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life science

41 Easy Hands-on Faith-Neutral Science Activities for Kids

September 21, 2024 | 2 Comments
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

This list of 41 easy hands-on faith-neutral science activities for kids is not only fun, but simple to do at home. These awesome activities for kids can be used in multiple ways.

Look at these 4 ways on how to use these quick hands-on faith-neutral science activities.

  • If you’re homeschooling for faith-based reasons you want to add your own science worldview. Doing faith-neutral science activities doesn’t mean you need to leave your faith checked at the door; it does mean you can add your family’s values to an activity. Whether you homeschool for faith-based reasons or you’re a secular homeschooler, you can use these activities;
  • To respect a multitude of beliefs if you’re teaching a co-op, it’s best to have on hand science activities that all kids can do regardless of belief or lack of it;
  • Because activities don’t have to be complicated, these are ideas you can do at home with little prep; and
  • Last, but not least, the BEST list of ideas always comes from educators like us using what we have in our home or things we can purchase easily at the local store.
41 Easy Hands-on Faith-Neutral Science Activities for Kids

FAITH-NEUTRAL SCIENCE ACTIVITIES FOR KIDS

So these ideas comes from the brilliant and creative homeschool moms in my Facebook Group. (Yes, I’m biased). Hats off to them for being awesome home educators.

1. Check the Accuracy of the 5 Second Rule.

You need three petri dishes and gummy bears. Test the idea that if you pick up food from the floor before 5 seconds would it have bacteria.

One dish is labeled as the bacteria of a gummy bear which didn’t touch the floor, one for a gummy bear which was on the floor for 5 seconds, and one that was on the floor for a minute.

Put the dishes away for a week and check the results.

How to test the results?

After 3 days my son checked it and using a marker he circled areas where bacteria was growing and then checked again after a week.

2. Compare Transparency, Translucency, and Opacity.

Paint mason jars with a mixture of white glue and food coloring (or paint).

When you put a light inside, you can see how opaque or translucent the jar is.

3. Learn about Aerodynamics.

We rolled old socks into balls and threw them around.

Then, we compared the looser sock balls, tighter sock balls, and tried an unrolled sock. We talked about aerodynamics, then threw some more socks! 

4. Make a Fraction Salad.

Science includes math. So when you study fractions make a fraction salad.

Cut grapes in halves, apples in quarters, and bananas in sixths (or eighths, depending on the size of the fruit). Then we ate it!

5. Growing Ivory Soap Science.

Microwave Ivory soap for about a minute or stop every few seconds so your kids see the changes in the soap.

Discuss air pockets. Microwave another bar to compare to see why Ivory soap expands and why it’s lighter.

SCIENCE ACTIVITIES FOR KIDS

6. Investigate Condensation.

Review the terms condensation, precipitation, and evaporation.

Condensation is harder to understand and to see.

So place a pea seed in a jar with lid and moisten cotton balls.

Watch the pea sprout with the condensation built up inside.

7. Build a DIY Easy Bird Feeder.

You can use many things to build feeders, but we loved using left over pumpkin halves to build feeders in the fall.

Look at this other post How to Make Easy DIY Bird Feeders.

8. Science Art – Make Pressed and Painted Leaves.

After leaves fall from trees, press, then paint underside of leaves and make prints on canvas.

9. Sprout a Sweet Potato.

Sprout a sweet potato is easy fun science or just to have some pretty green in your house at the time of the year when all plants seem to die.

10. Learn About Patterns – Perler Beads Creations.

Make easy patterns while learning about them or create themed ones like Minecraft using the Fun-Schooling Book.

Use Perler Beads to make your creations for any science topic or a science fiction creation.

HANDS-ON SCIENCE AT HOME

11. Learn about traction.

You need leftover boxes from your Amazon orders or any box will do, but normally we have plenty of empty Amazon boxes.

Make two easy ramps with your leftover Amazon and run toy cars down them.

41 Easy Hands-on Faith-Neutral Science Activities for Kids

Then, try sticking different things to the surfaces to create traction for the cars, like sandpaper, bubble wrap, whatever you have in the house.

This is a quick and easy quick play to learn about ramps, speed, and different effects the surface provides.

12. What Affect Different Liquids has on Items?

Take gummy bears and put then in different liquids to see how it would effect them.

We used vinegar, salt water, baking soda, coke, water and just plain water.

Compare the fun results.

13. Edible Math Graphing.

Use a bag of skittles (preferable big so you have enough to eat afterwards) and separate by color. Graph the results.

Eat, enjoy and repeat. (oops with another bag)

Also, look at 25 Creative and Tasty Edible Math Activities That Keep Learning Fun.

14. Understand Dissolving.

Put salt in warm water and cold water and determine which ones dissolves more of the salt and why.

FAITH-NEUTRAL SCIENCE IDEAS

15. Learn about Yeast and How It Produces Gas.

Make home made pizza dough and individual pizzas.

Learn about yeast and the gas production that causes it to rise while enjoying the end results and the different flavors of pizza.

Look at my post How to Turn a Pizza Into a Fun Edible Human Cell Model.

16. Dissect Owl Pellets.

41 Easy Hands-on Faith-Neutral Science Activities for Kids

Easy science.

Grab a kit and read a book about food chains to round out the experience.

Grab the book Owl Puke.

And here is an Owl Pellet Dissection Kit.

17. Diorama of the Planets or 18. Diorama of Different Habitats.

Whether you use styrofoam balls, wood. or paper mache this is a fun project.

Another idea is to make a mobile of the planets.

If you do habitats you can easily use what you have in the house and do one for the tundra, rainforest, and a desert.

Look at these fun and free printable planets and here is a printable to create a coral reef diorama , an Arctic polar animals diorama, an Amazon Jungle or Rainforest Animals, and Dinosaur habitat,

19. Grow (attempt) Celery.

Growing celery from the stump butt of one bought from the store can be fun even if it’s a fail.

Science is about attempting a variety of activities. Kids learn about what not to do in science.

BEST HANDS-ON SCIENCE ACTIVITIES

The celery did not grow, but the kids learned why to not over water vegetables.

20. Make an Outline of the Human Body and Add a Few Organs.

41 Easy Hands-on Faith-Neutral Science Activities for Kids
Picture courtesy luv of @loveandlearninghomeed

For younger kids make an outline of the human body and then have your older kids learn where body organs go.

Here is a link for the free printable organs.

