Showing posts with label leaves. Show all posts
Showing posts with label leaves. Show all posts

Sunday, December 23, 2018

Winter Story Stretcher: "The Fox and the Falling Leaves" by Julia Rawlinson

Most folks would probably think of Julia Rawlinson's The Fox and the Falling Leaves (also under the title Fletcher and the Falling Leaves) as Fall themed book and, indeed it does whimsically share the tale of a young fox, Fletcher and his fruitless attempts at "saving" his favorite tree from this thing called Autumn that is responsible for causing all of its leaves to fall off. As Fletcher tries again and again to help restore his poor, beloved tree to its leafy Summer self, he is confronted again and again by Autumn's seemingly gravitational pull and some other woodland critters who are of little help. There is a magical Wintry surprise at the end that makes this the perfect book to transition seasons. We chose this book for a star role in our Winter Break Story Stretchers Playcamp on the afternoon before Winter solstice and to celebrate and honor Autumn's departure with a fun STEAM activity to go along with it.

Lest you think that our Story Stretcher times look picture book perfect, there's Y wandering in the background and S trying to hear the story over his singing...

"Tree, tree!" shouted Y, gleefully bringing me the pipe cleaner tree from our activity setup at the table!
We gathered (more or less) on the rug for our story together, and then took to the table for our STEAM Challenge to Build a Winter Tree. This is the perfect activity to combine fine motor skills, art, engineering and creativity as the children got to use cotton ball "snow" and a prepared pipe cleaner tree trunk (I found a great tutorial and the inspiration for this project on the blog Play Trains!) If you have older kids, they can shape and form their own tree trunks and branches from pipe cleaners. Cotton balls have a lovely way of sticking to the pipe cleaners and Y even discovered how to pull them apart and stretch the cotton like drifts of snow. I was quite impressed! S followed suit. The harder challenge is getting loose parts like glass gems, sea glass and mosaic tiles to withstand slipping through the branches to taking the whole tree down! It's a challenge we were up for! As the boys were busy building, designing, constructing and reconstructing, I thought it might be fun to add in some Fletcher to Fox characters, and offered them each a small toy fox from our collection of winter forest animals.

I love using the collection of building prompts from Pocket of Preschool's Winter STEM pack to introduce our activity at the table. It supports the print rich environment I strive for and provides visual inspiration as well. To try this activity at home you will need pipe cleaners (black or brown) for your tree base and cotton balls for snow (alternatively you could use fiber fill or wool batting). Glass gems, mosaic tiles and/or sea glass make a lovely optional addition and the addition of a toy fox or other small toy woodland animals could make for some great small world play and storytelling.

I almost never know what activities will draw the boys in (one or both) and which will sustain their attention and curiosity. This one was a huge winner!  I aim to set up our area in ways that are thought provoking and visually appealing. The formality of wooden bowls added a sense of beauty and reverence to their work area and I think that goes a long way in capturing their interest. I love finding these at secondhand stores. I find them super inexpensively and they are great for storing and organizing art materials, loose parts, small toys, even jewelry and small personal objects. They are also a lovely addition to dramatic and sensory play. Both boys really had a great time with this activity and were quite pleased when I showed them that all of the parts to recreate it are readily available in our Winter STEAM drawers or other easy to access areas in our play space. I think it is especially important when children do take an interest in an activity like this to make it available for recreation and repetition.

With that, we've officially said so long to Autumn and welcomed Winter! And we will be back soon with some more Winter themed Story Stretcher fun. Until then...

Happy Reading and Happy Playing!



