I have learned that if the class is truly interested in something, they will use reading, writing, and math skills as they explore their interests naturally. I observe and listen closely to discover what they are interested in. Sometimes a book or story will spark an interest. Sometimes an interest is sparked by something a friend shared with the class. Sometimes I notice interests by listening to their stories and their play. Our last large group interest was sparked when one of our friends found an almost dead praying mantis. The kids were fascinated with it and wanted to look closer, observe, and find out more. Every time we went outside they wanted to look for insects! I set out some invitations for them to explore insects further. They quickly started looking through books and models of insects to see what they could find out. I started encouraging them to record what they noticed using different materials. One of their favorites was the book Microsculpture:Portraits of Insects by Levon Biss. It truly took a closer look at insects including closeups of legs, wings, eyes feet, etc. it was such a beautiful book. I set it out with materials for them to create their own beautiful portraits of insects showing what they noticed. They are starting to figure out how to try to spell unfamiliar words by writing the sounds they hear in words. They practiced labeling their insects here also. But the insects they got the most excited about were the ones completely covering our milkweed plants! They wanted to know all about them! We looked at a picture of one and made our thinking visible by recording what we saw, thought and wondered. Then we got our Entomologist tools, took them outside and found out everything we could about them! They were amazing and thorough Entomologists! We recorded everything we noticed and then put some of our information in the computer and found out they are called Milkweed bugs! We then did an observational drawing as Entomologists and used our writing skills to label what it is and some body parts. Here is the display outside our room showing everything we learned about them! The other insects all took a backseat to the milkweed bug! I could have done a traditional insect unit, but these kids noticed something in their environment where they could truly experience it, so I followed the direction they took our insect study. I often let the kids direct our curriculum! They show me what they want to learn and I follow their lead and learn along side them. They were much more involved, interested and excited about learning as we followed their interest. Also, this fell naturally into our science standards of living things and what they need! I can’t wait to see what other interests this group will have that we can dig deeper into! They are definitely bringing in leaves by the bucketful... Here are some other things going on in our classroom: We are still working on those fine motor skills! Our finger muscles need a lot of work! Stories are being created in all of the areas of our room as we learn about story making! Here they are encouraged to show math in an open ended way. At the moment they are working on the numbers 1-10, shapes, writing numbers to 10, counting objects and matching to the correct number, counting to 25, subitizing and patterns. They are also learning to notice math all around us and how we use it in our every day lives. Some Fall art inspiration with sunflowers. They drew pictures of Mrs. Coberly wearing Michigan State colors and wrote “Mrs. Coberly loves Sparty!” Then we decorated her door! They loved this! Unfortunately, the Buckeye/Spartan game did not end well for me! It has been a busy place filled with all kinds of learning!
Have you ever had live creatures in your classroom? There is something quite magical about having a living, breathing part of nature in the classroom to inspire some deep thinking. Beyond the obvio…
I have learned that if the class is truly interested in something, they will use reading, writing, and math skills as they explore their int...
A bug hotel is part garden craft and part winter home for insects! Create one today with this fun and easy bug hotel craft for kids!
Work on important skills like fine motor skills and hand strength development with this fun and simple preschool bug craft.
Kids enjoy watching and touching these tiny, fast-moving critters that fly or crawl. Capitalize on their fascination and set up some bug centers in your classroom.
Super cute and simple, Bug Coloring Pages are perfect for learning about insects with toddler, preschool, and kindergarten age kids.
