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Hands-On Activities

Make Way For Ducklings Fun Duck Pond Playdough Invitation to Play

April 24, 2023 | Leave a Comment
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

This activity for preschoolers about Make Way For Ducklings is fun to do for a spring theme. Also, you’ll love my Free Bird Unit Study.

Are you looking for an easy but engaging spring lesson to enjoy with your preschooler?

This is a fun way to work on learning without sitting down and “doing school”.

And you can read aloud while your child’s hands are busy.

Make Way For Ducklings Fun Duck Pond Playdough Invitation to Play

Grab a copy of Make Way for Ducklings and check out the sweet duck pond activity I have for you.

Make Way For Ducklings is a classic storybook that still holds up today even though it was written over 80 years ago.

It is a fun and simple story about two mallard ducks searching for the perfect place to raise their babies and their adventures once their 8 precious babies are hatched. 

To go along with it I have a 2-ingredient playdough recipe that is so fluffy and smooth to the touch.

It is a fun and unique sensory experience for small hands to mold, flatten, shape, and squeeze,

Add a few pond-themed items and some other little trinkets to it while you read from the story, and you have a wonderful activity for preschoolers up to lower elementary aged children.

Facts About Ducks

But first, here are some facts about ducks that either your preschoolers or older child may enjoy.

  • It takes about 28 days for duck eggs to hatch.
  • In the wild ducks will usually eat fish eggs, aquatic plants, small fish, worms, and insects.
  • Ducklings can fly within 5-8 weeks of hatching.
  • Did you know that ducks have 3 eyelids and can see in color?
  • There are over 100 types of ducks and all of them have waterproof feathers.
  • You can find ducks all over where there are small bodies of water-wetlands, marshes, ponds, rivers, lakes, and oceans. 
  • To protect themselves ducks can close one eye and put half their brain to sleep while the other half keeps watch. 
  • Waterfowl is the term used to describe the group of birds which includes ducks, geese, and swans.
  • Also, some ducks eat aquatic plants, seeds from grasses and other plants, snails and other insects and invertebrates.
  • Bread doesn’t have good nutritional value for ducks. It can cause health issues if they eat too much.
  • A male duck is called a drake.
  • A female duck is called a hen.

Then add some hands-on activities.

More Duck Hands-on Activities and Resources

  • Head on over and check out this Make Way For Ducklings Unit Study and Lapbook to extend the lessons even further.
  • You may like the style of a Make Way For Ducklings FIAR Study.
  • Head out to a local pond if you have one and see if you can spot some ducks, take a long a little food if it’s allowed in your area to toss for them. Here is also a recipe for a lovely DIY Duck Food that is duck-safe and nutritious for them.
  • Make a paper plate duck, it becomes a great puppet for play.
  • Build LEGO ducks with just a few basic LEGO bricks.
  • Counting Ducks is a solid early math activity for toddlers.
  • How cute are these Rice Cake Duck snacks?
  • This big lot of rubber ducks would make fantastic counters for a math activity.
  • Make a pond-themed slime in addition to the playdough for an alternative sensory experience.
Make Way For Ducklings Fun Duck Pond Playdough Invitation to Play

Too, add more bird unit study resources.

More Bird Craft Ideas and Resources

Also, here are some more fun bird crafts and activities.

  • How to Make an Easy Bird Craft Fun Paper Plate Peacock
  • Free Bird Journal – Hands-on Nature (Coloring & Identification Pages)
  • Free North American Robin Bird Lapbook and Fun Homeschool Unit Study Ideas
  • Bird Craft For Kindergarten Make an Adorable Fun American Robin Foot Print
  • Beautiful Bald Eagle Fun Facts And Torn Paper Bird Craft
  • Free Bird Unit Study and Lapbook And Fun Edible Bird Nests
  • Cardinal Birds in Winter and Birch Trees Easy Watercolor Kids Activity
  • Wildlife in the Amazon Rainforest – Create Fun Macaw and Toucan Crafts
  • How to Make a Fun Paper Mache American Robin Bird Craft
  • How to Make a Kid’s Fun and Easy Bird Nest Activity
  • How to Make an Easy Jumbo Stick Bird Feeder with Kids
  • Hands-On Nature Study: Bird Color Bar Graphing Activity
  • Hands-On Nature Study: Make a Fun Bird Nesting Bag
  • Colorful Winter Bird: Northern Cardinal Lapbook & Unit Study
  • Winter Nature Craft: How to Make Easy DIY Bird Feeders

Make Way for Ducklings 2 Ingredient Playdough Invitation to Play

You will need:

  • ½ cup hair conditioner
  • 1 cup cornstarch
  • Blue food coloring
  • Essential oil-optional
Make Way For Ducklings Fun Duck Pond Playdough Invitation to Play

Other fun things to add:

  • Pond themed toys
  • Sticks and pebbles
  • Duck-shaped cookie cutter
  • Letter beads or tiles
  • Small blue glass beads

In a medium-sized bowl stir together hair conditioner and cornstarch.

You will need to get in it with your hands after the initial mixing to make sure everything is combined well.

The texture should be like a very soft marshmallow, if it’s too crumbly add more conditioner, if it’s too wet add a bit more cornstarch.

Make Way For Ducklings Fun Duck Pond Playdough Invitation to Play

Once the texture is good, mix in blue food coloring to get to the color you want.

Make Way For Ducklings Fun Duck Pond Playdough Invitation to Play

If you have a light or unscented conditioner you might want to add a few drops of essential oil to give it a calming scent, lavender is perfect for this making it a relaxing activity.

Remove from the bowl and knead for a few minutes to work food coloring through and improve texture further, I highly recommend gloves at this point.

Make Way For Ducklings Fun Duck Pond Playdough Invitation to Play

To create a duck pond invitation to play, gather pond-themed toys such as these cute little ducks and fun things right from the yard like pebbles and small sticks.

