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Pre-K activities, learning games, crafts, and printables


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INTERACTIVE PLANNING-MOSQUITOESInteractive planning-Mosquitoes

 

NEW! (Open interactive planning-Mosquitoes) Print and use the document to present activities related to the theme for your group. 

 

CIRCLE TIME


Deposit long clothing, insect repellent, and a beekeeper hat with a veil in a basket. Use the items to spark a conversation with your group. Ask children if they have ever seen a mosquito. What must we do to avoid mosquito bites? What must we do if we have a mosquito bite? Do other types of insects bite?

 

NEW! Animated discussion-Mosquitoes

(Open picture game-Mosquitoes) Print and laminate the pictures in the format you prefer. Use them to spark a conversation with your group and to ask children questions related to the theme.  

 

NEW! Interactive circle time discussion-MosquitoesPicture game-Mosquitoes-1

For this activity, you will need a fly swatter. Sit in a circle with your group. Use the fly swatter to indicate a child and invite him to answer a theme-related question. Have you ever seen a mosquito? Is there another word that can be used to replace “mosquito”? How can you avoid mosquito bites? What should you do if you have a mosquito bite? Can you name other insects that bite? etc.

 

AREA SETUP

 

NEW! Thematic poster-Mosquitoes

(Open thematic poster-Mosquitoes) Print, laminate, and display the poster where parents are sure to see it.

 

NEW! Educa-theme-Mosquitoes

(Open educa-theme-Mosquitoes) Print and laminate the different elements representing the theme. The items can be used to present the theme to children (and their parents) or simply to decorate your daycare for the theme.

 Educa-theme-Mosquitoes

NEW! Educa-decorate-Mosquitoes
(Open educa-decorate-Mosquitoes) Print, laminate, and cut out the items. Use them to decorate your daycare walls and set the mood for the theme.

 

NEW! Stickers for rewards

(Open stickers for rewards-Mosquitoes) Print the illustrations on adhesive paper and use them to create a collection of original stickers.

 

NEW! Pennants-Mosquitoes

(Open pennants-Mosquitoes) Print and have children cut out and decorate the pennants. Hang them within your daycare or over your daycare entrance in the form of a garland.  

 

Beware of the mosquito
Draw or print a picture of a giant mosquito. Glue it on your daycare door before children arrive.

 

Insect garlandEduca-decorate-Mosquitoes-1
(Open leaf garland) Print the leaves and hang them around the daycare. Have children make tiny insects and add them to your garland.

 

PICTURE GAME


The pictures may be used as a memory game or to spark a conversation with your group. Use them to decorate the daycare or a specific thematic corner. (Open picture game-Mosquitoes) Print, laminate, and store in a Ziploc bag or thematic bin.

 

Stationery-Mosquitoes
(Open stationery-Mosquitoes) Print and use the stationery to communicate with parents, in your reading and writing area, or to identify your thematic bins.

 

WRITING ACTIVITY


(Open writing activities-M like mosquito) Print for each child or laminate for use with a dry-erase marker.

 

ACTIVITY SHEETS


(Open activity sheets-Mosquitoes) Print and follow instructions.

 

Color by number-MosquitoesPennants-Mosquitoes
(Open color by number-Mosquitoes) Print for each child. Children must follow the color code to complete the picture.

 

VARIOUS WORKSHOPS


Have fun with these wonderful workshop ideas provided by Caroline Allard.

 

Construction/building blocks:

  • Green straw (found in Easter baskets) in a container along with plastic insects. Children will enjoy making the insects crawl in the "grass".
  • Provide only green, black, brown, and red blocks. Children can use them to create giant bugs.
  • Assembly games such as K-nex and Magnetix are perfect for creating silly or scary insects.
  • Drinking straws can be inserted one inside the other to create long worms! You can even organize a contest!

