Showing posts with label seasons. Show all posts
Showing posts with label seasons. Show all posts

Sunday, December 15, 2019

Montessori-Inspired Months and Seasons Activities Using Free Printables

By Deb Chitwood from Living Montessori Now 

Even though I can't believe it'll be a new year soon, I'm excited to share some new months and seasons activities today ... perfect for a new year! I also have a Montessori-inspired months and seasons pack (subscriber freebie at LivingMontessoriNow.com)




You'll find many activities for preschoolers through first graders throughout the year along with presentation ideas in my previous posts at PreK + K Sharing

You'll also find ideas for using free printables to create activity trays here: How to Use Printables to Create Montessori-Inspired Activities. At Living Montessori Now, I have a post with resource links of Free Printables for Montessori Homeschools and Preschools. 

Disclosure: This post contains affiliate links (at no cost to you). 

Montessori Shelves with Month and Season Themed Activities

You’ll find Montessori-inspired months and seasons numbers, letters, and and more (part of my subscriber freebie pack, so just sign up for my email to get the link and password … or check the bottom of your latest newsletter if you’re already a subscriber)

I always have related books available throughout a unit. On the top shelf, Sunshine Makes the Seasons and Weather and the Seasons focus on science and the seasons. The Story Orchestra: Four Seasons in One Day is part of a fabulous series of musical books. The child presses musical buttons to hear parts of Vivaldi's The Four Seasons.

You could mix your month and season themed activities among your shelves according to curriculum area. Or you could have a special month and season themed area something like the one pictured. My shelves at the beginning of our unit have a mixture of skill levels mainly from preschooler through early elementary. Many of the activities can be adapted for a variety of levels. If you’re a homeschooler, just choose the activities that work for your child’s interests and ability levels. If you don’t have room for all the activities you’d like to do, simply rotate them.

Montessori Celebration of Life Activity with Months and Seasons and Sunshine Makes the Seasons Book

Montessori Celebration of Life Activity with Months and Seasons and Sunshine Makes the Seasons Book

Free Printable: Free sun printable from Clker.com
Free Printable: Month Labels by Ms Amy’s Learning Toolbox at Teachers Pay Teachers
Free Printable:  Seasons Cards by MOMtessori Life at Teachers Pay Teachers (seasons labels are optional for the birthday ceremony)
I also printed out the photo of the layout from our Montessori birthday celebration at home. (See details there as well.)
You'll need a candle to represent the sun. (I used an LED candle as a tradition, especially for safety when I have toddlers around. Preschoolers can use a real candle with close supervision or an LED candle.) You'll also need a Montessori globe or another type of globe to represent the earth. A Multicraft tray works well for most activities.
This activity can be used as an extension activity for a Montessori birthday. It can also be a New Year's activity to celebrate the earth's birthday!

Activity Making Montessori Birthday Candle Wheel


Activity Making Montessori Birthday Candle WheelFree Printable: Montessori Birthday Candle Wheel by Amanda of Barley and Birch at Teachers Pay Teachers (with directions at Barley and Birch)

This is a fun idea for a craft for an advanced preschooler on up. You can use a toilet paper tube or a paper towel tube cut to the length you wish for the candle. I printed out the photo from Teachers Pay Teachers to use as a model. For children, I just have them use cardstock and not add the cardboard pieces.

If you have younger children, you could make the model yourself using the printable with cardstock and cardboard pieces. It could even be used for the Montessori birthday celebration.

Salt and Glitter Snow Writing Tray with Months m and Seasons s Cards

Salt and Glitter Snow Writing Tray with Months f and Seasons s Cards

Free Printables: Months letter m and seasons letter s for salt writing tray (part of my subscriber freebie pack, so just sign up for my email to get the link and password … or check the bottom of your latest newsletter if you’re already a subscriber)


You'll see a variety of simple letter writing trays in my previous unit study posts. I often used the wooden tray from the Melissa & Doug Lace and Trace Shapes. You can use whatever tray or container work best for you, though.