Put them in a small, divided container such as a muffin tin and set them out with your 2 ingredient playdough for a fun sensory and imaginative playtime.

Make Way For Ducklings Fun Duck Pond Playdough Invitation to Play

Your child can recreate the story, make up a new one, or just enjoy the simple playtime with this soft dough and add-ons.

Depending on the age of your child you can also add letter beads or tiles to practice beginning letters for things like duck, pond, hatch, egg, etc. or to spell out the words for older children.

Make Way For Ducklings Fun Duck Pond Playdough Invitation to Play

Leave a CommentFiled Under: Hands-On Activities Tagged With: birds, ducks, elementary science, hands-on, hands-on activities, handson, handsonhomeschooling, life science, science

How to Make an Easy Bird Craft Fun Paper Plate Peacock

April 23, 2023 | Leave a Comment
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

This easy bird craft paper plate peacock is fun to do to celebrate Bird Day. Also, you’ll love my Free Bird Unit Study.

Peacocks are beautiful and easily identifiable.

They make the perfect model for a fun bird craft to include in your studies or just as a stand-alone activity.

How to Make an Easy Bird Craft Fun Paper Plate Peacock

From their long, beautiful train to their unusual cry peacocks are exotic indeed.

Peacocks are also known as peafowls and peahens. The peafowl is a member of the pheasant family.

Facts About Peacocks

Look at some peacock facts.

  • The beautiful brightly colored birds with elegant tails are all males. Further, females (peahens) are a dull brown color, so they blend in with the nest to protect it.
  • The peahen has a weakness for the magnificent display of the males wide fanned train.
  • Peafowl lives between 10 and 25 years in the wild and up to 50 years in captivity.
  • In 1963 peacocks were declared the national bird of India.
  • Peafowls can fly, even with tails that stretch out to 5’ long, but not very far distances.
  • A group of peafowls is called a harem. A male can have up to 5 hens and father as many as 25 chicks.
  • Peacock feathers have microscopic structures that appear like crystals, this is what gives the bright almost fluorescent colors and shimmer.
  • There are only three species of peafowl: Indian, Green, and Congo.
How to Make an Easy Bird Craft Fun Paper Plate Peacock

Also, look at these resources about peacocks.

Books and Resources to Learn About Peacocks

Add one or two of these resources to your study about peacocks.

Image for Unbelievable Pictures and Facts About Peacocks

Unbelievable Pictures and Facts About Peacocks

On average how many years do peacocks live
for? Are peacocks animals which can be kept as pets?

In this book you will explore the wonderful world of peacocks, finding the answers to these questions and so many more. Complete with incredible pictures to keep even the youngest of children captivated, you will all embark on a little journey into the great unknown.

Image for Big Book of Birds

Big Book of Birds

The next Big Book in the series introduces young children to some of the most colorful, magnificent, silly, and surprising feathered creatures from around the world.

Following up the hugely successful The Big Book of Bugs, The Big Book of Beasts, and The Big Book of the Blue, The Big Book of Birds is a fact-filled tour of the world’s most wonderful winged creatures. Yuval Zommer’s distinctive illustrations show off some of the most colorful, flamboyant, impressive, and wacky birds of the sky. Picture-book charm pairs with informative nonfiction to make a beautiful, large-format title for parents to share with young children and for older children to read by themselves.

Image for Natural Peacock Feathers 10"-12" with Eye Peacock Tail Feather

Natural Peacock Feathers 10"-12" with Eye Peacock Tail Feather

100% Genuine natural peacock feathers.

Approximate Size :10-12 inch

Image for Peafowl

Peafowl

An interesting and informative look into the life and behavior of peafowl for young readers.This book covers the physical characteristics, habitat, family life, behavior, and conservation of peafowl.

Image for Can You Dance Like a Peacock?: Encourage Kids to Get Up and Move with this Adorable Animal Book

Can You Dance Like a Peacock?: Encourage Kids to Get Up and Move with this Adorable Animal Book

Can YOU dance like a peacock? Stand up straight, fluff your feathers, stretch your neck, and STRUT STRUT STRUT!

Discover the amazing ways that animals use movement to communicate! Lighthearted text and vibrant illustrations teach readers how honeybees waggle, dolphins splash, and flamingoes march. It even invites kids to get up and try out some animal-inspired dance moves themselves

Next, look at some facts about peacocks in history.

Peacocks in History

Moreover, the Peacock Throne was a famous jeweled throne that was the seat of the emperors of the Mughal Empire in India.

Too, it was commissioned in the early 17th century by Emperor Shah Jahan and was located in the Diwan-i-Khas (Hall of Private Audiences, or Ministers’ Room) in the Red Fort of Delhi.

It was named after a peacock as two peacocks are shown dancing at its rear.

According to Britannica: “It was ascended by silver steps and stood on golden feet set with jewels, and it was backed by representations of two open peacocks’ tails, gilded, enamelled, and inset with diamonds, rubies, and other stones.”

Additionally, in the gardens of India, Rome, and Ancient Greece live peacocks were kept.

According to the Greek Reporter: “The peacock plays a role in ancient Greek mythology as the symbol of the goddess Hera, the consort of Zeus.“

How to Make an Easy Bird Craft Fun Paper Plate Peacock

Peacocks were featured in the royal courts of India for thousands of years.

Peacock and Bird Craft Ideas

  • Need more peacock art? Here is an Easy How to Draw a Peacock Tutorial Video and Peacock Coloring Page.
  • This little Cute Bird Made of Leftover Yarn is going on my to-make-it list.
  • A simple Yarn Wrapped Cardinal Craft not only makes a pretty craft but a great exercise for fine motor skills.
  • Watch What is it? Peacock to learn a little more about this brilliant bird.
  • Make a Tropical Birds Mobile with brightly colored parrots.
  • Little ones will appreciate the simplicity of the Paper & Sidewalk Chalk Baby Bird craft.
  • Listen to these peafowl sounds to get an idea of what this exotic bird sounds like.
  • Try making this Handprint Bald Eagle.
  • These Peacock Montessori Cards are the perfect companion to today’s peacock bird craft, helping your child label the different parts of the bird.

