Thankful Pumpkin Craft for Kids

Thankful pumpkin sticker

I saw this cute “Thankful Pumpkin” paper craft idea (source) and wanted to make some printables to go with it. I love the idea of helping kids remember what they’re thankful for. Activities like this are perfect opportunities to talk with kids about how blessed we really are!

Materials:

2 Sheets of Cardstock (to print these printables on: Thankful Pumpkin Printable)
Small Hole Punch
2 Brads
Green Construction Paper
Brown Pipe Cleaner

Directions

1.  After you print the two printable pages, cut them into strips (cut on the lines).

2.  Finish writing the “I am thankful for” phrases on 5 strips of cardstock.

3.  Decorate the “Happy Thanksgiving” on the other 5 strips. Get Creative!

4.  Make a small hole in the center of both ends of each strip.  (Use small hole puncher or another tool to make the small holes.)

5.  Stack the paper strips alternating the “I am thankful” and “Happy Thanksgiving”.

6.  Stick the prongs of a brad through the holes on one end of the stack with the metal circle of the brad resting on the side with the writing.  Secure Brad.

7.  Fan out the slips with the writing side facing the table.

8.  Pull up one strip and feed the prongs of the 2nd brad through the hole with the metal circle resting on the blank side of the strips. Continue putting strips on brad going in a circular pattern.

9.  When all of the strips are on the brad and you have formed a ball, secure the brad by pushing the prongs down in opposite directions.

10. Cut 2 leaf shapes from the green construction paper.  Poke a small hole at bottom of each leaf.

11. Wrap the brown pipe cleaner around a pencil to make a spiral shape. Gently slide the pipe cleaner off to keep spiral shape.

12. Lift up the prongs of brad, hold brad in place from below, and slide on leaves.

13. Place brown pipe cleaner next to prongs, push prongs down on top of pipe cleaner to securely attach the leaves and “stem”.

 

Here’s what it looked like when my friend tried it with her class:

thankful pumpkin

Click here for more fun and free Thanksgiving stuff for kids!

(Free!) Thanksgiving Graphing Worksheet

Turkey Graphing sticker

Thanksgiving’s the time to be grateful… for cool stuff like bar graphs! So here’s my free graphing worksheet for your Thanksgiving pleasure! Click here for the PDF: Turkey Graphing

Click here for more free Thanksgiving stuff for kids!

Using Evidence From The Text (Free Poster)

Show the evidence poster sticker

Kids often need reminders to use evidence and support from the text when explaining or writing about a piece of text. Here’s a free printable poster for your classroom (near your guided reading table?) to remind kids to use textual evidence!  Click here for the PDF: Show the Evidence Poster

Sit Down! (Skip Counting Group Game)

Sit down sicker

“Sit Down!” is another all purpose game.  Kids stand in a big circle.  One student is “it” in the middle with a pointer (or just his finger).  “It” gets to decide what number we start counting on to count by 10s.  He might pick 7.  So “It” starts pointing at one child at a time as the whole class counts by tens starting at 7.  So we count 7, 17 27, 37, 47, 57, 67, 77, 87, 97 and if you are the student pointed to when it is over 100, you “SIT DOWN”.  The whole class says “SIT DOWN” and then the game continues, starting with 7, 17 and so on until you again reach 100 and SIT DOWN.  When a student sits down, they just sit in their place in the circle and they continue to help the class count.  You do this until the whole class is sitting with just one per son standing.  Then the last one down is “It” and you start again.  “It” picks a new number to start with and you keep going.  This game could be down with numerous concepts (like saying the alphabet, state names, etc.), or skip counting by any number (not just 10). Kids especially like it if teacher plays and has to sit down too.

Ziploc Bag Slider Number Line for Addition & Subtraction

I recently saw this idea on Mrs. T’s First Grade Class and thought it was awesome! It’s got so many applications in math, I can hardly stand it! Id’s be great for simple addition/subtraction (draw a number line from 0 up). I wish I had known about this idea when I was teaching kids about negative numbers (write 0 in the middle along with positive and negative numbers)!

Free Thanksgiving Graphing Worksheet (Kindergarten, First Grade)

I Can Graph the Pictures- Thanksgiving 2 STICKER

Hooray for free things! Today’s freebie is a free graphing Thanksgiving worksheet for kindergarten or first grade. Use the pictures as data to help you complete the graph. Enjoy! Click here for the free worksheet (PDF):  I Can Graph the Pictures- Thanksgiving 2

Click here for more fun and free Thanksgiving stuff for kids!