Hi guys! I'm here to share all about our bee inquiry that we just wrapped up in our classroom. It all started when we were learning about where bees go in the winter during our animals in winter inquiry. You can read the blog posts for that inquiry here (part 1) and here (part 2). When we were learning about what animals do in the winter, the question I had was "where do bees go in the winter?" We read a website and found out that the bees stay in their hives and they huddle around the queen bee. The worker bees work together and rotate being on the outside of the huddle and near the middle so they don't freeze but the queen bee always stays in the middle. After we learned this one of my students asked "Why doesn't the queen bee have to move? Why is she so important?" I thought that was a great question and since we were just finishing up our animals in winter inquiry, I thought it was a great time to move on to the next one! So first, we started with a K-W-L chart. First we recorded what we already knew about bees. Then the students shared what they were wondering about bees. I recorded the information on sticky notes and put them on the K-W-L chart. Then I took those questions, grouped them in categories and started researching and lesson planning! I reserved books at my local library and also asked my librarian at our school to pull some books about bees for us. I also hopped on Pinterest for some art and centre ideas. After I gathered my books, I read the books and started to plan my lessons. Here is what I came up with. You can download my bee inquiry plans to use a reference if you need ideas for planning your own inquiry! Click here or on the image below: For the first lesson, we read "Give Bees a Chance" by Bethany Barton (which I highly recommend, lots of cool facts and it's written with lots of humour, great for Kindergarten!). We talked about why bees sting us (self-defense) and then I invited any student who wanted to to come to the guided table and write a sentence about something new they learned about bees from the book. Here are just a few examples: "I learned that bees have 5 eyes." "I learned that bees have 2 stomachs." You can find these inquiry writing sheets in my "Inquiry Writing Templates for Kindergarten" pack. You can click here if you are interested in checking it out! The next day we read a page from "Buzz About Bees" by Kari-Lynn Winters to learn about what makes the queen bee important. Then we wrote what we learned on the easel. During centres, I had the girl who originally asked the question about queen bees come and record the information on paper and add a picture so that we could display our new learning on our inquiry board. The next day we read the book "Bee Dance" (which was suppose to be lesson #4 but I switched lesson #3 and #4 from my original plans because I wanted to introduce the centres that go with lesson #4 earlier) and learned why bees fly and how they communicate with other bees. Then I introduced these three centres: 1. NECTAR TRANSPORT CENTRE Students were asked to pretend that the eye droppers were bees, suck the nectar up from the flower (the "nectar" is just water with yellow food colouring!) and transport it to the hive. I have these hollow hexagon pattern blocks that were perfect for this activity! The kids absolutely LOVED this centre and it's great as a small world play/fine motor centre too! 2. POLLEN TRANSPORT CENTRE We also learned that bees carry pollen back to the hive so we pretended that the yellow tweezers were bees and we practiced flying the "pollen" (yellow pom poms) to the hive. 3. BEE SMALL WORLD PLAY We used regular wooden pattern blocks, some bee figurines, a grass mat and fake flowers for the students to create their own bee story or to retell "Bee Dance". The bee figurines are from Michaels and the grass mat and fake flowers are from Dollarama! There was lots of amazing stories being created here and I was happy to hear some of them using the vocabulary that we had talked (e.g. nectar, hive) about during our inquiry lessons! We also jumped ahead the next day to lesson #8 since I wanted to put this craft out asap during centre time! We that bees have three body parts, the head, the abdomen and the thorax. Then the students were invited to show the three body parts and look closely at the book/example to create a realistic bee! I provided tracers for the head, abdomen and thorax and some punched out circles for the small eyes (I used our hole puncher). Everything else they had to cut out themselves! It was a bit of a challenge for some of them but they did a great job! And they all came out so unique! Here is a picture of the set-up for the centre. I had the students use laminating film scraps for the wings. You can see the students' paper bees on the bulletin boards at the end of this post! I also put out this invitation to draw and label a bee as one of our centres! My kids love to draw so this was a perfect way to have them practice drawing realistic bees and identifying their body parts. I drew and made the directed drawing cards myself (I also made a more cutesy bee, not pictured here). I've had some requests