Wednesday, October 18, 2017

An Autumn Afternoon Story Stretcher



With the busy holiday season just behind us, we were all in need of some fresh air and afternoon fun here. Our southern heat has given way to some cooler and crisper days and some gorgeous Autumn foliage! The last of the big Jewish holidays is Simchat Torah, the day on which we celebrate every preschool parent's and teacher's worst nightmare dream come true: a child's request to "read it again!" We complete our yearly cycle of reading the Torah, roll it on up, and begin again, with one of the most important parshiot, Bereishit, the story of Creation.  Because of the timing of this Torah portion falls directly on the heels of a huge holiday season, it is often a struggle to "fit in" learning about it in Jewish homes and classrooms. I tinker each year with whether to rush through it, knowing full well that we will read it again (and again and again, G-d willing), or to extend it beyond its space in the yearly rotation just as more very important parshiot are rolling on by (like the story of Noach). This year S is learning a great deal about the parsha in school. At home I have decided to slow the pace down and introduce some play themed afternoons for each of the days of Creation even beyond this week--there is great benefit in repetition!


And speaking of repetition, this week's story stretcher was a rerun from last Autumn. Lois Ehlert is a favorite author and illustrator of mine and we all loved her book Leaf Man so much last year that I decided to pack it up along with some Autumn themed fun for a story stretcher on the go! We picked a favorite local park and packed up our target story along with some other easily transportable materials and activities:


  • a basket for collecting colorful leaves, acorns and nuts, pine cones and whatever else your little ones may wish to collect--do make sure that removing natural materials is permissible at your park location. If not, it can be a great opportunity to practice leaving items from nature in nature when you are done!
  • masking tape for making Fall leaf bracelets
  • a clipboard for transporting a work surface
  • white paper & broken, peeled crayons in Autumn colors for leaf or tree bark rubbings
  • a sheet of clear contact paper for collecting colorful leaves
  • a large recycled brown bag for easy transport and collection of items that may be too large for your basket!
S is just about always game for a story being read, but if and when he's not, a change in location or routine is the perfect way to sneak in reading together. He loved reading at the park while enjoying a snack! 

One of the easiest and most transportable take-along materials for outdoor exploration and nature walks in all seasons is a roll of masking tape! Simply wrap a strip around your children's wrist (and your own!) with the sticky side out. In the Fall, small, colorful leaves make a lovely bracelet. Spring and Summer wildflowers look beautiful as well!

Last year we made and laminated our own Leaf Man. He came along with us for an afternoon of play and story stretcher fun and to be re-united with some of his closest friends and cousins.

Y had a good time with Leaf Man, too!

You can use clear contact paper to collect beautiful leaves and flat objects from nature. They will look quite lovely hung in a window, but also make a wonderful surface for doing leaf rubbing.

The leaf rubbings came out beautifully--especially the oak leaves! A park and playground truly provide all the entertainment that S requires without any additional activities being included. If this is true for your little ones as well, I don't suggest "forcing" participation in take-along activities. Many times, if I stop to try an activity out, S will join in as he wishes. Other times, he chooses not to, and that is OK, too!

No kid collects leaves like a kid who isn't ready to leave the park! We enjoyed a slow-paced walk back to the car as S filled our basket with leaves of all colors, shapes and sizes!

He decided to send this collection in to his teachers to use in their classroom activities this week. We will likely go on a second nature walk next week to fill our own sensory table with some Fall themed finds!


 Wishing you all the fun and wonder that this season brings, and, as always, Happy Playing!

Thursday, November 10, 2016

Beyond the Book: Leaf Man by Lois Ehlert

Check out Leaf Man from your local library!
 We checked out Lois Ehlert's Leaf Man from our local library and loved it! It has gorgeous illustrations (typical to Ehlert's work) and a beautiful, flowing story line. We took our reading beyond the book with some fun with process art and nature exploration.
Here's a peek at some of our activities in relation to this wonderful Autumn-themed book:
We started off with a stroll through a nearby park. In addition to some
larger leaves, pine cones, seed pods and nuts of all kinds, we collected tiny leaves on masking tape bracelets. This wonderful method of nature collecting was suggested in Trish Kuffner's The Toddler's Busy Book.




