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This blog is here for you to find fun learning activities to do with your children. We share great ideas we find and love on the Internet, as well as ideas we come up with on our own! We also like to share resources we find helpful.
To find ideas for your child, click on the age range blog label or on the theme/topic you are looking for (on the left side of the page). In each post, we try to list optimal age ranges for the activity, but you must judge for yourself if it is appropriate for your child. When you try an activity out, please comment and let us (and everyone else) know how your child liked it!
Showing posts with label caterpiller. Show all posts
Showing posts with label caterpiller. Show all posts
Wednesday, August 15, 2012
Beginning Sounds Caterpillar
This is a time of year I seem to equate with insect activities. I don't know why, but it is the way my head works. Maybe I am looking forward to saying good-bye to them as the colder weather is in sight? :)
This activity helps focus on first sounds. It is very simple. Draw or create on the computer several circles. Draw or create a caterpillar head. Then print, draw, or find in magazines things that start with the letter C. Have your child color them/cut them out/etc. Have your child glue them into the caterpillar circles.
As your child does this, ask what each thing is and emphasize the "c" sound.
Simple as that!
Labels:
caterpiller,
letters,
phonics,
preschooler,
toddler
Wednesday, May 9, 2012
Caterpillar to Butterfly

Supplies:
- Coffee Filter
- Markers, paints, or something to color coffee filter
- Clothespin
- Pom-pom balls
- Pipe cleaner
- Wiggly eyes
- Scissors
- Glue
Activity:
- Color the coffee filter. Set aside to dry.
- Glue some pom-pom balls to a clothes pin. Three works well--that way you can open and close the clothes pin easily.
- Glue on wiggly eyes.
- Glue on pipe cleaner for antennae.
- You can then take the caterpillar and scrunch up the filter in the clothes pin to make a butterfly! This is a great supplement to a caterpillar theme unit!
Kaitlyn made this at preschool last month and it has been one of her favorite projects by far.
Monday, March 26, 2012
Caterpillar to Butterfly
Last year, my neighbor caught a caterpillar for us to raise until it became a monarch butterfly. I hadn't ever caught a caterpillar before, but she has done it every year since childhood. She just brought me the caterpillar in the jar. We enjoyed it so much I think we will make it our own tradition!
I figured someone on the Internet would have more experience and advice on the topic than myself, and I found it here: http://www.butterflyschool.org/teacher/raising.html
We broke some of the things listed on this site--like we obviously used a jar with a lid with holes in it (apparently a no-no), but our butterfly survived and thrived. You probably will want to ask around with people who live by you as to what type of caterpillars you can find, where to find them, and when. This site said most caterpillars pupate in the winter. Ours was late summer and turned into a beautiful butterfly late in September. So when this activity is right for you will depend on your climate and what types of butterflies you can find.
Raising a caterpillar into a butterfly is a lot of fun and a great science activity. You watch the caterpillar get bigger and bigger. Then you see it in its chrysalis. Then it comes out, you watch its wings grow stronger, you can hold the butterfly, and then when it is strong enough, you release it and watch it fly away!
Here is our butterfly exercising the wings:
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