Ready To Learn - Western Reserve Public Media
Transcription
Ready To Learn - Western Reserve Public Media
PBS 45 & 49’s Ready To Learn Caregiver Guide www.pbs4549.org Table of Contents PBS 45 & 49’s Ready To Learn Service .................................... 3 Diversity ............................................................................... 44 Exercise ................................................................................. 46 Developmental Areas and the PBS 45 & 49 Series That Address Them ............................................................................ 4 Families ................................................................................. 48 Feelings ................................................................................. 50 PBS 45 & 49 Children’s Programs Friends .................................................................................. 52 Arthur ..................................................................................... 8 Health ................................................................................... 54 Barney & Friends ................................................................... 9 Music & Movement ............................................................ 56 The Berenstain Bears ........................................................... 10 New Experiences ................................................................. 58 Between the Lions ............................................................... 11 Pets ........................................................................................ 60 Bob the Builder .................................................................... 12 Recycling & the Environment ........................................... 62 Clifford the Big Red Dog .................................................... 13 Safety ..................................................................................... 64 Cyberchase ........................................................................... 14 Self-Esteem ........................................................................... 66 Dragon Tales ........................................................................ 15 Shapes ................................................................................... 68 George Shrinks .................................................................... 16 Special Needs Awareness ................................................... 70 Maya & Miguel .................................................................... 17 Storytelling ........................................................................... 72 Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood ........................................... 18 Television / Media Literacy .............................................. 74 Postcards From Buster ........................................................ 19 The Five Senses .................................................................... 76 Reading Rainbow ................................................................ 20 Weather ................................................................................. 78 Sesame Street ....................................................................... 21 Teletubbies ........................................................................... 22 PBS 45 & 49 Curriculum Planning Pages Planning Page ...................................................................... 83 Where to Write ......................................................................... 23 Curriculum Planning Sheet ............................................... 84 Book List by Theme ............................................................ 85 Online Resources Activity Index by Curriculum Area ................................. 89 PBS Kids Online .................................................................. 24 PBS Parents .......................................................................... 24 PBS TeacherSource .............................................................. 25 Credits Instructional Designers and Authors Reading Rockets .................................................................. 24 Bree Silski, PBS 45 & 49 Ready To Learn Ready To Learn .................................................................... 25 Laura McFalls, PBS 45 & 49 Ready To Learn Intern Myra Sholtis, PBS 45 & 49 Educational Services Curriculum Planning: Program Taping Guide .................... 26 Project Coordinators PBS 45 & 49 Learning Triangle Activities The Learning Triangle ........................................................ 28 Bree Silski Graphic Designer Paula Kritz Diane Steinert Theme Index ........................................................................ 29 ABCs ..................................................................................... 30 Body Awareness .................................................................. 32 Celebrations ......................................................................... 34 Colors .................................................................................... 36 PBS 45 & 49’s Ready To Learn service is made possible, in part, with grants from… Conflict Resolution ............................................................. 38 Cooperation ......................................................................... 40 Counting & Numbers ......................................................... 42 The Sisler-McFawn Foundation The Charles E. and Mabel M. Ritchie Memorial Foundation The R. C. and Katharine Musson Charitable Foundation Ready To Learn is supported under the Ready To Learn Television Program, PR/Award Number R295A00002, as administered by the Office of Educational Research and Improvement, U.S. Department of Education. However, the contents do not necessarily represent the positions or policies of the National Institute on Early Childhood Development and Education, the Office of Educational Research and Improvement, or the U.S. Department of Education, and you should not assume endorsement by the Federal government. Printed 12/04 PBS 45 & 49’s Ready To Learn Service At PBS 45 & 49, we know that television can be a wonderful tool for learning. We also believe that, for young, impressionable viewers, all television is educational; we’re just not sure we want children to learn from everything they watch. We’re proud of PBS 45 & 49’s history of excellent, nonviolent, commercial-free programming for children. The time children spend watching our children’s programs is time spent learning. Wouldn’t it be wonderful to extend the learning after the program is over? You can. In this resource guide, we’ll provide you with some great ideas. What Does Being Ready to Learn Mean? Being ready to learn means that a preschooler has gained all kinds of experiences, behavior skills and thinking strategies to meet the demands of school. When a child can make connections between old and new experiences, work well in a group and solve a new problem all by herself, that child is very likely to know success in school. That child is ready to learn. Children who are ready to learn have the resources