21. Why do Leaves Change Color?

We looked at why leaves change color by soaking leaves in methylated spirit (denatured alcohol) which drew out the green (chlorophyll) and left the other colors.

41 Easy Hands-on Faith-Neutral Science Activities for Kids
Picture courtesy luv of @loveandlearninghomeed

22. Practical Math Using the Iditarod.

Make a litter of sled dog puppies (socks filled with rice) to study the Iditarod.

Practice math by weighing your puppies (sometimes adding or removing rice), calculating food amounts, etc.

Also learn how dog sled pups are named.

Make beef stew and serve in (brand new and washed) dog bowls and watch Sled Dog.

And look at my post How to Make a Popsicle Stick Stem Dogsled | Balto Unit Study.

23. Make an easy spinal cord.

Make the spinal cord out of penne pasta and gummi rings, the pasta being the vertebrae and the gummi rings the disks.

41 Easy Hands-on Faith-Neutral Science Activities for Kids
Picture courtesy luv of @loveandlearninghomeed

I have more Build An Edible DNA Model and Fun Edible Spine.

24. Engineering Challenge.

Do an engineering challenge to build a shelter with materials you find.

41 Easy Hands-on Faith-Neutral Science Activities for Kids
Picture courtesy of @loveandlearninghomeed

Also, look at How to Create Swiss Family Treehouse Blueprints With Kids.

25. Nature Observing.

Look for evidence of insects and animals. Read about habitats and trees in your local area, then take a nature hike.

Too, I have this post 26 Fun Nature Unit Studies for Multiple Ages.

26. Experiment with a resister to electricity.

Experiment with an electricity kit.

41 Easy Hands-on Faith-Neutral Science Activities for Kids
Picture courtesy of @loveandlearninghomeed

We determined that the current reduces when you add a resistor so the light bulb will be dimmer.

We also added a fan to a circuit.

HOMESCHOOL SCIENCE ACTIVITIES

27. Glow Germ Experiment.

This is a fun one to do in a co-op or with siblings.

Click here to read about how to do the glo germ activity.

28. Learn about Capillary Action.

We explained capillary action by cutting celery stalks at the bottom and putting them in containers with food dye.

After a few hours if you cut the stalk you could see the food dye had been drawn up.

Then, after a day or so the leaves were showing the food dye.

29. Apple science.

Cut open a few different apples and inspect the seeds. Look at my posts Apple Lapbook and Apple Unit Study.

Learn about how the number of seeds directly correlates with the pollination of the apples which of course will lead us into a study on pollination.

30. Understand about blubber.

Learning about the Arctic and Antarctica are doing a blubber hand.

You insert one hand in ice water with just a glove or ziplock bag and the second hand is immersed in shortening (blubber) before put in cold water.

The kids can compare the difference with the blubber.a

31. Dissect a Shark.

And look at How to Create a Hands-on Fun Shark Vocabulary Anatomy Activity, Shark and Oceans for Kindergarten Fun Sight Word Activity and How to Make A Megalodon Shark Tooth Fun Homeschool Project.

FUN SCIENCE AT HOME

32. Make bouncy eggs.

Make bouncing eggs by soaking eggs in vinegar for three days.

The calcium of the eggshell will dissolve and leave the membrane of the egg which will be bouncy.

This will be to demonstrate the effect of acid on minerals like calcium.

33. Learn about weight and floating.

Make boats out of tin foil and weigh them. Make a note.

Then find things around the house and weigh them before putting them in the boat, again taking note.

Find things like pennies, paper clips and small toys.

Make it a challenge by the winner being whoever gets the most things in their boat without it sinking. They can draw pictures in their science journals too.

34. Chemical reactions.

Use silly putty to show chemical reactions. Click here to learn about the chemical reactions.

35. Color of Leaves.

Pick up leaves and examine them with a magnifying glass.

36. Make balloon operated cars.

Here is a fun video lesson to watch on how to make an easy balloon operated car.

SCIENCE TO DO AT HOME

41 Easy Hands-on Faith-Neutral Science Activities for Kids

37. Study Arthropods.

Finish your unit with an Arthropod scavenger hunt!

Kids use a scavenger hunt to find certain arthropods, take pictures of them, and then create a beautiful power point presentation as their final assessment.

38. Make a Tree Book.

Put together a book on trees.

This is a great activity if you have a ton of trees around. Go on a leaf hunt.

Then iron them in wax paper and look up each leaf and write facts about them.

Put the wax paper in plastic sleeves and put them in a notebook and keep it as a keepsake to look at all year round to remind us of the different and beautiful trees we have around us.

39. Composting.

You get short term and long term benefits from this hands-on idea.

Composting is quick to set up, but you do have to wait a few years to eventually get new dirt.

Too, i have Gardening Projects For Homeschool Easy Composting With the Amazing Dr. George Carver (Free Printable About Compost).

40. How Does Drag Work?

Make paper airplanes. Here is a link on how to make a paper airplane.

41. Make Crystals.

You can make crystals out of a solution and measured the temperature to start with, in the middle, and at the end.

Make different colors, discuss about geodes and how they form as well as other crystals like ice, salt, and sugar.

The best way to teach is hands-on and having these faith-neutral science kid’s activities at your finger tips allows you to plan quickly with just a few things on hand.

For example, look at How To Make Crystals | Facts About Crystals For Kids.

What easy science ideas have you done?

Look at these other fun ideas you’ll love:

  • Kinder Gardening to Celebrate Nature and Science
  • How to Easily Make Fun Seed Tape With Kids
  • How to Make a Fun Kids Root Viewer
  • Easy Seed and Gardening Unit Study for Kids (Middle – Upper Elementary)
  • 18 Amazing Kids Subscription Boxes to Try Right Now
  • 6 Fun and Free Nature Studies to Beat the Doldrums
  • 100 Brilliant STEM Activities Using Everyday Items

Hugs and love ya,

2 CommentsFiled Under: Hands-On Activities, How To - - -, Science, Science Based, Teach Homeschool Science Tagged With: hands-on, hands-on activities, handsonhomeschooling, homeschoolscience, life science, physical science, science

Free Color By Number Penguin And Penguins Antarctica Habitat

September 19, 2024 | Leave a Comment
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

Exploring the amazing Antarctica habitat and the penguins that live there make for a fun hands-on unit study. Also, look at my Free Winter Lapbook and Unit Study for more ideas.

