Friday, September 21, 2012

12 Little Donuts


I found this idea on Inner Child Fun and it is basically cute overload.  These donuts {please do not fall out of your chairs!} are made of socks from the dollar store. You cut the toe off, roll them, and decorate - check out the Inner Child Fun link for the details.

I adapted the familiar rhyme so many of us use already:

12 little donuts in the donut shop
Yummy and warm with sprinkles on top
____ came along with a quarter to pay
She took one home and ate it right away...Yum! Yum!

Don't eat too many donuts!

Flannel Friday is what today is about and you can read about it on Flannel Friday's own website!  Sharon at Rain Makes Applesauce is today's round-up hostess, and Pinterst is THE place for Flannel Friday overload!

Thursday, September 6, 2012

Not Flannel Friday: Dear Zoo in 3D


I thought it might be fun to do a 3D version of the classic Dear Zoo, using some of the finger puppets I have on hand.  I tried really hard to find a small finger puppet snake, but I had to settle for a rubber one instead.  I found this cute box at the Dollar Tree and shoved my little animals in there (verrry tight squeeze!)  I'm going to have my eye out for a bigger box.

In telling the story, I just repeated the refrain from the book using the animals I chose.  It's a flexible way to tell it, and you can use any animals you have on hand.

I wrote to the zoo to send me a pet
and they sent me ____________!
He was too _______ , so I sent him back.

(you end with a dog - who is "perfect!" and you keep him!)



Flannel Friday is the fun we are having today - you can read about it here

Loons and Quines is our host for the day.

And Pinterest, of course, is the place for the best Flannel Friday eye candy!

Thursday, August 30, 2012

Sssss...Snakes!


Lots of slithery, snakey fun with this rhyme:

ONE little snake looking for something to do
He finds another and that makes TWO.
Two little snakes wrapped around a tree,
Another slithers up and that makes THREE.
Three little snakes by the garden door,
They see another and that makes FOUR.
Four little snakes notice one more arrive,
Basking in the sun, the snakes make FIVE.
(rhyme credit: Storytime Magic)

And here's a good song to use, which you could also use various flannel pieces for:

The snake in the grass went ssss, ssss, ssss, the snake in the grass went ssss, all day long.
The turtle on the rock goes snap, snap, snap . . .
The frog in the pond goes ribbit, ribbit, ribbit . . .
The bee in the tree goes buzz, buzz, buzz . . .
The rabbit in the hole goes hop, hop, hop. . .

Today's flannel friday is hosted by Notes from the Story Room, and the Flannel Friday website is always a great place for details!

Thursday, August 16, 2012

Pete the Cat


No new ideas here, but I still wanted to share my version of ol' Pete the Cat!  I used the "stiff" felt from Hobby Lobby - they sell it in the most perfect shade of blue for cool Pete.  Can't wait to use it this fall!

Check out Flannel Friday's website for more information on Flannel Friday; Mollie is this week's host!

Wednesday, July 25, 2012

Manners Storytime

Manners is a fun storytime option, but it kept my wheels turning for a while, particularly on a flannel option.  I decided upon Bears on Chairs, a darling book and good for a range of ages.  My flannel version reminds me of a question I ask myself a lot "does this extend or enhance the book itself?" You know, some books really are best as books!  I don't ever want to make a flannel for the sake of making it - I like to make it if it extends the chance of interaction with the kids, extendes their chance of interacting with the story, or if it might enhance the process (visual or otherwise) of telling it to a large group.


What ended up working for me was to just interact with the bears and their chairs, without using the (great!) rhyming text from the book.  When I tried it with the text, it seemed forced because I was trying to move bears and chairs a bit too much.  The older toddlers responded the best to the bears, counting chairs and then ultimately having them share.  It is an easy and cute story to just talk through, ask open ended questions, and let your kids watch the final resolution and cheer for bears who share.


I brought out my 3 mice friends to sing this adorable song:

3 Nice Mice
3 Nice Mice
See how nice they are
See how nice they are

They're always polite when they nibble their cheese
They never forget to say thank-you or please
They cover their noses whenever they sneeze
ahchoo! ahchoo! ahchoo!
3 Nice Mice
3 Nice Mice


Funny mouse stories: the baby group seemed a bit frightened of the mice - something that never crossed my mind!  If the mouse in the middle looks more loved than the others, the middle mouse is a a most-important member of my own family, while the other two are "library mice."


Line-up of great book options:

Friday, June 29, 2012

Flannel Friday: Ocean ideas


This story, Mitch the fish, is from the lovely Storytiming blog.  I made the story prop bigger to suit my audience a bit better.  Mitch the Fish is a fish who changes colors with the swish of his tail.  He has a cute song he sings and he turns the colors of other things he sees in the ocean.  The full story is on the Storytiming blog.  The fish scene is made out of a box lid covered in paper.  The string you see went around my neck, so I could have both of my hands free to change Mitch's color and be more interactive with the kids.  This was a really fun story to tell, and the kids really enjoyed the fish changing colors. A lot! Sweet preschoolers think of you as a magician when you pull your storytime tricks out.


Another popular rhyme was the 5 Little Jellyfish rhyme from Nikarella.  These were so fun to make!  Definitely use wrapping paper ribbon (twirling ribbon) because it gives the jellyfish some great movement.

Five Little Jellyfish
5 little jellyfish swimming by the shore, the yellow one got lost and that left 4.
4 little jellyfish swimming in the sea, the bright blue one swam far away and that left 3.
4 little jellyfish in the ocean bule, the purple one took a seahorse ride and that left 2.
2 little jellyfish swimming in the sun, the oragne one took a dive and that left 1.
1 little jellyfish swimming all alone, it was time for him to go home and that left none!


I had a giant sea shell that I brought out for this song.  I held it to my ear and pretended it was telling me about the creatures in the ocean.  The idea was to pass out the ocean animals and when I called a particular animal, those children would hold them up and show me their animal's "movement."  Well, since the audience is a large daycare, this didn't work out as great as it might in an audience with more parental help.  Sooo, in the subsequent tellings, I kept the props with me and after singing the sea shell's song, I held up the ocean creature and we all did the movement together.

Sea shell, sea shell, sing a song for me
Tell me about the ocean
Tell me about the sea.
In my ocean, there's _______.

In my ocean - there's a seahorse (bob up and down), a whale (make a big "thwack!" with your hands for a tail), a fish (fish face), an octopus (octopus arms), a starfish (arms like a starfish), and a shark (chomp, chomp!)

Tuesday, June 12, 2012

Fried ham, fried ham


This book is full of fun songs for sing alongs and the fried ham song, in particular, made me want to share and have fun with school age groups.   If you aren't familiar with this song, you sing it in different ways to make it terribly silly.  It goes "next verse same as the first, Texas accent makes it worse (or, underwater makes it worse; or, opera voice makes it worse.)" I gathered images of the items (some Microsoft Word images, some Google images) and turned it into a poster via Microsoft Publisher.  I've done it with a field trip and a class visit and success!  The best part of sharing this silly poster was the kids easily started volunteering their own ideas for singing it - including pirate accent and with dentures.  HA!

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