Arts & crafts:

  • Plastic insects and poster paint. Children press the insects in the paint and then make prints on paper.
  • Attach plastic or gummy worms to the end of a fishing pole. Dip them in poster paint and make prints on paper.
  • Make insect crowns! A strip of paper and antennae are all you need!
  • An empty toilet paper roll, construction paper wings, pipe cleaners for the antennae and a small quantity of paint make perfect bees or butterflies.
  • A coffee filter with a clothespin attached in the center makes the perfect dragonfly or butterfly. Add a few drops of food coloring, just for fun!
  • A butterfly model and colourful tissue paper which can be torn and glued on the wings.
  • A butterfly (or a ladybug) drawn on a transparent acetate. Add colourful sand and white glue to make a stained-glass craft. It will look beautiful in a window!
  • Two paper plates (one cut in two), a fastener, red and black paint...for a ladybug!
  • Two egg carton sections, wiggly eyes, yellow and black paint, construction paper or tulle wings, and antennae...for a bee!
  • Insect-shaped hole punches.Mosquito-faces
  • Honeycomb cereal glued to a square box to represent a beehive.
  • Brown, pink, or black yarn pieces to make a worm collage.
  • Make fireflies with glow-in-the-dark paint.
  • Make your own binoculars with two empty toilet paper rolls, string, and cellophane paper.
  • Use string dipped in poster paint for worm paintings!
  • Use a series of egg carton sections to make a caterpillar.
  • Spread black or brown poster paint on paper by blowing through a drinking straw to create a spider shape.

Drawing:

  • Insect, flower, and garden-themed stencils.
  • Insect coloring pages.

Role play:

  • Create a beekeeper corner. Include a hat with a veil, a rain suit, a few bees (or other insects), a large square box (to represent a beehive), and a few instruments such as a watering can, a shovel, etc.
  • Create an insect hunter corner. Include butterfly nets, empty containers, plastic insects of all kinds, binoculars, cardboard reference cards containing information about various types of insects, magnifying glasses, etc. Hang insect posters on the wall.
  • Create a gardening area. Provide toy versions of gardening tools such as a watering can, flowerpots, etc. Add gloves, a sun hat, a hose, and knee protectors.
  • Dress up like insects.

Manipulation:

  • Memory game related to insects with educatall.com illustrations.Educa-decorate-Mosquitoes-2
  • Puzzles with pictures of insects (homemade or store-bought).
  • Modeling dough with plastic insects. Children will enjoy pricking them in the dough or making prints. Offer cookie cutters shaped like flowers too!
  • Children can also use modeling dough or salt dough to create insects.
  • Association games involving insects (insects that fly, insects that crawl...).
  • Several insect illustrations. Children must sort them per their number of spots, legs, etc.
  • Association game with bees and flowers of the same color.

Pre-reading:

  • Books about insects, flowers, etc.
  • Butterfly illustrations and posters can be used to decorate your area.

Pre-writing:

  • Connect the dots worksheets related to the theme.
  • Activities in which children must identify the differences between two insect illustrations.
  • Hunt and seek activities.
  • Various activity sheets related to the theme.
  • Game with educatall.com word flashcards.

Motor skills:

  • Children pretend they are worms crawling on the ground in the rain.
  • Obstacle course involving chairs children must crawl under like ants.
  • Simon says...to act like insects.Counting cards-Mosquitoes-1
  • Treasure hunt.
  • Deposit a jumping rope on the ground and invite children to walk on it.
  • Pin the stinger on the bee! Hang a large bumblebee on the wall. Blindfolded, children must glue the bee's stinger as close to the right spot as possible.
  • An obstacle race throughout which children must hop like a grasshopper.
  • Children stand in a circle and throw a ball of yarn back and forth to create a giant spider web.

Sensory bins:

  • A container filled with soil and real worms!
  • A container filled with sand containing plastic worms and other insects.
  • A container filled with Honeycomb cereal.
  • A container filled with water and a few Styrofoam lily pads and insects such as a dragonfly, a praying mantis, etc.

Science:

  • Create a vivarium. Simply use an old aquarium or give each child a transparent container. Add soil, grass, and the insects you find outside. Don't forget to deposit a screen on top!