to share these so I made them both available as a free download. You can click here or on the image below to grab them! Next we moved on to lesson #3 and #5. We read "The Bee Book" by Charlotte Milner and investigated why bees come out when it's summer and why bees make honey. We then recorded our new learning and added the writing to our bulletin board. The next day I set out this invitation to create a hive for the bees with paint! Students were asked to stamp the hexagons with yellow paint on the first day to make the hive and let it dry. The next day they were invited to add paint to the bee stamp and stamp on some bees! The bee stamps didn't show up well if there was too much paint on them, so I made sure to model to them how to use a paint brush and brush paint thinly on the bee stamp. I also had them practice stamping on GOOS paper first before stamping on their hives. I got the bee stamp from Michaels. Lastly, we read about how wasps and bees are different from "Buzz About Bees" (we used this book a lot during this inquiry!) and created a t-chart as a class. Then we had the students who had this wonder originally come and record some of the information we learned to display on our bulletin board. Here is a look at our bookshelf during our bee inquiry! Some books we read together and some were for independent reading during centre time. Finally we transferred our work from our inside bulletin board to our outside bulletin board to make space for new inquiry documentation and to share our work with the rest of the school! I printed some pictures I took while students were playing at centres and had some students come and write about what they were doing. We talk about the purpose behind this (so when other teachers and kids from other classes are looking at our bulletin board, they will know what we were doing) and the kids get really good at explaining what they were doing! The kids also made these egg carton bees with our CYW placement student (who is FANTASTIC. I have her for one more week and I will sure miss having her in our room!!). They LOVED making these and it was also a hands-on way to review the parts of a bee (e.g. it has 2 antennas, it has 3 eyes, it has 3 body parts etc.) The students used yellow acrylic paint to paint the head, abdomen and thorax on the first day, black paint to paint the eyes and stripes on the second day, and added the legs, antenna and wings on the third day. I had my CYW placement student hot glue the egg cartons, and cut small slits in the egg cartons to thread the antennas, wings and legs into. And that's it for this inquiry! Now we have some wonders about the sky (particularly about clouds and thunder) so I'll be doing some planning over spring break to bring those wonders to life! It also looks like it might lead into a space inquiry! Looking forward to sharing that with you in a month or so! - Yukari
Buzz through spring with the Bee Pollination STEAM Activity! Now that more and more bees are coming out after the cold winter, it's the perfect time to teach children about how bees and flowers help each other out to accomplish each other's goals: Flowers getting pollinated and bees gathering nectar for honey. Children will enjoy flying their little bee buddies around and helping them gather pollen to deliver from flower to flower.
Kids enjoy watching and touching these tiny, fast-moving critters that fly or crawl. Capitalize on their fascination and set up some bug centers in your classroom.
For the past two weeks we have been learning about the life cycle of a butterfly in our kindergarten classroom. It all started when our delivery of caterpillars arrived. My students were immediately d
Our Bug Sensory Bin was a success! I used an old storage tubfallen leavesrocksbug models from amazonand magnifying glasses! The boys and I absolutely love it! I added our bug identifier printable to add some science to it!
Hi guys! I'm here to share all about our bee inquiry that we just wrapped up in our classroom. It all started when we were learning about where bees go in the winter during our animals in winter inquiry. You can read the blog posts for that inquiry here (part 1) and here (part 2). When we were learning about what animals do in the winter, the question I had was "where do bees go in the winter?" We read a website and found out that the bees stay in their hives and they huddle around the queen bee. The worker bees work together and rotate being on the outside of the huddle and near the middle so they don't freeze but the queen bee always stays in the middle. After we learned this one of my students asked "Why doesn't the queen bee have to move? Why is she so important?" I thought that was a great question and since we were just finishing up our animals in winter inquiry, I thought it was a great time to move on to the next one! So first, we started with a K-W-L chart. First we recorded what we already knew about bees. Then the students shared what they were wondering about bees. I recorded the information on sticky notes and put them on the K-W-L chart. Then I took those questions, grouped them in categories and started researching and