Wednesday, March 27, 2013

Bunnies Story Time

This week's theme was bunnies so I could get away with doing an "Easter" story time without actually doing it. This way, if the parents want to incorporate the "Easter Bunny" while they do the craft, that's up to them. However, I'm playing it safe by just calling them bunnies!

The Books:
You're Finally Here! by Mélanie Watt

Little Bunny Foo Foo by Cori Doerrfeld

Squish Rabbit by Katherine Battersby
The Favorite: Little Bunny Foo Foo was the favorite, which I was surprised since they are all equally my favorite bunny stories! I wasn't sure how the parents/kids would react to Little Bunny Foo Foo eating the Good Fairy at the end of the book, but it went over okay as far as I could tell. I had the kids do the finger play motions as I read the book.


Flannelboard: 5 Little Bunnies Rhyme found on storytimekatie.com

Hippety hop and hippety hay,
Five little bunnies went out to play.
Hippety hop and hippety hay,
One little bunny hopped away.
(Repeat until there are no bunnies left)
No more bunnies are playing today,
I hope they come back another day.


The best part about this rhyme is having the kids repeat "Hippety hop and hippety hay" over and over before I started the rhyme to "make sure they could say it" and they were really excited to say it with me and kept them from grabbing the bunnies down from the flannelboard.


What's in the Memory Box? 
I put a tiny felt mouse in the box this time for the field mice that Little Bunny Foo Foo was bopping on the head. I wish I had put one of my felt cupcakes in there instead since that's what the mice stole from Foo Foo to make her chase them. I'll have to remember for next time.


The Craft: Bunny Finger Puppet
This craft was so simple! I remembered seeing a finger puppet paper dog on Pinterest some time ago and thought I could use that idea and make it into a bunny. Some of the kids didn't want holes and just covered them up with another white bunny head.

This is my first pattern-turned-PDF to share!


Wednesday, March 20, 2013

Butterfly Storytime

To celebrate the first day of Spring, I was all about caterpillars turning into butterflies for this story time. 

The Books:
Butterfly, Butterfly by Petr Horacek
 Butterfly, Butterfly has a great pop-up butterfly at the end of the story!
Good Night, Sweet Butterflies by Dawn Bentley

The Very Hungry Caterpillar by Eric Carle
 Flannelboard: The Very Hungry Caterpillar
I made everything from the story out of felt and I have a great puppet of the butterfly at the end of the book, but of course, I can't find it! I love this story, so I'll use the flannelboard again this summer and hopefully I'll find the puppet by then!
All the food the caterpillar eats. 1 apple, 2 pears, 3 plums, 4 strawberries, 5 oranges, a piece of chocolate cake, an ice cream cone, a pickle, a slice of swiss cheese, slice of salami, a lollipop, a piece of cherry pie, sausage, a cupcake, and a slice of watermelon!

Big fat caterpillar ready for his cocoon!

I love this one because it has so many pieces. Most of the kids got to put up more than one piece of food.

What was in the Memory Box?
One of the oranges that the Very Hungry Caterpillar ate!


The Craft: Coffee filter butterflies

Mine is boring because I didn't paint it, but I gave the kids watercolor paint and they loved being able to make multicolored butterflies.





Wednesday, March 13, 2013

Green Story Time

It's time for another story time for St. Patrick's Day without having a holiday specific theme besides "green things"! I really like everything about St. Patrick's Day when thinking of a craft or activity, but as far as stories go, there's slim pickings for toddlers. Those leprechaun books are always so wordy and have paragraphs on each page.

So every year, I settle on stories & a craft that have to do with something "green."

The Books:
Five Green and Speckled Frogs by Priscilla Burris


Where is the Green Sheep? by Mem Fox
In the Tall, Tall Grass by Denise Fleming
We have an assortment of those ridiculously large picture books that I hardly ever use because they are hard to read and hold up due to their size. In the Tall, Tall Grass is one of those books, but I know this story by heart, so it wasn't a problem to turn the almost-life-size-pages so the kids could see.
I remember my School Librarian having a special stand for these large books, but we don't have one and I don't really care enough to get one. The big books that we do have aren't my favorites, so I wouldn't want to get one just for when I occasionally feel like using the big version. Ugh. #LibrarianProblems. Haha.






Flannelboard: Five Green and Speckled Frogs
I just used the props on the flannelboard to make the story interactive. While I read the story, I called up kids by name to grab a frog off the board. Notice the poor one-eyed frog. I have one toddler that really loves pulling eyes off of any felt with an eye. I'm just glad it was only one eye this time.

What was in the Memory Box?
I put a fly in there. This fly is from my super creepy "Lady Who Swallowed a Fly" doll that I bought at a NJLA Youth Services Forum. The reaction from the kids was split: either some were totally creeped out or some wanted to "pet" the fly. 

The Craft: Frog masks complete with party blower "tongue" to catch those flies. 





Wednesday, March 6, 2013

Robot Story Time

I found two cute picture books about robots while shifting/shelf reading the picture books and after finding "robot parts" online, I thought I could have a robot themed story time. I didn't do much for this story time because I had a meeting to go to and I didn't want to cancel story time for it. Since R Robot Saves Lunch is a little wordy, I stuck with only reading two books and we talked about what kind of robot we would like to have.

The Books:

Hello, Robots by Bob Staake

R Robot Saves Lunch by Nicholas Kuszyk
What was in the Memory Box? RAIN!
The robots in Hello, Robots get all discombobulated after being out in the rain and have to exchange heads.





Craft: 
I did another easy craft just like with the Snowmen. I gave everyone a colored piece of construction paper and gave the kids assorted "robot parts" to color and assemble with glue onto the paper. I don't have a photo of this either because I didn't make an example since I didn't want the kids to have robots that all looked like mine. There were some creative robots!