 Without giving instructions or an example, I set out a recycled container of glue and a brush along with a tray of some of the most unique and colorful leaves we found on our nature walk. He had at it! Older children might have fun actually creating animals and people with the leaves. My little one had a great time gluing them on the paper and I resisted the urge to point out when they happened to take shape of animals I recognized! To best preserve collages made with leaves, you may wish to press/dry them beforehand and/or laminate the finished product. Left naturally, the leaves with dry and curl and likely crumble over time.




I laminated my son's bracelet from our nature walk, cut it out and attached a yarn tassel to make a keepsake bookmark he can use in his homeschool journal.  

With some of the other leaves we found, I created and laminated my own Leaf Man to use for story telling and play. Now I must resist the urge to make a whole Leaf Family...






 Autumn is a great time to explore the glorious colors of nature hands-on in your own backyard or front yard studio. We took a collection of nature's "paint brushes" in the form of pine needles, seed pods, leaves, pine cones and even a real paintbrush (at my son's request) outside along with a large sheet of craft paper and a tray of Autumn colors to mix and explore with. Again, in favor of encouraging process art, I left out instructions and examples. When at first my son seemed hesitant, my husband and I joined him in trying out some of the "brushes" in the paint. We didn't verbalize directions or our own ideas and before long, he was confident to dig in! The different strokes and prints of our Autumn nature collection was amazing and the ideas that inspired my little one's art and play in the time we spent with this activity even more incredible!
He started off using different leaves as brushes on paper and rolling the pine cone in the paint to make prints.
Then he took a whirl at painting the pine cone with his paintbrush! We brought the colorful creation inside to dry and decorate
 our home for the season.



He especially loved painting with this pine needle brush...

Which led to a game of sweeping and painting the lawn as well!
We had such a wonderful time taking Leaf Man beyond the book. I've especially loved the opportunity to include more process art in our homeschooling this week as well as the invitation to take our learning and play outdoors as the season change envelopes us with color, texture, and all kinds of inspiration! Happy playing, creating and exploring!

Wednesday, November 9, 2016

Autumn Theme: Fingerplays, Songs and Action Rhymes

Using scarves with songs/chants encourages gross motor
skills, rhythm awareness, and the important aspects of
brain development that occur when crossing the mid-line.
There are countless studies to show the benefits of music to early childhood development. Music and rhyme are powerful learning tools for "students" of all ages. Think back to the little tricks you may have used when studying for tests in which memorization was required, or songs that you still remember from childhood. With little ones, music can be a wonderful way to enhance language skills. Early literacy skills are attained as even very young children gain a sense of rhythm and rhyme. And any time we include a variety of learning tools in an activity--as in the gross motor/fine motor skills of dance and finger-plays along with the rhythms, melodies and vocabulary of songs and chants--you increase overall development and comprehension. My own son has just reached the age of beginning to repeat back songs on his own. He sings in, um, one pitch and one volume--off key and loud! But he has gained so much vocabulary, awareness of rhyming sounds and a of other concepts to boot. For these reasons and more, we use a lot of fingerplays, songs and action rhymes in our learning together.
Using props and movement in daily davening (prayers)
There are a variety of popular nursery rhymes and children's songs that we know from our own childhoods and perhaps you already sing and play with your children using these. There are also a wealth of newer ones available in books as well as online. And never discount your own poetic and lyrical abilities when it comes to making up your own songs and rhymes. I learned to spell my name as a little girl with a song my own mother made up the tune from the Mickey Mouse Club! My son has his favorite songs and rhymes that we sing year round and even do our daily davening (prayers) to music. We also incorporate new songs and rhymes to new play themes, often using familiar tunes. Including props like laminated paper, foam, felt or fabric cut-outs, puppets can add a fun element of play. We also use instruments (even homemade ones) like shakers, bells and drums to play along and tap out rhythms. Adding scarves to your movement and dance can also be a great way to bring larger motor skills into the picture.
Here are some of the Autumn-themed fingerplays, action rhymes and songs we have been enjoying:
(Where possible I have incuded a link site to the title, although many of these have been posted and shared in so many places, it's hard to credit an original composer)

Fall Leaves Falling
t.t.t.o. "Twinkle Twinkle Little Star"
This is a great one for moving from a high-energy activity to a quieter/calmer time.