lesson planning! I reserved books at my local library and also asked my librarian at our school to pull some books about bees for us. I also hopped on Pinterest for some art and centre ideas. After I gathered my books, I read the books and started to plan my lessons. Here is what I came up with. You can download my bee inquiry plans to use a reference if you need ideas for planning your own inquiry! Click here or on the image below: For the first lesson, we read "Give Bees a Chance" by Bethany Barton (which I highly recommend, lots of cool facts and it's written with lots of humour, great for Kindergarten!). We talked about why bees sting us (self-defense) and then I invited any student who wanted to to come to the guided table and write a sentence about something new they learned about bees from the book. Here are just a few examples: "I learned that bees have 5 eyes." "I learned that bees have 2 stomachs." You can find these inquiry writing sheets in my "Inquiry Writing Templates for Kindergarten" pack. You can click here if you are interested in checking it out! The next day we read a page from "Buzz About Bees" by Kari-Lynn Winters to learn about what makes the queen bee important. Then we wrote what we learned on the easel. During centres, I had the girl who originally asked the question about queen bees come and record the information on paper and add a picture so that we could display our new learning on our inquiry board. The next day we read the book "Bee Dance" (which was suppose to be lesson #4 but I switched lesson #3 and #4 from my original plans because I wanted to introduce the centres that go with lesson #4 earlier) and learned why bees fly and how they communicate with other bees. Then I introduced these three centres: 1. NECTAR TRANSPORT CENTRE Students were asked to pretend that the eye droppers were bees, suck the nectar up from the flower (the "nectar" is just water with yellow food colouring!) and transport it to the hive. I have these hollow hexagon pattern blocks that were perfect for this activity! The kids absolutely LOVED this centre and it's great as a small world play/fine motor centre too! 2. POLLEN TRANSPORT CENTRE We also learned that bees carry pollen back to the hive so we pretended that the yellow tweezers were bees and we practiced flying the "pollen" (yellow pom poms) to the hive. 3. BEE SMALL WORLD PLAY We used regular wooden pattern blocks, some bee figurines, a grass mat and fake flowers for the students to create their own bee story or to retell "Bee Dance". The bee figurines are from Michaels and the grass mat and fake flowers are from Dollarama! There was lots of amazing stories being created here and I was happy to hear some of them using the vocabulary that we had talked (e.g. nectar, hive) about during our inquiry lessons! We also jumped ahead the next day to lesson #8 since I wanted to put this craft out asap during centre time! We that bees have three body parts, the head, the abdomen and the thorax. Then the students were invited to show the three body parts and look closely at the book/example to create a realistic bee! I provided tracers for the head, abdomen and thorax and some punched out circles for the small eyes (I used our hole puncher). Everything else they had to cut out themselves! It was a bit of a challenge for some of them but they did a great job! And they all came out so unique! Here is a picture of the set-up for the centre. I had the students use laminating film scraps for the wings. You can see the students' paper bees on the bulletin boards at the end of this post! I also put out this invitation to draw and label a bee as one of our centres! My kids love to draw so this was a perfect way to have them practice drawing realistic bees and identifying their body parts. I drew and made the directed drawing cards myself (I also made a more cutesy bee, not pictured here). I've had some requests to share these so I made them both available as a free download. You can click here or on the image below to grab them! Next we moved on to lesson #3 and #5. We read "The Bee Book" by Charlotte Milner and investigated why bees come out when it's summer and why bees make honey. We then recorded our new learning and added the writing to our bulletin board. The next day I set out this invitation to create a hive for the bees with paint! Students were asked to stamp the hexagons with yellow paint on the first day to make the hive and let it dry. The next day they were invited to add paint to the bee stamp and stamp on some bees! The bee stamps didn't show up well if there was too much paint on them, so I made sure to model to them how to use a paint brush and brush paint thinly on the bee stamp. I also had them practice stamping on GOOS paper first before stamping on their hives. I got the bee stamp from Michaels. Lastly, we read about how wasps and bees are different from "Buzz About Bees" (we used this book a lot during this inquiry!) and created a t-chart as a class. Then we had the students who had this wonder originally come and record some of the information we learned to display on our bulletin board. Here is a look at our bookshelf