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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 reindeer. Show all posts
Showing posts with label reindeer. Show all posts

Thursday, December 16, 2010

Rr is for Reindeer


We've been covering the letter Rr this week for Charis and Atalie, and since it's reindeer week at our house, we made Rr reindeer. Makes sense right? This was a fun and easy way to review the letter Rr.
Prep: I drew the letter R r on card stock with brown marker. I did not put the empty space in the capital R, allowing for the wiggly eye to serve that purpose. I pre-cut the rectangles for the antlers. That's it!
  • I let them color the Rrs in w/ brown marker. You could use brown marker, paint, or glue and shreds of brown paper. I chose marker so it would dry faster. Good practice for staying inside of the lines!
  • I again used glue in a small container and a cotton swab to let her glue on the wiggly eye. We had a discussion about why the reindeer only has one eye. Ever notice that projects from kids with a side view of the character produces a product that looks like 2 eyes on one side of the head to us? It's about perspective and what they know to be true about faces; faces have 2 eyes. An explanation of why only one eye is needed would be a great teachable moment here.
  • I used Do-A-Dot markers for the red nose, but you could do anything...puff balls, colored in circle, a button, glue w/ glitter, etc.
  • We glued on a pre-cut ear (again, only one).
  • Then I explained antlers. We talked about what they look like (a comparison to a tree branch is what I used) and how we could use the little rectangles to "build" them on our reindeer.

My preschooler has an aversion to glue and other sticky things on her hands. So I showed her how to use the cotton swab to put glue where she wanted the eye/ear/antlers to be and then sticking the pieces on the paper. That is much cleaner than holding that tiny piece of paper and trying to apply glue without making a mess on your hands.

Wednesday, December 23, 2009

More Reindeer Activities

I know that Raegan provided you with enough reindeer activity ideas to last a month, but I just had to share three more ideas!

ORNAMENT

This is a simple ornament for your preschooler or toddler to make. It requires yarn or string, three popsicle sticks, two eyes, glue, a pom-pom, paint, paint brush, and some pipe cleaner.

Have your child paint the popsicle sticks brown. Let dry. Then, have your child glue them into a triangle shape. Add a nose, eyes, and antlers. Glue a string on the back. Let dry and hang your ornament!





SANDWICHES

I wanted to make a rudolph sandwich one day and just threw it together. I only had peanut butter chocolate chips open and didn't want to open a new bag just for four pieces. I just took two pretzels, two chocolate chips, and one almond M&M for each sandwich. It isn't fancy at all, but the kids loved it! Brayden (4.5) appreciated it much more than Kaitlyn (2.5). They want a rudolph sandwich every day now. My point here is to remember that children are easily pleased. It doesn't have to be fancy or professional for them to be happy with something like this.

COLOR REVIEW
Brayden's preschool teacher used the rudolph idea to review the colors they had learned so far this year. They had a little booklet with a picture of rudolph on each page. They then put different colors of noses on each picture.

Friday, December 4, 2009

Reindeer Week

This week we are learning about reindeer. I decided to take it a step further and go ahead and make the Learning Poster Val posted about, and make it a reindeer themed week. Here's what we are doing:

1. Hands and Feet Reindeer: This is great as a keepsake for little hand prints. :) You'll need brown and black paper, plus 2 small white circles (for eyes, or you can use big wiggly eyes), one black circle for the nose, red glitter (optional), glue, scissors, pencil for tracing.

Trace their foot (or feet if you are making more than one) on brown paper. Trace hands on black or tan paper. These are for the antlers, so make them whatever color you want them to be. You need 2 hands and one foot per reindeer. Let them glue the hands on top. Since my daughter is still not a fan of glue on her hands, we use cotton swabs to let her put the glue on her papers. Glue eyes and nose on. Cover the nose with glue and let them sprinkle red glitter on the nose if they want to make Rudolph.


2. Reindeer Cookies: You need sugar cookie dough (store bought is fine), pretzels, chocolate chips, and M&Ms. Before you start, break the pretzels up to look like antlers.
For the kids to do: Roll the sugar cookies into balls. Stick 2 pretzel on for antlers.
For you to do: Bake according to sugar cookie directions. While they are still hot stick on the M&M and chocolate chips. Learn from my mistake. :) If you bake them on wax paper, you can slide them off the cookie sheet so your child can stick them on without fear of burning themselves on the pan.

