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Free Bird Journal – Hands-on Nature (Coloring & Identification Pages)

April 11, 2023 | 20 Comments
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

Last year when spring rolled around, I shared a free Bird Journal along with a Bird Identification page. Also, grab more information about birds on my page Hands-on Bird Unit Study and Lapbook.

Tiny had been coloring birds for a few years before I shared it last year. 

Also, I wanted something that could be used both as a coloring journal AND to print a page over and over when we identified birds.

Free Bird Journal - Hands-on Nature (Coloring & Identification Pages)

So this free printable bird journal includes the following pages.

  • Colorful front page for your journal
  • owl coloring page
  • raptor or hawk coloring page
  • cardinals coloring page
  • heron coloring page
  • emeral toucan coloring page
  • spoonbill coloring page
  • sulphur crested cockatoo coloring page
  • cross bill coloring page
  • bob white coloring page
  • quetzal coloring page
  • vulture coloring page
  • song sparrow coloring page
  • catbird coloring page and
  • a beautiful Bird Identification Page which you can print over and over as your children discover new birds

Grab this free and fun Bird Journal which includes high quality coloring pages and bird identification page which allows plenty of room for sketching and noting birding details. CLICK HERE to grab it!

So this year and as all kids do, he has grown up a bit more and wanted the Bird Identification page changed around to allow room for a larger sketch and less coloring.

Free Bird Journal - Hands-on Nature (Coloring & Identification Pages)

Moreover, in the download I included a “field guide” page.

Just add the field page into a page protector and add to your notebook.

Using a 3 ring notebook worked best for us so could keep adding to it each year.

Free Bird Journal - Hands-on Nature (Coloring & Identification Pages). Last year when spring rolled around, I shared a free Bird Journal along with a Bird Identification page. Also, grab more information about birds on my page Hands-on Bird Unit Study and Lapbook. Also, I wanted something that could be used both as a coloring journal AND to print a page over and over when we identified birds. Free front page for your bird journal and coloring pages with bird identification key. Free 16 pages,

Additionally, if you want to delve into more spring learning look at the NaturExplorers.

Our Journey Westward

However because I know you still may have younger sweeties and kids who probably like to color, I have added a few more bird coloring pages to the Bird Journal.

Free Bird Journal

I also updated the Bird Identification page to allow room for a larger sketch and to use for an older child.

Free Bird Journal - Hands-on Nature (Coloring & Identification Pages). Last year when spring rolled around, I shared a free Bird Journal along with a Bird Identification page. Also, grab more information about birds on my page Hands-on Bird Unit Study and Lapbook. Also, I wanted something that could be used both as a coloring journal AND to print a page over and over when we identified birds. Free front page for your bird journal and coloring pages with bird identification key. Free 16 pages,

We want to get in the habit of bird watching year around so I created this page so that the season could be easily marked when we’re bird watching. 

Free Bird Journal - Hands-on Nature (Coloring & Identification Pages)

More Fun Learning About Birds Activities

Also, I have so many fun activities for your kids to learn about birds.

  • Free Bird Unit Study and Lapbook And Fun Edible Bird Nests
  • North American Robin Bird Lapbook and Fun Homeschool Unit Study Ideas
  • Bird Craft For Kindergarten Make an Adorable Fun American Robin Foot Print
  • Bald Eagle Fun Facts And Torn Paper Bird Craft
  • 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
  • Kid’s Fun and Easy Bird Nest Activity
  • Easy Jumbo Stick Bird Feeder with Kids
  • Bird Color Bar Graphing Activity
  • Make a Fun Bird Nesting Bag
  • Colorful Winter Bird: Northern Cardinal Lapbook & Unit Study
  • Easy and Fun Nature Study: Beautiful Birds
  • Winter Nature Craft: How to Make Easy DIY Bird Feeders

But we only seem to do it when we have spring fever.

Grab this free and fun Bird Journal which includes high quality coloring pages and bird identification page which allows plenty of room for sketching and noting birding details. CLICK HERE to grab it!

More Coloring Pages

  • 20 Fun Home School Education Coloring Books to Pair With Unit Studies

In addition, add some fun bird books to use as referenced for the bird journal.

11 Fun Resources and Books to Learn About North American Robin Birds

Studying about North American Robin birds is fun to do anytime of the year with all ages. You'll love adding one ore more of these resources to your study.

Image for 1. All About Robins

1. All About Robins

A robin is one of the most familiar and beloved of all birds that are found throughout North America. You may see robins running across lawns or going after earthworms in your yard or a park. You can also find robins by listening for their clear, melodic singing.There are many facts about robins that most people don’t know. If your children have ever wondered about robins and how they grow from chicks to adult birds, this book is for them. The book contains dozens of beautiful photos of robins from the time they first hatch, to when their mother feeds them, until they take their first flight. It also includes many little-known facts that are sure to captivate young naturalists.

Image for 2. Model Backyard Birds Toys

2. Model Backyard Birds Toys

Set of bird figurine toys, which contains 7 different small plastic birds. The weight of bird figure toy is 96G / 0.2LB. The set of small plastic bird contains 7 pieces of toy birds, such as robin, bluebird, oriole, woodpecker, etc. Please refer to the picture for the actual size and color.

Image for 3. Big Book of Birds

3. Big Book of Birds

The book draws in children and parents alike with captivating information about and charming illustrations of hummingbirds, peacocks, flamingos, bald eagles, secretary birds, puffins, red-crowned cranes, and more. The book also invites young bird-watchers to protect birds where they live and make their gardens bird-friendly. The text is chatty, funny, and full of remarkable facts.

