Try these 10 great Charlotte's Web activities with your toddlers and preschoolers! Crafts, recipes, games and more for the classic book!
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Come and grab the free printable to go along with the book, Walter's Wonderful Web. An engaging Literacy Snack Shapes Read-Aloud!
Free Charlotte’s Web Homeschool Unit Study and Fun Hands-on Ideas. I have a free Charlotte's Web homeschool unit study today with fun hands-on ideas. Also grab more ideas on my best homeschool unit studies page.
A Charlotte's Web unit study perfect for homeschool, classroom, or thematic novel study. The book study resources listed in this post are all FREE!
Check out these 7 activities to use with the novel Charlotte's Web including spider web synonyms, how to draw a pig, spider web art, and more.
This Charlotte's Web spider web art resist painting is a great STEM project to pair with your favorite children's book during reading time! Word Web.
Yeah! Our state testing is over! We finished our last 2 sessions of our state testing this week. My kiddos were pretty fried… but I didn’t want to lose speed in our last 9 weeks of 3rd grade. I knew that this week would need a special kind of book to keep […]
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Students will love to color this in and use while they are reading Charlotte's Web or any other book they choose!
This is my eighth (and final!) post about implementing reading workshop in the primary classroom. In my last post, click HERE to read, I explained how I use English Language Arts checklists (for the Common Core State Standards) as the main way that I assess my students during reading workshop. Today, I will specifically talk […]
Incorporate classic literature into your homeschool lessons with these FREE Unit Studies and Printables for Charlotte's Web.
Check out these 7 activities to use with the novel Charlotte's Web including spider web synonyms, how to draw a pig, spider web art, and more.
Try these 10 great Charlotte's Web activities with your toddlers and preschoolers! Crafts, recipes, games and more for the classic book!
Book Web Store Concept designed by Bogdan Nikitin for Nixtio. Connect with them on Dribbble; the global community for designers and creative professionals.
Today we attended a performance of “Charlotte’s Web” at Theatre for Young America at Union Station. This live performance was a wonderful retelling of the now classic story, with a dash of humor and a whole lot of audience participation…Read more →
Simon and I recently finished reading Charlotte’s Web together (meaning I read a bit of it to him every night before bed). We both really enjoyed it. My older
For this event, we played the cartoon adaptation of "Charlotte's Web" by E.B. White. Patrons could also write a spider message, make an award to give a friend, play Feed Templeton, and make a Wilbur puppet. For a photo op/decoration, I used our giant spider web from our Halloween Carnival and hot glued on black construction paper letters spelling out TERRIFIC.Speaking of terrific--because Wilbur wants a prize at the fair, and Charlotte's Web is all about friendship, one of our activity stations
Howdy! We just finished reading our Charlotte's Web as a class before the end of the first nine weeks of school. I feel that this is the most beautiful read aloud ever. Year after year, my
Simon and I recently finished reading Charlotte’s Web together (meaning I read a bit of it to him every night before bed). We both really enjoyed it. My older
Free Charlotte's Web Unit Study for homeschool. Charlotte's Web unit pdf. Charlotte's Web novel study and reading unit. Secular homeschool.
Kids will love creating their own web, just like The Very Busy Spider in Eric Carle's popular book. This craft uses basic supplies.
Fun classroom Charlotte’s Web activities your students will love! Ideas include character studies, reading comprehension and writing tasks.
Cross-curricular ideas to celebrate Wilbur and Charlotte.
Check out these 7 activities to use with the novel Charlotte's Web including spider web synonyms, how to draw a pig, spider web art, and more.
A Charlotte's Web unit study perfect for homeschool, classroom, or thematic novel study. The book study resources listed in this post are all FREE!
Simon and I recently finished reading Charlotte’s Web together (meaning I read a bit of it to him every night before bed). We both really enjoyed it. My older
Incorporate classic literature into your homeschool lessons with these FREE Unit Studies and Printables for Charlotte's Web.
This summer, after attending a reading workshop, I've made it my goal to amp up and improve my guided reading and shared reading instruction. With this in
Spider Web Art Tutorial 4 comments Directed Drawing, Spiders, Tutorials Let's talk spider webs. I'm not a fan. Not in real life, that is. But, artsy webs, that I can do! Every year, I make these webs with my students, and they are always a huge hit! I'll admit, I'm not the first do this project, but I have done it for years using different mediums (crayons, oil pastel, colored pencil, etc). There are many tutorials out there, but I thought I'd add mine to the mix after sharing our projects on Instagram and seeing that other teachers were interested in doing this project in their own classrooms. :) This project is so easy to do, and it doesn't take much time. My second graders completed it from start to finish in less than 40 minutes. And, the end result is a stunning, cheerful display perfect for the month of October (or to compliment a unit of study on spiders). Not only is this guided art project lots of fun, but it's a great way to work on visual discrimination skills, as well as listening skills. So, let's take a look at how to get this project done! Here's what you'll need: card stock (cut into 8x8 inch squares) pencils Sharpies watercolors and paintbrushes plastic spider rings (optional) I like to use the 8x8 inch size paper because it works better for the design and it's a more manageable size. In the past, I have also cut the paper down to 6x6 inches. Begin by drawing a line through the middle of the top and side (you're making a giant plus sign). Then, draw a line from corner to corner. Confession: I find that even I have a hard time drawing a straight enough line from one corner to the other, so I actually show my students how to start at the middle of the "plus sign" and draw a diagonal line to each corner from that center point of the paper. Now that the support lines are drawn, it's time to add those swooped lines that will transform the design into a spider web! I model this one section at a time for my students because it is tricky for some of them to make those swooped lines. I like to point out that the swooped lines in one section should connect to the swooped lines in the next section over. This helps them to make sure their web is more consistent and recognizable, but trust me, even if they struggle with this, the end result is still great! Notice, mine isn't perfect either. ;) Once all the pencil lines are drawn, I give each student a black Sharpie to trace over their original lines. Then, they erase any pencil lines that are peeking through. Finally, it is time to paint! If your students have never used watercolors before, you may want to start with a brief tutorial on how to do that. Mine are pretty well versed in the watercolor department, so they knew exactly how to use them. I don't tell them how to paint them, I just let them have at it, and make them colorful. Once the spider webs are all dry, I place a plastic spider on each web. Plastic spider rings are super cheap, and are perfect for this. I cut off the ring part prior to hot gluing the spider in place. Then, I hang the paintings up so we can enjoy them! DON'T FORGET IT, PIN IT! Toodles! Share It:
Charlotte's Web might technically be a book for kids, but E.B. White's classic 1952 novel is just as entertaining for adults as it is for children — which is why we have absolutely no problem reading it for our kids every single time they ask. And it's a classic for a reason — the heartwarming tale of unlikely friendship has a message that will never get old. Charlotte (spoiler alert!) might have died right after sparing Wilbur's life by saving him from slaughter, but her spirit will live on in the book forever. We've gathered our absolute favorite quotes from the story...
Reading Response Activities for Wonder
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