Antarctica may seem like a frozen desert but it’s home to some incredible wildlife.

So, beyond the icy sheets and frigid waters, it is home to fascinating penguins.

Free Color By Number Penguin And Penguins Antarctica Habitat

Antarctica’s penguins are adaptable and resilient despite one of the most extreme environments on earth.

Besides Antarctica is located at the South Pole surrounded by the Southern Ocean.

And the temperatures in wintertime can drop below -70°F.

However, during the summer the sun in the Antarctica region shines nearly 24 hours a day.

But in winter it can be completely dark for months.

Also, look at some of these books about Antarctica.

ANTARCTICA BOOKS FOR KIDS

I prefer to use living books when I can find them instead of dry boring textbooks.

11 Antarctica Books & Resources for Kids Who Love to Read and Be Read To

Add some of these books for different ages and resources to your study about Antarctica.

Image for Antarctica: The Heart of the World

Antarctica: The Heart of the World

Named a "Best Book of the Year" by Science Books & Films

"Librarians acquiring this book, a must-have for any scientific collection, can be assured that it will contribute to some reader's decision to visit or work in Antarctica."—VOYA

"This is an eye-catching book packed with gems for browsing, and the presentation makes it suitable for reports."—School Library Journal

Image for A Trip to the Bottom of the World with Mouse:

A Trip to the Bottom of the World with Mouse:

Join a young explorer and his best friend, Mouse, on a sea journey to Antarctica, where they make new friends with penguins and a whale – and have all kinds of fun. Young readers won’t stop grinning as they’re swept away by the strange and magical world created by Frank Viva, the bestselling author of Along a Long Road. As kids TOON into Reading, they will want to circle back to the beginning – again and again.

Image for The Real Book About the Antarctic

The Real Book About the Antarctic

The exploration of the Antarctic has been undertaken for five centuries in the name of many nations. Challenged by the mystery of its formidable, icy regions, they have used dogs, sleds, and above all the weapon of human endurance to cut down the barrier which isolates it from the developed world. In this history of the centuries of exploration, of the men who risked and often gave life to penetrate its secrets, the achievements of many great figures are reviewed

Image for Endurance: Shackleton's Incredible Voyage

Endurance: Shackleton's Incredible Voyage

In August 1914, polar explorer Ernest Shackleton boarded the Endurance and set sail for Antarctica, where he planned to cross the last uncharted continent on foot. In January 1915, after battling its way through a thousand miles of pack ice and only a day's sail short of its destination, the Endurance became locked in an island of ice. Thus began the legendary ordeal of Shackleton and his crew of twenty-seven men. When their ship was finally crushed between two ice floes, they attempted a near-impossible journey over 850 miles of the South Atlantic's heaviest seas to the closest outpost of civilization.

Image for Antarctica Toob - Toy Figurines Penguins, Whales, Seals, & More

Antarctica Toob - Toy Figurines Penguins, Whales, Seals, & More

Explore Antarctic Wildlife: This Toob includes 10 diverse figures from the freezing landscapes of Antarctica: emperor, chinstrap, and rockhopper penguins, blue, humpback, and sperm whales, an orca, a crabeater seal, an Antarctic fur seal, and a wandering albatross.

Image for Shipwreck at the Bottom of the World: The Extraordinary True Story of Shackleton and the Endurance

Shipwreck at the Bottom of the World: The Extraordinary True Story of Shackleton and the Endurance

The extraordinary true story behind Ernest Shackleton's harrowing expedition to Antarctica on the Endurance—the ill-fated ship that became trapped in ice and sank to the ocean floor. Defying the odds, the crew made it back alive, bringing with them the astounding collection of photographs included in this critically acclaimed, timeless book.

Image for Antarctic Journal: Four Months at the Bottom of the World

Antarctic Journal: Four Months at the Bottom of the World

It is the windiest, coldest, most forbidding region on earth, and I am heading straight for it.

Sketchbook in hand, an artist leaves home to spend four months in Antarctica. She hikes up glaciers, camps on deserted islands, and sees mirages of castles in the air. She sails past icebergs and humpback whales. And she fills her sketchbook with drawings of penguin chicks huddled in their nests and seals basking in the sun. Jennifer Dewey's sketches, photographs, journal entries, and letters home let you see the last great wilderness on earth through the eyes of an artist at work.

Image for Ice Trap! : Shackleton's Incredible Expedition

Ice Trap! : Shackleton's Incredible Expedition

In August 1914, during the height of the heroic age of Antarctic exploration, Sir Ernest Shackleton set off from England with a team of explorers to walk across the Antarctic and study the icy depths of this new and forbidding continent. Sailing through some of the most perilous seas, the Endurance becomes trapped in the deadly pack ice of the Weddell sea. When the Endurance is eventually crushed between the vast bulk of two floating icebergs, the men are forced to abandon ship and make the dangerous journey across the crushing sea in lifeboats,

Image for Where Is Antarctica?

Where Is Antarctica?

Antarctica, the earth's southernmost continent, was virtually untouched by humans until the nineteenth century. Many famous explorers journeyed (and often died) there in the hope of discovering a land that always seemed out of reach. This book introduces readers to this desert--yes, desert!--continent that holds about 90 percent of the world's ice; showcases some of the 200 species that call Antarctica home, including the emperor penguin; and discusses environmental dangers to the continent, underscoring how what happens to Antarctica affects the entire world.

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

The Anatomy series by Julia Rothman is always a go-to resource, ocean Anatomy contains plenty of information on the animals that live in Antarctica, icebergs Polar Ice, and glaciers.

Image for Penguin's Way

Penguin's Way

With a new children’s book imprint, the Bodleian Library brings beloved classics back into print, beginning with a beautiful storybook about the life of a fascinating Antarctic species. Originally published in 1962, Penguin’s Way by Johanna Johnston tells the surprising story of these creatures, complete with colorful artwork by award-winning illustrator Leonard Weisgard. In Penguin’s Way, a playful colony of emperor penguins lives on the edge of a faraway secret sea. During the summers, the penguins are content to fish and swim in the icy waters. But, when the seasons change, they must travel more than one hundred miles to the snowy lands surrounding the South Pole. All across the snow plain, the penguins sing songs to welcome newly hatched chicks into the world, but how will the fluffy newborns survive the freezing winter?

Also, look at some of these features of the Antarctica habitat for penguins.

FEATURES OF THE ANTARCTICA HABITAT FOR PENGUINS

Besides having 24 hour daylight and darkness, penguins are suited to life in their Antarctica habitat.