during our bee inquiry! Some books we read together and some were for independent reading during centre time. Finally we transferred our work from our inside bulletin board to our outside bulletin board to make space for new inquiry documentation and to share our work with the rest of the school! I printed some pictures I took while students were playing at centres and had some students come and write about what they were doing. We talk about the purpose behind this (so when other teachers and kids from other classes are looking at our bulletin board, they will know what we were doing) and the kids get really good at explaining what they were doing! The kids also made these egg carton bees with our CYW placement student (who is FANTASTIC. I have her for one more week and I will sure miss having her in our room!!). They LOVED making these and it was also a hands-on way to review the parts of a bee (e.g. it has 2 antennas, it has 3 eyes, it has 3 body parts etc.) The students used yellow acrylic paint to paint the head, abdomen and thorax on the first day, black paint to paint the eyes and stripes on the second day, and added the legs, antenna and wings on the third day. I had my CYW placement student hot glue the egg cartons, and cut small slits in the egg cartons to thread the antennas, wings and legs into. And that's it for this inquiry! Now we have some wonders about the sky (particularly about clouds and thunder) so I'll be doing some planning over spring break to bring those wonders to life! It also looks like it might lead into a space inquiry! Looking forward to sharing that with you in a month or so! - Yukari
This Bug/Insect Exploration activity is fantastic for a classroom setting, a daycare or home school environment, or as an extension to your educational learning home. Children can explore how to build a bug/insect with a variety of materials. Great for a Montessori or Reggio Emilia inspired environment. Materials Included: - Sectional organizing tray - Wooden card stand - 14 laminated bug/insect cards - Chalkboard (approx 6"x8") - Clipboard w/ paper - Small river pebbles - Large black rocks - Round wooden discs - Sticks and Toothpicks - [display mat, wicker basket, crayons, and chalk are NOT included] Suggestions for use: - Place this work in a place for your child/children to easily access - Let them explore without any directions - Use this in conjunction with a Spring/Insect unit - Provide book about bugs/Insects for further exploration Important Information: - Recommended for children ages 3+ as there are small parts. If using with young children please keep a close eye on them. - Some of these materials are made with unfinished wood and may have some exposed wood splinters.
We love word walls. Because it introduced new words to the kids and there are only a handful of new words, so the kids will not feel too overwhelmed. This time around, we are doing
Kids enjoy watching and touching these tiny, fast-moving critters that fly or crawl. Capitalize on their fascination and set up some bug centers in your classroom.
Isn’t it funny how little ones are just curious about everything and totally don’t have that grossed out reaction that we have as adults? I have to admit bugs creep me out, so I was totally not excited for this week’s theme. I tried my best to contain my feelings about insects so Madelynn could […]
Explore celebrate always' 7815 photos on Flickr!
Hi guys! I'm here to share all about our bee inquiry that we just wrapped up in our classroom. It all started when we were learning about where bees go in the winter during our animals in winter inquiry. You can read the blog posts for that inquiry here (part 1) and here (part 2). When we were learning about what animals do in the winter, the question I had was "where do bees go in the winter?" We read a website and found out that the bees stay in their hives and they huddle around the queen bee. The worker bees work together and rotate being on the outside of the huddle and near the middle so they don't freeze but the queen bee always stays in the middle. After we learned this one of my students asked "Why doesn't the queen bee have to move? Why is she so important?" I thought that was a great question and since we were just finishing up our animals in winter inquiry, I thought it was a great time to move on to the next one! So first, we started with a K-W-L chart. First we recorded what we already knew about bees. Then the students shared what they were wondering about bees. I recorded the information on sticky notes and put them on the K-W-L chart. Then I took those questions, grouped them in categories and started researching and lesson planning! I reserved books at my local library and also asked my librarian at our school to pull some books about bees for us. I also hopped on Pinterest for some art and centre ideas. After I gathered my books, I read the books and started to plan my lessons. Here is what I came up with. You can download my bee inquiry plans to use a reference if you need ideas for planning your own inquiry! Click here or on the image below: For the first lesson, we read "Give Bees a Chance" by