I recently purchased this lovely spelling/alphabet tray from FamilyTreeWW on Etsy. Zoey recently turned 6 and is focusing on spelling a lot. She needs more room for writing longer words. We're also working on cursive. So I'm showing an example of how you can use the font cards to focus on both manuscript and cursive writing.

If you would like help with introducing phonetic sounds, introducing objects with sounds, or beginning phonics in general, check out my DIY Beginning Montessori Phonics with Preschoolers.

Matching Manuscript and Cursive Months and Seasons Alphabet Cards

Free Printable: Months and seasons alphabet cards in manuscript and cursive (part of my subscriber freebie pack, so just sign up for my email to get the link and password … or check the bottom of your latest newsletter if you’re already a subscriber)

The months and seasons alphabet cards have a months and seasons wheel that has the abbreviation for each month along with colors showing the months for each season.

Zoey has really enjoyed this activity. I used it originally with a cursive tracing board. I got the 2-sided version (with capital letters on one side and lowercase on the other), since capital cursive letters aren’t commonly seen on written materials.

After tracing the letters on the tracing board, Zoey places the manuscript letters in alphabetical order. Then she matches each of the cursive letters to the manuscript letters. Now we've added the wooden cursive movable alphabet letters as well.

We’ve been using a traditional small wooden manuscript movable alphabet, although we’re now working with the cursive wooden movable alphabet. There are a number of price ranges available. You can find more movable alphabet resources in my “Inexpensive and DIY Movable Alphabets” post.

Seasons ea Phonogram Card and Booklet

 

Free Printables: “ea" seasons phonogram card (part of my subscriber freebie pack, so just sign up for my email to get the link and password … or check the bottom of your latest newsletter if you’re already a subscriber) 

Free Printable: Green Series ea Letters from MontessoriSoul (Print two sets if you want to use the pictures for movable alphabet word building.) This is so easy to prepare, yet it isolates the ea phonogram very well. 

I have a post and video on how to introduce words starting with phonograms, even with very young children.

Seasons Sorting and Reading Activity in English and Spanish

Seasons Sorting and Reading Activity in English and Spanish 

Free Printable: Four Seasons Cards from My Montessori Family at Teachers Pay Teachers (This is editable, so I changed the names of the seasons to start with lowercase letters.)

Free Printable: Bilingual Seasons of the Year Printable from Tales of a Crafty Mom

Free Printable: Four Seasons Sentence Sort by The Real World First Grade at Teachers Pay Teachers

This is super easy to prepare. Just print and cut out the printable pages. Laminate if desired. 

With toddlers, we'll just use the photo picture cards to discuss seasons. Toddlers on up can learn the Spanish names of the seasons. Children who can read can learn to read and write the Spanish names. They can also read and sort out the four seasons sentences.

The Turning of the Year Book with Months of the Year Picture and Word Sort in English and Spanish

The Turning of the Year Book with Months of the Year Picture and Word Sort in English and Spanish

The Turning of the Year by Bill Martin Jr. is a Montessori-friendly book that's a good introduction to the months of the year.

Free Printable: Months of the Year Cards from Montessori for Everyone

Free Printable: Months of the Year in Spanish by The Williams Sisters at Teachers Pay Teachers

Free Printable: Interactive Notebook Spanish Months by Christina Cantrell at Teachers Pay Teachers

I display the cards simply in a Montessori cards display box (which I love and often use.)

This activity is best for children who can read well, although younger children can be taught the names of the months in Spanish. For this activity, the child could lay out the pictures with English words first and then match the two sets of Spanish words. Add a colored dot or another control of error to the back of each card for a self-correcting activity.

