Thursday, March 25, 2010

CR Stuff

Old Cricket by Lisa Wheeler was the best CR book ever. Old Cricket is cranky and crotchety and suffers from creaks, cricks, and cracks; and that's all before he meets Old Crow.

Activities

Crawling race.

We had Tal's friend Luke over and we did a variety of races in the front yard, beginning with crawling. We also jumped, hopped, walked, tip-toed, and, of course, ran.

Crown



I cut out a long strip of thin cardboard (a cereal box worked well) and measured it to fit around Tal's head. 2 or 3 inches wide. Then I cut yellow paper the same length as the cardboard but about an inch wider. I glued the yellow paper to the cardboard, lining up the bottom edges. This gave me room to cut the points. Tal decorated the paper side (not the cardboard side) with all sorts of craft bling. Finally we made a ring and stapled it.

Note that Tal added his jewels in a very mathematical and ordered way. We also glued cotton balls on the bottom to give it a furry crown look.

Crocodile



I found the instructions for this guy here. I'm going to pull their images to explain this because it was a bit complicated. Or you could just go to their website where the craft is very clearly explained.

With scissors, I cut two 16.9 oz soda bottles in half and then trimmed one of the bottom pieces to about 3 inches.



Then I cut about three slits up the bottom of the longer bottom piece so that I could fit it over the other and used packing tape to fix them in place. After I slit the top pieces so they too could fit over the ends and fixed them in place with packing tape.

Finally, I hot glued four bottle caps to the bottom for legs, and two to the top for eyes.



Then came the fun part. I mixed 2 Tbs Elmer's glue with 2 Tbs water. Working in chunks, I spread the mixture over the surface of the crocodile, and affixed 1" squares of green tissue paper. Once the glue was covered by tissue paper, I then spread another layer of glue over the paper. I repeated this until the entire surface was covered and I liked the thickness of the tissue paper skin.

After the glue dried, we added details. Googly eyes for the eyes, points down his back, and feet for his legs. Voila! Craft crocodile.

We sang a whole long of "Never Smile at a Crocodile" during the making of this project.

Treasure hunt. crayons, craft box, crown, cricket, crocodile. The treasure was a Nestle's Crunch bar.

CL Stuff

Activities

Clay Coil Pot



I found this self-hardening clay at the craft store and taught Tal how to make a coil pot. We rolled out long snakes of clay and then circled them around until we had formed a pot.

Tricks I remembered from high school pottery: Scratch and wet each layer before adding the next one. I guess that's it.

Clown Collage



I found this project in the Usborne Art Treasury (see link at left). Have I touted the virtues of this book yet? This book has fantastic ideas for art projects using not much more than your basic craft materials. If you've got paint, paper, and glue, you're pretty much good to go. The authors connect each project with a work of art, and this project was connected to Picasso and his collages.

Clock

I used some clock flash cards to teach Tal how to tell time. He's pretty good. He definitely gets that the little hand points to the hour and the big hand points to the minutes. He also got pretty good and counting by fives.

Treasure hunt: closet, clothes, clay, clock. The treat was eclipse gum.

Sunday, March 7, 2010

BR Stuff

Bobby Bramble Loses his Brain by David Keane was full of BRs and HILARIOUS to a four year old.

Activities

Braid



He learned how to braid really well! You know, bring the outside clump in the middle. We added some beads for fun.

Bracelet

I bought Fruit Loops. This was HUGE. In our house we purchase Cheerios, Kix, Chex, and for when your feeling a little outrageous, Life. So the Fruit Loops were a great big giant deal.

I measured a piece of yarn that fit around Tal's wrist and he strung it with Fruit Loops. I envisioned him leaving it intact until Daddy got home to take a picture of it. It didn't last more than 15 minutes.

Breadsticks

Here is my favorite recipe.

1.5 c warm water
2 Tbsp sugar
1 Tbsp yeast
3-4 c flour
1/2 tsp salt
1 cube butter
garlic salt
parmesan cheese

Dissolve yeast in water and sugar. Add flour and salt. Mix and knead 5-6 minutes. Let rest 10 minutes. Melt butter. Pour half of melted butter in cookie sheet. Spread around until entire sheet is covered. Roll out dough until covering most of the pan, and a uniform thickness. Pour remaining butter over the top of rolled dough. Sprinkle very generous amounts of garlic salt and Parmesan cheese. Let rise 15-20 minutes. Bake at 350 for about 20 minutes.