Dyslexia: What Teachers (& Parents) Need To Know (Part 4)

This is the final part (part 4) in a series about Dyslexia. The author, Robin, is a mother of 4 boys, 2 of whom have dyslexia.  She has been taking her sons to private tutoring and researching as much as she can about dyslexia for the past 7 years.

dyslexia series- sticker 4

Famous people who are dyslexic (and these are only the ones whose names I recognized):

Whoopi Goldberg                             Henry Winkler*

Tom Cruise                                         Jay Leno

Danny Glover                                     Orlando Bloom

Alexander Graham Bell                     Albert Einstein

Thomas Edison                                  Cher

John Lennon                                      Bruce Jenner

Muhammad Ali                                 Magic Johnson

George Washington                          Woodrow Wilson

Andrew Jackson                                Nelson Rockefeller

Hans Christina Anderson                 Agatha Christie

Henry Ford                                         Charles Schwab

Steven Spielberg                               Walt Disney

*Henry Winkler, also known as the Fonz from the TV series Happy Days, is dyslexic.  He never new until he was an adult and his own son struggled with it and was diagnosed.  He had a very strict military father and went to military school and really struggled.  He had a talent for acting so that’s how he became a success.  Anyway, he got together a few years ago with an author and they wrote a series of books about a kid in elementary school with dyslexia (based on Winkler’s life).  They are called the Han Zipzer series. Many teachers haven’t heard of them, but they’re an excellent read.  They are funny but bring to light some of the struggles that kids with dyslexia have as well as some of the stereotypes of being lazy or just a bad kid.

backwards

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I’ve combined all these posts together into a 9 page PDF document so you can print it out easily. Here it is: Dyslexia book.

DISCLAIMER: The medical information in this article is merely information – not advice. If you need medical advice, you should consult a doctor or other appropriate medical professional.

Dyslexia: What Teachers (& Parents) Need To Know (Part 3)

This is part 3 in a series about Dyslexia. The author, Robin, is a mother of 4 boys, 2 of whom have dyslexia.  She has been taking her sons to private tutoring and researching as much as she can about dyslexia for the past 7 years.

dyslexia series- sticker 3

Kids with dyslexia learn best kinesthetically.  Here is a list of ways to help them learn material if they are struggling with other areas.

  • writing words in the air
  • large invisible letters on a wall with their finger, have them point to where each letter is in a different sequence so you know they visualize the word
  • write on the board  in large letters
  • Have them write their letters inside a square box so they remember which direction the letter goes.
  • Practice tracking with the child using fun finger pointers, a pen, or a ruler
  • Play fluency games: a list of letters repeated in a different order on each line.  Have them read as many as they can in a minute and see if they can beat their previous time every day.  You can also use words as they begin to read more.
  • Sand is messy so make a board with fine sandpaper that students can write letters with their fingers.
  • hair gel in a large zip bag gives them a squishy surface to practice spelling words.
  • Teach students WHY a word is spelled the way it is, give them a rule to apply or a saying to go with the rule.  One of the first that my son learned was the FLOSS rule which states that when a small word with a single short vowel sound ends in F L S (or Z), you double the last consonant.  And the word floss demonstrates the rule.  Other words are jazz, miss, grass, fluff, doll…you get the idea.
  • Give instructions in steps and allow more time to complete assignments or shorten the assignment to help the child feel successful by completing along with the rest of the class.

One final thought.  Kids with dyslexia often have distortions when looking at a page with a lot of text.  Copy work on to colored paper (blue is the most common to help) to eliminate the stark difference between black print and white background. The distortions are part of what is called Irlen’s Syndrome.  The Irlen method of using colored overlays or lenses was discovered by Helen Irlen.  It is common among people with all kinds of learning disabilities such as dyslexia, ADD/ADHD, and various other visual processing disorders.  The disorder is not only associated with dyslexia, although many people with dyslexia are helped by the Irlen method.  

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Remember, these are smart kids that just learn differently.  Find what works best for them.  You will be their best friend if you show that you try to understand them.  Encouragement goes a long way with a child who puts forth a great effort that seems effortless to others.

{MINDY’S 2 CENTS: I had Irlen’s Syndrome as a kid. In elementary school, I was in the gifted and talented classes, but I had a hard time reading. I complained of having headaches while reading and said the words seemed to swim on a white page with black printing. My GATE teacher referred us to a specialist from the Irlen Institute who tested me to see how well I did on reading and different tasks when I had colored lenses on. Light blueish-violet was the trick! That particular shade of blue caused no color distortion (when I looked at a white wall it was still white), and my reading problems went away!  The specialist said that without the colored lenses (or colored transparency on the page), I wasn’t blinking so my eyes would become fatigued. The colored sheets did the trick, and I wore blue-tinted lenses for many years as a kid. This was a relatively inexpensive fix (not funded by the school district) and it did wonders! Turns out, my sister also needed colored lenses (a different shade) for depth perception instead of reading.  They weren’t the coolest glasses ever, but it made a world of difference in my studies, self-confidence and ability to get through scholastic tasks. Now I don’t really seem to have the problem, but boy am I glad my teacher knew enough about Irlen’s Syndrome, dyslexia and other learning circumstances to suggest this to my mom.}

Stay tuned for more in our Dyslexia series (symptoms, tips & tricks for parents and teachers)!

DISCLAIMER: The medical information in this article is merely information – not advice. If you need medical advice, you should consult a doctor or other appropriate medical professional.