Bethany Barton (which I highly recommend, lots of cool facts and it's written with lots of humour, great for Kindergarten!). We talked about why bees sting us (self-defense) and then I invited any student who wanted to to come to the guided table and write a sentence about something new they learned about bees from the book. Here are just a few examples: "I learned that bees have 5 eyes." "I learned that bees have 2 stomachs." You can find these inquiry writing sheets in my "Inquiry Writing Templates for Kindergarten" pack. You can click here if you are interested in checking it out! The next day we read a page from "Buzz About Bees" by Kari-Lynn Winters to learn about what makes the queen bee important. Then we wrote what we learned on the easel. During centres, I had the girl who originally asked the question about queen bees come and record the information on paper and add a picture so that we could display our new learning on our inquiry board. The next day we read the book "Bee Dance" (which was suppose to be lesson #4 but I switched lesson #3 and #4 from my original plans because I wanted to introduce the centres that go with lesson #4 earlier) and learned why bees fly and how they communicate with other bees. Then I introduced these three centres: 1. NECTAR TRANSPORT CENTRE Students were asked to pretend that the eye droppers were bees, suck the nectar up from the flower (the "nectar" is just water with yellow food colouring!) and transport it to the hive. I have these hollow hexagon pattern blocks that were perfect for this activity! The kids absolutely LOVED this centre and it's great as a small world play/fine motor centre too! 2. POLLEN TRANSPORT CENTRE We also learned that bees carry pollen back to the hive so we pretended that the yellow tweezers were bees and we practiced flying the "pollen" (yellow pom poms) to the hive. 3. BEE SMALL WORLD PLAY We used regular wooden pattern blocks, some bee figurines, a grass mat and fake flowers for the students to create their own bee story or to retell "Bee Dance". The bee figurines are from Michaels and the grass mat and fake flowers are from Dollarama! There was lots of amazing stories being created here and I was happy to hear some of them using the vocabulary that we had talked (e.g. nectar, hive) about during our inquiry lessons! We also jumped ahead the next day to lesson #8 since I wanted to put this craft out asap during centre time! We that bees have three body parts, the head, the abdomen and the thorax. Then the students were invited to show the three body parts and look closely at the book/example to create a realistic bee! I provided tracers for the head, abdomen and thorax and some punched out circles for the small eyes (I used our hole puncher). Everything else they had to cut out themselves! It was a bit of a challenge for some of them but they did a great job! And they all came out so unique! Here is a picture of the set-up for the centre. I had the students use laminating film scraps for the wings. You can see the students' paper bees on the bulletin boards at the end of this post! I also put out this invitation to draw and label a bee as one of our centres! My kids love to draw so this was a perfect way to have them practice drawing realistic bees and identifying their body parts. I drew and made the directed drawing cards myself (I also made a more cutesy bee, not pictured here). I've had some requests to share these so I made them both available as a free download. You can click here or on the image below to grab them! Next we moved on to lesson #3 and #5. We read "The Bee Book" by Charlotte Milner and investigated why bees come out when it's summer and why bees make honey. We then recorded our new learning and added the writing to our bulletin board. The next day I set out this invitation to create a hive for the bees with paint! Students were asked to stamp the hexagons with yellow paint on the first day to make the hive and let it dry. The next day they were invited to add paint to the bee stamp and stamp on some bees! The bee stamps didn't show up well if there was too much paint on them, so I made sure to model to them how to use a paint brush and brush paint thinly on the bee stamp. I also had them practice stamping on GOOS paper first before stamping on their hives. I got the bee stamp from Michaels. Lastly, we read about how wasps and bees are different from "Buzz About Bees" (we used this book a lot during this inquiry!) and created a t-chart as a class. Then we had the students who had this wonder originally come and record some of the information we learned to display on our bulletin board. Here is a look at our bookshelf during our bee inquiry! Some books we read together and some were for independent reading during centre time. Finally we transferred our work from our inside bulletin board to our outside bulletin board to make space for new inquiry documentation and to share our work with the rest of the school! I printed some pictures I took while students were playing at centres and had some students come and write about what they were doing. We talk about the purpose behind this (so when