and skills to get the most out of school and out of life. A Brief History of Ready To Learn A 1995 survey of 7,000 kindergarten teachers showed that 35 percent of children entering kindergarten are not fully prepared to start school; 50 percent of those teachers said that school readiness has clearly decreased in the last five years. The Ready To Learn project was developed by the Corporation for Public Broadcasting (CPB) and the Public Broadcasting Service (PBS) in 1995 in response to the growing concern that preschoolers are not prepared to begin a formal education. The project is our unique contribution to the national educational goal that all American children start school “Ready To Learn.” Research Has Shown That Ready To Learn Works Educators at The University of Alabama completed a research project in 2004 that studied the first five years of the Ready To Learn program. Findings indicated that parents who have participated in Ready To Learn workshops: Ready To Learn is ... • A daily line-up of children’s programming on PBS 45 & 49, specially designed to meet the needs of preschool and young school-aged children. • Educational messages between programs that urge children to be creative, curious, cooperative and responsible learners. • Supplementary support materials for children and adults, such as our Ones to Grow On newsletter and our Media Literacy Guide. • Station-sponsored events and workshops for families. • Staff development workshops for child care providers. Contact Information If you would like additional information regarding our free community workshops for parent groups and childcare providers, please call Bree Silski, Ready To Learn Coordinator, at 1-800554-4549 or e-mail her at bsilski@wneo.pbs.org. • Read more books and stories to their children. • Do more hands-on activities with their children. • Read for more educational purposes. • Take their children to libraries and bookstores more often. PBS 45 & 49’s Ready To Learn Caregiver Guide 3 Developmental Areas and the PBS 45 & 49 Children’s Series That Address Them The children’s programs on PBS 45 & 49 are designed by teams of professional educators and television producers who carefully create the educational components and content of the programs. The following academic and emotional/social skills are the focus of our children’s programming: Physical/Motor Skill Development Through these programs, your child can learn how the body works, how each body part is identified and how it moves, how to approach and accomplish physical tasks and how to appreciate the complexity of his/her own body movement and motor skills. • Barney & Friends • Teletubbies • Sesame Street Social/Emotional Skill Development These shows help children learn to name the feelings they experience, learn that others have similar feelings and that those feelings are conveyed through facial expressions and physical postures, learn appropriate and creative responses to a wide range of emotions and learn that other people can be supportive, loving and responsive. Problem-solving skills are modeled by characters in these programs. Your children will learn how to break a problem down into smaller tasks that make up a problem; learn what resources are available for help in solving problems; and learn to find books and turn to other children and supportive adults as resources. The shows acknowledge that some frustration is a natural part of solving a problem but that, with patience and selfconfidence, answers can be found. • Arthur • The Berenstain Bears • Bob the Builder • Clifford the Big Red Dog • Cyberchase • Dragon Tales • George Shrinks • Arthur • Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood • Barney & Friends • Sesame Street • The Berenstain Bears • Bob the Builder • Clifford the Big Red Dog • Dragon Tales • George Shrinks • Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood • Sesame Street 4 Critical Thinking/Problem-Solving Skill Development Language and Literacy Skill Development Good language skills allow children to understand other people and to express themselves so that others can understand them. These programs show children that being able to read and write well is relevant to happiness and success in personal and professional pursuits, and that mastering both skills requires tenacity and practice. They’ll also see that language is a dynamic and satisfying tool for communicating with others and making connections. Science Study Through these programs, children are encouraged to ask questions about animals, plants and all parts and pieces of the natural world. The shows’ hosts represent both genders and people from all walks of life to give youngsters the confidence needed to pursue science studies. Viewers are introduced to basic scientific principles from which elementary school science curricula are formed, and discover resources that are available to answer their questions about science and the natural world. • Bob the Builder • Arthur • George Shrinks • The Berenstain Bears • Reading Rainbow • Between the Lions • Sesame Street • Clifford the Big Red Dog • Maya & Miguel • Postcards From Buster • Reading Rainbow • Sesame Street Cognitive Skill Development Cognitive skills are the building blocks that allow children to organize their knowledge and experiences and begin to develop problem-solving and reasoning skills. Cognitive skills include the ability to classify objects according to form, structure, size, number, etc.; recognize when objects are the same or different; recognize numbers and letters of the alphabet; and understand relationships between objects and events (for instance, inside, on top of, behind, before and after). Life Skills Development Basic skills in taking care of oneself are covered by these programs. Topics such as child care, cooking and nutrition, cleaning and organizing home and room, managing money and time, behaving properly, identifying interests and pursuing careers are covered. • Arthur • Barney & Friends • The Berenstain Bears • Bob the Builder • Clifford the Big Red Dog • Dragon Tales • Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood • Sesame Street • Barney & Friends • Between the Lions • George Shrinks • Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood • Sesame Street • Teletubbies PBS 45 & 49’s Ready To Learn Caregiver Guide 5 Cultural/Social Diversity Appreciation and Understanding Children will learn that diversity is interesting, challenging and positive. They’ll learn that differences in a person’s appearance, behavior, taste in food and clothing, choice of games and holiday observances are often related to the person’s specific religious, ethnic and cultural background. It’s fine to ask questions to find out more about how people are different and to feel confident and proud of the ways in which we may be different from others with whom we’re friends or classmates. • Barney & Friends • Clifford the Big Red Dog • Dragon Tales • Maya & Miguel • Reading Rainbow • Sesame Street Music and Art Appreciation These programs introduce young viewers to a variety of musical styles and demonstrate what kinds of music result when the different components of music are changed