Image for 4. A Nest Full of Eggs (Let's-Read-and-Find-Out Science 1)

4. A Nest Full of Eggs (Let's-Read-and-Find-Out Science 1)

Named a Best Children's Science Book of the Year by Science Books & Films, this picture book shows how the birds develop inside their eggs during the spring; how they mature into fledglings in the summer; how they learn to fly in the fall; and how they leave for warmer climates in winter—only to return when spring comes around again.

Image for 5. BACKYARD BIRDSONG GUIDE EASTERN AND CENT (cl) (Cornell Lab of Ornithology)

5. BACKYARD BIRDSONG GUIDE EASTERN AND CENT (cl) (Cornell Lab of Ornithology)

Suitable for beginning bird watchers, Backyard Birdsongs is an interactive handbook of birds and their songs. With a touch-button electronic module that contains common vocalizations of seventy-five species from across eastern and central North America, this volume offers a truly sensory way to identify and get to know local birds. Crisply detailed, scientifically accurate illustrations accompany each entry, and up-to-date range maps provide clear geographical reference points. With an introduction that will inspire readers to look out their windows and venture into the field, this unique book gives people of all ages an exciting entryway into the subtle art of using birdsong to identify birds.

Image for 6. A Nest for Celeste: A Story About Art, Inspiration, and the Meaning of Home (Nest for Celeste, 1)

6. A Nest for Celeste: A Story About Art, Inspiration, and the Meaning of Home (Nest for Celeste, 1)

Beautifully illustrated with hundreds of black-and-white drawings, A Nest for Celeste is a short novel that tells the story a mouse living in the 1800s and his friendship with John James Audubon’s young apprentice. While enjoying this sweet amd appealing story, young readers will also learn about nineteenth-century plantation life and the famous naturalist who was known for his paintings of birds and American wildlife.

Image for 7. An Egg Is Quiet: (Picture Book, Kids Book about Eggs)

7. An Egg Is Quiet: (Picture Book, Kids Book about Eggs)

This stunningly beautiful and wonderfully informative book from award-winning artist Sylvia Long and author Dianna Hutts Aston makes for a fascinating introduction to the vast and amazing world of eggs. Featuring poetic text and an elegant design, this acclaimed book teaches children countless interesting facts about eggs. Full of wit and charm, An Egg Is Quiet will at once spark the imagination and cultivate a love of science.

Image for 8. Robins!: How They Grow Up

8. Robins!: How They Grow Up

Robins are the most familiar and beloved of all birds, found throughout North America and celebrated as one of the first signs of spring. But there's a lot about them that most people don’t know! In this visually stunning picture book that features comic-book panels combined with painterly illustrations, Eileen Christelow tells the story of two young robins’ first year, and reveals plenty of little-known facts that are sure to captivate young naturalists. Narrated with humor and filled with kid-pleasing details, this fascinating account of how robins grow up includes an Author’s Note, Glossary, More About Robins, and Sources.

Image for 9. Rob the Robin: A Tale of a Feathered Friend

9. Rob the Robin: A Tale of a Feathered Friend

Join Rob the Robin on his adventure as he discovers first the difficulty of surviving a long winter and then the wonders of spring. Written as an early reader, this tale is sure to delight children with captivating photography and pictures that visually tell the story in such a way that will interest both readers and non-readers alike.

Image for 10. The American Robin

10. The American Robin

In this book, Roland Wauer offers a complete natural history of the American Robin for a popular audience. Combining his own observations as a field naturalist with data gleaned from the scientific literature, he described the American Robin from every angle - appearance and biology, distribution, behavior, life cycle, and enemies and threats. In addition, he explores the legends and lore surrounding robins ("Whoever kills a robin redbreast will never have good luck were they to live a thousand years") and offers suggestions for attracting robins to your yard with favorite food, water, landscape plantings, and nesting places.

Image for 11. American Robin Plush Authentic Bird Sound

11. American Robin Plush Authentic Bird Sound

Kids and adults love this bird stuffed animal and are captivated by its realistic sound. They are also great baby toys and used as sensory toys. With one squeeze, Audubon birds produce beautifully authentic bird calls provided by the Cornell lab of Ornithology’s bird recording archives.

Are y’all planning any special project for spring?

How to Get the Free Bird Journal

Now, how to grab the free bird journal. This is a subscriber freebie.

 1) Sign up on my list.
 2) Download your freebie NOW!
 3) Last, look for all my emails in your inbox. Glad to have you following me!

20 CommentsFiled Under: 1. My FREE Learning Printables {Any Topic}, Free Homeschool Resources Tagged With: birdjournal, freeprintables, hands-on, hands-on activities, handson, handsonhomeschooling, homeschoolscience, middleschool, nature study, science, sciencecurriculum, spring

How to Make Easy Herb and Olive Oil Garden Bread With Kids

March 29, 2023 | Leave a Comment
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

Today we’re doing some fun hands-on learning with this herb and olive oil garden bread. And if you’re looking for another fun recipe look here at Cherokee Garden Pan Bread and look at my page  Easy Seeds and Gardening Unit Study for Kids (Middle – Upper Elementary) for more garden ideas.

Cooking and baking are some of the best ways to teach your child without any kind of textbook or formal classroom setting.

The lessons they learn, not to mention the memories you make together, are substantial.

Since it is spring and many of us have at least simple gardens, like herb gardens, I thought we would work on an herb garden bread.

This is a perfect recipe for the whole family to prepare and enjoy together.