It’s also a dry region and has unique dry valleys.

It is also rich in marine life. For example seals are the main predators of penguins.

But penguins are birds suited to their Antarctica habitat because they live in colonies.

These colonies provide safety in numbers.

Additionally, besides having a thick layer of waterproof feathers, they have a layer of blubber below their skin.

This provides ;penguins with an additional insulation to the cold.

Glaciers flow from the ice sheets.

So during extreme cold, penguins huddle together to preserve body heat.

And they rotate so that every penguin has a chance to get warm.

Also, they have streamlined bodies which helps them to reduce drag while swimming.

In addition, their strong flippers help them to be agile and fast.

Free Color By Number Penguin And Penguins Antarctica Habitat

Finally, look at how to download this free color by number penguin page.

MORE ANTARCTICA HABITAT ACTIVITIES

  • How to Make an Easy Antarctica Diorama With Your Kids
  • 10 Awesome Antarctica Day Activities for Kids
  • Antarctica Unit Study & Polar Biome
  • Easy Hands on Snowflake Winter Craft
  • Kids Easy Crafts and Activities that Celebrate Snow

How to Get the Free Color by Number Penguin Antarctica Page

Now, how to grab the free color by number freebie. It’s a subscriber freebie.

That means when you sign up to follow me, you get my emails in your inbox and you get this freebie.

1) Sign up on my email list.

2) Grab the freebie now.

3) Last, look for all my emails in your inbox. Glad to have you following me!

Leave a CommentFiled Under: Hands-On Activities Tagged With: antarctica, color by number, color pages, coloring, hands-on, hands-on activities, handsonhomeschooling, life science, penguin, science

10 Fun Facts About Kapok Trees You’ll Love

September 18, 2024 | Leave a Comment
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

Today is all about fun facts about Kapok trees. Also, look at my pages Rain Forest – Amazon, Rain Forest – Animals of the Amazon, and Rainforest Activities for Kids for more ideas, crafts and activities.

 And this is a super easy learning activity with things you should already have on hand.

For preschoolers you will want to keep this activity very simple.

10 Fun Facts About Kapok Trees You’ll Love

But older kids can add more detail and even label the different layers of the rainforest.

Rainforests are like giant, green umbrellas that cover about 6% of the Earth’s land surface.

They’re found near the equator in South America, Africa, and Asia.

They are full of tall trees, lush plants, and amazing animals.

In fact, over half of the world’s plant and animal species live in rainforests.

Kapok trees are towering, important parts of rainforests.

They have been brought to our front door by wonderful classic books like The Great Kapok Tree.

The beautiful images make it more real to children and show how they are a central part to the flora and fauna there.

I love using literature as a base for unit studies.

While we cover a lot of great rainforest information we are going to focus on Kapok trees with our chosen story.

BOOKS ABOUT THE RAINFOREST FOR KIDS

First, look at some of these fun books about the Amazon to add to your reading day.

I choose living books when I can find them.

16 Rain Forest Animals For Kids Books & Resources

Add these rain forest animal books, games, and toys to round out your study of the animals of the rain forest.

Image for All the Way Down: Amazon Rainforest

All the Way Down: Amazon Rainforest

This book explores the rainforest layer by layer and the creatures that make their home in each part of the rainforest.

Image for Rainforest Animals (Who Am I?)

Rainforest Animals (Who Am I?)

Which rainforest animal is a frog that uses its eyes to help it swallow its food? Which rainforest animal is a bird with a big, colorful bill? Let's learn more about rainforest animals such as sloths, poison dart frogs, toucans, and more! Read With You's Who Am I? series encourages children to be more curious about the world around them as they learn fun facts about animals from across the globe.

Image for Over and Under the Rainforest

Over and Under the Rainforest

Part of the critically acclaimed Over and Under series that includes Up in the Garden and Down in the Dirt and Over and Under the Snow!Under the canopy of the rainforest hundreds of animals make their homes, but up in the leaves hides another world. Turn the pages of this beautiful and educational book to discover in words and mesmerizing illustration:

Animals like the slender parrot snake and the blue morpho butterfly.

The canopies where toucans and pale-billed woodpeckers chatter and call.

Capuchin monkeys who swing from vines and slow-moving sloths who wait out daily thunderstorms.

Image for In the Rainforest (Let's-Read-and-Find-Out Science 2)

In the Rainforest (Let's-Read-and-Find-Out Science 2)

The rainforest is home to millions of plant and animal species. Some animals live high up in the trees, some crawl across the forest floor, and some tunnel underground, but they all depend on one another and the rain to survive. With colorful illustrations and fascinating diagrams from author-illustrator Kate Duke, In the Rainforest is a lively look at the most vibrant ecosystem on our planet. 

Image for Anacondas (Rain Forest Animals)

Anacondas (Rain Forest Animals)

This book introduces readers to the largest snake in the world: the anaconda. Readers learn about the life cycle, behavior, physical characteristics, and habitat of anacondas

Image for Learn to Draw Rainforest & Jungle Animals

Learn to Draw Rainforest & Jungle Animals

Expanding the popular collection of animal books in the Learn to Draw Series, Learn to Draw Rainforest & Jungle Animals will teach kids how easy it is to draw a variety of exciting and exotic creatures from around the world. Each project starts with a basic shape and progresses with simple-to-follow steps to a finished realistic final colored artwork. While they’re learning, kids will also discover fun facts about each featured animal.

Image for The Rainforest Grew All Around

The Rainforest Grew All Around

Imaginations will soar from the forest floor, up through the canopy and back down again, following the circle of life in this clever adaptation of the song “The Green Grass Grew All Around.” The jungle comes alive as children learn about a wide variety of the animals (jaguars, emerald tree boas, leafcutter ants, sloths, poison dart frogs, toucans, and bats) and plants (kapok trees, liana vines, and bromeliads) living in the lush Amazon rainforest. Delve even deeper into the jungle using sidebars and the three-page “For Creative Minds” educational section.

Image for Wildlife Anatomy: The Curious Lives & Features of Wild Animals around the World

Wildlife Anatomy: The Curious Lives & Features of Wild Animals around the World

While it covers more than just the rainforest this is a fabulous resource to have on your shelves. You will find plenty of great pictures and information on many animals that live there- crocodiles, harpy eagles, monkeys, tapir , sloths,Jaguarundi, and the food web.

