Happy Wednesday friends! I hope you're enjoying learning about the letter D with all our activities this week - and I'm here to share even more!
Have you ever made play dough with your children? It's a great sensory experience - this dough is even scented with sugar free Kool-Aid - and it is cheaper than buying, and lasts a LONG time! Making dough is this week's cooking activity!
While we're talking about sensory activities, I have some adorable hand print ideas for you this week!
I found the idea for the dinosaur here, and the duck inspiration here. You can also find a lot more great ideas on my Hand print and Foot print Pinterest board.
If your child is a junior paleontologist - a dinosaur scientist - I have an abundance of dinosaur themed learning activities, including this free counting and adding activity!
It includes 2 sets of dino number cards 1 - 20, the addition mat pictured at top, and a worksheet. (Sorry, the plastic dinos and number tiles don't come with it.)My students also had a blast making these dragons! I taped bubble wrap to the table (or to boxes), let the children paint all over the bubble wrap, and then we laid paper over the painted bubble wrap, pressed down to take a print, carefully lifted the paper, and ta-da! Scales! When its dry cut out your dragon, and provide paper scraps to add details!
For dog lovers (please tell me you're ALL dog lovers!) I have this cute letter counting activity.
Children choose a dog name card, count how many letters are in the name, and count out a matching number of doggy bones OR if they're working on letter recognition, they can match the letters in each doggy name with 1" letter tiles.
While we're focusing on letters, here's a fun initial sound activity for Dd! Go on a scavenger hunt for things that start with Dd (think duck, dragon, deer, donuts, dogs, etc.), a few things that do NOT start with D, and a non-breakable dish. Children go through the items one at a time, placing only those that start with D on the dish. As they do, they sing this song (to the tune of there's a spider on the floor):
"There's a d___ on the dish, on the dish. There's a d___ on the dish on the dish. If I had a wish, I'd put a d____ on a dish, there's a d____ on a dish, on a dish." (Click here to hear me sing it on my YouTube channel.)
Finally, you and your kiddos can make letter D crafts! There are a couple of ways to make the dotty D. For the one pictured below I offered wine bottle corks to dip in paint and stamp onto our D. They're a great size for small hands to hold, and make a lovely circular dot. Another way to do it is to use a circle punch and work finger muscles to make lots and lots of polka dots to glue on.
The lowercase d is a dinosaur - we added a head with mouth and eyes, and triangles for the tail. I had the children glue a piece of white paper behind the hole in the d, and in that space I wrote "First the dinosaur, then its tail." If you made the lowercase b craft, you can see that these two letter crafts complement each other, and help children remember the difference between the two letters.
Are YOU digging the letter Dd yet? Subscribe or come back next week for hands on ideas for the letter E - it's exciting!
No comments:
Post a Comment