How to Make Easy Herb and Olive Oil Garden Bread With Kids

If you don’t have a garden with fresh herbs, just pick a few up from the store farmers market, or grab them in pots.

And place a few in your window to grow.

You don’t need a sizable garden for herbs.

Gardening is another great way to teach your child some important skills and life lessons.

Homeschool Cooking

 Even if you don’t have the space for a large garden consider trying out a few things in pots.

Cooking teaches practical life skills:

  • following directions,
  • knife skills,
  • food prep planning,
  • budgeting,
  • kitchen safety,
  • sanitation, and nutrition.

And it introduces and increases knowledge of different cuisines (which can become a quick geography lesson).

This one is a lesson in patience as you must wait a bit for the bread to rise.

Don’t forget that cooking also provides reading, math, and science lessons as well.

This recipe offers all the above and if you want to get even more intentional you can include cookbooks and other food-related books in the “lesson”.

Easy Curriculum for Cooking

I found this recipe went along great with Julia Rothmans Food Anatomy.

 If teaching cooking was on your to-do list this is a must-have.

The illustrations are so pretty, and the book covers a host of food-related topics like the history of food, place settings, types of flatware, types of refrigeration, fruits and veggies, grains, meat, dairy, street food, seasonings, drinks, and sweets.

How to Make Easy Herb and Olive Oil Garden Bread With Kids

The two-page spread on olives makes a great supplement to this herb and olive oil garden bread.

It covers types of olives, acidity, cold press, origin country, harvest, and how they ripen.

There are also a few pages on bread around the world that go hand in hand with our recipe.

How to Make Easy Herb and Olive Oil Garden Bread With Kids

There are some fantastic food-related vocabulary suggestions as well.

How to Make Easy Herb and Olive Oil Garden Bread With Kids

Before we get into the recipe here are some more great activities to go along with it including some recipes from the garden that are fun to make and use.

Also, do you wish your kids knew how to cook? You’ll love the program Kids Cook Real Food.

More Garden Bread Hands-on Activities

How to Plan And Start an Easy Gardening Unit Study for Kids – perfect if you are ready to start a garden with the kids but aren’t sure how to begin.

The next natural step in gardening is composting to reduce waste and create your own free-rich garden soil.Easy Composting With the Amazing Dr. George Carver.

Butterfly & Bee Garden for Pollinators – How to Make an Edible Tea Garden– What a great idea.

This is a simple and fun recipe How To Make Herb Salt

And here is a fantastic post on Kids’ Knife Skills if you need a little extra help.

How to Make Easy Herb and Olive Oil Garden Bread With Kids

Finally, look at this fun recipe.

You will need:

  • 1 cup warm water
  • 1 package active dry yeast
  • 1 tablespoon sugar
  • 2 cups all-purpose flour
  • ½ teaspoon Italian seasonings
  • 2 Tablespoons fresh Rosemary and/or Basil
  • 2 tablespoons extra virgin olive oil
  • Pinch of salt and pepper
  • 1 egg white whisked with 1 tablespoon of water.
  • A little extra fresh rosemary and basil for the top of the bread

I recommend using a stand mixer with a dough hook if you have one.

It’s the easiest for simplifying bread recipes. If not, you can still mix by hand.

How to Make Easy Herb and Olive Oil Garden Bread With Kids

How to Make Herb and Olive Oil Garden Bread

Combine the warm water, sugar, and yeast in the bowl of the mixer and let it sit for 10 minutes until it becomes foamy.

How to Make Easy Herb and Olive Oil Garden Bread With Kids

Add olive oil and mix lightly.

How to Make Easy Herb and Olive Oil Garden Bread With Kids

Here is a great opportunity to teach knife skills and demonstrate how to hold it safely as they chop the fresh basil and rosemary.

In a separate bowl whisk together flour, rosemary, Italian seasoning salt, and pepper.

How to Make Easy Herb and Olive Oil Garden Bread With Kids

Add the flour mixture to the yeast mixture and mix just until the dough starts to form.

How to Make Easy Herb and Olive Oil Garden Bread With Kids

Lightly flour the counter surface and transfer the dough to the counter.

Then knead for 5 minutes until the dough becomes smoother and has some elasticity. You could also just do this in the mixer with the dough hook

How to Make Easy Herb and Olive Oil Garden Bread With Kids

Spray a large bowl with nonstick cooking spray, transfer the dough to the bowl, and cover it with a towel. Allow it to rise for 1 hour.

How to Make Easy Herb and Olive Oil Garden Bread With Kids

Remove from the bowl back to a floured surface and punch it down.

How to Make Easy Herb and Olive Oil Garden Bread With Kids

Transfer to a pan. I prefer a pizza stone and then form your loaf. You can make it round or create a longer loaf.

How to Make Easy Herb and Olive Oil Garden Bread With Kids

Cover with a clean towel and let it rise for the final time, 45 minutes.

Just before the time is up preheat the oven to 400℉. And place a second pan on the bottom rack to prevent the underside of your bread from burning.

Brush the egg white and water mixture over the top of your bread.

Use a sharp knife to cut 2-3 slits or a simple design into the top.

Add a little of your fresh chopped herbs to the top.

Bake for 20-25 minutes, or until the top is golden brown.

Remove it from the hot oven and allow it to cool for a few minutes.

How to Make Easy Herb and Olive Oil Garden Bread With Kids

Leave a CommentFiled Under: Hands-On Activities Tagged With: cooking, hands-on, hands-on activities, handson, handsonhomeschooling, homeschoolscience

Fun Hands-on Free Mushroom Unit Study and Kids Learning Activities

March 27, 2023 | Leave a Comment
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

This mushroom unit study is a fun topic to study any time of the year. Also, grab more ideas on my best homeschool unit studies page.

