[Nfb-krafters-korner] This week's fun with Kids
Dixie
blueherons at sbcglobal.net
Wed Jul 7 19:46:51 UTC 2010
I also downloaded one of those terrarium books. I will have to go back and
look for the other.
When my daughter was in 1st grade the class did a project with land snails.
Each kid was given a snail to care for and do experiments with. The kids
kept them in plastic deli containers. Boring! So, she and I created a
terrarium for her snail. That snail must have been very happy as she dug
down along the edge of the terrarium and laid a nest full of eggs. My
daughter was the hit of the 1st grade. The teacher had her go around to the
other 3 classes and show off the nest of eggs. Then in a little while we
had a terrarium full of many snails!
Dixie
~ @-> ~ <-@ ~
"
Ps. 121:1-2 "I will lift up mine eyes unto the hills, from whence cometh my
Help. My Help cometh from the LORD, which made heaven and earth."
~ @-> ~ <-@ ~
-----Original Message-----
From: nfb-krafters-korner-bounces at nfbnet.org
[mailto:nfb-krafters-korner-bounces at nfbnet.org] On Behalf Of Eileen Scrivani
Sent: Wednesday, July 07, 2010 12:18 PM
To: List for blind crafters and artists
Subject: Re: [Nfb-krafters-korner] This weeks fun with Kids
Hey Henrietta:
Sounds like you are really into the Match Box Car thing. How about knitting
for your grand children a rug or mat that looks like a road or driving
track?? I would think not a difficult knit, some black yarn, with
contrasting yellow or white for the lines in the road or side walks.
Last night I downloaded 2 books from NLS in the recent releases on making
terrariums. One was for kids the other not for kids. I've always had a
fondness for terrariums and thought they looked so cool in clear glass or
plastic containers or globes.
Eileen
--------------------------------------------------
From: "Henrietta Brewer" <gary.brewer at comcast.net>
Sent: Wednesday, July 07, 2010 7:59 AM
To: <nfb-krafters-korner at nfbnet.org>
Subject: [Nfb-krafters-korner] This weeks fun with Kids
> Hi There,
> It is a beautiful morning here today. But the temps are climbing fast. I
> have some outdoor ideas that can keep the kids cool as well as some quiet
> indoor ideas today.
>
> Teaching science starts with very small children. No one has to know that
> learning is going on with this activity.
>
> You will need:
> As many containers of ice as you can freeze
> An old plastic shower curtain
> water from a hose
>
> Dirrections:
> Freeze as much ice as you can. Try using all sizes of containers. A huge
> block of ice is fun along with ice cubes. Sand molds work well.
>
> Remove the ice from containers by running a bit of warm water over the
> bottoms. Take the ice outside and place on a plastic shower curtain that
> has been sprayed with water. Spray the ice so no one sticks to it.
>
> Have children guess which pieces will melt first. Which will last the
> longest. Put some on the hot cement and some under a tree.
>
> A shower curtain makes a wonderful slip and slide so if children are old
> enough to handle slippping and falling keep the hose spraying lightly and
> let the children move on the plastic.
>
> This is cherry festival time in Michigan, where I live. Our kids, even as
> teens, like to have old fashion cherry pit spitting contests. It sure
> doesn't matter who can get their pit thefurtherest. The fun is in
> spitting. Afterall, it is a forbidden activity most of the time.
>
> Okay, enough outdoor time:
>
> Here are a couple indoor activities
>
> Create a maze of roads on the floor or carpet and race match box cars.
> Children can add block structures to make a city.
>
> materials:
>
> duct tape
> match box cars
> blocks
>
> dirrections:
>
> Help children create roads that cross and some long straight aways for
> lots of different play. You might even run the tape over a block to make a
> hill. This should be your time to sit down and have a lemonade and relax.
>
> Making a Lava Lamp
>
> Materials:
>
> a clear plastic bottle such as a water bottle with label removed.
> clear oil such as olive oil
> water
> food coloring
> an antacid tablet or baking soda
>
> Place some of the oil in the bottom half of the bottle. add water to
> almost the top. add a few drops of food coloring. Place the bottle in the
> sink of in a pie plate. When you add the tablet the bubbles will make a
> lava lamp look.
>
> correction: You need only a qusarter of the tablet.
>
> Start saving large paper bags and newspaper for an August project. We
> will make large building blocks that will entertain the whole
> neighborhood.
>
>
>
> Henrietta
> ~I wish you enough~
>
>
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