I'm flying solo this week.
As in, my mom's preschool is on Spring Break, so I mostly have to come up with my own learning shizz to do with the kiddos.
I bought a white board at Wal-Mart which has already been a worthy investment. And since we ended with "Z" a couple weeks ago, it seemed appropriate to start with "A" yesterday. When I asked the kids to think of things that start with the letter A, they immediately said "apple!", then the rest of the letter sesh was spent drawing penguins and made up dinosaurs on the white board. Again, we are very loosely following any structure.
This morning Rowan wrote the number "12" on the board. We went with it.
I showed them 12 Easter eggs in a carton and we talked about the word "dozen", threw in some quick math by taking half the eggs out of the carton for a "half dozen".
But the real winner was gluing numbers on a clock face. I found a simple blank clock face clipart online and made some colorful numbers to cut out and glue on the face. Kids totally dug it.
Super easy! And to make it easier, I added some templates below. The sizing should be about right when printed.
You need:
Plain paper
Construction paper
Glue
Brad (or tack w/ some sort of backing)
Instructions:
It's simple. Print the templates below. Cut the numbers out. Glue them on the clock. Cut the clock hands out of construction paper & pin them to the center with a brad so they move. Done.
Printable Clock Template |
Numbers and Hands Template |
A few tips:
1) I threw the Sesame Street pinball song on Youtube while I put together my little clock activities (I sing this song in my head every time I count numbers with the kids....yeah). That gave me enough time to find a free blank clipart clock face online.
2) I was originally going to have the kids trace the numbers (which you can totally do) but since my kids are forced to do a lot of that, I decided to draw some colorful numbers and cut them out for the littles to glue in place. They LOVE to glue. Probably because I dislike it.
3) Depending on the age, you can have the dotted numbers on the clock or have them figure it out themselves. Mine needed the traceable numbers. They both did great with minimal help from me, even Cid.
4) If you don't have brads (mom fail!) then you can use my ghetto tack trick. I stuck the tack through the paper and into cardboard. A cork would work GREAT for this, which I'm sure plenty of us moms have lying around....I just happened to be fresh out.
Ghetto Brad |
Both kids occupied. Both kids happy. Win!
~Sarah
Well, I'm going to be borrowing some ideas from you. We were planning to do a unit on clocks soon. Thanks for the templates! There are twelve months in the year and twelve inches in a foot too. Measuring things is always fun. You guys have got this down. :)
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