Friday, January 31, 2020

Valentine Hearts Storytime

Storytime for 1 to 3 year olds:
  • Opening - Skinnamarink, Sticky Sticky Bubblegum
  
 



  • Stand-up Activity – Valentine, Valentine (action rhyme similar to the traditional "Teddy Bear, Teddy Bear Turn Around")
Valentine, Valentine turn around.
Valentine, Valentine touch the ground.
Valentine, Valentine blow a kiss.
Valentine, Valentine swim like a fish.
Valentine, Valentine give a hug.
Valentine, Valentine jump like a bug.
Valentine, Valentine find your feet.
Valentine, Valentine find your seat.

  • Bridge - Open, Shut Them (fingerplay)
Open, shut them
(open and close hands)
Open, shut them
Give a little clap (clap)
Open, shut them
Open, shut them
Put them in your lap
(put hands in lap)

Creep them, creep them
Under your chin
(creep fingers up chest)
Open your mouth, but don't put them in
(do as words say)

Open, shut them
Open, shut them
Give a little clap
Open shut them
Open shut them
Put them in your lap 


  • Flannelboard - Eight Valentine Cards (counting  backwards story found in Artsy Toddler Storytimes by Carol Garnett Hopkins)

  • Letter of the Day - "V" is for Valentine

  • Book #2 – Snappy Little Hugs by Dugald Steer, illustrated by Derek Matthews (pop-up) 

  • Activity – "If You're Happy and You Know It" action song from Songs for Wiggleworms by Old Town School of Folk Music

  • Closing - Scarves to the song "Popcorn Calling Me" from Buzz Buzz by Laurie Berkner 


  • Art Experience – Glue heart foam shapes onto paper hearts 

Saturday, January 25, 2020

Great Valentine's Day Preschool Storytime

Storytime for 3 to 5 year olds:



  • Literacy activity flannelboard - Spelling the Word "Heart"
Hand each child a paper heart. The hearts have the letters for the word "heart" written on them. Then I write the letters on the board, one at a time, and the children bring up their hearts when their letter is written.


  


  • Stand-up activity - "There's a Little Wheel a-Turnin' In My Heart" action song from Buzz Buzz by Laurie Berkner

  • Activity - Put Your Valentine On Your Nose (fingerplay written by Carol Hopkins)
Put your Valentine on your nose, on your nose
Put your Valentine on your nose, on your nose
It's a heart for love and friendship
A hug for everyone
Put your Valentine on your nose
Put your Valentine on your toes...
Put your Valentine on your head...

(repeat with more body parts)




  
 

  • Art experience - Place dot stickers on a heart that is then cut out with scissors

Tuesday, January 21, 2020

January Preschool Library Lady

I have once again started visiting the local ECEAP program on a monthly basis.  I really enjoy being the "Library Lady" to this group of preschool students.  In order to get a feel for the attention spans for this new group of students, I used a combination of short and long books. 

SHORT BOOKS: 

   

Fortune Cookies by Albert Bitterman, illustrated by Chris Raschka (moving pieces board book)
Kipper's Rainy Day by Mick Inkpen (lift-flap book)
Peekaboo, Blueberry! by Barney Saltzberg (lift-flap board book)
What Can Rabbit Hear? by Lucy Cousins (lift-flap book)

LONGER BOOKS: 

  

A Big Bed for Little Snow by Grace Lin
The Cow Loves Cookies by Karma Wilson, illustrated by Marcellus Hall
Froggy Gets Dressed by Jonathan London, illustrated by Frank Remkiewicz 



Thursday, January 16, 2020

Snow Much Fun Storytime

Storytime for 1 to 3 year olds:
  • Opening - Skinnamarink, Sticky Sticky Bubblegum
  
 

  • Book #1 – One Mitten by Kristine O'Connell George, illustrated by Maggie Smith


  • Bridge - Open, Shut Them (fingerplay)
Open, shut them
(open and close hands)
Open, shut them
Give a little clap (clap)
Open, shut them
Open, shut them
Put them in your lap
(put hands in lap)

Creep them, creep them
Under your chin
(creep fingers up chest)
Open your mouth, but don't put them in
(do as words say)

Open, shut them
Open, shut them
Give a little clap
Open shut them
Open shut them
Put them in your lap 


  • Flannelboard - Five Little Snowmen (counting backwards rhyme I found somewhere many years ago)
Five little snowmen all made of snow.
Five little snowmen all in a row.
Out came the sun and shone all day.
And one little snowman melted away.

(continue rhyme counting down until you get to two snowmen)

The last two snowmen made a good plan.
Into my kitchen They both ran,
Hopped in my freezer where the temperature's right,
And they come out to play on very cold nights.

  • Letter of the Day - "W" is for winter


  • Activity – Itsy Bitsy Snowflake (fingerplay I found in a Mailbox Preschool magazine, December/January 2007-8, page 26)

  • Closing - Scarves to the song "Popcorn Calling Me" from Buzz Buzz by Laurie Berkner 
    
 

  • Art Experience – Print snowflakes on blue construction paper using white and paint and plastic receipt roll centers

Saturday, January 11, 2020

Miss Carol's Favorite Book Finds of 2019 - Non-fiction Children's Books

Every year I spend the last few weeks of the year compiling my favorite book finds of the year.  They are not always new books.  Just books I discovered for the first time and really, really liked.