More Easy Bird Craft Ideas and Resources

Also, here are some more fun bird crafts and activities.

  • Free Bird Journal – Hands-on Nature (Coloring & Identification Pages)
  • Free North American Robin Bird Lapbook and Fun Homeschool Unit Study Ideas
  • Bird Craft For Kindergarten Make an Adorable Fun American Robin Foot Print
  • Beautiful Bald Eagle Fun Facts And Torn Paper Bird Craft
  • Free Bird Unit Study and Lapbook And Fun Edible Bird Nests
  • Cardinal Birds in Winter and Birch Trees Easy Watercolor Kids Activity
  • Wildlife in the Amazon Rainforest – Create Fun Macaw and Toucan Crafts
  • How to Make a Fun Paper Mache American Robin Bird Craft
  • How to Make a Kid’s Fun and Easy Bird Nest Activity
  • How to Make an Easy Jumbo Stick Bird Feeder with Kids
  • Hands-On Nature Study: Bird Color Bar Graphing Activity
  • Hands-On Nature Study: Make a Fun Bird Nesting Bag
  • Colorful Winter Bird: Northern Cardinal Lapbook & Unit Study
  • Winter Nature Craft: How to Make Easy DIY Bird Feeders
How to Make an Easy Bird Craft Fun Paper Plate Peacock

You can make your paper plate peacock bird craft as simple or as elaborate as you like.

Add glitter, vibrant paints, and even sequins to dress up your fancy bird.

How to Make a Toilet Roll and Paper Plate Peacock

You will need:

  • Paper plate
  • Empty toilet paper roll
  • Bright craft paints-teal, purple, blue, yellow/gold
  • Paintbrushes
  • Craft feathers
  • Yellow construction paper
  • Black permanent marker
  • Hot glue gun/glue sticks
  • Glitter or sequins-optional

Directions:

Cut the bottom 1” of your paper plate off straight across.

How to Make an Easy Bird Craft Fun Paper Plate Peacock

Paint the entire plate a vibrant teal and set it aside to dry completely.

How to Make an Easy Bird Craft Fun Paper Plate Peacock

Pinch together one end of an empty toilet paper roll and secure with hot glue, and hold in place until cooled and hardened.

How to Make an Easy Bird Craft Fun Paper Plate Peacock

Paint the entire outside of the toilet paper roll with a deep blue for contrast.

How to Make an Easy Bird Craft Fun Paper Plate Peacock

Cut feet and a beak shape from yellow cardstock or construction paper.

How to Make an Easy Bird Craft Fun Paper Plate Peacock

Once the body is dry, glue the beak and feet in place and draw on little black eyes.

How to Make an Easy Bird Craft Fun Paper Plate Peacock

Add a small piece of feather to the top of the back of the head to give him a little crest.

Draw 6-8 lines from the bottom center of the dry plate up to the top to create the quill of the tail feathers.

How to Make an Easy Bird Craft Fun Paper Plate Peacock

Add small little lines up and down either side to represent the loose barbs.

To create the beautiful little eyes on the feathers, press your finger into a shallow puddle of yellow paint and make fingerprints across the top of the barbs.

Add smaller prints of purple and blue on top to form the eye, you can either do it carefully while it’s wet or allow each color to dry in between.

How to Make an Easy Bird Craft Fun Paper Plate Peacock

If you want to add a little sparkle to your peacock, sprinkle a bit of glitter on the paint while it is still wet.

Let everything dry completely.

Finally, hot glue the body to the tail feathers, lining up the bottom so it sits nicely.

How to Make an Easy Bird Craft Fun Paper Plate Peacock

Leave a CommentFiled Under: Hands-On Activities Tagged With: birds, crafts, elementary science, life science, peacock, science, spring, spring crafts

7 Science Garden Ideas and Make a Pizza Container Garden

April 22, 2023 | 1 Comment
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

I’m sharing some fun science garden ideas and a fun pizza container garden. You’ll love more ideas on my page Easy Seeds and Gardening Unit Study for Kids (Middle – Upper Elementary)

Turn a simple interest in gardening into a fun lesson with a great hands-on activity by picking up a couple of fresh herb plants, some soil, and whatever planter you have on hand.

This is a fun garden idea for preschoolers through high schoolers to get involved in, making it the perfect activity for the whole family.

7 Science Garden Ideas and Make a Pizza Container Garden

I have more science garden ideas for homeschooling that you can choose from.

Most families love pizza, so making a from-scratch pizza together, and adding fresh herbs that you grew with your hands makes it that much better.

Besides putting together a fabulous small herb garden you can also let the kids get creative juices flowing by creating their own plant labels to add to the garden as well.

Use this simply as a fun family activity or turn it into a unit study with books, additional gardening activities, cooking, and more.

In Farm Anatomy I found a treasure trove of information like how to grow tomatoes in various ways, tomato varieties, and even how to can tomatoes.

There are plenty of tips like bugs that are good vs. bad bugs for your garden.

And great herb illustrations as well as recipes.

More Science Garden Ideas

Next, look at more ideas to bring gardening, cooking, and science together.