and varied. Children will learn to look at various examples of visual art and recognize the processes that went into, for example, a painting’s composition. The programs hope to instill in preschoolers an appreciation for the ways music and visual arts enhance life. • Barney & Friends • Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood • Sesame Street Math Skills These programs help children foster pre-math skills by focusing on concepts such as sorting, classifying and matching. Higher-level math skills, such as identifying patterns, measuring and telling time and temperature are also found throughout the episodes. Children will see how math is used throughout their daily lives. • Barney & Friends • Cyberchase • Sesame Street PBS 45 & 49 Children’s Programs Web site: www.pbskids.org/arthur Ages 4 to 8 Series goals and themes • Empowers children by showing how Arthur and his friends use effective, age-appropriate problem-solving skills. • Promotes reading and writing skills. • Models the building of healthy relationships among friends and family. Why is the series beneficial for young children? Arthur is not only designed to entertain, but also to encourage a love for reading and writing and to enhance kids’ problem-solving and social skills. Each episode shows Arthur dealing with a dilemma, and the storyline takes viewers through the problem-solving stages. Introduction to the characters Arthur is an 8-year-old who likes soccer and TV’s Bionic Bunny. He’s introspective and sometimes a little neurotic, but that’s because he takes things very seriously that other people may not notice — a friend who’s acting strangely, for instance, or the fact that the janitor hasn’t been at school all week. Shy and reflective, Arthur tends to embarrass easily, but he’s no goody-goody. At times, Arthur is mean, he breaks the rules, he even lies — but these actions all have consequences. The point is, he’s learning as he goes through his third-grade life. D.W. (Dora Winifred) is Arthur’s 4-year-old sister. She’s independent and highly imaginative, the first to suspect a conspiracy or that aliens have taken over her parents’ bodies. She thinks fast and is always handy with advice for her older brother. 8 Baby Kate is the youngest member of Arthur’s family. She’s a baby. She eats. She goes to the bathroom. She makes strange noises. Mother and Father are supportive and thoughtful people, but they are also busy with their own lives. Mom’s an accountant and Dad runs a catering business out of the garage. Buster and Francine are Arthur’s good friends. Web site: www.pbskids.org/barney Ages 2 to 5 Series goals and themes • Emphasizes singular themes that deal with important childhood achievements, such as learning to count, identifying colors and shapes or making friends. • Reinforces learning concepts through repetition. Why is the series beneficial for young children? Barney & Friends is designed to enhance the development of the whole child in the thinking, social, emotional and physical areas. Young children are given opportunities for new learning experiences. Existing skills are reinforced, and appropriate behavior is modeled. Strong emphasis is placed on positive social skills, such as making friends, sharing, cooperating and using good manners. This is accomplished primarily through the use of children’s imaginations. The series also stimulates language development, social interaction, problem-solving, musical play and physical activity. Introduction to the characters Barney is a lovable, friendly 6-foot purple dinosaur who comes to life from a plush toy by way of children’s imaginations. Barney is a friend to all children — they feel safe with him and look to him for reassurance and security. Baby Bop is Barney’s 3-year-old friend. Her behavior, language and level of development are typical of a child of this age. BJ is Baby Bop’s 6-year-old brother. He is an active, impulsive dinosaur who especially enjoys baseball, playing with his friends and helping his younger sister. Miss Etta Kette is a lavender-feathered bird who teaches children about manners and being kind to others. Scooter McNutty is a lively, brown, furry squirrel who has mishaps and misadventures that are the result of acting first and thinking later. Stella the Storyteller shares tales of travels from around the world. The children in the cast of each episode represent various ethnic backgrounds with diverse interests and abilities. PBS 45 & 49’s Ready To Learn Caregiver Guide • PBS 45 & 49 Children’s Programs 9 Web site: www.pbskids.org/berenstainbears Ages 2 to 7 Series goals and themes • Represents the joys, trials and tribulations of a family. • Models positive bonds of family including communication, conflict resolution, familial relationships, working toward common family goals and showing kindness. • Encourages children to make thoughtful, informed and responsible choices and decisions. • Features at least one socio-emotional issue (such as peer pressure, diversity, fear, friendship) per episode. The resolution of these conflicts provides clear, tangible payoffs for the characters — and the viewers at home. Why is the series beneficial for young children? Young children not only need to know their ABCs and 123s to succeed in school, but also how to interact socially and cooperatively. They need to know how to think critically and solve problems, they need to be motivated and persistent and they need to develop an appreciation for discovery and learning. In other words, when preparing children for school, parents and caregivers should consider the needs of “the whole child.” Introduction to the characters Brother Bear loves sports of all kinds, especially soccer. He often acts as protector and stands up for the smaller cubs at school. Sister Bear is a spirited, spunky third-grader. Outdoorsy and sports-minded, she also loves fairy tales, writing and jump rope. Papa Bear is big-hearted and rises to all occasions in times of crisis. He is always ready to make whatever sacrifice is necessary for the benefit of his cubs. An ardent fisherman and outsdoorsbear, he is also very fond of eating. Mama Bear is the wise heart and soul of the family, the keeper of morals and manners. She is an avid gardener and loves to quilt as well. 10 Web site: www.pbskids.org/lions Ages 4 to 7 Series goals and themes • Promotes reading and writing by using a combination of music, stories, animation, live action and puppetry. • Emphasizes the pleasures and values of reading, as well as the skills needed for learning how to read, by teaching both whole language and phonics. Why is the series beneficial for young children? The framework for each episode is based on a “whole-part-whole” teaching approach, which many experts recommend as the most effective way to combine both whole language and phonics. Each episode introduces new vocabulary words and showcases the pleasures of reading. There is no other series on television that teaches reading. Between the Lions is the first series in a decade designed to do so. Introduction to the characters A family of lions (Theo and Cleo and their two cubs, Leona and Lionel) runs an unusual library where books, words