Thanksgiving Headdress Activity

Headdress SS.001

Today, I am sharing a template with you so that your little one can make a personalized headdress.

I always loved doing holiday crafts as a kid, so I am trying to keep that tradition going!

I got this craft idea when I went to my son’s Thanksgiving Feast.

The kids wore headdresses and one class had Native American nicknames written on their headbands, but I thought it would be cute to try it on the feathers.

I thought, I could do that.  And as you may know, I like reproducible activities.

So, I made this template for you.

The feathers have upper case letters, lower case letters, and numbers so there are lots of directions you can take this craft.

[Click HERE to become a member and get unlimited access to  ALL The Mommy Teacher Printables including this one!

OR CLICK HERE to purchase this Thanksgiving printable individually from my TeachersPayTeachers Store.]

When I did this at home:

sean patrick coloring feathers My goal today was simply to get Sean Patrick to put the letters of his name in order after I scrambled them up, and give him a fun accessory to wear to go with all of his little Indian songs he has learned.

So, I scrambled them up and asked him to find the letters in his name.  He found S, then ‘e,’ then ‘a,’ then ‘n,’ etc., colored them, and then I taped them onto his headband that I cut from a brown paper bag..

 

You Could:

1) Use this as a number order activity or assessment by teaching your little one to put the feathers in order from 0-9 and then mix the feathers up and see if your little one can put them in order himself.

2)  Let your kiddos come up with names for their stuffed animals, put small feather headbands on stuffed animals heads (use a print setting that prints multiple pages at onto one sheet of paper to print small feathers).

3) Place paper feathers on the inside of construction paper to give it a pop of color if you don’t print them onto colored paper or if you children don’t color them in much.

4) Or, come up with something original and share it on The Mommy Teacher Facebook Page or as a Mommy Teacher Spotlight because we are always looking for more ideas to do and to share!

A creative mommy-teacher friend of mine put her own twist on this activity, and I love it!  Had to share:

indian princess

Art Table Giveaway! {New Design Launch Party} -Winner Announced

Winner Announced:

Thank you to everyone who entered!!  If you entered and would like a FREE link to my “Turkey Art Templates” then e-mail me jessica (at) themommyteacher (dot) com, and I  will also send you a link to my next Thanksgiving activity that I will be posting on Sunday (to those who entered and would like these printables). 😉

So, in a small way, everyone is a winner, but only ONE person could win the Art Table, and Rafflecopter randomly chose “Lisa Wilson!”  Congratulations Lisa W.!

Spread the word about The Mommy Teacher because when we reach 200 “Members” we will be doing another big item giveaway!

 

 

Casey and I have been SOOOO eager to launch the new design of The Mommy Teacher that we just had to celebrate with an awesome giveaway!

We are giving away one of our favorite things… a wonderfully kid-friendly art table!

We went back and forth about which one to give away and after a close Facebook poll, we decided to let the winner pick!

Yes, if you win you get to PICK whichever one of these art tables you would like:

arttablegiveawayflyer

 

Oh, and before you enter… read about two quick updates we want to share:

1) You can now submit Mommy Teacher Spotlight submissions,

and

2) We have a Membership Page!  I post so many printables so often these days that we wanted to bundle them all together for just $5.50 a month….

Yes, you get them ALL for that unbelievable price – and I add to this collection often.

Okay, now enter!

a Rafflecopter giveaway

Turkey Art Templates

I was itching to do some q-tip painting with the kids but I didn’t feel like googling to find a good turkey art template.

So,

I made three turkey art templates –

1) I made a plain template that you can color, decorate with feathers, glue and glitter, etc. Or, just use any other material you have in your house that you don’t have to shop for.

Turkey Art Template w: brand.005

2) The next template is a turkey that is easy to fill with larger circular materials like pom poms (cotton balls), dot paint, big circle stickers, etc.

Turkey Art Template w: brand.006

3.  And, my inspiration for making these… the turkey with feathers perfect for painting with q-tips.  Small incentive stickers also fit in these circles if you want to use it more that once!

Turkey Art Template w: brand.007

[Click HERE to become a member to get unlimited access to ALL The Mommy Teacher Printables including this one!

OR CLICK HERE to purchase these Turkey Templates individually from my TeachersPayTeachers Store.]

And here is what some of our time looked/sounded like:

First, I asked Sean Patrick which turkey he wanted to paint first.  He told me that he wanted to paint with dot paint first.

So, we put the template with the large circles in front of us first.  He picked “blue” paint and I encouraged him to fill in the circles on each tail feather, one at a time.  I demonstrated how he could do this on my template in front of me quickly.

(Notice we have already discussed colors, shapes, parts of a turkey, and one-to-one correspondence; your children are learning even when you don’t realize it).

dot paint

Then, I asked him questions like “How many more do you have left to fill your whole turkey?” “Can you find any feathers that have three circles?”  “Which feather has the most circles?” And “What do you think this turkey would say about his new blue tail feathers?” (That last question was just for fun but it gets him thinking outside the box.”