  • How to Make Easy Herb and Olive Oil Garden Bread With Kids
  • How to Plan And Start an Easy Gardening Unit Study for Kids
  • George Washington Carver Fun Peanut Quick Unit Study & Notebooking Pages
  • Gardening Projects For Homeschool Easy Composting With the Amazing Dr. George Carver (Free Printable About Compost)
  • LEGO is good for everything. Check out How to Easily Garden Plan With Kids Using LEGO.
  • This simple activity is great for younger learners- Growing a Seed Activity For Kindergarten Science Kids Activity.
  • Kinder Gardening to Celebrate Nature and Science
  • Keep birds out of your garden with Painted Garden Rocks.
  • Cherokee Garden Pan Bread
  • This dinosaur garden is a fun activity reminiscent of fairy gardens, perfect for little hands.

Additionally, here are some fun books about gardening and ideas.

11 Gardening With Kids Books & Fun Resources

As a true bibliophile no unit study would be complete without a strong list of books to support a topic. Here is a great list for everyone in the family.

Image for Farm Anatomy: The Curious Parts and Pieces of Country Life

Farm Anatomy: The Curious Parts and Pieces of Country Life

Learn the difference between a farrow and a barrow, and what distinguishes a weanling from a yearling. Country and city mice alike will delight in Julia Rothman’s charming illustrated guide to the curious parts and pieces of rural living. Dissecting everything from the shapes of squash varieties to how a barn is constructed and what makes up a beehive to crop rotation patterns, Rothman gives a richly entertaining tour of the quirky details of country life. 

Image for The Garden Classroom: Hands-On Activities in Math, Science, Literacy, and Art

The Garden Classroom: Hands-On Activities in Math, Science, Literacy, and Art

Packed with garden-based activities that promote science, math, reading, writing, imaginative play, and arts and crafts, The Garden Classroom offers a whole year of outdoor play and learning ideas—however big or small your garden.

Image for Up in the Garden and Down in the Dirt:

Up in the Garden and Down in the Dirt:

Explore the secret realm beneath the dirt that brings the world of nature to life: Follow a young girl and her grandmother on a journey through the year planning, planting, and harvesting their garden—and learn about what's happening in the dirt to help make it all happen.Up in the garden, the world is full of green—leaves and sprouts, growing vegetables, ripening fruit. But down in the dirt exists a busy world—earthworms dig, snakes hunt, skunks burrow—populated by all the creatures that make a garden their home

Image for Gardening Lab for Kids: 52 Fun Experiments to Learn, Grow, Harvest, Make, Play, and Enjoy Your Garden

Gardening Lab for Kids: 52 Fun Experiments to Learn, Grow, Harvest, Make, Play, and Enjoy Your Garden

A refreshing source of ideas to help your children learn to grow their own patch of earth, Gardening Lab for Kids encourages children to get outside and enjoy nature. This fun and creative book features 52 plant-related activities set into weekly lessons, beginning with learning to read maps to find your heat zone, moving through seeds, soil, composting, and then creating garden art and appreciating your natural surroundings.

Image for The Ultimate Guide to Gardening: Grow Your Own Indoor, Vegetable, Fairy, and Other Great Gardens

The Ultimate Guide to Gardening: Grow Your Own Indoor, Vegetable, Fairy, and Other Great Gardens

Whether inside or outside, decorative or edible, this book is full of gardening projects large and small. Easy-to-follow, step-by-step instructions are accompanied by photographs that guide the aspiring gardening through planting all kinds of gardens.

Image for Kids Gardening Set

Kids Gardening Set

MONTESSORI FOR TODDLERS: Our gardening tool set encourages kids to play outside & learn about plants, nature & sustainability. Perfect for the yard and sand box.

OUTDOOR LEARNING ACTIVITIES: Our Kids Garden Set is great for Occupational Therapy & Developing Fine Motor Skills. Suitable for Boys and girls.

Image for Do-It-Yourself Garden Research Handbook - The Thinking Tree: How to Design, Plant, & Care for Your Own Garden! Homeschooling Science, Nature & Home Economics

Do-It-Yourself Garden Research Handbook - The Thinking Tree: How to Design, Plant, & Care for Your Own Garden! Homeschooling Science, Nature & Home Economics

A Gardening Research Workbook & Planning Guide for Teens, Kids and Families! Perfect for Homeschooling Science, Nature Study, Botany and Home Economics!

Designed for teens, but perfect for Ages 9+ (Younger students will need some extra help).

Image for Raised Garden Bed Wood Planter Boxes Outdoor for Kids with Legs

Raised Garden Bed Wood Planter Boxes Outdoor for Kids with Legs

{Raised Garden Bed for Kids} We designed the children raised garden bed carefully, so that your children can feel the happiness of plant growth and the magic of natural life. Our raised garden bed deep enough to provide your plants and vegetables with ample room to breathe and grow healthy.

Image for From Seed to Plant

From Seed to Plant

Flowers, trees, fruits—plants are all around us, but where do they come from?  With simple language and bright illustrations, non-fiction master Gail Gibbons introduces young readers to the processes of pollination, seed formation, and germination.  Important vocabulary is reinforced with accessible explanation and colorful, clear diagrams showing the parts of plants, the wide variety of seeds, and how they grow.  The book includes instructions for a seed-growing project, and a page of interesting facts about plants, seeds, and flowers.   A nonfiction classic, and a perfect companion for early science lessons and curious young gardeners.

Image for National Geographic Readers: Seed to Plant

National Geographic Readers: Seed to Plant

Kids see plants, flowers, and trees around them every day. In this lively and educational reader, they'll learn how those plants grow. Kids will take this magical journey from seed pollination to plant growth, learning about what plants need to thrive and grow with the same careful text, brilliant photographs, and the fun approach National Geographic Readers are known for.

Image for Oh Say Can You Seed? All About Flowering Plants

Oh Say Can You Seed? All About Flowering Plants

An easy and fun introduction to plant biology! With the able assistance of Thing 1 and Thing 2 - the Cat in the Hat explores the world of plants. Kids will learn about the various parts of plants, seeds, and flowers; basic photosynthesis and pollination; and seed dispersal.