and story characters come to life. Click the Mouse, the library’s technology guru, can drag and drop characters from books into the library or the other characters into books. Cliff Hanger, star of a continuing series of adventure stories, helps showcase key words and sounds. The Vowelles, a Motown-style female singing group with lead vocalist Martha Reader, entertains with a repertoire that includes only vowel sounds. Gawain’s World, a live-action segment, demonstrates how to combine sounds to form words. PBS 45 & 49’s Ready To Learn Caregiver Guide • PBS 45 & 49 Children’s Programs 11 Web site: www.bobthebuilder.org Ages 2 to 5 Series goals and themes • “Measure Up the Job” builds problem-solving and creative-thinking skills. • “Call in the Crew” emphasizes teamwork and communication. • “Keep On Building” teaches about follow-through and determination. • “Celebrate a Job Well Done” builds confidence and a sense of achievement. Why is the series beneficial for young children? Bob the Builder’s world is constructed block-by-block with positive messages. By demonstrating all of the steps for finishing what you start, Bob the Builder shows how a positive attitude, problem-solving, teamwork and follow-through are the necessary tools to complete every job. Introduction to the characters Bob is kind, friendly, helpful and hard-working. He is a good builder, but he tends to be a little disorganized. Bob is very proud of his machines. He gets everyone in the building yard excited with his “can-do” call. Wendy, Bob’s business partner, is extremely capable – she deals with customers, organizes the business and makes sure that the building crew is in the right place at the right time. She is also a technology wizard. The Machine Team, including Scoop, Muck, Lofty, Dizzy and Roley, isn’t your average construction equipment. The machines talk, sing and play, and they all have their individual ways of going about their tasks and getting the job done. Bob would be the first to say he has the best crew around and makes sure that they know it! 12 Clifford THE BIG RED DOG Web site www.pbskids.org/clifford Ages 3 to 7 Series goals and themes • Teaches good citizenship through tolerance, fun, unconditional love and inclusion. • Promotes the love of reading. Why is the series beneficial for young children? Clifford the Big Red Dog and his friends explore the universal experiences of childhood. Their adventures highlight community, inclusion and self-esteem. Each program includes a segment on “Clifford’s Big Ideas,” which explores attributes such as honesty, sharing and respect. Introduction to the characters Clifford is curious, eager and ever enthusiastic. As simple as his outlook on life may be, his enormous size affects every facet of life for him and those around him. He adores Emily Elizabeth, and his primary goal in life is to please her and those around him. Emily Elizabeth Howard is a great kid! Honest, loving and kind, she always wanted a dog of her own. An outgoing and determined 7-year-old, her love for Clifford is unconditional. Cleo is a scrappy, headstrong poodle with a healthy self-image. She has a tendency to leap before she looks and she’s known to steer her friends in the wrong direction, but her heart is always in the right place. T-Bone’s looks can be deceiving. Despite his sturdy exterior, T-Bone is really just a gentle, timid pup. Cautious when dealing with the unknown, he has a knack for innocently stating the obvious. PBS 45 & 49’s Ready To Learn Caregiver Guide • PBS 45 & 49 Children’s Programs 13 Web site: www.pbskids.org/cyberchase Ages 6 to 11 Series goals and themes • Encourages children to develop a “can-do” attitude toward math. • Motivates children to approach mathematics with enthusiasm, confidence and competence. • Helps increase youngsters’ math knowledge and skills and involve them in reasoning and problem solving. Why is the series beneficial for young children? The educational objectives and content of Cyberchase have been guided by and are consistent with the principles and standards of the National Council of Teachers of Mathematics (NCTM). Each component of the project demonstrates several defining characteristics of mathematics: Math is problem solving, math can be collaborative and math is for everyone. Introduction to the characters Matt is a cyber-detective with a yo-yo, a backpack full of gadgets and a knack for uncovering clues. Jackie is smart and funny, and she always has a plan. Sometimes she’s a bit over-the-top, but she’s on a mission to save the future of Cyberworld! Inez is a little girl with a big vocabulary. She is curious about everything. Digit is a loveable klutz who is a first-class pal to the kids. Motherboard is the wise and powerful ruler of Cyberworld. Hacker is a pompous and power-hungry scoundrel. He’s primped and primed to take over the Cyberworld — and he’s not about to let anyone ruin his plan. 14 Web site: www.pbskids.org/dragontales Ages 3 to 6 Series goals and themes • Encourages young children to pursue the challenging experiences that support their growth and development. • Helps young children recognize that there are many ways to approach and learn from the challenging experiences in their lives. • Helps young children understand that to try and not succeed fully is a natural and valuable part of learning. Why is the series beneficial for young children? Dragon Tales is full of the type of fun and fantasy that is engaging to preschoolers. As the characters romp through this land of make believe, however, they encounter challenges very similar to those young children face in their daily lives. It may be a fear they need to cope with or a problem they need to solve. As they watch, young children will work along with the characters to come up with effective strategies. They will also gain an understanding that some things take more time and effort than others do and it is okay to take many little steps toward achieving a goal. Introduction to the characters Emmy (6 years old) and Max (4 years old) take frequent trips to visit their friends in Dragon Land. Ord is a very big and lovable dragon who is scared of almost everything. Cassie is a small and shy dragon who can usually understand all points of view. Zak and Wheezie, a two-headed brother and sister dragon, disagree about everything except their love of music and each other. Quetzal is a wise teacher who provides support and guidance when “grown-up” help is needed. PBS 45 & 49’s Ready To Learn Caregiver Guide • PBS 45 & 49 Children’s Programs 15 Web site: www.pbskids.org/georgeshrinks Ages 2 to 11 Series goals and themes • Provides fertile ground for cognitive growth and development. As a “natural” at thinking and problem solving, George sees new uses for household objects and toys, and uses them to solve his “size issues” and to get different jobs done. • Provides illustrative models for creative thinking and problem solving. Because of his small size, George meets obstacles in every show. • Emphasizes characters’ social and emotional development. Why is the series beneficial for young children? The creative main character helps youngsters understand the importance of self-acceptance. The