While you can find many species of mushrooms year-round the very best time to get out and study them in nature is in the fall and in spring.

Fun Hands-on Free Mushroom Unit Study and Kids Learning Activities

Besides, even if you are not able to find any mushrooms in your backyard, fields, or woodland areas there are still plenty of fun hands-on free mushroom unit study and kid’s learning activities to be found.

You can gather resources from the library or Amazon to put together a wonderful nature study on mushrooms so easily.

But first, let’s learn a few fun and fungi facts.

5 Funky Mushroom Facts

  1. Mushrooms grow in all 50 States.
  2. Mushrooms are like plants, but they lack chlorophyll and must take their nutrients from other materials.
  3. Just one Portabella mushroom can have more potassium than a banana.
  4. There are over 30 species of mushrooms that glow in the dark.
  5. The name for those who collect and eat mushrooms from the wild is a Mycophagist. 

Next, add some fun books.

9 Mushroom Unit Study Books

Grab some of these fun books to learn about mushrooms, the part of a mushroom and the life cycle.

Image for Mushrooms: How to Identify and Gather Wild Mushrooms and Other Fungi

Mushrooms: How to Identify and Gather Wild Mushrooms and Other Fungi

This mushroom foraging book is packed with vital information that will help you identify the exact types of mushrooms you are looking for when you’re out foraging. You’ll learn how to identify the caps, stems and gills, which all have different physical characteristics like shape and texture, and color.From the Neobulgaria pura and the Mitrula paludosa, discover newly-found fungi species and complex ones which can only be viewed microscopically. The detailed illustrations and identification charts will help you name the mushrooms you find or hope to search for. 

Image for Back to the Roots Organic Mini Mushroom Grow Kit

Back to the Roots Organic Mini Mushroom Grow Kit

GROW YOUR PLANT ALL YEAR-ROUND: This organic mushroom indoor kit allows you to grow your own crop all-year round; Just place the box near a window with indirect light, mist twice a day, and you'll see delicious, beautiful mushrooms growing within a week; Included in this kit is an organic plant-based soil infused with mushroom spawn and a booklet with instructions

Image for Nature Anatomy: The Curious Parts and Pieces of the Natural World

Nature Anatomy: The Curious Parts and Pieces of the Natural World

See the world in a whole new way! Acclaimed illustrator Julia Rothman combines art and science in this exciting and educational guide to the structure, function, and personality of the natural world. Explore the anatomy of a jellyfish, the inside of a volcano, monarch butterfly migration, how sunsets work, and much more. Rothman’s whimsical illustrations are paired with interactive activities that encourage curiosity and inspire you to look more closely at the world all around you.

Image for National Audubon Society Field Guide to North American Mushrooms (National Audubon Society Field Guides)

National Audubon Society Field Guide to North American Mushrooms (National Audubon Society Field Guides)

Featuring a durable vinyl binding and over 700 full-color identification photographs organized visually by color and shape, the National Audubon Society Field Guide to North American Mushrooms is the perfect companion for any mushroom hunting expedition. Each species is accompanied by a detailed physical description, information on edibility, season, habitat, range, look-alikes, alternative names, and facts on edible and poisonous species, uses, and folklore. A supplementary section on cooking and eating wild mushrooms, and illustrations identifying the parts of a mushroom, round out this essential guide.

Image for The Mushroom Fan Club

The Mushroom Fan Club

Elise Gravel is back with a whimsical look at one of her family’s most beloved pastimes: mushroom hunting! Combining her love of exploring nature with her talent for anthropomorphizing everything, she takes us on a magical tour of the forest floor and examines a handful of her favorite alien specimens up close. While the beautiful coral mushroom looks like it belongs under the sea, the peculiar Lactarius indigo may be better suited for outer space. From the fun-to-stomp puffballs to the prince of the stinkers―the stinkhorn mushroom―and the musically inclined chanterelles, Gravel shares her knowledge of this fascinating kingdom by bringing each species to life in full felt-tip-marker glory.

Image for Botanicum: Welcome to the Museum

Botanicum: Welcome to the Museum

The 2017 offering from Big Picture Press's Welcome to the Museum series, Botanicum, is a brilliantly curated guide to plant life. With artwork from Katie Scott of Animalium fame, Botanicum gives readers the experience of a fascinating exhibition from the pages of a beautiful book. From perennials to bulbs to tropical exotica, Botanicum is a wonderful feast of botanical knowledge complete with superb cross sections of how plants work.

Image for Ridley's Funky Fungi

Ridley's Funky Fungi

FUN FAMILY GAME: See if you have what it takes to be the mushroom master in Funky Fungi from Ridley's Games! In this card-collecting game that will definitely grow on you, forage for the best fungi to be the first player to reach ten points and win the game.

Image for Let's learn about mushrooms

Let's learn about mushrooms

Introduces the characteristics and uses of a variety of mushrooms and discusses some of the beliefs and customs connected with this plant family.

Image for Katya's Book of Mushrooms

Katya's Book of Mushrooms

Mushrooms are exciting to find, beautiful to look at, fascinating to identify, and delicious to eat. When you know what to look for, a mushroom hunt is as safe and enjoyable as a treasure hunt. Katya Arnold ranges through the world to find hundreds of varieties of mushrooms, as well as fascinating anecdotes and fun facts that make these wonders of nature exciting and immediate. A walk in the woods will never be the same!