other teachers and kids from other classes are looking at our bulletin board, they will know what we were doing) and the kids get really good at explaining what they were doing! The kids also made these egg carton bees with our CYW placement student (who is FANTASTIC. I have her for one more week and I will sure miss having her in our room!!). They LOVED making these and it was also a hands-on way to review the parts of a bee (e.g. it has 2 antennas, it has 3 eyes, it has 3 body parts etc.) The students used yellow acrylic paint to paint the head, abdomen and thorax on the first day, black paint to paint the eyes and stripes on the second day, and added the legs, antenna and wings on the third day. I had my CYW placement student hot glue the egg cartons, and cut small slits in the egg cartons to thread the antennas, wings and legs into. And that's it for this inquiry! Now we have some wonders about the sky (particularly about clouds and thunder) so I'll be doing some planning over spring break to bring those wonders to life! It also looks like it might lead into a space inquiry! Looking forward to sharing that with you in a month or so! - Yukari
This fun and easy firefly craft is perfect for kids! This is a great craft for kids of all ages including bigger kids like elementary aged kids. Learn
Invite kids to create their own big bug art collage with a variety of painting techniques. Great spring insect theme activity for preschool and kindergarten
Hi guys! I'm here to share all about our bee inquiry that we just wrapped up in our classroom. It all started when we were learning about where bees go in the winter during our animals in winter inquiry. You can read the blog posts for that inquiry here (part 1) and here (part 2). When we were learning about what animals do in the winter, the question I had was "where do bees go in the winter?" We read a website and found out that the bees stay in their hives and they huddle around the queen bee. The worker bees work together and rotate being on the outside of the huddle and near the middle so they don't freeze but the queen bee always stays in the middle. After we learned this one of my students asked "Why doesn't the queen bee have to move? Why is she so important?" I thought that was a great question and since we were just finishing up our animals in winter inquiry, I thought it was a great time to move on to the next one! So first, we started with a K-W-L chart. First we recorded what we already knew about bees. Then the students shared what they were wondering about bees. I recorded the information on sticky notes and put them on the K-W-L chart. Then I took those questions, grouped them in categories and started researching and lesson planning! I reserved books at my local library and also asked my librarian at our school to pull some books about bees for us. I also hopped on Pinterest for some art and centre ideas. After I gathered my books, I read the books and started to plan my lessons. Here is what I came up with. You can download my bee inquiry plans to use a reference if you need ideas for planning your own inquiry! Click here or on the image below: For the first lesson, we read "Give Bees a Chance" by Bethany Barton (which I highly recommend, lots of cool facts and it's written with lots of humour, great for Kindergarten!). We talked about why bees sting us (self-defense) and then I invited any student who wanted to to come to the guided table and write a sentence about something new they learned about bees from the book. Here are just a few examples: "I learned that bees have 5 eyes." "I learned that bees have 2 stomachs." You can find these inquiry writing sheets in my "Inquiry Writing Templates for Kindergarten" pack. You can click here if you are interested in checking it out! The next day we read a page from "Buzz About Bees" by Kari-Lynn Winters to learn about what makes the queen bee important. Then we wrote what we learned on the easel. During centres, I had the girl who originally asked the question about queen bees come and record the information on paper and add a picture so that we could display our new learning on our inquiry board. The next day we read the book "Bee Dance" (which was suppose to be lesson #4 but I switched lesson #3 and #4 from my original plans because I wanted to introduce the centres that go with lesson #4 earlier) and learned why bees fly and how they communicate with other bees. Then I introduced these three centres: 1. NECTAR TRANSPORT CENTRE Students were asked to pretend that the eye droppers were bees, suck the nectar up from the flower (the "nectar" is just water with yellow food colouring!) and transport it to the hive. I have these hollow hexagon pattern blocks that were perfect for this activity! The kids absolutely LOVED this centre and it's great as a small world play/fine motor centre too! 2. POLLEN TRANSPORT CENTRE We also learned that bees carry pollen back to the hive so we pretended that the yellow tweezers were bees and we practiced flying the "pollen" (yellow pom poms) to the hive. 3. BEE SMALL WORLD PLAY We used regular wooden pattern blocks, some bee figurines, a grass mat and