show encourages individuals to use the means available to them to solve problems and overcome obstacles. The topics covered by the program include biology, botany, entomology and ecology, which will help foster an interest in science by highlighting the fun side of learning. Introduction to the characters When you first meet George, you might notice he's a little small for his age. He may be only three inches tall, but that's not a problem. George never sweats the small stuff and he loves a challenge. Junior Shrinks is George's big, little baby brother, who just wants to play and help George. Not only is George the best brother in the whole wide world, he's the best “toy” any kid could have. Mom (Perdita Shrinks) is not a regular Mom. She is constantly surprising us with her talents as a sculptor, painter, gardener, nature enthusiast and just about anything else you can think of. Dad (Harold Shrinks) is a bit eccentric. He is a musician and an inventor. He invents crazy instruments and is in a band. He also helped George invent his Zooper Car. 16 Becky is George's best friend who lives next door. She is very smart and when George can't always figure everything out, Becky will come up with an idea to solve the problem. Zooper Car, George’s main method of transport, is a transformer-like craft of his own design. With a flip of a switch the Zooper Car can rearrange, transforming from plane to submarine, helicopter to racecar. Web site: www.pbskids.org/mayaandmiguel Ages 6 to 8 Series goals and themes • Promotes the value of a culturally diverse society by supporting, respecting and validating the variety of perspectives, traditions, languages and experiences that populate today’s world. • Supports English language acquisition and usage in personal, social and cultural interactions. Why is the series beneficial for young children? Maya & Miguel is designed to entertain and educate all children, to promote cultural diversity and to encourage English language acquisition, particularly among Hispanics. Equally important, the initiative addresses the growing need in the U.S. for positive media representations of Hispanic children, one of the fastest-growing population segments, which is currently underserved due to a lack of relevant children’s television programming. Introduction to the characters Maya is smart, creative, curious, ambitious, wellintentioned and a true romantic at heart. Quite simply, she is a force of nature. She isn’t happy unless she is dreaming up a “big idea” to improve the lives of those around her. Everyone knows when they hear Maya’s famous words “¡Eso es!” (“That’s it!”) or “Tengo una idea!” (“I have an idea!”), they’re in for an adventure! Miguel is three minutes older than Maya and quite her opposite — practical where she is romantic, careful where she can be reckless. He is patient, modest and very “¡Chevere!” (“Cool!”). When caught up in one of Maya’s plans, he’s often the one who gets the pie in his face. Known for his phrase “Yo te conozco, Maya ...” (“I know you, Maya ...”), Miguel is yin to Maya’s yang. PBS 45 & 49’s Ready To Learn Caregiver Guide • PBS 45 & 49 Children’s Programs 17 Web site: www.pbskids.org/rogers Ages 2 to 6 Series goals and themes Fred Rogers’ television series emphasizes child development principles from his own studies and his work with consultants, assuring that this carefully structured program can help children develop the skills they’ll need for learning: • self-esteem • curiosity about the world • the ability to deal with feelings • self-control • imagination • persistence • tolerance for waiting • cooperation • appreciation of diversity • creativity Why is the series beneficial for young children? • Encourages children to feel good about themselves by consistently supporting their sense of self-worth. • Helps children learn the skills needed for growing up — such as curiosity, paying attention, patience and cooperation. • Made for children. The series is slow and simple — that’s how young children learn best. Introduction to the characters In the Neighborhood Creator Fred Rogers Wise and strong Queen Sarah Saturday Speedy Delivery Mailman Mister McFeely Prince Tuesday, son of the King and Queen Regulars include Joe Negri and the late Don “Chef” Brockett Timid and unsure Daniel Striped Tiger Visitors from a wide variety of professions and fields of interest, who come to talk about their jobs or interests with Mister Rogers “Rockit” rocking chair maker Cornflake S. Pecially X the Owl, the eager learner In the Neighborhood of Make-Believe Puppets Authoritarian-but-kindly King Friday the 13th 18 Shy Henrietta Pussycat Mischievous, opinionated Lady Elaine Fairchilde Web site: www.pbskids.org/postcards Ages 6 to 8 Series goals and themes • Builds awareness and appreciation of the many cultures of North America. • Supports elementary school-age English language learners. Why is the series beneficial for young children? In today’s world, it is important to learn both about people who are different from ourselves. In each episode, Buster meets kids from all walks of life: different regions, different religions, different backgrounds and different interests. And Buster, always curious, acts as a representative for all viewers. Each episode also focuses on particular language functions and vocabulary fields. Language functions include such actions as offering encouragement, expressing feelings and asking for advice. Vocabulary fields deal with words related to particular topics covered in each episode. Introduction to the characters Buster is Arthur’s best friend. Since his parents divorced, Buster has lived with his mom, Bitzi. But now he’s traveling with his dad, Bo. Buster is one of the world’s great explorers. He’s interested in everything around him. He loves food, and he dreams of aliens. To keep in touch with all his friends, Buster sends them video postcards using a camera his mom gave him. Bo, Buster’s dad, is a professional pilot. Los Viajeros, a Latin American rock group, hired Bo to fly them on their multi-city tour across the United States — with forays into Mexico, Canada and Puerto Rico. Bo really enjoys the chance to spend more time with his son. Carlos and Mora Velasquez are the husband-and-wife team who front the band, Los Viajeros ("The Travelers"). Carlos is from the western Puerto Rican town of Rincon. He sings back-up vocals and plays the lead guitar plus many Latin-American string instruments. Mora’s parents are from Mexico, but she grew up in New York City. She sings lead vocals, but often plays the accordion that her dad brought with him when he first arrived from Mexico. PBS 45 & 49’s Ready To Learn Caregiver Guide • PBS 45 & 49 Children’s Programs 19 Web site: www.pbskids.org/readingrainbow Ages 2 to 12 Series goals and themes Reading Rainbow’s primary goal is to instill in children positive attitudes toward reading. The series is based on the premise that the optimum time for learning to read, wanting to read and loving to read is when a child is young. This is also a critical time for adopting positive learning habits, skills and attitudes toward reading, science and math. Why is the series beneficial for