Seasons Greater Than, Less Than Activity with Snowflake and Bead Bar Manipulative

Seasons Greater Than, Less Than Activity with Snowflake and Bead Bar Manipulative

Free Printable: Seasons math cards 1-20 plus greater than and less than cards (part of my subscriber freebie pack, so just sign up for my email to get the link and password … or check the bottom of your latest newsletter if you’re already a subscriber)

You could do an activity similar to the duckling greater than, less than activity I shared previously using bead bars. For this activity, I added acrylic snowflakes to match the climate in many areas right now. You could vary this activity according to your season at the time.

I used bead bars from the decanomial box. (My bead bars, which I love, are from Alison’s Montessori. You can get bead bars on Amazon, although I haven’t personally used materials from those companies.)

Cutting and Dressing Activity with Paper Dolls for the Seasons

Cutting and Dressing Activity with Paper Dolls and Clothes for the SeasonsFree Printable: Paper Dolls for the Seasons from Royal Baloo

This is such a simple activity to prepare ... and it's lots of fun! If you have a preschooler with advanced cutting skills or an older child, you can just print out the pages and place them on a tray similar to mine. If your child is younger, you can cut out the paper dolls and clothing. Then your child can dress the doll or dolls for the season.

Free Months and Seasons Printables for Preschoolers Through First Graders

Montessori-Inspired Months and Seasons Pack 

Montessori-Inspired Months and Seasons Pack for DIY Cards and Counters, Number or Letter Matching, Number or Letter Basket, Bead Bar Work, Hands-on Math Operations, Number or Letter Salt/Sand Writing Tray, Letter Tracing, DIY Movable Alphabet, and Creative Writing (subscriber freebie, so just sign up for my email to get the link and password – or check your inbox if you’re already a subscriber).

For more free months and seasons printables, see my post at Living Montessori Now with Free Months & Seasons Printables and Montessori-Inspired Months & Seasons Activities.

More Months and Seasons Resources




Have a wonderful holiday season and New Year!

Deb - Siganture
Deb Chitwood

Deb Chitwood is a certified Montessori teacher with a master’s degree in Early Childhood Studies from Sheffield Hallam University in Sheffield, England. Deb taught in Montessori schools in Iowa and Arizona before becoming owner/director/teacher of her own Montessori school in South Dakota. Later, she homeschooled her two children through high school. Deb is now a Montessori writer who lives in San Diego with her husband of 43 years (and lives in the city where her kids, kids-in-law, and grandkids live). She blogs at Living Montessori Now.


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Friday, January 3, 2014

Measureing Time in a Brand New Year!

Welcome!   Welcome to a new year!  Are you ready?  I am!
http://merrykinderkapers.blogspot.com/

I am so excited for this new year.  It's a blank slate, a chance to write a new story or finish an old one.

But for our littles is it really anything new?  Do they really get it?  For us oldsters time is a way of life.  It is concrete, solid, set in stone.  It may not be easy to control, but it is easy to grasp and understand.  Not so much for our young friends. 
How often do we ask for the name of the month and our students respond with the day of the week?  I don't think it is because they don't know the right names, but they really don't get the difference.  Are they really going to know what it means to say it is now 2014?  Did they ever know what 2013 was?  How can we make time concrete for our little ones.  I have a few ideas.

First, I like to talk about how time happens.  We talk about daytime and nighttime (they get that...it is light during the day and dark at night).  Then we talk about how that happens.  I pick a student to be the sun.  A flashlight, lantern, or a bright yellow shirt helps them to visualize the sun.  That student stands in the middle of our circle.  Next I use a globe (every classroom should have one, if not check your library or storage space of things nobody uses any more).  First we spin the globe to show how it is daytime in some places while it is nighttime in others.  We are still good and most students get this.  Now I move on to the confusing part....the year.  I usually walk around the sun myself, with the globe, talking and explaining the whole time.  I talk about each season and when we get back to the beginning we start over.  Now we go around and add in the months.  Around and around we go.  Students have a chance to go around too.

