I have so many things to blog about and ideas to share that I
am just now getting around to our toddler class’ shape for December, which was predictably
the star. (My new full-time job is a little bit of a distraction too… in a good
way!) Anyway, as with our other shapes of the month, it is all about fun and learning
through play. Here are 4 things we did with stars in addition to all our other
Christmas activities.
1. Painting with Star Cookie Cutters: Anything with paint is bound to be a lot of fun for toddlers, as this was. This can, of course, be adapted for any shape, season, or subject, as long as you have the cookie cutter.
We had 2 different sized and colored star cookie cutters, so
we definitely incorporated some vocabulary (big vs. small) and color learning
too. The colors of the cookie cutters matched the colors of the paint, which
made it even more fun to mix them together on our papers.
No, not every star was recognizable on our papers, but it was
definitely a fun activity that the kids really got into!
Some of them wanted their hands cleaned after they had done a
few stars, and other children could have sat there for hours and kept playing
in the paint.
These beautiful collages ended up going in our portfolios as
our “shape of the month” page.
2. Star Stickers: This took practically no time at all, which
was perfect for toddler attention spans. This was an activity for our alphabet
book (coming soon!), which I try to make pretty simple. I had die cut several
stars on construction paper, so the children got to glue those down on their
papers. Then they got to play with star stickers. It’s always interesting to
see the reactions of children just being introduced to stickers. There are
those who tear them, stick them to everything, and pick them off the paper as
soon as they’re stuck down. Most of them I had to help, but they were all very
interested, and some of them even worked at getting the stickers off the
sticker sheet. (Yay for fine motor skills!)
3. Water Play with a Star: I can’t really take credit for this
activity – we randomly found this star on our playground one day, and we just
ran with it! December was actually a pretty warm month for us (as evidenced by
the short sleeves), so we played with water outside. (This would be so fun for
snow too though!)
It seems like it’s a sandbox mold? Anyway, we had been
practicing pouring water for several months, so the learning continued as we
talked about this smiling star and sang “Twinkle, Twinkle, Little Star.”
The kids loved when I poured water onto the star from high
above.
This also came in handy when we played with dirt and mulch!
4. Magic Scratch Stars: Just like our magic scratch hearts we did at Valentines Day, I had these stars that the toddlers were delighted to
color.
I got these from Oriental Trading Co, but I think this kind of
paper is available at craft stores for you to cut into whatever shape you want.
This is not just fine motor practice; it is definitely writing
skills being developed! Just look at the finger grip here!
In addition to reading books about shapes (including stars)
and dropping star shapes into shape-sorter holes, which I’ve not pictured in
this blog post, there are a few other ideas I would love to incorporate into
future star studies for toddlers, as time allows:
- make stars with play dough (using cookie cutters again)
- look at and touch starfish
- put students’ pictures inside star shapes for display
- have a “star parade” with students carrying stars and/or their star-shaped pictures on popsicle sticks
Thank you so much for joining us at Living Well Spending Less this week! I love these star ideas - they would be fun for my little girls! :)
ReplyDeleteThanks for linking this to Tuesday Tots. Just letting you know that I've featured it this week on Learn with Play at home. You're welcome to grab a featured button if you like. Hope to see more from you next week. Debs :)
ReplyDeleteThank you so much! So exciting!
DeleteLove activities that follow a theme. Thanks for linking up at Artsy Play Wednesday. You post has been pinned to our group board.
ReplyDeleteLoved this post. Thanks for sharing...Do you mind telling me what kind of paint was used? And where to buy. Thank you very much.
ReplyDeleteGlad you enjoyed! We used regular tempera paint for the cookie cutter paintings. They have great deals at discountschoolsupply.com if you want to buy in bulk, but I'm sure they're available at regular craft stores too.
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