young children? Reading Rainbow motivates children to discover books and to read for the joy of it. It also provides positive role models by showing children a variety of culturally and ethnically diverse women and men in work and expert roles. The series explores a wide variety of topics with intriguing video segments that take viewers to places they may never get to visit. Excitement about reading and learning are also an integral part of the specifically science- and math-focused programs. Introduction to the characters LeVar Burton is a dynamic African-American actor who communicates his genuine interest in reading, literacy, science and math. His own insatiable curiosity and love of books lends a wonderful flavor to the series. You may know LeVar from his roles in “Star Trek: The Next Generation” and in Alex Haley’s “Roots.” Parents and kids have indicated that it’s important to have the opportunity to “meet” individuals who are positive role models representing various cultures in the world. The show consistently presents experts, book reviewers and kids who are not in stereotypical gender roles. These experts represent a range of ethnic heritages and offer viewers a variety of people with whom they can identify. 20 Web site: www.pbskids.org/sesame Ages 2 to 6 Series goals and themes Sesame Street encourages children to: • Learn to appreciate human diversity. • Take beginning steps toward reading, writing and math. • Feel good about themselves and take pride in what they can do. • Interpret the sights, sounds and experiences in their environment. • Develop an attitude of cooperation. • Think creatively to solve problems. Why is the series beneficial for young children? Sesame Street is the most thoroughly researched and tested television show ever produced. Reactions to the show provide the information that keeps Sesame Street current and responsive to the interests and needs of young children. The format of the show is designed to encourage participation. • Every show includes a number of situations designed to encourage children to use problem-solving skills to help characters think of solutions to various predicaments. • Pauses after questions encourage children to think about how they would answer. • The Muppets and the people often speak directly to the audience. • The Muppets’ personalities are designed to reflect the excitement, curiosity and anxieties of childhood, so young children can easily identify with them. Introduction to the characters Maria is Puerto Rican and runs the Fix-It Shop with her husband, Luis. Elmo is a bright red Muppet who thinks and acts just like a typical preschool child. Big Bird, 8 feet tall and covered with yellow feathers, is outgoing and asks a lot of questions. Zoe is a bright-orange 2-yearold who always has a lot to say (very quickly). Cookie Monster, Bert & Ernie, The Count, Oscar the Grouch, Slimey the Worm and others round out the cast. PBS 45 & 49’s Ready To Learn Caregiver Guide • PBS 45 & 49 Children’s Programs 21 Web site: www.pbskids.org/teletubbies Ages 1 to 4 Series goals and themes Teletubbies’ unique format and characters are designed to nourish young children’s thinking skills, teach them to listen, help to build their curiosity, expand their imagination and increase their confidence. Through a bright and playful environment featuring music, animation and live-action segments, each episode of Teletubbies: • Promotes a sense of play and humor • Encourages listening and making predictions • Teaches through repetition • Promotes affection • Encourages movement • Celebrates individuality Why is the series beneficial for young children? In each enjoyable 30 minutes, our youngest viewers find their place: a playful, imaginative world inhabited by gentle, loving characters exploring and experiencing everything around them. The series is also a wonderful opportunity for parents to share the joy of first discovery through children’s eyes. The pacing of the series is intentionally slow to give children, and the adults who care for them, the chance to interact with the Teletubbies and each other. The series recognizes the developmental importance of movement and play and features a dance segment in each episode to encourage the viewing audience to get up and interact with the Teletubbies. Introduction to the characters The purple Teletubby, Tinky Winky, is also the gentlest member of the group. Usually singing his “Tinky Winky” song, he loves to dance and fall over on his back. Baby Sun, who finds the Teletubbies very funny. Dipsy is the green Teletubby. Known for his distinctive steps, way of saying hello and singing a song with a reggae beat, he also loves his hat very much. Voice Trumpets, who bring songs and poems to Teletubbyland. The yellow Teletubby, Laa-Laa, is the happiest one who also smiles the most. She loves to sing and dance and her favorite word is “nice.” The Windmill, which spins when something is about to happen. Po is the red Teletubby and she is often on her scooter zipping around the hills, repeating “quickly, quickly, quickly” or “slowly, slowly, slowly.” 22 Others in Teletubbyland include ... Noo-Noo, the Teletubbies’ friendly, funny, conscientious pet vacuum cleaner. The Lion and the Bear. Where to Write Here’s an “extend the learning” activity. Write or send a drawing to your favorite children’s programs. You can e-mail most programs from their Web sites. Arthur WGBH Audience Services 125 Western Avenue Boston, MA 02134 Web site: www.pbskids.org/arthur Dragon Tales Sesame Workshop One Lincoln Plaza New York, NY 10023 Web site: www.pbskids.org/dragontales Barney & Friends HIT Entertainment 830 South Greenville Ave. Allen, TX 75002 Web site: www.pbskids.org/barney George Shrinks Nelvana Communications, Inc. 7920 Sunset Blvd., Suite 402 Los Angeles, CA 90046 Web site: www.pbskids.org/georgeshrinks Barney & Friends Fan Club P. O. Box 9000 Allen, TX 75013-1307 Maya & Miguel Scholastic 555 Broadway New York, NY 10012 Web site: www.pbskids.org/mayaandmiguel The Berenstain Bears Nelvana Communications, Inc. 7920 Sunset Blvd., Suite 402 Los Angeles, CA 90046 Web site: www.pbskids.org/berenstainbears Between the Lions WGBH Audience Services 125 Western Avenue Boston, MA 02134 Web site: www.pbskids.org/lions Bob the Builder HIT Entertainment 830 South Greenville Ave. Allen, TX 75002 Web site: www.bobthebuilder.org Clifford the Big Red Dog/Clifford’s Puppy Days Scholastic 555 Broadway New York, NY 10012 Web site: www.pbskids.org/clifford Cyberchase WNET 450 West 33rd St., 6th Floor New York, NY 10001 Web site: www.pbskids.org/cyberchase PBS 45 & 49’s Ready To Learn Caregiver Guide Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood Family Communications, Inc. 4802 Fifth Avenue Pittsburgh, PA 15213 Web site: www.pbs.org/rogers Postcards From Buster WGBH Audience Services 125 Western Avenue Boston, MA 02134 Web site: www.pbs.org/postcards Reading Rainbow P.O. Box 80669 Lincoln, NE 68501-0669 Web site: www.pbskids.org/readingrainbow Sesame Street Sesame Workshop One Lincoln Plaza New York, NY 10023 Web site: www.pbs.org/kids/sesame Teletubbies Ragdoll 120 Wooster St., Fifth Floor New York, NY 10012 Web site: www.pbskids.org/teletubbies 