After looking at our various collection of die-cuts, I decided for this month's bulletin board to be a dessert theme. We had ice cream, popsicle, cupcakes, and candy die-cuts and thought the pastel colors and brown would look very bakery-ish.
I found a variety of awesome dessert picture books and I think this theme would be great for a storytime program.
Friday, August 17, 2018
Tuesday, August 14, 2018
Toddler Art: At the Beach
This was a good Toddler Art program with a smaller, cozier
crowd. The group listened to the story, Sea, Sand, Me! by Patricia Hubbell very well and I explained our two
crafts.
Our first craft was painting our own sand pail made out of
card stock, construction paper, and yarn. Moms were able to write their
children's names on the pail with marker and they had a choice of finger
painting or using a paint brush.
Our second craft was making our own beach scene using construction paper, sand paper, and tissue paper. We used construction paper for our backdrop and our die-cut suns, sand paper for our sand castles that I cut out, and light blue tissue paper for our water. I told moms to make sure that their child feels the sand paper and the difference between that and the other paper.
Our second craft was making our own beach scene using construction paper, sand paper, and tissue paper. We used construction paper for our backdrop and our die-cut suns, sand paper for our sand castles that I cut out, and light blue tissue paper for our water. I told moms to make sure that their child feels the sand paper and the difference between that and the other paper.
Both crafts provided some sort of sensory experience and
everyone seemed to have enjoyed the sand paper element in the one craft.
Other books on beaches:
Beach Day Karen Roosa
All You Need for a Beach Alice Schertle
Noni the Pony Goes to the Beach Alison Lester
Labels:
beach,
sand,
sand castle,
sand pail,
sea,
toddler art
Friday, August 10, 2018
Decorate Your Own Pencil Case
I decided to read a short school picture book story to this
group. They really enjoyed Splat the Cat by Rob Scotton and were very good listeners.
I had the group go to their spots where I had foam alphabet
letters spelling out their names. This was a good way to keep track of those
who wanted to drop-in and make sure that those who were registered got their
pencil cases first.
They used their foam letters and markers to decorate. The
group was very pleased with the canvas pencil case craft and I had a few drop-ins.
They really liked being able to personalize their case with the foam letters. I
had a few moms ask if we'll do anything like this again. I was happy to see
that I didn't need to get fabric markers and we could just use the standard Crayola
markers.
This was a fun program to get the kids excited about the new
school year and both young and old kids enjoyed it. I think it would be well-received if we didn't something like this at the beginning of every school year.
Tuesday, August 7, 2018
Preschool Picasso: At the Beach
This time around, I had quite a bit of drop-ins mixed with those registered. I always make extra crafts for this reason and I had enough for everyone.
I started by reading To the Beach! by Linda Ashman. This is a fun, rhyming story about a family who wants to go to the beach but can't seem to get there because they keep forgetting things to bring. This book has a good flow to it and entertained the group and made the group laugh.
For our first craft, we made sandcastles using sand puffy paint. I had each glue their cutout sand castles onto light blue construction paper, glue a die-cut sun on the top of their construction paper, and paint their sand castle with puffy paint. The paint was a mixture of shaving cream, play sand, and a dab of brown paint. Everyone really enjoyed the idea and liked the sensory aspect of the grainy sand feel and the light, fluffy shaving cream.
For our second craft, we painted beach balls on card stock. I printed out beach ball templates on card stock and they were given red, blue, and yellow paint. Some just had fun painting the ball and blending colors, while others tried to stay in the lines with their paint. It worked for the older and younger ones in the group.
Other possible beach books:
Beach Day by Karen Roosa
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