Mushroom Unit Study Lesson Plans and Resources

  • Lesson Plan for Teaching about Fungi
  • Fungus Files K to 6 Educator’s Guide
  • More awesome mushroom activities here.
  • Yeasts, Molds and Mushrooms Teachers Guide
  • Guide about morel mushrooms

Vocabulary words about mushrooms

  • cap – The cap or the top of the mushroom protects the gills.
  • gills – The gills are the structure that produce the spores, and the spores are similar to seeds.
  • mycelium – The spores germinate into mycelia which are root-like threads that usually grow underground, similar to a root.
  • fungus – any of numerous plants lacking in chlorophyll, including yeasts, molds and mushrooms.
  • asexual – Showing no sexual differentiation (no male or female forms)

Hands-on Activities for Mushroom Unit Study

Get out and explore your own backyard, woodland area, or local state or national park and see what you can find to study firsthand.

We found this growing in a flowerpot that was in the shade and stayed very damp.

Fun Hands-on Free Mushroom Unit Study and Kids Learning Activities

This was growing on the side of a picnic table, which we think might be Turkey Tail.

Fun Hands-on Free Mushroom Unit Study and Kids Learning Activities

And several different types of lichen growing on trees.

Fun Hands-on Free Mushroom Unit Study and Kids Learning Activities

MORE MUSHROOM ACTIVITIES

  • Fungi Fun: 11 Unconventional Mushroom Gift Ideas for the Adventurous Spirit
  • How To Design A Mushroom Preschool Sensory Tray
  • Free Life Cycle of a Mushroom Worksheet & Fun Meringue Mushrooms
  • The app iNatrualist is great for helping to identify individual mushroom species, just capture an image of any you find with your phone and plug it in, search for suggestions and you can figure out what you have found.
  • Make these super fun mushrooms for snack time while you study all about them.
  • Try growing your own small batch of oyster mushrooms in just 10 days with this kit.
  • Make a mushroom spore print to get a reverse detail look at the underside of a mushroom, the gills.
  • There is a wealth of great mushroom activities at Treehouse Magazine for middle to upper elementary ages, including printable pdfs with math, crosswords, puzzles, spore prints and more.
  • Make a Felt Mushroom to label. It’s such a fun craft. You will find the directions below.
  • Print these Mushroom worksheets like labeling the parts of a mushroom, coloring pages, life cycles, etc.
  • Play Mushroom themed games like Morels or Funky Fungi.
  • Take the kids to the grocery store or farmers market and check out the different types of mushrooms. Bring some home and try a new recipe together.

Then here is a cute and simple dot to dot mushroom print for the wee little ones.

Fun Hands-on Free Mushroom Unit Study and Kids Learning Activities

In addition, look at more best homeschool unit study ideas.

Best Homeschool Unit Study Ideas

I have many different themes.

  •  Unit Study Egg to Sea Turtle Lesson Plans & Lapbook
  • Little House on The Prairie Unit Study and Fun Punched Tin Lantern
  • Learn About Daniel Boone Hunting With a Fun Deer Unit Study & Notebooking Pages
  • How to Plan And Start an Easy Gardening Unit Study for Kids
  • Pirate Unit Study Ideas and Free Pirates Lapbook
  • Texas Homeschool Lapbook and Fun Homeschool Unit Study Ideas
  • Volcano Unit Study and Fun Apple Volcano
  • Solar System Unit Study and Hands-on Planets Activity
  • Charlotte’s Web Homeschool Unit Study and Fun Hands-on Ideas
  • Homeschool Unit Study Ideas | Lewis and Clark Exploration Lapbook
  • Mushroom Unit Study and Kids Learning Activities

Finally, look at this fun hands-on mushroom activity.

Parts of a Mushroom Labeling Activity

You will need:

  • Red, tan, and white felt
  • Black permanent fine-tip marker
  • Scissors
  • Craft/school glue or hot glue
  • Cardstock
Fun Hands-on Free Mushroom Unit Study and Kids Learning Activities

Directions:

Cut out a red slightly oblong piece of red felt for the cap whatever size you like for your labeling activity.

Fun Hands-on Free Mushroom Unit Study and Kids Learning Activities

Cut tiny white pieces for the “spots” on your mushroom.

Fun Hands-on Free Mushroom Unit Study and Kids Learning Activities

Next, cut longer skinny white strips for the “root” or mycelium.

Fun Hands-on Free Mushroom Unit Study and Kids Learning Activities

Further, trace the red mushroom cap onto tan felt but only cut out the bottom third.

Fun Hands-on Free Mushroom Unit Study and Kids Learning Activities

This will be the underside of the mushroom to show the gills.

Draw the gills as curved lines with a fine permanent marker.

Fun Hands-on Free Mushroom Unit Study and Kids Learning Activities

Cut a curve along the bottom of the red cap to show more of the gills.

Also, from the tan color, you will also cut your rectangular stem as well as the volva and ring as seen here in the book we used for reference.

Fun Hands-on Free Mushroom Unit Study and Kids Learning Activities

Too, the ring wraps around near the center of the stem and the volva is the cuplike structure at the base with natural edges and shapes rather than straight across.

Fun Hands-on Free Mushroom Unit Study and Kids Learning Activities

We went back and added a little brown marker to the edges of our tan pieces to help differentiate the parts on the stem after we glued it together.

However, learn from us and make it easy on yourself. Do this step right after cutting.

Fun Hands-on Free Mushroom Unit Study and Kids Learning Activities

Begin assembling your mushroom by gluing the tan gills to the red cap with the stem in between.

Fun Hands-on Free Mushroom Unit Study and Kids Learning Activities

Next, wrap the ring around the stem and glue it in place as well as the volva.