23 Online Resources PBS Kids Online PBS has built a wonderful Web site for children ages 2 to 12. In the award-winning tradition of PBS’s children’s programming, the animated PBS Kids neighborhood offers children a free, fun, safe and educational Web environment. If you’re not linked to the World Wide Web at home, don’t despair. Your local library is probably online, and that’s another very good reason to take a family trip to the library. Children can go “backstage” at the Kids Online site to find: • PBS Kids Fun Pages • Fun and games • Coloring sheets that can be printed • And much more! PBS Kids Online also features poems, stories, games, drawings and other fun activities for your children. Go to www.pbskids.org PBS Parents PBS Parents is about: • Together Time — the time you spend playing and learning with your child. • Parent Time — the time you spend learning how to be a better parent. A “PBS Parent” is a mom or a dad, a grandma or grandpa, a friend or a caregiver – any adult who helps a child learn and grow. Parents can access: Go to www.pbs.org/parents 24 • TV program information • Parenting issues and advice • Fun and games PBS TeacherSource PBS TeacherSource materials are developed by trained and practicing educators. In addition to having teachers create curriculum materials, PBS regularly seeks educator feedback through surveys and focus groups, receives ongoing guidance from the team of exemplary teachers who make up the TeacherSource Advisory Group and conducts periodic “reality checks” with the PBS Board of Directors’ Education Committee representing various educational organizations. Finally, the TeacherSource editorial staff is composed of educators with a variety of teaching backgrounds. At this site, teachers can explore a vast array of resources, including: • Education’s best resources for grades Pre-K to 2 • In-depth online professional development through PBS TeacherLine Go to www.pbs.org/teachers • Details on PBS station outreach activities in your community • Tips on how to effectively teach with technology • And much more! Reading Rockets Reading Rockets offers a wealth of strategies, lessons and activities designed to help young children learn to read. Its resources assist parents, teachers and other educators in working with struggling readers who require additional help in reading and comprehension skills development. The Reading Rockets Web site is updated daily with news headlines about reading, research-based articles, video interviews with top children’s book authors, tips for parents and educators, lists of national and local resources and much more. Access these links relative to teaching children to find: • What’s new • Frequent questions Go to www.readingrockets.org PBS 45 & 49’s Ready To Learn Caregiver Guide • Current articles • News and views 25 PBS 45 & 49’s Ready To Learn The PBS 45 & 49 Ready To Learn Web site offers online access to the valuable resources available through this program. Visitors to the site can register for workshops and read or download a variety of helpful publications, activities pages and caregiver tips. The Web site offers: Go to www.pbs4549.org/RTL.HTM • Workshop information and registration links • A program schedule for Ready To Learn • Online access to the current edition of The Ones to Grow On • “Watch, Do and Read” resources • PBS 45 & 49’s Media Literacy Guide • Caregiver and literacy tips • And much more! Curriculum Planning Program Taping Guide “How do I find out what is on PBS 45 & 49 and when a show will air? There are two ways to access our program schedule: 1. Visit our Web site on a regular basis (www.pbs4549.org). Browse through the program listings to check for interesting themes. Tape the programs for immediate or future use. Where to look on our Web site: • Click on the word “Programming.” This is the first word listed on the left sidebar on our home page. • Click on the first choice listed, “PBS 45 & 49 Weekly Schedule.” • Choose the week’s listings that you would like to view. • Click on the name of the program that interests you. (Most of the children’s programs will be listed in the morning and afternoon grids.) You will access a listing of that show’s episodes for the week. 2. Subscribe to our free children’s newsletter, The Ones to Grow On. This is our helpful quarterly newsletter for anyone who cares for young children. In the newsletter, you will find programming schedules for the upcoming month or so. Each day will be followed with the episode name and theme. To subscribe to the newsletter, call PBS 45 & 49 at 1-800-4549. 26 PBS 45 & 49 The Learning Triangle Active Television Viewing • Make viewing a physical activity whenever possible: Sing, dance, exercise — get up and start moving along with the television characters. • Encourage children to describe what they see, repeat new words and predict what will happen next. Television provides opportunities for children to learn and practice new words, hear others talk and develop conversation skills. • Ask open-ended questions: What are they doing? What will happen next? • Encourage your children to ask questions about the programs. Let your children know that you are there to help them understand television events. The Learning Triangle Watch, Do & Read • Before viewing, talk to your children about what they will see and hear. Use your schedules to see what will happen on the program, and prepare children to watch and listen for those educational messages that you hope to reinforce. Doing Activities With Children • The process is more important than the product. Praise your child’s efforts for working through the activity. A perfect picture is not important. • Ask children to tell you about their work. “Tell me PBS 45 & 49 encourages you to use “The Learning Triangle” when you watch our children’s shows with your youngsters. After you • WATCH a TV program, • DO a hands-on activity and • READ a related book. 28 about your picture” — this question begins discussion, strengthens language skills and eliminates guessing games. • Put your child’s name on his/her work. Show children that they should be proud of their accomplishments. The refrigerator door could always use an extra picture. • The activity does not have to be an art activity. Go for a walk, play a game, sing a song, or go on a field trip to a museum, fire station or library. Reading to Children • Choose a regular reading time. • Ask open-ended questions and encourage children to talk about the story. • Use body language. Emphasize key words, mimic events and encourage your children to move right along with you. • Take time to discuss the story after reading. Theme Index ABCs ............................................................................................................................................................... 30 Body Awareness ........................................................................................................................................... 32 Celebrations .................................................................................................................................................. 