Next, look at this fun gardening idea of doing a pizza container garden.

7 Science Garden Ideas and Make a Pizza Container Garden

Now, you can absolutely start your herb and vegetable garden from seeds but for new gardeners, I highly suggest that you start with plants.

How to Make Pizza Herb Garden

This helps keep the kids excited about the project as it speeds up the time from planting to harvest quite a bit.

You will need the following:

  • Basil Plant
  • Oregano Plant
  • Pepper Plant
  • Tomato Plant
  • Potting Soil
  • Large or multiple containers for planting
  • Wood craft sticks
  • Sharpie markers

Directions:

Start with a good-sized container with drainage holes.

Fill the container ¾ of the way with potting soil.

Press the tomato cage down into the soil so that it is secure.

Since I used a container that wouldn’t allow enough of the supports to go in, I bent the ends up about 5” and pressed it in the soil nearly to the bottom.

7 Science Garden Ideas and Make a Pizza Container Garden

Carefully remove each plant from the pot and spread it out around your container.

You don’t want to overcrowd your pot. They may be small now, but plants will grow quickly with proper care.

For the tomato plant, you want to put it inside the cage, laying on its side up to the first set of leaves.

7 Science Garden Ideas and Make a Pizza Container Garden

Add your other herbs, spacing them as far apart as you can.

7 Science Garden Ideas and Make a Pizza Container Garden

Looking good already, right?

7 Science Garden Ideas and Make a Pizza Container Garden

Water until the soil is soaked.

7 Science Garden Ideas and Make a Pizza Container Garden

Paint each craft stick a fun color to help them last a little longer outdoors, allowing them to dry completely.

Write out the names of your plants onto the craft stick with permanent markers or paint pens, let them get creative, and draw pictures or simple doodles on them if they want.

Add your labels to the plants in the pots to keep track.

For the first week or two you will want to make sure that your water well every day.

After that several times a week, keep an eye out for weeds.

Even in a container, weeds will make their way through draining holes or some spread seeds by floating.

7 Science Garden Ideas and Make a Pizza Container Garden

1 CommentFiled Under: Hands-On Activities Tagged With: earthscience, garden, gardening, hands-on, hands-on activities, handsonhomeschooling, life science, science

Learn About African Art For Children And Make Fun Djembe Drums

April 19, 2023 | Leave a Comment
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

If you’re learning about African art for children, you’ll love learning about djembe drums. Also, look at my pages Free Africa Unit Study for Kids Who Love Hands-on Learning | Free Continent & Country Reports and How to Make a Kids’ Fun Ceremonial African Tribal Mask for more ideas.

African Art, whether modern or historical, covers a wide range of items from elaborate masks to colorful jewelry, to bronze structure and instruments like the djembe drums.

The art of Africa tells powerful stories of culture, people, customs, animals, clothing, and history.

Learn About African Art For Children And Make Fun Djembe Drums

The djembe pronounced (GEM-bay) is one of West Africa’s most well-known instruments.

 It is a goblet-shaped drum and carved from a single piece of African hardwood.

A piece of dried animal skin functions as the drumhead.

The carvings and decorations on the djembe drums depict African designs, ceremonial tribal art, and imagery that tell stories and fables handed down through the ages.

Facts About African Art for Children

  • Masks were an important part of African art. Besides the art of designing mask, they were used with dance to create a type of performance art.
  • African masks are estimated to be over 20,000 years old.
  • Ancient African civilizations often made their jewelry from gold, gems, shells, and other materials.
  • African art is created in three dimensions.
  • Rock art is the earliest form of African art.
  • African art was made for more than just beauty. The art was used in everyday life like clothing, masks, jewelry, baskets, and dishes.

Also, here are more facts about Senegal and Gambia where djembe drums are more common.

Facts about Senegal and Gambia

To make a djembe drum often used in Senegalese and Gambian music, a hollow frame is carved out of a tree trunk.

Then, metal rings were used to stretch the animal skin over the top of the drum.

The sound and tone of the drums is made by twisting strings attached to the metal rings.

Drums have played an important part in West Africa societies.

Music is part of a larger ceremony which normally includes dance and storytelling.

Songs mark important stages in life.

  • Gambia is named after the Gambia River. The river’s banks are covered with mangrove swamps.
  • The main religion of the Gambia is Islam.
  • Since Britain once ruled Gambia, the main language is English.
  • Dakar is the capital city of Senegal and about 80% of the people are Muslim as well.
  • Only 40% of the people of Senegal can read and write. There are no government programs to help the poor.
  • Listen to the beautiful African drum music.

More Facts about the Geography of West Africa

  • West Africa has 19 countries and has the largest number of nations in Africa.
  • Some of the countries border the Atlantic Ocean and the countries between the Sahara Desert and coastal countries.
  • Some of the landscape consists of the desert, rain forest and coastal plains.
  • West Africa is famous for music and the arts.

Resources to Learn About Egypt in Northeast Africa

Additionally, you’ll love these other resources to learn about Egypt.

  • 7 Fun Ways to Play Go Fish Egyptian Games for Kids
  • Ancient Egypt DIY Simple and Fun Mummification Process Game
  • Egypt Crafts For Kindergarten Create a Fun Kid Sized Mummy
  • Fun Pharaohs and Queens Ancient Egypt Lapbook and Activities
  • Hands-On Ancient Egypt Craft: Create Canopic Jars
  • 11 Easy Hands-On Ancient Egypt Projects for Middle School.
  • Hands-on Ancient Egypt: Israelite Mud Bricks for Kids
  • Free Ancient Egypt Mehen Printable Board Game (Hands-on History)

Next, look at some of these books to add to your curriculum.

13 Resources for Children Studying About Africa

Add one or two of these books to your study about the art of Africa.