Early in the year I talk about seasons.  It always surprised me how many of my third graders were still unsure of which months go with each season and even could not put the seasons in the correct order.  I just always think everybody knows that.  Anyway...I digress.  Seasons.  In Kindergarten we talk about them all the time. We discuss what we wear in each season, what we do, what it looks like, what the weather is like, what is happening.  I like to reinforce the idea of the earth going around the sun, and the seasons happening in a circle. To do that, we make these season spinners.

You need 4 cheap white paper plates, 4 trees (I freehand drew one, then traced and cut them out for my students.  I wanted each set of 4 trees to be the same), tissue paper, glue, fishing lures, and fishing line (I prefer fishing line when hanging things up because it is clear).

I did one tree each day as we talked about that season.  On the last day we labeled them and stapled them together.  Be careful, it is actually easy to get the seasons out of order if you are not paying attention.


 
Finally, I punched holes in the top and strung the fishing line through the holes and up through the spinner.  Now the seasons can go around and around...just like my globe goes around the sun.

Their understanding is increasing, but they just haven't been alive long enough to have enough experience to make it concrete.  I have an idea for that too.  Here is a way for students to make their own personal timeline.  You will need 2 - 12"x18" pieces of white construction paper cut into 3"x18" strips (that should give you 8 strips, so you will have some spares for mistakes).  I am using die cut numbers because I have them.  You can have your students write the numbers on the strips if you do not have access to fancy numbers. Glue one number to each strip.

Still trying to decide which size I like better.
 

Have your students draw or write something they did when they were that many years old.  Don't worry they can skip some years.  I have them start with one...they were a baby.  Do they know their birthday?  Then, how old were they when they started school.  Ask questions to jog their memory.  What did they do last year?  Did they go to preschool? on a vacation with their family?  Do they have younger siblings, how old were they when brother or sister was born?  More than one thing on an age strip is good.  They could even fill both sides.

Now to put it all together.  You have two basic choices.  First you could just line them all up in order.  That would make a nice linear line.
 Or you can make each one into a circle and line up the numbers. Connect them with a ribbon or sentence strip. Then as you stack them you have a great tower or a hanging windsock.  I like things that hang, so we are making windsocks.

Stop by my blog, KinderKapers, next week to see our finished projects.  I don't think I am ready for break to be over...but I am excited to share this project with my students.
http://merrykinderkapers.blogspot.com/



Saturday, October 26, 2013

Pumpkins, pumpkins EVERYWHERE in preschool!


PUMPKINS ABOUND here in New England in the Fall!  Pumpkins are in everything ... from muffins to pies, coffee to donuts ... we sure do love our pumpkins!  And it's so easy to bring this orange goodness into our homes and preschool classrooms for young children to explore. 


Whether you are using real pumpkins, or making pumpkin inspired crafts or games ... it's all about the PUMPKIN!

Exploring Real Pumpkins


Opening up a real pumpkin and letting young children touch, smell and see what is inside is such a great learning opportunity.  


Before opening up the pumpkin, engage the kids in cognitive thinking about the pumpkin (how much does it weigh, how tall/wide is it, does it sink or float, etc).  You can have some fun by having children make some predictions about the answers before figuring it out.  You can use the fun worksheet to help track the information about your pumpkin.


After scooping out the seeds and drying them, add them to a batch of pumpkin play dough!


Pumpkin Crafts and Games


Break out the orange paint (along with some of those pumpkin seeds you scooped out) to make paper plate pumpkins.



Use orange construction paper, tissue paper, felt or fabric to make pumpkin faces from recycled bottles.


Use some more seeds for a fun pumpkin seed counting game.


Use different colors of play dough to make goofy pumpkin play dough faces.



PreK + K sharing PUMPKIN roundup!


Need more "pumpkin" inpiration?  We've had several posts on the preK + K sharing blog already! Here's a round up!

Plus, visit our Pumpkin Pinterest board for a whole host of 80+ preschool pumpkin ideas!



Laura Eldredge co-founded the website The SEEDS Network, as a way to provide early childhood professionals with ideas and resources that support them in their quest to provide quality care and education to our youngest learners. She blogs at www.theseedsblog.com.
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