Thursday, January 25, 2018

Winter Theme 2018

Our Montessori Inspired trays for the two weeks:



  1. Rock snowman mix and match story telling
  2. Pattern making with templates 
  3. Create your own pattern
  4. Sandpaper numbers and glass (ice) beads 
  5. Numeral and dot snowman match 
  6. Tens and ones roll and count 
  7. One to one correspondence with penguin stickers
  8. Stair counting with snowman manipulatives 
  9. Hundred chart cover and find the number 

1. Shape matching penguins 
2. Snowball ten frame 
3. Numerals and for ten frames using penguin manipulatives (cards from Your Sister's Shoppe )
4. Mitten Double letter blends picture card match 
5. Wooden snowflake match
6. The Mitten animal word building with the moveable alphabet
7. Penguin puzzle with penguin fact card 

Our winter feels Math Table:


Wooden scale can be found here


Our Loose Parts set out for them in their Block Area:




Here are our Invitations:

Invitation to Build: Can you build a snowflake? (pay attention to main parts of what make a snowflake) We paired this with the book: The Story of Snow



Invitation to Explore: What story can you tell using these loose parts on the light table?



Invitation to Build: Can you build a sled? This went along with the Red Sled book we borrowed from the library. We LOVE a good STEAM invitation.




We had a fun Small World Sensory Play day where I filled a baking sheet and froze it. Then I mixed baking soda and shaving cream and made a super fun moldable snow! We added the Safari Ltd. Penguins for some chilly play! When the ice melted it was a great discussion opener about icebergs! 




Below are just some of the Science, Math and Art we did during these Winter Theme weeks.

How Do Penguins Stay Dry?
I printed a picture of a penguin from A Scrap of Time. We tested just water on the penguin and noticed it got drenched immediately. Next we rubbed oil onto the penguin first and then added water. Conclusion: try it yourself to discover!



Making Snowflake Names:
Fold your paper like you would to make a normal paper snowflake. Then write the name you want on the fold of the paper. Cut along the lines careful not to cut the fold. Viola!






Painted Snowflake Symmetry:
Place some paint into the center of a folded piece of paper. I prefer the larger pieces of construction paper for durability of the wet paint. Then fold the paper. The child then pushes the paint into three lines moving it away from the center of the fold to the edges of the paper. Be careful not to press too hard or the paper could rip and to not go past the edges. Open the paper carefully!



Penguin Coding
After reading Lost and Found by Oliver Jeffers. I set up a basic coding game to follow the order of events of the story to get the penguin to the South Pole. My daughter then had to write down the code the youngest was to follow in order to achieve this goal. 




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