Image for Africa For Kids: People, Places and Cultures - Children Explore The World Books

Africa For Kids: People, Places and Cultures - Children Explore The World Books

Africa For Kids: People, Places, Culture gives children not only a peek into the land and its people but the artwork of even simple everyday items like weaving and serving plates.

Image for Africa Coloring Book For Kids!

Africa Coloring Book For Kids!

Here is a coloring book filled with African souvenirs to color that is soothing and a great springboard for discussion.

Image for African Patterns Scrapbook Paper

African Patterns Scrapbook Paper

I found this beautiful book of African Patterned Scrapbook paper that can be used for many craft projects.

Image for Africa, Amazing Africa: Country by Country

Africa, Amazing Africa: Country by Country

Atinuke’s first non-fiction title is a major publishing event: a celebration of all 55 countries on the African continent! Her beautifully-written text captures Africa’s unique mix of the modern and the traditional, as she explores its geography, its peoples, its animals, its history, its resources and its cultural diversity. The book divides Africa into five sections: South, East, West, Central and North, each with its own introduction. This is followed by a page per country, containing a delightful mix of friendly, informative text and colourful illustrations.

Image for Africa Is Not a Country

Africa Is Not a Country

Enter into the daily life of children in the many countries of modern Africa. Countering stereotypes, Africa Is Not a Country celebrates the extraordinary diversity of this vibrant continent as experienced by children at home, at school, at work, and at play.

Image for The Water Princess

The Water Princess

With its wide sky and warm earth, Princess Gie Gie’s kingdom is a beautiful land. But clean drinking water is scarce in her small African village. And try as she might, Gie Gie cannot bring the water closer; she cannot make it run clearer. Every morning, she rises before the sun to make the long journey to the well. Instead of a crown, she wears a heavy pot on her head to collect the water. After the voyage home, after boiling the water to drink and clean with, Gie Gie thinks of the trip that tomorrow will bring. And she dreams. She dreams of a day when her village will have cool, crystal-clear water of its own.

Image for Ashanti to Zulu: African Traditions (Picture Puffin Books)

Ashanti to Zulu: African Traditions (Picture Puffin Books)

Artists Leo and Diane Dillon won their second consecutive Caldecott Medal for this stunning ABC of African culture. "Another virtuoso performance. . . . Such an astute blend of aesthetics and information is admirable, the child's eye will be rewarded many times over."

Image for When Stars Are Scattered

When Stars Are Scattered

Omar and his brother Hassan, two Somali boys, have spent a long time in the Dadaab refugee camp. Separated from their mother, they are looked after by a friendly stranger. Life in the camp isn't always easy. The hunger is constant . . . but there's football to look forward to, and now there's a chance Omar will get to go to school . . .With a heart-wrenching fairytale ending, this incredible true story is brought to life by Victoria's stunning illustrations. This book perfectly depicts life in a refugee camp for 8-12 year olds.

Image for The Boy Who Harnessed the Wind, Young Reader's Edition

The Boy Who Harnessed the Wind, Young Reader's Edition

When a terrible drought struck William Kamkwamba's tiny village in Malawi, his family lost all of the season's crops, leaving them with nothing to eat and nothing to sell. William began to explore science books in his village library, looking for a solution. There, he came up with the idea that would change his family's life forever: he could build a windmill. Made out of scrap metal and old bicycle parts, William's windmill brought electricity to his home and helped his family pump the water they needed to farm the land. Retold for a younger audience, this exciting memoir shows how, even in a desperate situation, one boy's brilliant idea can light up the world. Complete with photographs, illustrations, and an epilogue that will bring readers up to date on William's story, this is the perfect edition to read and share with the whole family.

Image for Things Fall Apart

Things Fall Apart

Things Fall Apart is the first of three novels in Chinua Achebe's critically acclaimed African Trilogy. It is a classic narrative about Africa's cataclysmic encounter with Europe as it establishes a colonial presence on the continent. Told through the fictional experiences of Okonkwo, a wealthy and fearless Igbo warrior of Umuofia in the late 1800s, Things Fall Apart explores one man's futile resistance to the devaluing of his Igbo traditions by British political andreligious forces and his despair as his community capitulates to the powerful new order. With more than 20 million copies sold and translated into fifty-seven languages, Things Fall Apart provides one of the most illuminating and permanent monuments to African experience. Achebe does not only capture life in a pre-colonial African village, he conveys the tragedy of the loss of that world while broadening our understanding of our contemporary realities.

Image for Wildlife of East Africa (Princeton Pocket Guides, 3)

Wildlife of East Africa (Princeton Pocket Guides, 3)

Those looking for a concise yet informative, visually breathtaking yet affordable East African safari need look no further than this spectacular field guide. Featuring full-color photos of 475 common species of bird, mammal, snake, lizard, insect, tree, and flower, Wildlife of East Africa takes us on an exquisite one-volume tour through the living splendor of the main national parks and game reserves of Kenya, Tanzania, and Uganda. Many of the species included--from pelicans to plovers, ostriches to elephants, from the daintiest of antelopes to cattlelike giants, from leopards to lions, baboons to gorillas, chameleons to crocodiles, acacias to aloes--also inhabit neighboring countries. The selection was based on the personal experiences of the authors, wildlife experts who have been leading safaris in the region for more than twenty years.

Image for Facing the Lion: Growing Up Maasai on the African Savanna

Facing the Lion: Growing Up Maasai on the African Savanna

Heads up: this is a great book but there is a rite of passage and has a part about circumcision.

Joseph Lemasolai Lekuton gives American kids a firsthand look at growing up in Kenya as a member of a tribe of nomads whose livelihood centers on the raising and grazing of cattle. Readers share Lekuton's first encounter with a lion, the epitome of bravery in the warrior tradition. They follow his mischievous antics as a young Maasai cattle herder, coming-of-age initiation, boarding school escapades, soccer success, and journey to America for college. Lekuton's riveting text combines exotic details of nomadic life with the universal experience and emotions of a growing boy.