Image for The Great Kapok Tree: A Tale of the Amazon Rain Forest

The Great Kapok Tree: A Tale of the Amazon Rain Forest

Tells a story of a man who came to cut down a kapok tree and encounters many of the beautiful and exotic native creatures who make their home in the Amazon Rainforest.

Image for Professor Noggin's Reptiles and Amphibians Trivia Card Game

Professor Noggin's Reptiles and Amphibians Trivia Card Game

FUN FACTS: How about Reptiles versus Amphibians?!  That's just one of the topic cards in this kids card game.  Find out more fun facts from Eggs to the Komodo Dragon!

Image for Hello, World! Rainforest Animals

Hello, World! Rainforest Animals

This bright and exciting Hello, World! board book teaches toddlers all about the amazing world of a rainforest—with easy-to-understand facts about the incredible animals who make their home there.

Image for Where Is the Amazon?

Where Is the Amazon?

Human beings have inhabited the banks of the Amazon River since 13,000 BC and yet they make up just a small percentage of the "population" of this geographic wonderland. The Amazon River basin teems with life—animal and plant alike.

Image for Canopy, Card Game, Features 25 Unique Species of Rainforest Animals and Plants

Canopy, Card Game, Features 25 Unique Species of Rainforest Animals and Plants

Compete to grow the most bountiful rainforest! Carefully select what grows in your forest, and give rise to a thriving ecosystem.

Image for Afternoon on the Amazon

Afternoon on the Amazon

Vampire bats and killer ants? That's what Jack and Annie are about to run into when the Magic Tree House whisks them away to the Amazon River. It's not long before they get hopelessly lost. Will they be able to find their way back to the tree house? Or are Jack and Annie stuck forever in the rain forest?

Image for Red-eyed Tree Frog (Scholastic Bookshelf)

Red-eyed Tree Frog (Scholastic Bookshelf)

NatureI n a tropical rain forest in Central America, a red-eyed tree frog spends the night looking for food while avoiding potential predators. Award-winning photographer Nic Bishop's larger-than-life, gorgeous images document the hunt, which ends happily with the frog settling down in the leaves to spend his daylight hours sleeping! Joy Cowley's simple, readable text makes the frog's story fun, interesting, and accessible to young readers.

Image for Protecting the Amazon Rainforest (Saving Earth's Biomes)

Protecting the Amazon Rainforest (Saving Earth's Biomes)

Explores the richness of the Amazon rainforest, how humans have damaged it, and efforts being taken to protect it. Clear text, vibrant photos, and helpful infographics make this book an accessible and engaging read.

Then look at facts about Kapok trees.

10 FUN FACTS ABOUT KAPOK TREES FOR KIDS

The kapok tree is also a symbol of strength and resilience, and it is often used in art and literature to represent these qualities.

Kapok trees are native to tropical rainforests in Central and South America.

They can grow to be over 200 feet tall, making them one of the tallest trees in the rainforest.

Kapok trees have large, buttressed roots that help to support their massive trunks.

The bark of the kapok tree is smooth and gray, and it is covered in small, sharp spines.

The leaves of the kapok tree are large and compound, with each leaf divided into several smaller leaflets.

The flowers of the kapok tree are large and white, and they bloom in clusters.

The fruit of the kapok tree is a large, brown capsule that contains hundreds of small, fluffy seeds.

The seeds of the kapok tree are used to make a variety of products, including stuffing for pillows and mattresses, insulation, and life jackets.

Kapok trees are an important part of the rainforest ecosystem, and they provide food and shelter for many animals.

10 Fun Facts About Kapok Trees You’ll Love

Before we began our craft, we read The Great Kapok Tree to learn all about the animals of the rainforest.

 It was also a wonderful reference throughout to know where to place them.

We also pulled out our Professor Noggin Wildlife Safari game to explore the animals and pulled out those that live in the rainforest which led to matching them with our plastic animals.

10 Fun Facts About Kapok Trees You’ll Love

Do you need a few more ideas to round out your rainforest study?

Here are ideas for Kapok trees as well as the amazing animals that make their home there.

KAPOK TREES AND OTHER SYMBOLS OF THE RAINFOREST

Here are 7 Cool Rainforest Science Activities and Create Rainforest Floor Slime for a wonderful sensory experience.

Take a virtual field trip into the fascinating Rainforest among thick greenery and past flying exotic birds with these 25 Facts About The Amazon Rainforest.

Learn about and make some of these 20 Tropical Rainforest Foods and Make an Acai Bowl for hands-on learning.

Beautiful And Colorful Amazonian Rainforest Animals Lapbook For Kids

Use your plastic animals to create a Rainforest Sensory Bin for hours of open ended play and investigation.

How to Make an Easy Rainforest Triorama With Kids

Find out questions like Do Geckos Live in the Rainforest and 10 Facts About Reptiles and make a replica of a Turnip Tailed Gecko too.

Fun Easy Amazon Rainforest Crafts and Make a Bubble Wrap Pattern Anaconda

This is a great idea for turning our book  into an interactive and fun The Great Kapok Tree Lapbook Project.

10 Fun Facts About Kapok Trees You’ll Love

Finally, look at how to make this easy Kapok tree activity.

HANDS-ON KAPOK TREE ACTIVITY

You will need:

  • 1 brown construction paper
  • 2 blue construction paper
  • 2 green construction paper Plastic rainforest animals
  • Glue stick
10 Fun Facts About Kapok Trees You’ll Love

First, we’re keeping this easy and use a minimum of supplies.

Start by tearing brown paper in half to create the trunk and ripping up the green into large irregular pieces for the tree’s foliage.

We also tore off a strip to create the forest floor.

10 Fun Facts About Kapok Trees You’ll Love

Slightly overlap and glue together two blue pieces of construction paper to create a tall blue column.

10 Fun Facts About Kapok Trees You’ll Love

Stack the two halves of torn brown for the trunk of your tree and glue into place.

10 Fun Facts About Kapok Trees You’ll Love

Glue down a forest floor from one or several strips of paper.

10 Fun Facts About Kapok Trees You’ll Love

Place your large pieces of greenery all over the top of the tree to create the canopy, gluing into place.

10 Fun Facts About Kapok Trees You’ll Love

Create a thick canopy with lots of leaf layers.

10 Fun Facts About Kapok Trees You’ll Love

Once the glue is dry the animals can be placed while you talk about where in the tree each of the animals might live within the layers.