Fun Hands-on Free Mushroom Unit Study and Kids Learning Activities

Moreover, add your little bits of white with glue to the cap.

Fun Hands-on Free Mushroom Unit Study and Kids Learning Activities

Transfer your mushroom to a tray and add a layer of grass and dirt beneath with brown and green felt.

Fun Hands-on Free Mushroom Unit Study and Kids Learning Activities

Add your mycelium to the soil.

Write -mycelium, ring, cap, gills, volva, and stem on cardstock and use them to label each of the parts.

Additionally, you can also use felt to create other mushroom species like Honey Mushrooms.

Fun Hands-on Free Mushroom Unit Study and Kids Learning Activities

Or Hen of The Woods. Finally, we had so much fun creating our mushrooms. Going to give them a try?

Fun Hands-on Free Mushroom Unit Study and Kids Learning Activities

Leave a CommentFiled Under: My Unit Studies {Free Printables & Hands-on Ideas} Tagged With: earthscience, elementary science, hands-on, hands-on activities, handsonhomeschooling, homeschoolscience, life science, mushroom, nature, nature study, science, unit studies, unit study

Cutest Ever Egg Carton Sea Turtle Craft and Learning Activities for Kids

March 25, 2023 | Leave a Comment
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

I have a fun egg carton sea turtle craft. Add my fun From Egg to Sea Turtle Nature Unit Study & Lapbook to make it for multiple ages.

I love taking trash and turning it into a treasure. And this was a really fun way to do it.

Create the cutest little sea turtles to put together a lesson that would be perfect for preschool or kindergarten.

Cutest Ever Egg Carton Sea Turtle Craft and Learning Activities for Kids

Pair it with a book and a couple of fun activities and you have a wonderful lesson without a textbook or worksheet in sight.

Grab a copy of Ocean Anatomy to dive into learning a little about sea turtles with your little one while you work together on this sweet egg carton sea turtle craft.

This book in a series by Julia Rothman covers a lot of ocean topics including sea turtles, seaweed, the food chain, ocean currents, and many of the other animals that make their home there.

5 Fun Facts about Sea Turtles

  1. There are 7 different species of marine turtles – Flatback, Green, Hawksbill, Loggerhead, Leatherback, Olive ridley, and Kemp’s ridley.
  2. The record for the largest marine turtle recorded goes to a leatherback that was found ashore measuring 8.2 feet long and 8.2 feet from flipper to flipper and weighing almost 2000 pounds.
  3. Unlike other kinds of turtles, sea turtles cannot retract their flippers and head into their shells.
  4. Nest temperatures determine the sex of sea turtle hatchlings. Warmer temperatures will produce more females while cooler will produce more males.
  5. Sea Turtles can live to be about 100 years old.
Cutest Ever Egg Carton Sea Turtle Craft and Learning Activities for Kids

Next, add some books and resources.

Sea Turtle Books For Fun Egg Carton Sea Turtles

Like I mentioned Ocean Anatomy is a must-have book for studying the wonderous ocean, look at the beautiful illustrations.

While it is not super in-depth it covers so much of the ocean in general and gives a great page on sea turtle Identification, some facts, and labeling of the parts of a sea turtle.

10 Sea Turtle Resources

Add some books about sea turtles and hands-on resources to your lesson or unit study to bring it to life.

Image for Sea Turtles

Sea Turtles

Sea turtles are fascinating. Hatched from eggs smaller than a baseball, some can grow to weigh over a thousand pounds. Once adults, they can live to be around 100 years old. And when it's time to nest, they migrate more than 1,000 miles. With colorful, clear illustrations and straightforward text, Gail Gibbons introduces the eight kinds of sea turtles living in the ocean today. Learn the similarities and differences with labeled diagrams and experience the hatching of the tiny turtle babies with detailed illustrations. This updated edition now includes the most up-to-date information about these beloved reptiles, as reviewed by an expert vetter in the field of herpetology.

Image for I'll Follow the Moon

I'll Follow the Moon

Celebrating the love between mother and child comes an achingly beautiful story that has captured hearts around the world. Written by a new mom, by accident, when she sang a little song to her fussing newborn, I'll Follow the Moon proudly donates proceeds to charity: every book saves a turtle.

Image for Ocean Anatomy: The Curious Parts & Pieces of the World under the Sea

Ocean Anatomy: The Curious Parts & Pieces of the World under the Sea

Follow Rothman’s inquisitive mind and perceptive eye along shorelines, across the open ocean, and below the waves for an artistic exploration of the watery universe. Through her drawings, discover how the world’s oceans formed, why the sea is salty, and the forces behind oceanic phenomena such as rogue waves. Colorful anatomical profiles of sea creatures from crustacean to cetacean, surveys of seafaring vessels and lighthouses, and the impact of plastic and warming water temperatures are just part of this compendium of curiosities that will entertain and educate readers of all ages. 

Image for National Geographic Readers: Sea Turtles

National Geographic Readers: Sea Turtles

Who could resist celebrating sea turtles? They may seem like lazy ocean reptiles drifting with the oceans’ currents, but they are actually long-distance swimmers that spend their entire lives searching for food and a mate. What’s more, they come with their own built-in GPS, returning to the exact beach where they were born to lay their own eggs. Kids will learn all about these tranquil and mysterious animals through brilliant photography and illustrations, plus the trusted and distinctive content you love from NG Kids!

Image for Tammy Turtle: A Tale of Saving Sea Turtles

Tammy Turtle: A Tale of Saving Sea Turtles

A book that tells how turtles survive with the help of protection programs.