Image for The Bitter Side of Sweet

The Bitter Side of Sweet

Fifteen-year-old Amadou counts the things that matter. For two years what has mattered are the number of cacao pods he and his younger brother, Seydou, can chop down in a day. The higher the number the safer they are. The higher the number the closer they are to paying off their debt and returning home. Maybe. The problem is Amadou doesn’t know how much he and Seydou owe, and the bosses won’t tell him. The boys only wanted to make money to help their impoverished family, instead they were tricked into forced labor on a plantation in the Ivory Coast. With no hope of escape, all they can do is try their best to stay alive—until Khadija comes into their lives. She’s the first girl who’s ever come to camp, and she’s a wild thing. She fights bravely every day, attempting escape again and again, reminding Amadou what it means to be free. But finally, the bosses break her, and what happens next to the brother he has always tried to protect almost breaks Amadou. The three band together as family and try just once more to escape.

Moreover, add some of these hands-on activities to learn about Africa.

Hands-on Activities to Learn about Africa

Start by having your child identify West Africa on a map, where the Djembe drums are from.

Use the map or globe to identify different areas where various art comes from.

  • Make a salt dough map of Africa to learn to identify the continent and its countries.
  • Create a beautifully Painted African House  craft.
  • Make a Kente cloth with simple paper weaving.
  • How to Make a Kids’ Fun Ceremonial African Tribal Mask
  • This African Sunset Art is a nice addition to your learning about Africa.
  • Make and then play your own Mancala game that is native to Africa.
  • Here you can build your own African Thumb piano to make native music.
  • A Clay African Basket is a great activity for all ages.
Learn About African Art For Children And Make Fun Djembe Drums

Finally, let’s make some fun African art for children.

How to Make Djembe Drums With Kids

You will need:

  • 2 plastic cups
  • Tan tissue paper
  • Twine
  • School glue
  • Markers or paint
  • Hot glue gun/sticks

Directions:

Hot glue two cups bottom to bottom with a generous amount of glue.

Be careful not to touch the metal nozzle of your glue gun to the plastic cup or it will melt them and high temp glue guns can as well.

Hold in place until the glue cools and it is secure.

Also, let younger children tape them with masking tape. You want to involve them in the project from start to finish.

Learn About African Art For Children And Make Fun Djembe Drums

Mix 1 part water to 2 parts school glue to make mod podge.

Paint glue mixture onto the top couple inches of one of the cups and wrap a piece of tissue paper over it to cover.

Learn About African Art For Children And Make Fun Djembe Drums

Brush the glue mixture over the top of the tissue to form the drumskin. Be careful not to poke through. It will strengthen after it is dry.

Repeat the layering of tissue paper glue over just the top 2 more times.

Cover the remainder of the drum with tissue paper.

First, brush the glue mixture over the surface then pressing in tissue,and finally coat all over the top of the tissue with glue again.

Two to three coats are plenty.

Learn About African Art For Children And Make Fun Djembe Drums

Allow the glue to dry well all over the entire surface before going on to the next step.

Afterwards, once the glue is dry it is time to add the beautiful colors and patterns using either permanent markers, paint, paintbrush, or paint markers.  

Markers work very well and dry quickly.

Learn About African Art For Children And Make Fun Djembe Drums

Once done, wrap twine around the top edge, center, and bottom.

Next, hold it into place with hot glue.

Learn About African Art For Children And Make Fun Djembe Drums

Your drum is ready to use.

The hardened glue makes it stronger.

Finally, it will hold up to gentle drumming. But it is meant for display.

Learn About African Art For Children And Make Fun Djembe Drums

Leave a CommentFiled Under: Hands-On Activities Tagged With: Africa, art, crafts, hands on history, hands-on, hands-on activities, handson, handsonhomeschooling, history, history resources, homeschoolhistory

Celebrate Arbor Day With A Fun Flowering Cherry Tree Activity

April 12, 2023 | Leave a Comment
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

Celebrate Arbor Day with this fun tree activity. Also, grab more ideas to study trees on my page Famous and Historic Trees Fun Nature and History Homeschool Unit Study.

Arbor Day is celebrated every year on the last Friday in April. But what exactly is Arbor Day?

Arbor Day is a day of observance where people as groups or on their own are encouraged to plant trees.

Celebrate Arbor Day With A Fun Flowering Cherry Tree Activity

Celebrating Arbor Day is the perfect time to work on a little tree study.

You can find an event, buy a tree to be planted, or donate to the Arbor Day Foundation.

You can cover trees in general or learn about a specific tree.

Washington DC Cherry Trees Facts

Today we are going to learn about and create a craft based on the flowering cherry trees.

For example, we’re going to create one like the beautiful ones you see lining the waterway in East Potomac Park Washington DC.

First, look at some facts about cherry trees.

  • The peak bloom generally occurs around April 4th but does vary from year to year. Be sure you check the estimates here at the national cherry blossom festival before planning a trip to DC to see the blossoms.
  • Originally there were 3,020 trees of 12 different varieties.
  • In 1910 Japan presented the trees as a gift of friendship to the American people.
  • There are approximately 3,800 cherry trees within the park.
  • The Yoshino and Kwanzan are the most common types now in Washington DC.
  • Most cherry trees tend to have a short lifespan, around 15-30 years. Black cherry trees, however, can live up to 250 years.
  • It’s against the law to pick cherry blossoms in Washington DC, sorry no souvenirs.
  • This year is the 104th anniversary of the Cherry Blossom Festival.

Then, here are a few facts about the history of cherry trees.