10 Fun Facts About Kapok Trees You’ll Love

Leave a CommentFiled Under: Hands-On Activities Tagged With: amazon rain forest, hands-on, hands-on activities, handson, handsonhomeschooling, life science, rainforest, trees

How To Make A Letter Y Handprint Craft Featuring A Yak

September 12, 2024 | Leave a Comment
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

Today, we’re making a letter Y handprint craft. Also, look at my page How to Homeschool Preschool for more handprint crafts and preschool ideas.

And we’re featuring a yak, a fun new animal to introduce to your preschooler or kindergartener.

There is just something so precious about those first little handprint crafts with tiny fingers that won’t stay that way for long.

Too, they are so proud of the finished product.

How To Make A Letter Y Handprint Craft Featuring A Yak

My main focus during the preschool years is reading good quality books.

Reading aloud develops imagination, vocabulary, language development, listening skills, comprehension, and helps grow their focus and attention.

I found the absolute cutest story that went right along with our activity and of course “we” had to model our yak after the little hero of the story Gertie.

The book is The Littlest Yak. A cute must read with your littles.

While Gertie is adorable, yaks really are amazing animals that live in the high mountains of the Himalayas. Yaks are very important to the people of the Himalayas

Known for their long, shaggy fur and their big horns, yaks are found in the high mountains of Asia.

What makes them so amazing is that yaks are very strong and can carry incredibly heavy loads.

They are also very gentle and friendly animals.

People in the Himalayas use yaks for many things.

For example, they are used to transport goods, to pull plows, and to provide milk and meat.

Books about the Continent of Asia for Kids

Also, grab some of these books to read about Asia to your child.

I love to use living books when I can find them.

9 Asia Books for Kids Who Love to Read and Be Read To

Asia is a large continent but I try to list some of our favorites.

Image for Prairie Lotus

Prairie Lotus

Acclaimed, award-winning author Linda Sue Park has placed a young half-Asian girl, Hanna, in a small town in America’s heartland, in 1880. Hanna’s adjustment to her new surroundings, which primarily means negotiating the townspeople’s almost unanimous prejudice against Asians, is at the heart of the story.

Image for A Single Shard

A Single Shard

Tree-ear is fascinated by the celedon ware created in the village of Ch’ulp’o. He is determined to prove himself to the master potter, Min—even if it means making a solitary journey to present Min’s work in the hope of a royal commission . . . or arriving at the royal court with nothing but a single celadon shard.

Image for Sadako and the Thousand Paper Cranes

Sadako and the Thousand Paper Cranes

The star of her school’s running team, Sadako is lively and athletic…until the dizzy spells start. Then she must face the hardest race of her life—the race against time. Based on a true story, Sadako and the Thousand Paper Cranes celebrates the courage that makes one young woman a heroine in Japan. 

Image for The Big Wave

The Big Wave

Kino lives on a farm on the side of a mountain in Japan. His friend, Jiya, lives in a fishing village below. Everyone, including Kino and Jiya, has heard of the big wave. No one suspects it will wash over them, until the rushing water sweeps away the whole village—including Jiya's family.

Image for One Grain of Rice: A Mathematical Folktale

One Grain of Rice: A Mathematical Folktale

Long ago in India, there lived a raja who believed that he was wise and fair. But every year he kept nearly all of the people's rice for himself. Then when famine came, the raja refused to share the rice, and the people went hungry. Then a village girl named Rani devises a clever plan. She does a good deed for the raja, and in return the raja lets her choose her reward. Rani asks for just one grain of rice, doubled every day for thirty days. Through the surprising power of doubling, one grain of rice grows into more than one billion grains of rice - and Rani teaches the raja a lesson about what it truly means to be wise and fair.Demi's exquisitely detailed art, inspired by traditional Indian miniature paintings, combine with her simple retelling to convey the heart and wisdom of this satisfying mathematical tale.

Image for I Rode a Horse of Milk White Jade

I Rode a Horse of Milk White Jade

A moving and heartfelt story about the lengths one would go to help their family.

When Oyuna was a baby, a horse accidentally crushed her foot, cursing her family with bad luck. Oyuna vows to restore good fortune to her family…but how?

One fateful day, soldiers from the great Khan's army invade her village to steal horses and gather new soldiers. In hopes of bringing honor to her family, Oyuna courageously disguises herself as a boy and joins the soldiers on their quest. With only her horse and her cat to keep her company, Oyuna sets off on an amazing journey across deserts and mountains―a journey that will change her life forever.

Image for The Golden Hawks of Genghis Khan

The Golden Hawks of Genghis Khan

"You must not speak of the Golden Hawks! Word easily flies down the caravan trails to the ears of the Mongols in the land of Genghis Khan. And then, Jalair, the Mongols will come and slay you!"

Image for The Story about Ping

The Story about Ping

Ping, the spirited little duck who lives on a boat on the Yangtze River. Ping's misadventures one night while exploring the world around his home form the basis of this timeless classic, which is brought to life by Kurt Wiese's warm and poignant illustrations.

Image for The Littlest Yak

The Littlest Yak

A little yak yearns for BIG things in this rollicking, rhyming picture book that celebrates individuality, unique talents, and the importance of not growing up too fast.Gertie is the littlest yak in her pack, feeling stuck in her smallness. She wants to grow up and have BIGNESS and TALLNESS, with the hugest of hooves and humongous horns too! Because there isn't anything a BIG yak can't do.So Gertie devises a growing-up plan. She eats her veggies, exercises every day, and reads lots of books. Still, she isn't any bigger. But when the other yaks come calling for Gertie to help them with a daring and dangerous task, could it be because it's something only a small yak can do?

Then look at some fun facts about yaks to share with your children.

5 Yak Fun Facts 

  1. Yak poop doesn’t stink-when they have water and are able to forage to eat, their dung has little to no odor. The Tibetan plateaus don’t have trees, so yak dung is the only easily obtainable fuel.
  2. Yaks have two layers of fur to keep them warm in the high altitude cold mountain air of places like China, Nepal, Mongolia, and Tibet. See if you can find these places on a map or globe.
  3. They have a long social life in the wild and can live for up to 20 years with their herds.
  4. Yaks are herbivores, which means that they eat plants like low lying grasses and shrubs.
  5. Yak butter is big in Tibet, their milk is  white or pink and very nutritious. It is also used to make a unique popular cheese.

