your part. Some of the activities are also too simple for Alicia already so I only picked what I thought would work best for us)
You need:
- a party blower (see pic below)
- a small piece of velcro (the hard side)
- small pieces of felt (to simulate the fly)
The chameleon in the story loves to eat flies but I was too lazy to make a fly manipulative so I just gave her whatever small piece of felt I had on hand for this activity. It's probably quite difficult for a child to imagine how the long tongue of the chameleon works, so I think this is an interesting activity to illustrate how the chameleon catches the fly with its tongue (though it is not really exactly the same).
(iii) Make your own colourful chameleon
ok, I got this idea from somewhere but I can't remember where exactly... can't seem to find the link.
Anyway, you need:
- colourful plastic dividers (I recycled the old ones which were lying around waiting for an opportunity to be recycled)
- transparencies (the type used for Overhead projectors in the past) - trace the pics of the chameleon from Eric Carle's book
- marker
- scissors
happily playing with the cut up colourful dividers - her first encounter with them
Place the transparencies of the pictures of the chameleon around the house and get your preschooler to find them:
Can you see it? :P
Alicia loved to place the transparencies on different surfaces and kept asking me each time, "Mummy, where's the chameleon?"
It's a different chameleon every time and it can be done over and over again! :)
(iv) Writing practice
Discuss what the chameleon wanted to be in the story with your preschooler and ask her what she wants to be.
The little ardent swimmer that Alicia is, she naturally chose the fish. :)
As she is still unable to draw a proper fish, I drew a simple one for her. We then wrote a simple sentence about it. (I wrote the sentence for her, and she used a marker to trace the words for writing practice). We had to split this activity up into two sessions (conducted on different days) as she was unwilling to finish the sentence in one sitting.
(v) Art and craft fish + shape matching + writing practice (Mandarin)
Cut out some shapes to form a picture (I chose a fish since it tied in nicely with the above activity).
Trace the exact shapes onto a sheet of paper to form the picture.
Get the child to place the shapes correctly on the paper first before sticking.
Get your preschooler to stick the shapes on.
Write the word you want your preschooler to trace and let her use a marker to write the word. Guide your child to write in the correct sequence of strokes if writing the chinese word. Name the strokes in Mandarin as you guide your child and get her to say the word when it's completed.
*You can always adapt this activity to make your child practise writing in English or other languages.
3/28/2011
Activities to go with The Wind Blew by Pat Hutchins
*Backdated post: the activities were conducted at about the time of chinese new year*
Alicia loved this story about the wind which blew so many things away. Before you turn the page to find out what the wind blows off next, you should be able to guess what the wind would take next on its adventure by looking around the page for new characters/items (prediction skills).
Here are some of the activities we did in relation to this book:
(i) Painting a 'kite'
Basically, I just got her to do her usual painting one day and I cut out a kite shape later with a craft scissors, drew in the lines, punched a hole and threaded the yarn through. Though it's not a real kite, she loved it and kept pretending to fly her kite:
(ii) Making a mobile/ sequencing activity
I printed out the items that the wind blew away in the book from here (pg 24 of the document; there are other suggested activities in that pdf doc), pasted them on a cereal box and cut them out individually for Alicia to colour.
After the colouring's done, you can do sequencing (of the story) with your tot using those little cards before you actually make the mobile I made, shown below:
Just get a pair of disposable chopsticks, tape it down, forming a cross. Punch a hole in each card , thread some yarn through and string them onto the chopsticks. Because there are quite a few items, you'd need to have more than one item hanging from each point of the chopsticks (see how I attached them together in the above pics). Lastly, thread more yarn through the X, tie a tight knot and hang it up at the window! :)
(iii) Science: Light vs. heavy
We got a small fan - be careful of those little fingers! - and some random light and heavy items for her for this simple experiment to see what the wind can/ cannot blow away.
There she is with the two-dollar note!:
(iv) Just having fun with a windmill
Find a windy day to just let your tot have fun with the windmill - see how fast it's spinning!
Testing the wind strength from a greater distance from the window:
(v) Fly a kite - a real one
If you can, fly a real kite with your tot! We didn't manage to but we brought her to see people fly kites though! :)
(vi) Cotton ball race
Saw this activity at Activity Mom some time back. Simply get a straw, trim it so it's shorter and easier to handle, then have a cotton ball race with your tot! :)
Have fun!