History of Cherry Trees

Additionally, it’s fun to learn about the history of how the cherry trees came to the U.S.

  • In 1876, during the American Revolution Centennial Year, the area bordering the Potomac River, where the beautiful Japanese flowering cherry trees now stand, encompassed one of the least desirable locations in Washington, D.C. (See The Japanese Flowering Trees of Washington, D.C.)
  • This area was a dreary swamp not far fromthe White House where weeds flourished and mosquitoes bred, causing many health problems.
  • The cherry blossom is the national flower of Japan.
  • Samurai warriors were fond of cherry blossoms. Moreover, look at my Medieval Japan Unit Study and Lapbook to learn more about the Samurai and Japan.
  • Because of the short life of the cherry blossom Samurai warriors felt they embodied their duty to their master to die at a moment’s notice.
  • The high regard in which the flowering cherry tree is held is reflected in all aspects of the culture, life, land literature of the Japanese people.
  • Through the ages, the Japanese have equated the brief transient beauty of the cherry blossom with that of the human life:
    • Yo no naka wa
      Mikka minu ma ni
      Sakura kana
      (Life is short, like the three day
      glory of the cherry hlossom.)
  • Sakura means cherry blossom.

Listen to this beautiful Japanese folk song Cherry Blossoms.

Next, here are some ideas for hands-on fun.

Hands-on Tree Activities

If you want a few more fun hands-on ideas or even a few unit studies to pull together your own tree study, look at these below.

Celebrate Arbor Day With A Fun Flowering Cherry Tree Activity
  • Make an easy Tissue Paper Apple Tree Craft.
  • Work on fine motor skills with this Yarn-Wrapped Blossoming Spring Tree
  • Create a stunning Four Seasons Tree Painting
  • Combine Nature Anatomy and plastic toy trees to study different types of trees, shapes, leaves, and more.
  • Older children will love putting together a LEGO Bonsai or have them create the alternate build of a cherry tree to build fine motor skills, following directions, planning, and so much more.
  • You can also use them as inspiration for drawing.

More Hands-on Activities for Learning About Cherry Trees

Add some of these fun hands-on activities for your younger kids when learning about trees or cherry trees.

Image for LEGO Icons Bonsai Tree

LEGO Icons Bonsai Tree

Features a bonsai tree model with a rectangular pot and a slatted wood-effect stand, made of LEGO elements, designed for adults

Includes interchangeable pieces so you can style the artificial plant with classic green leaves or vibrant pink cherry blossom blooms,

Image for Realistic Plastic Trees for Kids Sensory Bins

Realistic Plastic Trees for Kids Sensory Bins

8PCS Replica of Mini Tree Toy Set:pine, elm, juniper, topiary, petticoat, aspen, and 2 maples.Suitable for boys and girls over 6 years old,good for brain ability and imagination.

Image for Early Childhood Education Building Blocks Wooden Assembling Tree

Early Childhood Education Building Blocks Wooden Assembling Tree

Carykon tree-shaped wooden blocks

Material: Made of environmentally friendly wood, no burrs, no peculiar smell, bright colors and can be assembled at will (warm reminder: this product is recommended for children over 5 years old)

Additionally, here are more tree activities for kids of all ages below.

More Tree Activities With Kids

Also, look at these other ways to incorporate more fun and learning about trees in your homeschool day.

Grab mty lapbook about historic trees and add to your tree unit study.

  • Dynamic Famous and Historic Trees Lapbook for Multiple Ages

    Dynamic Famous and Historic Trees Lapbook for Multiple Ages

    $4.00
    Add to cart
  • Cardinal Birds in Winter and Birch Trees Easy Watercolor Kids Activity
  • Famous and Historic Trees Fun Nature and History Homeschool Unit Study
  • Hands-On Literature Nature Study: Simple Tree Craft
  • Homeschool Kindergarten Life Science – Hands-on Fun Nature Tree Study
Celebrate Arbor Day With A Fun Flowering Cherry Tree Activity

Now, let’s make this cherry tree activity.

How to Make a Toilet Roll Cherry Tree Activity

You will need:

  • 2 toilet paper rolls
  • Pink, white, and light green tissue paper
  • Brown paint
  • School glue
  • Paintbrush
  • Pencil with an eraser
  • Scissors

Paint one empty toilet paper roll brown on the inside.

Then paint the other brown inside and outside of the roll. Allow them to dry completely.

Celebrate Arbor Day With A Fun Flowering Cherry Tree Activity

While you are waiting for the trunk of the tree to dry make your flowers and leaves.

Tear up very small bits of pink and light green tissue paper about the size of an adult thumbprint.

Celebrate Arbor Day With A Fun Flowering Cherry Tree Activity

Place the eraser end of a pencil on each little bit of tissue paper and twist.

Also, you could also just ball up each piece as well but I like the little texture and shape it makes twisting it.

Celebrate Arbor Day With A Fun Flowering Cherry Tree Activity

Once your toilet paper rolls are dry cut strips about ¼” wide halfway down. Cutting some a little more and some a little less, these will become your branches.

Celebrate Arbor Day With A Fun Flowering Cherry Tree Activity

Slide the cut roll into the uncut roll and secure it with glue. Hot glue will set faster.

Celebrate Arbor Day With A Fun Flowering Cherry Tree Activity

Roll to curve each one down at slightly different levels.

Celebrate Arbor Day With A Fun Flowering Cherry Tree Activity

Add dots of glue to the top and underside of each branch.

Celebrate Arbor Day With A Fun Flowering Cherry Tree Activity

Press flowers and leaves into each dab of glue. Add more glue and flowers as needed to create a full tree.

You can repeat this technique with different colors of leaves and or flowers to create other types of trees as well.

Celebrate Arbor Day With A Fun Flowering Cherry Tree Activity

Leave a CommentFiled Under: Hands-On Activities

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