Image for Our Sea Turtles: A Practical Guide for the Atlantic and Gulf, from Canada to Mexico

Our Sea Turtles: A Practical Guide for the Atlantic and Gulf, from Canada to Mexico

The book's pithy, well-organized sections are lavishly illustrated. It is a guide for anyone who is the least bit curious about these fascinating marine animals. Bite-sized installments harmonize with multiple images on each page to make this book a unique and entertaining resource. The story it tells covers understanding, experiencing, and saving our sea turtles, with descriptions of how these endangered animals contribute to our happiness and why they deserve a helping hand.

Image for Sea Turtle Scientist (Scientists in the Field)

Sea Turtle Scientist (Scientists in the Field)

The mother turtle has a vital job to do: dig a nest in which she will lay eggs that will hatch into part of the next generation of leatherbacks. With only one in a thousand of the eggs for this critically endangered species resulting in an adult sea turtle, the odds are stacked against her and her offspring. 

Image for 4 PCS Sea Turtle Life Cycle

4 PCS Sea Turtle Life Cycle

Children can see how animals change and grow. Realistic detail showing a different stage in the development of animals.

Uniquely molded textures and richly painted details bring them to life and help inspire creativity for kids.

It is a great way to expand the growth with children through physical science.

Image for Follow the Moon Home

Follow the Moon Home

A triumphant story of environmental activism, community, and friendship: Acclaimed activist Philippe Cousteau and renowned author Deborah Hopkinson team up to offer a story of the powerful difference young people can make in the world. Meet Viv, who has a new home and a new school by the sea and follow her as she finds her way in a new place and helps bring together a whole community to save the sea turtles of the South Carolina coast.

Image for The Life Cycle of a Sea Turtle

The Life Cycle of a Sea Turtle

Describes the life cycle of sea turtles discussing reproduction, birth, and adult life.

Next, add some fun hands-on sea turtle activities.

Sea Turtle Hands-On Activity Ideas

  • Grab a life cycle set to help your child get a grasp on the various stages of life sea turtles go through. They can be added to a science table or sensory bin or used with a life cycle worksheet.
  • Paint a picture of sea turtles with watercolors, acrylics. Use chalk pastels or some medium you have never tried before using a book or photo from Google for inspiration.
  • Use a mixed collection of land and water turtles to compare their differences and encourage your child to sort and make a pile of each. What is the difference between their feet (or flippers?) What about the difference between sea turtles and aquatic turtles that live in freshwater?
  • Include the whole family with my free From Egg to Sea Turtle Nature Unit Study and Lapbook.
  • Visit a local aquarium if you live near one and spend some time at the sea turtle tank observing their behavior, learning what type they are, and learning about these beautiful creatures.
  • Use play dough to help your child recreate the Sea Turtles Life Cycle Craft.
  • You could also add plastic sea turtles into this Fun Making Ocean Layers Soap activity to cover even more ocean topics.
  • Finally, replace the shark in this Fun Aquarium Jar Craft with a plastic sea turtle to match with the theme.
Cutest Ever Egg Carton Sea Turtle Craft and Learning Activities for Kids

Next, make this fun hands on sea turtle craft.

How to Make an Egg Carton Sea Turtle

You will need:

  • Cardboard egg carton
  • Green pom poms
  • Google eyes
  • Green construction paper or craft foam
  • School glue
  • Green paint
  • Paintbrush
Cutest Ever Egg Carton Sea Turtle Craft and Learning Activities for Kids

Directions:

Cut out individual cups from a cardboard egg carton and cut one for each turtle you want to make.

Cutest Ever Egg Carton Sea Turtle Craft and Learning Activities for Kids

Paint the entire cup green and set aside to dry.

Cutest Ever Egg Carton Sea Turtle Craft and Learning Activities for Kids

Glue googly eyes to a green pom pom and then attach it to the body with glue as well.

Cutest Ever Egg Carton Sea Turtle Craft and Learning Activities for Kids

Cut 4 flippers from green construction paper or craft foam.

It is basically just a long crescent shape.

Cutest Ever Egg Carton Sea Turtle Craft and Learning Activities for Kids

I recommend you draw 1 and let your child cut all 4 out at once by folding the paper into quarters before trimming.

Cutest Ever Egg Carton Sea Turtle Craft and Learning Activities for Kids

Attach flippers to the underside of the egg cup with glue and allow to dry.

Cutest Ever Egg Carton Sea Turtle Craft and Learning Activities for Kids

Add a little sand and you have all the makings for a lesson on how baby sea turtles find their way from the nest to the sea.

Leave a CommentFiled Under: Hands-On Activities Tagged With: crafts, hands-on, hands-on activities, handson, handsonhomeschooling, homeschoolscience, life science, nature study, turtles

How to Make a Simple Wind Vane | Fun Wind Activities Middle School

March 24, 2023 | Leave a Comment
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If you’re wanting to add fun wind activities middle school, your kids will love this simple wind vane. Also, grab more ideas here Middle School Hands-on Science : Extreme Winds and Free Weather Unit Study for Kids Who Love Hands-on Learning.

Important and valuable science lessons don’t always have to come from books.

You and your student can get a lot out of hands-on experiments, interesting books, and videos.

How to Make a Simple Wind Vane | Fun Wind Activities Middle School

To help you get started on your wind activities middle school journey I have some great resources.

And then let’s put together a very simple but informative hands-on experiment creating a weather vane to determine wind direction.

Wind Activities Middle School Ideas

Start off with a really fun activity that kids of all ages love-paper airplanes. Investigating Wind: Paper Airplane Competition.