LANGUAGE ACTIVITIES

Educa-chatterbox-Mosquitoes
Word flashcards

(Open word flashcards-Mosquitoes) The flashcards may be used to spark a conversation with your group, in your reading and writing area, or even to identify your thematic bins. Mosquito, insect repellent, citronella, screen, proboscis, wings, antennae, screen house, bite, redness, small, camping

 

NEW! Educa-chatterbox

(Open educa-chatterbox-Mosquitoes) Print, laminate, and cut out the cards. Decorate a shoebox and set the cards as well as a variety of small items related to the theme inside it. During circle time or, for example, when children are waiting for lunch to be served, have them pick one card or item out of your chatterbox at a time and encourage them to name the item and tell you what they know about it. 

 

PHYSICAL ACTIVITY AND MOTOR SKILLS

NEW! Modeling dough activity placemats-Mosquitoes

(Open modeling dough activity placemats-Mosquitoes) Print and laminate. Let children pick a placemat and provide modeling dough. Encourage them to use the dough to fill or reproduce the shapes that are on their placemat.

 

NEW! Mosquito pyramidModeling dough activity placemats-Mosquitoes

(Open mosquito faces) Print on adhesive paper and press the items on disposable drinking glasses. Stack the glasses to build a pyramid for various games. Children can, for example, attempt to make all the glasses fall with a frisbee. Give each child 3 tries. 

 

NEW! Insect hunt

(Open tiny insects) Print, laminate, and cut out the insects. Disperse them throughout your daycare or, if you prefer, set them on items in your yard. Encourage children to search for them. They can set the insects they find in a net.

 

NEW! Mosquito search

Hide tiny stuffed insects or pictures of mosquitoes throughout your daycare or a designated playing area. Invite children to find them.

 

NEW! “Avoid the mosquitoes” obstacle race

Create an obstacle course that will involve children hopping or jumping over various obstacles and crawling through tunnels or under tables without touching mosquitoes.

 

NEW! Mosquito chantTiny insects

Invent a short song or rhyme about mosquitoes with your group. Encourage children to suggest simple senteneces, gestures, or dance moves to accompany your chant.

 

Where are the insects hiding?
(Open tiny insects) Print. Hide the insects throughout your daycare. Invite children to search for them. When a child finds an insect, he must say, "I found an insect!" and give it to you.

 

Mosquito tag
Give each child a few stickers. Children must chase one another. When they touch a child, they press a sticker on him to represent a bug bite. Children love this game!

 

Mosquito hop
Children stand in line. They crouch down so that they are as small as can be (like mosquitoes). The last child in line jumps over the other children. When he reaches the front of the line, he crouches down so that he is small like a mosquito once again. The child who is now last in line does the same thing, and so on...

 

Where are the mosquitoes?
(Open mosquito hunt) Print and laminate. Hide tons of tiny mosquito illustrations throughout your daycare. Play music. Children collect as many mosquitoes as possible before the song ends. The child who finds the most mosquitoes may hide them for the next round.

 
Mosquito huntersEduca-symmetry-Mosquitoes

Divide your group into two teams. Identify spray bottles with colors. You must also have a card representing each color. One team will be the mosquito hunters (they will have the bottles) and the other team will be the mosquitoes (each mosquito holds a card with a color on it). The mosquito hunters must spray a mosquito (in summer, you may add water to the bottles). When a mosquito hunter sprays a mosquito, he must say, "I am (for example) the blue mosquito hunter!" The mosquito then shows his card. If it is the same color, the mosquito hunter keeps the card. If not, the mosquito keeps his card and is free to continue playing. The game ends when all the mosquito cards have been captured. The mosquito hunters then become the mosquitoes.

 

Under a magnifying glass
Provide magnifying glasses and plastic containers that children can use to capture mosquitoes or other insects in your backyard.

 

Outdoor mosquito hunt
(Open mosquito hunt) Print, laminate, and cut out the mosquitoes. Hide the mosquitoes throughout your yard. Encourage children to go on a mosquito hunt.

