Saturday, May 12, 2018

Ladybugs


Ladybugs! One of my favorite things about this unit is teaching the life cycle with the real bugs. It's interesting how few of us actually know the life cycle of a ladybug, and recognize its larva. I don't think I knew until I taught Kindergarten! And I remember my daughter and nephew showing their grandma a larva in her yard and she had no idea! My boys found several in the neighbor's yard and she didn't believe them that they were ladybugs! It's kinda fun empowering these preschoolers with knowledge that so many grown ups around them don't have, so they can teach them something new! Here's how our larvae looked when they arrived, and how they grew and changed! I order all our bugs from Insect Lore.

Tiny larvae:













 Growing bigger:
 
 And bigger:
 

 
 Pupae!
 
 Caught this one right after it changed. The pupa is yellow for just a few hours before it hardens and turns black:
 


 And ladybugs!












Most activities were bug-themed, but I also fit in some art and other activities that weren't going to fit into favorites week, or that we just hadn't had time to do and are so fun!
 
Dramatic Play

Flower garden full of bugs!


 

 

 

 
 

Blocks

Bug floor puzzle


Ladybug ABC puzzle


ABC puzzle


Magnets


Art

Water colors

Paint with bug stamps


Gelatin molds. So fun! Just plain gelatin in different molds. I have squirters and colored water they can stick into them, or some just tore it apart with their hands. Such a fun and unique sensory experience.


Jello shakers. I love the way they make the room smell!
 

Small Manipulatives

Flat marble pages


Ladybug line tracing and dry erase markers


Ladybug math (after we had done in small group)
 

Magnets
 

Writing

ladybug stamp markers
 

Outside

Once again, we got so lucky! We often see ladybugs near our peach trees, so we went searching there first for ladybugs. And we found some! Not only that, but we found aphids, so now the kids could see in real life, outside of books, what we're talking about when we talk about ladybugs eating aphids! Plus, super lucky, we saw ladybug larvae too! We took a twig of aphids in to feed our larvae too and they loved them! But then some other tiny bug was also on the twig and kinda infested the ladybug land, so I did have the wipe down the glass and pull out the ones I could. Who knew caring for bugs could be so much work?
 

 

Large Group

Day 1, we learned about the ladybug life cycle and cut out and made one.

Day 2, we did math. We read 5 Little Ladybugs, then they each took a turn rolling the dice and cutting out that many ladybugs. We then added them to our graphs. They each took 2 turns.
 

Day 3, we read The Grouchy Ladybug and made a ladybug. I cut out the body and we found its 3 parts (head, thorax, abdomen). They practiced cutting on the wings. I attached it with a brad so the wings could open. They added 6 legs and antennae, and colored their spots.
 

Day 4, we reviewed all our bug life cycles and, with partners, took turns putting them all in order with our models (ants, ladybugs, praying mantis, butterfly).

Small Group

Wrote in our journals what we learned about ants.

My group did ladybug math with the mats pictured above in small manips. With my "magic" dice that have one die inside another, they made an addition equation. One die determined how many spots they added on one wing, the other die determined how many on the next wing. Then they counted them all together to tell me how many dots they had all together. Great counting and addition practice!

The second week, they journaled their favorite fact about ladybugs.

My group did more lady bug counting. They picked a leaf card that had a number on it, then counted that many ladybugs onto that leaf. Show the teacher, and repeat with new leaf card and new number. I really worked with them on one-to-one correspondence as they counted.

