Video of Muddy Creek out of its banks on April 3, 2014, Pettis County, Missouri.
Fee Fi Fo Fum Desmond says while stomping down my hall. And finishes the fairy tale line in time to get to the doorway of the room his friend Weston is in. He’s given me the topic for a theme for an upcoming week. Here’s some brainstorming I’ve done since he showed me his interest.
To get kids interested in learning, you start with what they’re thinking about or what they’re most fascinated by. It’s ‘in the moment’ that they learn the best. Their real-life thoughts and curiosity will get the best of them once you begin.
We’ll have some open-ended questions like:
- What’s scary mean?
- What’s a Giant like?
- What do they eat?
- How do they sleep?
- Where do they get their furniture?
- Where do they live?
This is the jump off point to
- Writing journals,
- Story Telling
- Painting with Big Brushes
- Filling in a Giant’s footprint with legos or blocks.
- Listing Giant things
- Making a Giant group collage
- Super-size cooking with a Giant Pizza (kids love cooking and it’s Science/Math all in one)
- Tape recording Giant voices when singing songs or retelling stories (yes I own an ancient tape recorder)
- Get out the Floor puzzles that are larger than normal
- Perfect time to take height and weight measurements for growth records
- Play baseball and make Giant homeruns. We’re Royals fans here so we’d make a giant crown like at Kauffman Stadium for our target 🙂
- Sort Big and Little shapes
- Take a Size hunt to find things Bigger than we are and take pictures
- Use a Beach Ball for parachute games
- Sort stuffed animals into Big and Little
- Toss Bean Bags into graduated circles starting with little and going up to Big using chalk outdoors on the pavement
- Measure who takes the best Giant Step
- Match Big and Small letters
- Bring in baby pics and take current pics to compare how Big they are now
- Match baby and Mommy animals
- Exercise using Bigger and smaller (Make Big circles, now little. Make Big birds flying, now little, etc)
- Make a floor size board game with posterboards taped together.
- Make a giant road for play vehicles with posterboard or wallpaper samples.
- Create a giant marble run with cardboard tubes
- And for fun and lots of giggles, try walking around in my hubby’s shoes. He wears size 16
I love your tips. I will have to do some of these with my grandchildren. 🙂
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Thank you for visiting and I would love to hear how it goes in the future! I’ll bet you have loads of fun 🙂
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🙂
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Thanks so much for visiting my blog. That’s a gorgeous quilt in your header! Good luck with the A-Z Challenge. I enjoy it, and while I’m not as ahead of the game as I like to be, I am caught up at the moment. Thankful for Sundays : )
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Thanks for the nice comments:-) This is my first time in the challenge and I’ll admit I was in panic mode and about drove the family insane lol Best wishes back to you
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I love your ideas for open ended questions. I need to remember to ask things like that when reading to my daughter.
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Thanks for visiting:-) I would love to hear her answers:-) I’ll be blogging some of the ones I get in a later post. Guaranteed to put a smile on any face.
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These are all excellent ways to capture children’s attention and draw them into many activities. Open ended questions and hands on are so enticing to kids, as is making them curious.
MJ, A to Z Challenge Co-Host
Writing Tips
Effectively Human
Lots of Crochet Stitches
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Attentive busy children equals no time outs (although our time outs are the toys being removed. Not the children) lol
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