 

Insect hunt
Provide pictures of various common insects. Encourage children to search for these insects. Once they have captured all the insects, provide magnifying glasses that they can use to observe them.

 

Mosquito searchEduc-intruder-Mosquitoes
Search for real mosquitoes with your group. Show them how to kill them with their hands. Show children how a mosquito bites. Discuss mosquitoes with your group. What does a mosquito bite feel like? What must we use to avoid mosquito bites?

 

ACTIVITIES INVOLVING PARENTS


Recycle and reuse

Ask parents to collect empty insect repellent bottles. Clean them thoroughly and use them in your role play area.

 

COGNITIVE ACTIVITIES


NEW!
Educa-symmetry-Mosquitoes

(Open educa-symmetry-Mosquitoes) Print. Children must color the bottom picture (black and white) to make it look exactly like the top picture.

 

NEW! Educ-intruder-Mosquitoes

(Open educ-intruder-Mosquitoes) Print and laminate. Children must find the 6 intruders in the scene.  

 

NEW! Coloring hunt and seek-Mosquitoes

(Open coloring hunt and seek-Mosquitoes) Print and laminate. Children must find and color the insects in the scene.  

 Coloring-hunt and seek-Mosquitoes

NEW! Creating mosquitoes

(Open create your mosquito) Print for each child. Children cut out the mosquito body parts and use them to reproduce the illustrated mosquitoes.

 

NEW! Game-Four mosquitoes

(Open game-Four mosquitoes) Print, glue the cards on opaque paper and cut them out. Arrange them face down on the floor or table (so that you can’t see the illustrations). Children take turns rolling a die. Every time a child rolls a “1”, he turns a card over and looks at it without showing the illustration to his peers. If he doesn’t already have this card in front of him, he sets it on the floor or table for everyone to see. The first child who has all 4 mosquitoes wins. 

 

NEW! Counting cards-Mosquitoes

(Open counting cards-Mosquitoes) Print and laminate. Prepare a series of wooden clothespins on which you have painted or written numbers 1 to 9. Children count the items on each card and press the clothespin with the corresponding number on it.

 

NEW! Counting mosquito eyes

(Open counting mosquito eyes) Print, laminate, and cut out the mosquitoes. Press a piece of female Velcro behind each one. Glue 1 to 15 colorful wiggly eyes (different sizes) on large Popsicle sticks. Press a piece of male Velcro at the top of each stick. Children pick a stick, count the eyes, and then press the mosquito that has the corresponding number printed on it at the top.Create your mosquito

 

NEW! Sorting activity-Mosquitoes

(Open sorting activity-Mosquitoes) Print the mosquitoes and encourage children to sort them per various characteristics (color, size, etc.).

 

Snakes and ladders-Insects
(Open snakes and ladders-Insects) Print and laminate. Use a die and gummy worms as playing pieces.

 

Dominoes
(Open dominoes-Insects) Print, glue on heavy cardboard, and laminate. This game is for two to four players. Each child picks five cards. Place the remaining cards in a stack on the table. Turn over one card. The first player tries to play one of his cards. It must match an illustration already on the table. Matching illustrations must be touching. The second player does the same, and so on. If a player does not have a card with a matching illustration, he must pick an additional card from the stack. If he is still unable to play, his turn is over. The game ends when a player has used all his cards.

 

Hunt and seek-Insects
(Open hunt and seek-Insects) Print and laminate. Children pick illustrations and search for the items in the larger picture.

 Counting mosquito eyes

Magnifying glass game
(Open magnifying glass game-Mosquitoes) Print and laminate the cards and board game. Cut them out and store them in a Ziploc bag or box. Children pick a card and search for the item on the board game using a magnifying glass. When they find the item, they deposit the card in the correct square on the board game.

 

From smallest to biggest
(Open educ-big and small-Mosquitoes) Print and laminate. Children must place the illustrations in the correct order, from smallest to biggest, using Velcro or adhesive putty.

 

Mosquito puzzles
(Open puzzles-Mosquitoes) Print, laminate, and cut the pieces. Children must correctly place the pieces to recreate the scenes.