Also, add a few more letter y handprint crafts to your day.

More Letter Y Handprint And Y Crafts

  • Y is for Yo Yo, Here you will find some Letter Y craft ideas including a cute little hand that has been traced, cut out, and holding a yo yo.
  • For a unique take on the letter, check out –Y is For Yacht and take a boating turn on letter learning.
  • I thought that Y is for Yellow was a clever practice for Y, bright and colorful it catches a child’s attention and is a good representation of the sound.
  • Loads of activity ideas to supplement and a Y is For Yawn craft that might make you a bit sleepy too ( I recommend this one before nap time).
  • Make a mess with squiggly piles of yarn to create this Y is for Yarn craft.
How To Make A Letter Y Handprint Craft Featuring A Yak

More Handprint Crafts

  • Quick And Inexpensive Letter C Handprint Craft – Crafty Crab Fun
  • H Horse Handprint | Horse Study
  • N Is For Nest Handprint | Nests Study
  • How To Create A Sweet Strawberry Letter S Handprint Craft
  • How to Make A Letter V For Volcano Handprint Craft
  • P Is For Pineapple Craft | How To Make A Fun Handprint Pineapple

Additionally, here are more activities about Asia if you want to include you older children.

Asia Activities For Kids

  1. Quick and Easy Ancient Chinese Paper making for Kids
  2. Free Ancient China Lapbook for Kids Who Love Hands-on History
  3. Marco Polo Unit Study and Lapbook
  4. Medieval Japan Unit Study and Lapbook
  5. How to Make an Easy Bird Craft Fun Paper Plate Peacock

Finally, look at how to make this letter Y handprint craft.

Letter Y Handprint Craft Featuring A Yak

We are going to make a handprint craft from two handprints that make an adorable little yak.

We made ours black and white, but you can choose from the wide variety of yak colors to create yours.

Their fur comes in black, brown, white, and yellow.

You will need:

  • Construction paper
  • Craft paint
  • Google eyes
  • A little hand
  • paintbrushes
How To Make A Letter Y Handprint Craft Featuring A Yak

First, gather all your supplies and have them close at hand so you don’t have to leave little painted hands unattended while you run to grab something.

Paint the entire hand white.

How To Make A Letter Y Handprint Craft Featuring A Yak

Now quickly go over the white with black paint on the 4 fingers only, excluding the thumb.

How To Make A Letter Y Handprint Craft Featuring A Yak

Then press the hand firmly onto the paper, making sure to press gently but firmly all over your palm and fingers.

Wash the hand clean.

Paint the palm black and the pinky and thumb white and press onto the paper slightly overlapping the body hand print you made.

How To Make A Letter Y Handprint Craft Featuring A Yak

Again, press the entire hand down firmly to transfer as much paint as you can.

Use a paintbrush to extend the horns or fill in gaps of missing paint if you need to.

To create their cold snowy climate, use the back and of a paintbrush dipped in white paint for snowflakes.

How To Make A Letter Y Handprint Craft Featuring A Yak

The final step is to draw a large Y in pencil.

How To Make A Letter Y Handprint Craft Featuring A Yak

Now, let or help your child paint over it with a small paintbrush to become more familiar with the letter.

How To Make A Letter Y Handprint Craft Featuring A Yak

Once everything is dry, glue googly eyes to the face to finish it off.

Leave a CommentFiled Under: Hands-On Activities Tagged With: handprint, hands-on, hands-on activities, handson, handsonhomeschooling, homeschool, homeschool preschool, life science, preschool, preschool skills, science, yak

How To Make A Frog Craft Toilet Paper Roll

September 7, 2024 | Leave a Comment
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

We are making a frog craft toilet paper roll. Also, look at my page Free Toad and Frog Lapbook and Fun Homeschool Unit Study Ideas.

It is not only a model for a frog but also, is a fun cup and ball activity for motor development and hand eye coordination.

Cup and ball is a classic game of skill and coordination that is enjoyed by all ages.

The game is one that is simple to learn, but difficult to master. 

How To Make A Frog Craft Toilet Paper Roll

I thought that a frog was the perfect creature to make the focus of our DIY cup and ball game.

You can customize your frog to be any color, even make it like the bright frogs of the amazon rainforest.

Frogs are super cool creatures that can be found in all sorts of places around the world.

They come in different shapes and sizes and have some pretty amazing skills that help them survive in their homes.

Frogs are amphibians, which means they can chill out in both water and on land.

They have smooth, moist skin that helps them soak up oxygen and water.

And they also have long, powerful legs that they use to jump and swim like champs.

When it comes to food, frogs are carnivores, so they dine on other animals.

They use their long, sticky tongues to snatch up insects, spiders, and other small creatures.

And with their big, bulging eyes, they can spot their prey from a mile away.

I have fun facts, resources, activities, and of course today’s frog craft toilet paper roll instructions for you.

Books and Resources About Frogs for Kids

11 Frog & Toad Unit Study Resources

Add a book or two or some fun hands-on resources to your unit study.

Image for The Frog (Animal Lives)

The Frog (Animal Lives)

Superbly detailed drawings capture the elusive frog in its watery realm, as it captures its prey with a sticky tongue, feeds its young, and leaps from place to place to escape from predators.

Image for Frogs and toads;

Frogs and toads;

Frogs and toads;

Image for Tale of a tadpole

Tale of a tadpole

The natural world doesn't work the way fairy tales do, but it still has its fair share of enchantments. With text and pictures that are both scientifically accurate and totally true to the comedies of family life, this is a happily-ever-after tale of unexpected transformations

Image for A Toad for Tuesday 50th Anniversary Edition

A Toad for Tuesday 50th Anniversary Edition

Just in time for its 50th anniversary, this beloved classic tale of adventure, compassion, and friendship has been remade for a new generation of young readers, including text revisions and fully colorized original illustration on the cover. A favorite chapter book is back, for read aloud or read alone.

While on a journey to visit his aunt, Warton the Toad is captured by a surly owl who announces plans to eat Warton for his birthday dinner on the upcoming Tuesday. As he awaits his fate, Warton works gamely to make his remaining days as pleasant as possible while he also seeks some way to escape and tries to convince the owl to let him go.

Naturally, Warton and Owl talk. But what the pair don't realize is how quickly even the oddest of friendships may form.