Treasure hunt: broccoli, broom, bread, brother. The treat was brown licorice.

BL Stuff

We've pretty much covered letter combinations that make unique sounds (like Sh, Ch, and Dr) so we're going to cover letter combinations that you often find together. For example, B and L Talmage could sound out on their own in the word black, but bl as one sound would make the process easier. I think we'll work through the alphabet this way, (using the examples on this website) before we start to tackle vowels.

Again, I'm making this up as I go along with no real trained method in mind.

Anyway, I had no idea back at B Stuff that I'd still be doing ABC Stuff come 2010 and past the end of the alphabet. So a couple of the activities from B Week will do for Bl week. Maybe when I do this with Asher I'll get more specific with a better variety of B activities.

FHE Blessings: Daddy got into BL Stuff, so when it was his turn to teach Family Home Evening he did a lesson on blessings. He taught Talmage that blessings are something Heavenly Father gives us to help us in life and then he and I listed the blessings we are grateful for. Each of us then drew pictures of our blessings.

Daddy is grateful for:



Talmage is grateful for:



That's a picture of Daddy. Daddy is 29 years old. Mommy is also 29 years old, but she's less of a blessing in Tal's life.

Picture Blocks:



I let Tal pick 12 pictures that he liked of our family (easily available here) and printed them out. We then bought two 2-inch blocks (I had hoped for 3 inch, but 2 inch is what Michael's had. Robert's had nothing.) I cut a 2 inch by 2 inch square out of a piece of paper and let Tal use it to frame his favorite part of the pictures. I outlined the frame and trimmed the pictures down.

We then mod-podged the square faces and attached pictures. I then added two more layers of mod-podge over the top of the pictures to seal and finish.

Blackberry and Blueberry crumble: This dessert was super simple and super fantastic. I mean really fantastic. Really, really. Fantastic.

It came in handy as Tyler NAILED his administrative interview today and so we had Blackberry and Blueberry Crumble to celebrate.

Black and Blueberry Crumble

1/2 c Blackberries; fresh or frozen
1 1/2 c Blueberries; fresh or frozen
2 tb Sugar
1 ds Nutmeg
1 c Oatmeal
1/2 c Flaked coconut
1/3 c Melted butter
Vanilla ice cream

In saucepan, combine blackberries, blueberries, sugar and nutmeg. Cook over low-heat. Set aside. In a measuring cup, pour oatmeal and toast in microwave, cooking on high heat and stirring once. Combine toasted oatmeal, coconut and melted butter. Set aside. In dessert bowls, spoon an ice cream mound. Pour toasted oatmeal mixture on top. Spoon fruit over all.

Approximately 15 minutes.

Black painting (crayon resist): This is a fun project and one I remember from my elementary school years. Talmage and I colored pictures on a white sheet of paper. (Light colored crayons work best for this step, but I didn't limit Talmage.) Once our pictures were done, we took watered-down black tempera paint and covered the entire sheet of paper. Crayons are waxed based, so they repel the water-based tempera paints. Once the black paint had dried, we scratched a design in the picture that removed the layer of black paint.





Treasure hunt: blocks, blueberries, black (marker), blue (shirt), blood. The treat was a blow-pop.

TR Stuff

When I realized trucks and trains started with TR, I knew we'd have no problem finding TR books. Our favorite find of the week was Russell and the Lost Treasure by Rob Scotton.

Activities

Train. Since we painted a choo choo train during CH week, I had to change the activity a bit. This time I bought a wooden train from the craft store. Tal painted it.



Truck. Similar to above, this wooden train came in a kit with markers. Tal colored it.



Tree



For this activity, Tal traced my hand on white paper. We cut out the hand a glued it on blue paper. I then cut leaves out of various green and yellow papers and Tal glued them on.

Rice Krispie Treats.




Find the original recipe here.

Treasure hunt: Truck, train table, train tracks, trash can, tree, trunk. The treat was a store bought Rice Krispie treat. Tal pointed out that anything would work because treat started with a TR.