 

MORAL AND SOCIAL ACTIVITIES


NEW!
Ring Toss Game
(Open mosquito game) Print, laminate, and create a ring toss game where children must throw rings around cardboard or plastic mosquito models.

 

NEW! Mandalas-MosquitoesMosquito-game
(Open mandalas-Mosquitoes) Print a copy for each child. Encourage children to color their mandalas with bold colors.

 

NEW! My favorite mosquito
Children can look at different books about insects or, if you prefer, print our picture game. (Open picture game-Mosquitoes) Children draw their favorite mosquito on a sheet of paper. Once they are done, invite them to present their drawing and explain their choice.

 

NEW! Puppet show
(Open puppets-Mosquitoes) Print, laminate, and press the models on wooden sticks to create mosquito puppets. Organize a little show where the puppets become real mosquitoes and fly around your daycare.

 

The mosquito dance
With the children in your group, invent a mosquito dance. Present your dance to parents or to another group of children at the end of the day.

 

EARLY SCIENCE


Mosquitoes bite!Mandalas-Mosquitoes

Explain how when a mosquito bites us, it's really feeding itself with our blood. Using eyedroppers and red water (water and red food coloring), ask children to pretend they are tiny mosquitoes. Invite them to transfer the red water from one container to another using the eyedroppers.

 

Insect bin
Fill a sensory bin with various types of insects. Add containers children can use to "capture" insects, a few magnifying glasses, etc. You may also add soil and water to create a swamp-like environment.

 

CULINARY ACTIVITIES

 

My edible mosquito
Use a celery stick to represent a mosquito's body, carrots for the legs, liquorice pieces for the antennae and raisins for the eyes. You will have a yummy mosquito snack! Be creative and add different ingredients!

 

ARTS & CRAFTS

 

NEW! My articulated mosquito
(Open craft-mosquito) Print for each child. Ask children to cut out the different mosquito parts and assemble them using fasteners.

 Craft Mosquito

NEW! Making paper mosquitoes
Help children cut mosquito outlines out of colored paper. Invite them to decorate them with markers, stickers, or glitter.

 

NEW! Mosquito painting
Provide children with sheets of paper, paint, and brushes so they can paint mosquitoes or scenes containing flying mosquitoes.

 

NEW! My hand mosquitoes
Use stamps or children’s handprints to create artwork representing mosquitoes or mosquito patterns.

 

Insect stencils
(Open Insect-Stencils) Print and trace the shapes on heavy cardboard. Children can deposit the stencils on a piece of paper, dip sponges in paint and dab paint over the stencils.

 

Mosquito collage
Trace a mosquito outline on a piece of contact paper and cut it out. Have children stick pieces of tissue paper, confetti, cardboard scraps, or glitter on the mosquito shape. Add another piece of contact paper on top.

 

My little mosquitoPuppets-Mosquitoes
Collect a few egg carton sections. Let children use them to create their own little mosquito. Offer plenty of arts & crafts material. The result may surprise you!

 

Fly swatter
(Open model-fly swatter) Cut a 30 cm x 10 cm piece of heavy cardboard for each child. Cut two half-ovals out of construction paper or rubber with holes in it (used to line drawers). Glue the two half-ovals together at the end of the cardboard piece. Next, children can paint and decorate their fly swatter as they please.

 

CREATIVE COLORING


(Open creative coloring-Mosquitoes) Print for each child. Encourage children to draw mosquitoes and other types of insects on the screen door.

 

COLORING PAGES


(Open coloring pages theme-Mosquitoes) Print for each child.

 

SONGS & RHYMES


Mosquitoes

by: Patricia Morrison

sung to: Rudolph the red-nosed reindeer


Beware of the mosquitoes
Whenever you're outdoorsEduca-decorate-Mosquitoes-3
They fly around everywhere
Just waiting to take a bite
And when they do, you're itchy
It's so hard not to scratch
Beware of the mosquitoes
Wear your best bug repellent

 

Have fun!

The Educatall team


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