Fall leaves falling all around
(Reach up & wave hands slowly)
Fall leaves red and fall leaves brown
Fall leaves on my head and toes
(Touch head, touch toes)
Reach for a leaf
(Reach up with one hand)
And down it goes!
(Bring hand down and point to the ground)
Fall leaves falling all around
(Slowly bring arms down and crouch/sit down)
Clear pencil pouches like this one make a great storage option for small
props and collections of songs and rhymes, which I record on index cards
and attach with a metal ring. It makes accessing it on the go easy as well as
longer term storage.
Fall leaves falling to the ground

Leaves Are Falling Down
t.t.t.o. "Farmer In the Dell"
We love to do this one while having a "pile" of leaves (either real, paper or fabric) "fall down" from the sky (an adult sprinkles them overhead). Throw in a toy rake for clean-up/dramatic play or let your little leaf catcher pick them up when the song is done. You can even count them together at the end! The last verse can be used with motions and is a great tickle rhyme for lap babies especially.

The leaves are falling down (x2)
Fall is here and winter's near
The leaves are falling down

The leaves are falling down (x2)
Some are red and some are brown
The leaves are falling down

The leaves are falling down (x2)
They tickle your nose and touch your toes!
The leaves are falling down

The Leaves on the Trees
t.t.t.o. "The Wheels on the Bus" (We like to sing this one in the car and you can easily add your own verses!)

The leaves on the trees turn orange and red, orange and red, orange and red
The leaves on the trees turn orange and red
All through the town

The leaves of the trees come tumbling down, tumbling down, tumbling down
The leaves of the trees come tumbling down
All through the town

The leaves on the ground go swish, swish, swish, swish, swish, swish,
Swish, swish, swish
The leaves on the ground go swish swish swish
All through the town!

Ten Little Leaves
t.t.t.o. "Ten Little Indians" Add in some laminated leaves, artificial leaves or foam/paper cutouts for hands-on fun and counting

One litttle, two little, three little leaves
Four little, five little, six little leaves
Seven little, eight little, nine little leaves
Ten leaves blow away! Whoosh!

Leaves, Leaves, Falling Down
t.t.t.o. "Row, Row, Row Your Boat"
Add in your own props/visuals using paper or foam in the associated colors and/or shapes

Leaves, leaves, falling down
(wiggle fingers downward)
Falling to the ground
Red, yellow, orange and brown
Triangle, oval and round

Four Fall Leaves
t.t.t.o. "This Old Man"
This one is a great one to use with movement or with props

Four fall leaves up in the tree
Two for you and two for me
The wind will blow, watch them fall to the ground
One, two, three and four fall down

Five Little Pumpkins
(chant)
This one can be done with paper/foam/felt props or even real mini-pumpkins or gourds. Fingers make a great prop as well that you're guaranteed to have wherever you are! You could even make a finger puppet to use along with it by affixing 5 pumpkin stickers or felt cutouts to a glove.

Five little pumpkins in a country store
One rolled away, then there were four
Four little pumpkins growing near a tree
One rolled away, then there were three
Three little pumpkins sitting next to you
One rolled away, then there were two
Two little pumpkins outside in the sun
One rolled away, then there was one
One little pumpkin feeling all alone
He rolled away and now there are none!

Look at my Ten Fall Leaves
t.t.t.o. "Did You Ever See a Lassie?"
This is another great counting-backward one and is a wonderful one to use with props or fingers for a visual. We use 10 as our starting number, but you can choose fewer!

Look at my [10] fall leaves, [10] fall leaves, [10] fall leaves
Look at my [10] falls leaves
Ooops! One blew away!
Look at my [9] fall leaves...etc...

Happy Singing, Chanting, Dancing and Playing!