Build different styles and sizes, investigate the effects of the wind on them, and record the results.

Another fun and simple activity you can do is to learn about Extreme Winds and grab + a free mini book. 

Grab a Build Your Own Wind Turbine Kit for a firsthand look at wind energy.

Or build a model wind turbine completely from scratch with this tutorial.

Have your middle schooler create their own Anemometer with a few simple household items.

Why not challenge your teen to make their own windsocks, windchimes, and kites to incorporate some art into their studies on wind.

These activities are definitely not just for little ones.

Grab this online self-paced literature course for middle school to go along with the book The Boy Who Harnessed the Wind.

Also, look at this mini weather station.

Next, look at these videos to learn about weather and wind.

Videos about Wind

  • Air Pressure and Wind-Middle School Science
  • Watch Twister together for an epic fictional look at the power of the wind in tornadoes.
  • What Causes The Wind
  • The Coriolis Effect Explained
  • How a hurricane is formed and grows

Also, grab these useful books.

Learning about Wind

Wind Activities - Middle School Books

Create fun science learning ideas or a quick unit study from some of these resources.

Image for The Secret World of Weather: How to Read Signs in Every Cloud, Breeze, Hill, Street, Plant, Animal, and Dewdrop

The Secret World of Weather: How to Read Signs in Every Cloud, Breeze, Hill, Street, Plant, Animal, and Dewdrop

In The Secret World of Weather, bestselling author Tristan Gooley turns his gaze up to the sky, bringing his signature brand of close observation and eye-opening deduction to the fascinating world of weather. Every cloud, every change in temperature, every raindrop, every sunbeam, every breeze reveals something about our weather—if you know what to look for. Before you know it, you’ll be able to forecast impending storms, sunny days, and everything in between, all without needing to consult your smartphone.

Image for Science Comics: Wild Weather: Storms, Meteorology, and Climate

Science Comics: Wild Weather: Storms, Meteorology, and Climate

As “snowpocalypse” descends once again, one temperamental weatherman is determined to set the record straight on the myths and misconceptions surrounding the elements. What is the difference between weather and climate? How do weather satellites predict the future? Can someone outrun a tornado? Does the rotation of the Earth affect wind currents? And does meteorology have anything to do with meteors? Stormin’ Norman Weatherby is gearing up to answer all your wildest questions!

Image for The Boy Who Harnessed the Wind

The Boy Who Harnessed the Wind

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.

Image for Eric Sloane's Weather Book

Eric Sloane's Weather Book

"Amateur weather forecasters (which includes just about everyone) will find this volume an informative and entertaining account of the why and how of the weather." — The NationIn simple language, Eric Sloane explains the whys and wherefores of weather and weather forecasting — and does it in a style that's universally appealing.

Image for Global Warming and Wind Power - A Workbook for Middle School

Global Warming and Wind Power - A Workbook for Middle School

This workbook has 84 printable pages for students to explore global warming and wind power. Students learn about wind farms and residential wind turbines, which states are investing money into this renewable resource, how the cost has gone down, the top nations of the world in this industry, noise pollution from turbines, injuries to birds, reduction of carbon dioxide emissions, and offshore wind farms. Students search for information online about global warming, wind power, climate change, wind farms, turbines, offshore wind farms, wind-powered vehicles, the dangers from turbines and the wind, the benefits of harnessing the wind’s power, and the costs of turbines.

Finally, look at this simple wind vane activity for your kids.

How to Make a Simple Wind Vane | Fun Wind Activities Middle School

How to Make a Simple Wind Vane With Kids

You will need:

  • Paper or plastic straw
  • Pencil with eraser
  • Cardstock
  • Stick pin
  • Paper plate
  • Plastic cup
  • Sharpie marker
  • Ruler
  • Razor or sharp knife
How to Make a Simple Wind Vane | Fun Wind Activities Middle School

Directions:

Find the center of your plate.

Then have your student draw intersecting lines for N,S, E, W.

If you are doing this with younger students you may want to stop here.

For middle school kids I suggest further adding NE, NW, SE, and SW.

How to Make a Simple Wind Vane | Fun Wind Activities Middle School

Poke a hole with a straight edge razor or knife in the bottom of the cup to fit your pencil tightly.

How to Make a Simple Wind Vane | Fun Wind Activities Middle School

Cut a slit on either end of the straw.

Next, cut cardstock into a 1-11/2” triangle for one end and a trapezoid shape for the other end.

Slide each into a slit and secure with a dab of hot glue.

How to Make a Simple Wind Vane | Fun Wind Activities Middle School

Poke the straight pin down through the middle of the straw and into the eraser.

How to Make a Simple Wind Vane | Fun Wind Activities Middle School

Slide pencil mechanism through the cup and to the plate. Add hot glue as needed to secure any loose pieces.

How to Make a Simple Wind Vane | Fun Wind Activities Middle School

To add weight to your weathervane so it doesn’t fly away outside glue coins or small pebbles to the underside of the plate to anchor it.

Use a compass (you can get an app on your phone if you don’t have one)

Figure out north and point your N indicator on the plate in that direction.

Use your compass to determine the direction the wind is blowing; the arrow indicates the direction the wind is coming from.

 Next, have your child track the wind’s direction throughout the day or week with a simple grid. 

How to Make a Simple Wind Vane | Fun Wind Activities Middle School

Leave a CommentFiled Under: Hands-On Activities Tagged With: earth science, earthscience, elementary science, hands-on, hands-on activities, handson, handsonhomeschooling, homeschoolscience, science, wind

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