CHILDREN'S NON-FICTION BOOK DISCOVERIES FOR 2019:

   

Describes how Danish astronomer Ole Romer measured the speed of light using a crude telescope and a mechanical timepiece.

A fun and inspiring look at many of the amazing women who have worked at Disney Animation over the years--from Story Artists, to Animators to Inkers and Painters, all with unique personalities and accomplishments, such as becoming a record-holding pilot, or designing Hollywood monsters, or creating an international club for tall people!

How long does it take for science to find an answer to a problem? On January 25, 1862, naturalist Charles Darwin received a box of orchids. One flower, the Madagascar star orchid, fascinated him. How, he wondered, did insects pollinate the orchid? After experiments, he made a prediction. In 1992 a German entomologist captured the first photo of the hawk moth pollinating the flower, as Darwin had predicted 130 years before. 

 

Mars has a visitor. It likes to roam, observe, measure, and collect. It explores the red landscape - crossing plains, climbing hills, and tracing the bottoms of craters - in search of water and life. It is not the first to visit Mars. It will not be the last. But it might be the most curious.

In this important and moving true story of reconciliation after war, beautifully illustrated in watercolor, a Japanese pilot bombs the continental U.S. during WWII--the only enemy ever to do so--and comes back 20 years later to apologize.


Miss Carol's Best Book Finds of 2019 -- Picture Books

Monday, January 6, 2020

Miss Carol's Favorite Book Finds of 2019 -- Middle Grade Books

Every year I spend the last few weeks of the year compiling my favorite book finds of the year.  They are not always new books.  Just books I discovered for the first time and really, really liked.

MIDDLE GRADE CHAPTER BOOK DISCOVERIES FOR 2019:

 


Dragon Pearl by Yoon Ha Lee 
Min, a thirteen-year-old girl with fox-magic, stows away on a battle cruiser and impersonates a cadet in order to solve the mystery of what happened to her older brother in the Thousand World Space Forces.

Megabat and Fancy Cat by Anna Humphrey
Megabat was looking forward to Christmas morning: presents, p-laying toys, smoosh fruit and watching Star Wars. But then Daniel opened his last, most special present. Daniel thinks this might be the best Christmas present yet: a beautiful cat named Priscilla! But is there more than meets the eye with this furry menace?


Miss Carol's Best Book Finds of 2019 -- Picture Books

Friday, January 3, 2020

Miss Carol's Best Book Finds of 2019 -- Picture Books

Every year I spend the last few weeks of the year compiling my favorite book finds of the year.  They are not always new books.  Just books I discovered for the first time and really, really liked.

PICTURE BOOK DISCOVERIES FOR 2019:


  

Although he professes to fear nothing, it turns out that the most-feared villain in the Star Wars universe may not be so fearless after all.


Baby Goes to Market by Atinuke, illustrated by Angela Brooksbank 
Join Baby and his doting mama at a bustling southwest Nigerian marketplace for a bright, bouncy read-aloud offering a gentle introduction to numbers.


Count the Monkeys by Mac Barnett and Kevin Cornell 
The reader is invited to count the animals that have frightened the monkeys off the pages.


  

Crash, Splash, or Moo! by Bob Shea 
Mr. McMonkey hosts a game in which the reader is invited to guess whether a stunt will result in a crash, a splash, or a moo.


A monster named Buddy is determined to eat some cute little bunnies, until they prove to be more enjoyable as playmates.  


Everybunny Dance! by Ellie Sandall 
Bunnies dance, play, sing, and learn to include everyone in their games.  


  

The Fox on the Swing by Evelina Daciūtė, illustrated by Aušra Kiudulaitė
A boy named Paul lives in a cozy treehouse in a big city with his family. And then something unexpected happens--Paul befriends a wise, friendly fox on a walk home from the bakery.  The fox gives Paul a space to think about what makes him happy and what friendship means.  


Grumpy Pants by Claire Messer
Have you ever had a grumpy day and not known why? Penguin is having a grumpy day like that. No matter what he does, he just can't shake it! Sometimes the only thing left to do is wash the grumpy day away and start over.  


Just Add Glitter by Angela DiTerlizzi 
 Illustrations and simple, rhyming text encourages the reader to add glitter to everything in sight, until even what should really sparkle is obscured.

   

A Parade of Elephants by Keven Henkes
Illustrations and easy-to-read text introduce such basic concepts as adjectives, adverbs, daytime, and nighttime as they follow five elephants marching from dawn to dusk.


Thank you, Omu! by Oge Mora 
When the aroma of Omu's homemade stew fills the air, her neighbors arrive, one by one, for a taste until all is gone except for her generous spirit.


This Book Is Magic by Ashley Evanson 
Do you know that you're a magician? In this interactive book, use your fingers to perform all kinds of magic tricks. Tap a hat to make a bunny appear, recite a spell to make books bigger, say "Gone-zo!" to make a ship disappear, and much more. But beware: the clever magic tricks don't always turn out the way you'd expect! 


What’s Next Door? by Nicola O’Byrne 
The crocodile from Open Very Carefully is back, and he's not happy. All he wants to do is find his way home, but he can't get there by himself -- he needs your help! In this unique interactive book, children are encouraged to take part in the story and use their imaginations to guide him door-to-door on his journey. Will he ever find his way home?