3. Reindeer Breakfast: Williams Sonoma has these GREAT pancake molds. Super easy, easy to clean, and they have a snowman, too. That way it can be used past Christmas. Served pancakes with a side of pretzel sticks and dried berries (sticks and berries). I invested in these because they are very nicely made and will last a long time. I think we'll get lots of use out of these.

4. The letter R. We've been using letter stamps and stamping papers. Holding the stamps, pressing on the ink pad, and pressing hard enough to make the letter on the paper are great for hand strength. Also, if you put lines on a paper and have them stamp on the line, you can work on hand-eye coordination as well.
I also use clear squeeze bottles to make pancakes in the shape of the letter R.
We have cookie cutters in the shape of letters to cut out cheese, lunch meat, bread, etc.

5. Shape of the week:
If it's triangles, make open-faced reindeer sandwiches. Cut a slice of bread in half diagonally. You'll have 2 triangles. I let my toddler use a plastic knife or spreader to smear on peanut butter. Add some pretzels for the antlers. Cut a banana up in coins. If you cut one of the coins in half, you can use those for eyes. Chocolate chips, shredded cheese rolled into a ball, or brown M&Ms work. For the nose you can use raisins, craisins, or M&Ms.
Draw a reindeer out of basic shapes on a piece of paper. (Triangle=head, circles for eyes and nose, long rectangles for antlers). Use the Do-A-Dot markers to color. Helpful if the shape of the week is a circle, too.
Try shape pictures. You can also cut out shapes and let your child try to make a reindeer out of the shapes.
6. Puzzles: This is a do-it-yourself puzzle. Find a picture of a reindeer and print 2 copies. Depending on the skill level of your child, cut one picture into pieces. Show them the original and let them try to put the puzzle together. When just staring out or for young children, start by cutting the picture in half or fourths.
7. Make a touch-and-feel reindeer book. Sounds complicated, but it really isn't. Some reindeer facts you need to know first.
  • Reindeer have antlers that are covered with velvet when growing. The velvet falls off once the antlers get to the correct size. The antlers help them hear! *Cut out antlers using felt, velvet, or cloth and glue them on a page.
  • Reindeer like it cold! Using paper or a coffee filter, cut out a snowflake and glue it on another page. If you don't know how to make a snowflake, try this website for directions.
  • They can swim easily. Take a picture of a reindeer and glue down crumpled blue tissue paper (like it's swimming).
  • The hooves can change depending on the season. In the summer, they are soft and spongy and in the winter they are hard. Cut a hoof out of a sponge and piece of cardboard (like from a box).
  • They like to eat moss, but will eat leaves and grass. Take a walk outside and get some reindeer food to glue in your book.
8. Reindeer Song: (Sounds like 5 Little Monkeys Jumping on the Bed)
Eight little reindeer pulling Santa's sled
One fell down and bumped his head.
The elves called Santa and Santa said,"Can seven little reindeer pull my sled?"
(Go from 8 to 1, repeating the above lines)

One little reindeer pulling Santa's sled,
He fell down and bumped his head.
The elves called Santa and Santa said,"Call Rudolph!"
(Works on rhyme, and counting backwards from 10 to 1, and finger recognition of numbers)
9. Reindeer food: Mix oats and glitter or oats and green and red sugar/sprinkles. Sprinkle outside for the reindeer Christmas eve. We've added raisins, too.
10. Reindeer bird feeders: a new spin on the traditional peanut butter bird feeders. Cover a pine cone with peanut butter. Place pretzels for antlers and raisins for eyes and nose FIRST. I used dried cherries for the nose and prunes for the eyes. Depends on the size of your pine cone. Then roll in bird seed. (I saved an old coffee can and put the pine cone inside with birdseed and let my toddler shake it. Less mess!)
11. Footprints: Cut out 2 sponges like reindeer footprints. Get the sponges wet and tape them to your child's shoes (or tie them). The tape doesn't slip if you wrap the masking tape all the way around the shoe. Put a huge piece of paper on the floor. I used brown (like dirt/mud). The sponge will make footprints on the paper as they walk. I put a string down and had Charis try to walk in a straight line. We also pretended to dig for food like reindeer do. The prints dry quickly, leaving a clean piece of paper to draw (or stomp) on. Since it's just water, there wasn't much to clean up!

Have fun!

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