1/31/2011
Activities to go with Mister Seahorse by Eric Carle
I think you already know I like Eric Carle's books... so Mister Seahorse should come as no surprise. :P Actually, Mister Seahorse wasn't in the list of the books I wanted to borrow but I always make it a point to hop over to the CAR section of the library to see if there are any appropriate Eric Carle books for Alicia. I was not disappointed that day as I found a spanking new copy of Mister Seahorse! :)
We did a few activities after reading this book - Alicia really loved the activities! Ironically, she loved the activities more than the book itself. She had fun though with the pages where some of the fishes were camouflaged (Eric Carle used transparencies for some pages so that you could turn the page and see the fish hiding behind).
Here are the activities we did!:
(i) seahorse counting (and spelling of the number word)
I printed 12 seahorses (the exact pic of Eric Carle's seahorses), laminated them then cut them and trimmed the edges and made just enough alphabets (lower case) needed to spell 1-12 (one number only at any one time). The numbers are from the apple tree learning aid I made earlier and the cloth alphabets (in upper case) are from the Spelling Bee.
I velcro-ed all the parts so that they would stick nicely to the felt should I decide to hang up the piece of the felt as a felt board (felt measuring 64cmx64cm was obtained from the thrift store Daiso - here I folded it into about half its size).
We'd count the seahorses together then place the correct number on the felt.
Next, I'd place either the lower or upper case alphabets on the felt to spell the word and she would find the matching alphabets and place them below/above the alphabets that are used to guide her to spelling the number word. (This part of the activity helps with reinforcing matching upper and lower case alphabets and learning the spelling of the number word)
To further extend this activity to incorporate learning of Mandarin, you could get your tot to match the number to the Mandarin word (those with the Mandarin add-on counting cards for the apple tree learning aid could whip those out - kids get bored counting the same stuff all the time so seahorses could possibly break the monotony of counting apples!)
If you don't have time to make this learning aid, you can try this free resource which is slightly different but still teaches spelling of the number word.
We sang this rhyme (you could sing it as you do the counting activity shown above or sing it at any other time!):
Print out the rhyme here.
The seahorse was drawn by me and coloured by Alicia
(ii) Matching the numeral to the number word
I printed out this free resource from here and got Alicia to do the colouring of the seahorses - which she enjoyed thoroughly!
After printing out the pictures, I glued them onto a cereal box before cutting them out and letting Alicia doodle.
To encourage her to do the matching, I coloured the outline of the boxes with the words and she could choose the colours (we did it one number at a time so she could focus on the spelling of the word - I'd read out the alphabets which spell the word before and during the colouring of the outline of the box). After the colouring's done, she would place the seahorse on the correct box.
I also used phonics to guide her to finding the right word sometimes - e.g. pronouncing the /f/ sound so that she could narrow down her guesses to 'four' and 'five'.
Snapshots of the busy artist:
Doing the matching:
We further decorated the base sheet with paint - she's so good at painting... she really avoided painting inside the boxes! :P So proud of her! (the crayon marks inside the boxes were made before I told her not to colour inside the boxes)
(iii) Art (and Science) - exploring how colours blend together
Just as Eric Carle created his paintings for Mister Seahorse via tissue paper collage, I decided to try out this art activity using kitchen paper towels and food colouring.
Alicia posing with the materials
Mix 1 drop of food colouring with some water and place them in shallow dishes so that it's easier to get hold of the colours during the activity.
(You should try out with one sheet of kitchen towel before conducting this activity with your preschooler to have an idea of how it goes)
Fold the kitchen towel into half, then halve it again to make a square, then dip one corner or side into any dish:
Then dip it in another dish using another side/corner:
Repeat the step with the last colour:
Watch how the colours blend together and discuss what colours your tot sees and how different colours blend to make more colours (e.g. blue and yellow make green).
You can fold your kitchen towel into different shapes - for variety and also for teaching/ reinforcing shapes with your tot:
Alicia made a total of 4 pieces! (The fifth one was my experiment before conducting the activity):
Hanging on the grill to dry!
The dried pieces of art:
Some other activities you could consider doing with your tot can be found from this link.
I decided that it's time to move on to the next book - Corduroy by Don Freeman. :)
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