Before moving on to the next template, I encouraged him to color in the other parts of the turkey so he learned/reinforced (beak, wattle, feet, feathers, wings, and I had to google “snood” – the part on top of the head – because I had no clue what it was called).

qtip painting

For the q-tip painting we worked on patterns.  I always treat patterns as if I have never taught him about what they are by saying something like, “Oooooooh let’s make a pattern.  A pattern is something that repeats itself over and over and over and over and over again.”

“If mommy makes a red and orange pattern I would sing my song red-orange-red-orange-red-orange the whole way through so that I don’t forget my pattern or what comes next.”

If  he doesn’t want to do a pattern I don’t stress about it…. this is his time to express himself.  I’m just close enough to build on what he is learning.

turkey art finished products

Finally we did some finger painting to experience the sensory exploration of smearing paint all over, and the science exploration of seeing colors mix together.

Most importantly, we had fun!  Isn’t that what it is really about after all?

Including Your Kids In Your Hobbies

My mother-in-law gave me great advice the other day… she encouraged me to look for ways to include my kids in my hobbies.

This made me ask myself the first important question … What are my hobbies?

Hmmm…(I just had to ask my sister)… lol thats sad.

I like to exercise (is that a hobby?), I like to make personalized gifts (crafting a little), I like to cook (but not bake), and the obvious… I like to work/play on the computer.

So here is a small example of how I involve my kids in  “working” on the computer…

It makes sense to include your kids in your hobbies right? It is just hard to purpose it sometimes. But, I love to go on walks with my kids, cook with my kids, and craft with my kids so I should include all of those things in our daily routine since I enjoy them so much, AND take them on adventures so they can discover their hobbies.

Can you easily think of your hobbies or do you have to remind yourself what you used to enjoy?

My mother and father-in-law did a phenominal job training my husband as a child.  He is so disciplined – he helps around the house, he is always on top of the yard work, he fixes our household glitches, but he also has hobbies that he enjoys.  

I want to train my children like that…to “work” hard and to play hard!

What are your hobbies and how do you (or can you) include your children in them?

I would love some more  ideas. 🙂

P.S.  Someone tell my husband I want a learning tower for Christmas!  I can’t believe I don’t have one yet, but if I get one I can include the kids even more in the cooking – a stool isn’t cutting it!

Guidecraft Step Up Kitchen Helper - Espresso

Showing Your Children How They Communicate

Recently, in my “Parenting is Heart Work” group, we talked about how some children have a VERY hard time taking “no” for an answer.

Anyone? Anyone else experience this with their child?

I’m wondering if there are parents who don’t relate to this?!?

Well, children don’t recognize that when they don’t say “Yes ma’am” or “Yes Sir” to our rules and expectations that they appear to “disrespect” our authority.  They simply can’t comprehend why we would deprive them of joy…. ever.   Kids are like “Wait you are my parent… you are supposed to meet all my wants and needs in my timing at all times”  haha they are adorably mistaken.

But, we have a little of that in us as adults as well;  so, instant gratification is not a foreign concept for us either.

Either way, we have a big responsibility to ensure that our children become civilized little beings who can communicate in healthy ways… and unfortunately sometimes we don’t exactly model healthy responses.  As parents we can often be more reactive than anything else.

When Sean Patrick crosses his arms, throws himself on the floor, or loses his control, he doesn’t know that not only are his words destructive but his voice level and his body language also need to be replaced with appropriate responses.

So, I created a visual to show him how he communicates with me.

SS teaching children emotional control

I talked to him about all the different ways we can communicate about something and I made up stories about the children in a few of the pictures.  I strategically “make up” stories that are past examples of Sean Patrick’s impulsive responses.

For the picture of the demanding child crossing his arms I might say “This is Johnny.  Johnny’s mommy said that he couldn’t have a gummy snack until after dinner, and Johnny said ‘NO! I want it NOW!’  Can you see what Johnny’s face and arms are doing?  Do you think he is ready to listen and say “Okay mommy!”  Or do you think he is going to make his problem worse?  (Sean Patrick said he is not listening to his mom and he needs to get in control) .  The way Johnny is speaking to his mom with a mean face and crossed arms shows his mommy that he is demanding she listen to him instead of using his words to talk about the problem.  Can you tell Johnny that he can have a happy heart and wait until after dinner to get his fruit snack?”

We talk about the pictures and we also practice coping and fixing our problems AFTER we have a problem and he cools down I might say, “Sean Patrick what went wrong when we had that problem earlier?  Did you  try hard to calm down and talk about the problem or were you out of control?” (He usually is very honest about his emotions.  After we talk about that then we practice our coping strategies:  breathing, counting, walking out of the room for a minute, etc.

I hope this helps you too!

If you want this printable you can get it HERE

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