Image for Rainforest Frogs

Rainforest Frogs

Rainforest Frogs Haiku by Caley Vickerman Illustrated by Mark Lerer Foreword by Franco Andreone Designed and Edited by Susan Newman Frogs Are Green, Inc is proud to announce… Rainforest Frogs Order your copy now! Free shipping in the USA if you order directly from us! $11.95 | 52 pages softcover | Full color Rainforest Frogs profiles ten exotic and endangered amphibian species. Table of Contents Foreword by Franco Andreone Blue Poison Dart frog Amazon Milk frog Yellow-Banded Poison Dart frog Northern Glass frog Tiger’s Tree frog Golden Mantella Red-Eyed Tree frog Flat-Head Bromeliad Tree frog Tiger-Leg Monkey Tree frog Rabbs Fringe-Limbed Tree frog (Toughie)

Image for Frog (Life Cycle of a . . .)

Frog (Life Cycle of a . . .)

Do tadpoles have legs? Why do frogs live in water? How do frogs catch food? Explaining concepts through stunning photographs and simple text, 'Life Cycle of a Frog' takes an in-depth look at this familiar but fascinating animal.

Image for Climbing Tree Frogs (Pull Ahead Books)

Climbing Tree Frogs (Pull Ahead Books)

Introduces the physical characteristics, behavior, and habitats of North American tree frogs

Image for Frogs

Frogs

How far can frogs jump? Why do their eggs look slimy? Answer these questions and many more in this illustrated introduction to amphibians, and learn about the unique role frogs play in the environment. With her signature bright, well-labeled diagrams and simple text, Gail Gibbons introduces the habitat and life cycles of frogs, and gives a brief overview of common frog behaviors. Important vocabulary is introduced, defined, and reinforced with kid-friendly language and clear illustrations—plus a page of intriguing frog trivia. 

Image for Frog & Toad The Complete Collection

Frog & Toad The Complete Collection

This collection brings together all of Arnold Lobel’s engaging, warm and funny stories about Frog and Toad, and features a special foreword by Julia Donaldson. A collectable classic treasury that every child should read and own. Julia Donaldson says “I hugely admire and envy Arnold Lobel; he is my hero”. Once upon a time there were two good friends, a frog and a toad… From writing letters to going swimming, telling stories to finding lost buttons, Frog and Toad are always there for each other – just as best friends should be.

Image for Frog Growth Cycle

Frog Growth Cycle

This Forg life cycle set is a fun for children with an interest in insects and nature explore. And also it is a great teaching and learning tool for homeschoolers and preschoolers teaching.

Image for Anatomy Lab Soft Cover Frog Dissection Guide Book

Anatomy Lab Soft Cover Frog Dissection Guide Book

Fully Illustrated Guide: Each study guide is fully illustrated and conveys the complete dissection through illustration.

Visualize the Steps: the dissection guides depict anatomically correct step-by-step procedural illustrations helping the student visualize key organs and anatomy aiding in the overall dissection process.

Next, look at these facts about frogs.

7 Fun Facts about Frogs

  1. These amphibians have smooth, moist skin that helps them absorb oxygen and water.
  2. They have long, strong legs that help them jump and swim.
  3. They have sticky tongues that help them catch insects.
  4. Frogs can change their skin color to camouflage themselves with their surroundings.
  5. They make different sounds to communicate with each other, such as croaking and chirping.
  6. Frogs play an important role in the ecosystem. They help control the population of insects, and they are a food source for other animals, such as snakes and birds.
  7. They also help to keep the water clean by eating algae and other small organisms.

Also, look at more frog craft toilet paper roll activities

More Frog Craft Toilet Paper Roll Bonus

  • Explore the life cycle of a frog with this set that features frogs in every step of the life cycle from egg to full grown frog.
  • Read books and watch videos about frogs like this fun Wild Kratts episode, it is filled with facts, and a ‘frog’s eye view’ of frogs underwater.
  • Visit a zoo or aquarium to see frogs up close, you can search for zoos and aquariums in your area.
  • Read a story about frogs or flip through a living science book to learn more.
  • Learn about the different types of frogs that live in your area.
  • Preschoolers will be both fascinated and grossed out by this fun frog egg sensory bin.
  • Build fine motor skills making How to Make A Fun Origami Frog Amazon Rainforest Craft.
  • For early math skills create Fun Red Eyed Tree Frog Manipulatives for RainForest Math.
How To Make A Frog Craft Toilet Paper Roll

And more learning about frog crafts.

  • Why Is a Toad An Amphibian And Pondlife Facts & Make a Fun Toad House
  • Cute Colorful Toilet Paper Roll Rainforest Frogs for a Rainforest Frog Craft
  • Fun DIY Felt Frog Dissection With Frog Insides Labeled Mess Free (Free Printables)

Finally, look at how to make a frog craft.

Frog Craft Toilet Paper Roll

You will need:

  • Toilet paper roll
  • Red craft foam/felt
  • Green craft paint
  • Googly eyes
  • Pipe cleaner
  • Hot Glue
  • Paintbrushes
How To Make A Frog Craft Toilet Paper Roll

Paint the toilet paper roll green all over, set aside and allow to dry.

How To Make A Frog Craft Toilet Paper Roll

While you are waiting for the paint to dry, cut your pipe cleaner into 4 equal pieces.

Bend into the shape of legs for the frog.

How To Make A Frog Craft Toilet Paper Roll

Next, hot glue a medium sized pom pom to one end of a string 12” to 24” long.

Add more hot glue than is necessary to add some weight to the “fly” .

This helps make it easier to get in the “cup”.

Cut a tongue for your frog from craft foam or felt about 2”-3” long.

How To Make A Frog Craft Toilet Paper Roll

Once paint has dried, flatten one end of the tube and use hot glue to close it. Hold in place until glue has set.

How To Make A Frog Craft Toilet Paper Roll

Glue each of the legs into place.

Hot glue on googly eyes and glue the tongue inside the open mouth.

How To Make A Frog Craft Toilet Paper Roll

Finally, you will hot glue the string inside the mouth with the pompom on the opposite end.

How To Make A Frog Craft Toilet Paper Roll

To play:

Hold the cup in one hand and the ball in the other hand.

Swing the ball around the cup in a circle, keeping the string taut.

Try to catch the ball in the cup by flipping it upward while holding the mouth upright.

Practice makes perfect!

Leave a CommentFiled Under: Hands-On Activities Tagged With: frogs, hands-on, hands-on activities, handson, handsonhomeschooling, life science, science, toilet paper roll

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