**Just wanted to add a note about teaching children about bugs. I personally don't like bugs. At all. But I've never wanted my kids to know that! I haven't wanted them to be afraid of them either. So I'm careful what I say when I'm around them and we see bugs, and I feed into their natural curiosity about bugs by pointing them out and naming them so they know what they are, and teaching them which ones can bite or sting, and which are fine to hold. My kids love digging for worms and catching ladybugs or snails or grasshoppers. The preschool kids do too. They have been more intrigued by these bug units than any other that I teach. I think it's partially due to their natural attraction to bugs, and partly because these are things we find outside in our own yards and they can explore them on their own. I hope you parents can too feed your children's curiosity about bugs! If we teach them they're gross or scary, they'll believe us. I don't love pulling up rocks and finding bugs under them, but my kids do and so I encourage it by doing it with them! And I've actually learned so much about bugs myself! So I hope you can continue feeding this curiosity we've started and get digging for bugs in your won yards, and learning more about them! They can be a lot of fun! And even if none of these kids grow up to be scientists and study bugs, they're hopefully learning a respect for the world around them, and ability to find out more about subjects that fascinate them.

Saturday, April 28, 2018

Ants

Dramatic Play

Ant tunnels!

 

Blocks

Our ant farm!







Here are pics of how they progressed over the weeks:










 



Pattern blocks with bug pattern pages


Bug puzzle


Then I realized the tunnels are too active to have anything in the block area, and it was cleared for the next week.

Art

Q-tip painting


Egg carton ants. I made them, they got to color and decorate them.


Sponge brush painting


Paint rollers


Small Manipulatives

Toy bugs


Bug file folder games


Bug puzzles


Counting ants


Outside

Cornmeal and bugs in the sensory table


Searching for ants! We got so lucky on our first day searching! Once ever, we have moved rocks off our wall by the grapes and found an ant tunnel with ants and larvae everywhere. It was for preschool a few years ago. My kids have looked many times over the years and we've never seen it again. So I figured it was a long shot, but I moved a rock and was shocked to find any tunnels are larvae! The kids came running and had a great time observing the ants. It's better than even the ant farm because we watched them scramble to move their eggs and larvae and got to see what those look like up close and in real life. It made all the things we've watched and read about ants real and relatable!
 
 

Large Group
We learned an insect song to help us learn more about ants. It's to the tune of Head, Shoulders Knees and Toes:

Head thorax abdomen. Abdomen. Abdomen.
Head thorax abdomen, six legs and antennae.

Day 1, We learned about insects and sorted toy bugs by insect and not insect. We watched The Magic School Bus about ants while we ate popcorn for a snack.

Day 2, We made a KWL chart. K stands for Know, and we wrote the things we already know about ants. W stands for Want to know, so we wrote any questions or comments about things they want to learn during our ant unit. L stands for learned. We'll add our answers here at the end of the unit.


I loved their questions and curiosity and helping them answer each other's questions. We searched in books and talked about going to the library to find books about any subject you like to learn more about them. We're at the end of the year and they're so excited about learning and keep asking me if we can learn about more subjects they're interested in. I keep telling them to go home and have their parents help them find books about those subjects at the library, or search on the computers for information and videos about them. My favorite things about a play-based preschool is them discovering the fun side of learning and wanting to go on to keep learning more.

Day 3, we learned the life cycle of the ant, and answered some questions on our KWL chart.

Day 4, we took what we learned about ants and acted it out! Kids were assigned "jobs" like queen, nursery ant, scavenger ant, tunnel digging ant, etc. And they all acted out their jobs in the tunnels. The queen laid eggs, the nursery ants took care of them, the tunnel digging ants dug and made new tunnels, while the scavenger ants found food and brought in back in to the queen and storage tunnels. We switched jobs several times and they had so much fun!

Small Group

Counting Ants math stories
Before children are ready to learn addition, they can learn about combining things. We told math stories with our little ants today. We each had different mats, then we took turns telling our stories. For example, there were 2 ants at my picnic, then 3 more ants came. So then I had 5 ants at my picnic. They got to choose their stories, then we used dice to determine the number of ants the second time. Great counting practice, and speaking practice as they had to verbalize their math story!

Little Ants ramble and roam coloring page.

Ant books. We learned to track and follow along left to right as I helped them "read" a beginning reader about ants.

Sorting bugs by color, then size.