fake flowers for the students to create their own bee story or to retell "Bee Dance". The bee figurines are from Michaels and the grass mat and fake flowers are from Dollarama! There was lots of amazing stories being created here and I was happy to hear some of them using the vocabulary that we had talked (e.g. nectar, hive) about during our inquiry lessons! We also jumped ahead the next day to lesson #8 since I wanted to put this craft out asap during centre time! We that bees have three body parts, the head, the abdomen and the thorax. Then the students were invited to show the three body parts and look closely at the book/example to create a realistic bee! I provided tracers for the head, abdomen and thorax and some punched out circles for the small eyes (I used our hole puncher). Everything else they had to cut out themselves! It was a bit of a challenge for some of them but they did a great job! And they all came out so unique! Here is a picture of the set-up for the centre. I had the students use laminating film scraps for the wings. You can see the students' paper bees on the bulletin boards at the end of this post! I also put out this invitation to draw and label a bee as one of our centres! My kids love to draw so this was a perfect way to have them practice drawing realistic bees and identifying their body parts. I drew and made the directed drawing cards myself (I also made a more cutesy bee, not pictured here). I've had some requests to share these so I made them both available as a free download. You can click here or on the image below to grab them! Next we moved on to lesson #3 and #5. We read "The Bee Book" by Charlotte Milner and investigated why bees come out when it's summer and why bees make honey. We then recorded our new learning and added the writing to our bulletin board. The next day I set out this invitation to create a hive for the bees with paint! Students were asked to stamp the hexagons with yellow paint on the first day to make the hive and let it dry. The next day they were invited to add paint to the bee stamp and stamp on some bees! The bee stamps didn't show up well if there was too much paint on them, so I made sure to model to them how to use a paint brush and brush paint thinly on the bee stamp. I also had them practice stamping on GOOS paper first before stamping on their hives. I got the bee stamp from Michaels. Lastly, we read about how wasps and bees are different from "Buzz About Bees" (we used this book a lot during this inquiry!) and created a t-chart as a class. Then we had the students who had this wonder originally come and record some of the information we learned to display on our bulletin board. Here is a look at our bookshelf during our bee inquiry! Some books we read together and some were for independent reading during centre time. Finally we transferred our work from our inside bulletin board to our outside bulletin board to make space for new inquiry documentation and to share our work with the rest of the school! I printed some pictures I took while students were playing at centres and had some students come and write about what they were doing. We talk about the purpose behind this (so when other teachers and kids from other classes are looking at our bulletin board, they will know what we were doing) and the kids get really good at explaining what they were doing! The kids also made these egg carton bees with our CYW placement student (who is FANTASTIC. I have her for one more week and I will sure miss having her in our room!!). They LOVED making these and it was also a hands-on way to review the parts of a bee (e.g. it has 2 antennas, it has 3 eyes, it has 3 body parts etc.) The students used yellow acrylic paint to paint the head, abdomen and thorax on the first day, black paint to paint the eyes and stripes on the second day, and added the legs, antenna and wings on the third day. I had my CYW placement student hot glue the egg cartons, and cut small slits in the egg cartons to thread the antennas, wings and legs into. And that's it for this inquiry! Now we have some wonders about the sky (particularly about clouds and thunder) so I'll be doing some planning over spring break to bring those wonders to life! It also looks like it might lead into a space inquiry! Looking forward to sharing that with you in a month or so! - Yukari
Check out this list of all kinds of creative firefly crafts for kids to do this summer. You’ll find fireflies (or lightning bugs) made from things like paper towel rolls, pinecones, plastic eggs, paper lunch bags and more. This collection also includes lots of great summer science ideas! Follow our Crafts for Kids Pinterest board! …
Kids enjoy watching and touching these tiny, fast-moving critters that fly or crawl. Capitalize on their fascination and set up some bug centers in your classroom.
Fun and easy crafts for boys & even girls.Quick but creative kids craft ideas to make at home with boats, animal, dollar store gifts & painted DIY projects.
Making learning fun is what DIY Stick bugs is all about. Adventure around your neighborhood to find some sticks that will become magical DIY Stick bugs!