Wednesday, April 8, 2015

Little Oceanographers

We started our ocean unit on Monday and I'm really excited for what we have in store for us this month.

We covered ocean water and the ocean floor today since we were starting a little late.  The kiddos loved searching for objects on the theme poster using the empty looking glasses that came in the kit (I used the one from March, too, so two could be up at one time, which helped them take turns a little more easily).

I'm trying something new this month, inspired by my recent Amazon mom diaper delivery.  Miss M loved her "rocket" box last month so I thought this month we would make "submarines" for them to sit in during circle time to see if they can stay in the area with a little less cajoling.  If you have more children in your Mother Goose Time class, you could probably ask each parent to bring in a box (these large diaper boxes work great) for their child.  I plan on having us decorate them soon.

We had fun with the name tags.  I bought some dry erase crayons and they got to choose a color.  We helped them write their name the first time and then gave them a second color to practice tracing over the letters on their own.  I think this will be something I try to do with Miss M a couple times a week.  After that, we took the name tags back into the living room and practiced mixing them up and having them "swim" to find their own name (with only two children, this wasn't particularly difficult).

I adapted the Under the Sea activity to use the name tags since the concept of moving like different ocean animals (besides crawling along the ground for swimming) seemed a little above their heads right now.  We played a kind of Simon Says with the name tags, having them place them in, on, in front of, behind and under objects in the room (or me).  Behind and under seem to be concepts we need to work on a little more.

We did not end up doing the primary science activity, which was mixing up sweet and salty water to taste.  Our school friend had a rather unfortunate trampoline accident on Saturday that left his tongue in rough shape and I was afraid it might be too painful.  We may come back to it when he's had more time to heal.

We introduced the letter O and they had fun moving around a large tape O on the floor, either swimming if I held up an octopus picture or flying if I showed them an owl.  It made for a great race track a few minutes later when they decided they were done and wanted to play with cars.  After that was done, I pulled up the tape and gave the ball to Littlest, who enjoyed the texture for a few minutes.

The oyster pearl craft was a fun one and a great math activity.  We talked about how the plate was the same shape as an O and had them practice drawing circles/O's on it before they colored it however they wanted to.  I told them a little bit about how pearls are made while they colored.  We counted out 10 beads, then they strung them onto the pipe cleaners while counting again.  We bent them into circles and I slid a bead over each of the ends to help protect them from that little bit of wire that always pokes out.  They enjoyed making the oysters bite people and I noticed Miss M using the bracelet a little later as a sort of abacus, counting to herself.

It was a great hour of activities that kept them engaged the entire time, which was fantastic.





5 comments:

  1. This sounded so well done, and thought out as well as successful. Congrats. I like it when one of the activities can be a carry over through out the day /week..ie: abacus like bead counting.

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  2. That's the great thing about a lot of the crafts and lessons, since they are all theme-based, you can refer to them again and again throughout the month. The bracelet is a lot of fun because it can be used outside the theme.

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  3. Using the boxes as submarines and to give them a spot of their own is such a great idea. It will also extend into opportunities to reinforce the positional concepts you mentioned such as behind, under, above etc. What is swimming behind the submarine? You can throw some water toys out there into the 'ocean'.

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  4. Brilliant, brilliant circle time containment idea!

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    1. Thanks Tracy. It ended up not working as well as I hoped but mostly because she is still so short and the baby is a wiggle worm. :) I think with older kids who could get in and out of them more easily, it would be really helpful.

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