34 Colors ............................................................................................................................................................. 36 Conflict Resolution ....................................................................................................................................... 38 Cooperation ................................................................................................................................................... 40 Counting & Numbers .................................................................................................................................. 42 Diversity ........................................................................................................................................................ 44 Exercise .......................................................................................................................................................... 46 Families .......................................................................................................................................................... 48 Feelings .......................................................................................................................................................... 50 Friends ........................................................................................................................................................... 52 Health ............................................................................................................................................................. 54 Music & Movement ...................................................................................................................................... 56 New Experiences .......................................................................................................................................... 58 Pets ................................................................................................................................................................. 60 Recycling & the Environment ..................................................................................................................... 62 Safety .............................................................................................................................................................. 64 Self-Esteem .................................................................................................................................................... 66 Shapes ............................................................................................................................................................ 68 Special Needs Awareness ............................................................................................................................ 70 Storytelling .................................................................................................................................................... 72 Television/Media Literacy .......................................................................................................................... 74 The Five Senses ............................................................................................................................................. 76 Weather .......................................................................................................................................................... 78 PBS 45 & 49’s Ready To Learn Caregiver Guide • PBS 45 & 49 Learning Triangle Activities 29 ABCs Watch a clip of a program Program ABCs Theme Barney & Friends “What’s in a Name?” Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood #1023 “Looking for Letters” Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood #1349 “Letter Shapes” Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood #1373 “Signs” Do a related activity Letter Rubbing Alphabet Collage Materials: Materials: • Scissors • Large pieces of newsprint or large plain paper • Broken crayons with the wrappers removed • Pre-cut letters of the alphabet made from poster board or cardboard 1. Select a letter, put it on a flat surface and place a piece of newsprint or paper over the letter. 2. Using the side of the crayon, rub over the paper, pressing hard until an image of the letter appears. 3. Try this with several letters, or write a word by placing letters next to one another and rubbing an entire word. From the Mister Rogers’ Plan & Play Book, 1991, Family Communications, Inc. Used with permission. 30 • 26 index cards with one letter of the alphabet printed on each • Magazines • Scissors • Glue • A roll of cash register receipt paper 1. Let each child choose an index card with a favorite letter. 2. Using the cards as references, ask the child to cut or tear out that same letter from a magazine. 3. Glue the letter to the receipt paper. 4. Choose another index card to use for reference in finding another letter. 5. Hang the receipt paper with the collage of letters around the room and invite the children to name as many of the letters as they can. Turn to page 26 to find out how to access the PBS 45 & 49 program schedule. Letter People Song Activity Materials: Materials: • Alphabet letters • Bag or pillowcase • Nursery rhymes • Your voice 1. Place the letters in a bag or pillowcase. 1. Teach the children a particular letter by using a song that has words beginning with the letter. 2. Have the children sit in a circle. 3. Have one child draw a letter from the bag and decide how many friends he/she will need to make the letter with their bodies on the floor. Let them cooperate to solve the problem. 4. Continue around the circle until all of the letters have been created, or create a few letters each day. 2. Have the children alternately stand up and sit down when they hear the letter. From Barney’s Watch, Play & Learn, 1998, Lyrick Studios. Used with permission. Read a related book The Guinea Pig ABC By Kate Duke 26 Letters and 99 Cents By Tana Hoban A My Name Is Alice By Jane Bayer Chicka Chicka Boom Boom By Bill Martin, Jr. & John Archambault Farm Alphabet Book By Jane Miller The Folks in the Valley: A Pennsylvania Dutch ABC By Jim Aylesworth We Read: A to Z By Donald Crews My First ABC of Animals By Fiammetta Dogi Black and White Rabbit’s ABC By Alan Baker A to Z Picture Book By Gyo Fujikawa For additional ideas for the theme ABCs, visit the PBS 45 & 49 web site at www.pbs4549.org. Click on the programming link, then the PBS 45 & 49 Weekly Schedule link and select the week you want to view. You will find the Sesame Street links. Click on Sesame Street and you will be able to read about the episodes and their letter of the day. PBS 45 & 49’s Ready To Learn Caregiver Guide • PBS 45 & 49 Learning Triangle Activities 31 Body Awareness Watch a clip of a program Program Body Awareness Theme Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood #1141 “Growing” Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood #1342 “Handprints” Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood #1343 “Mirrors” Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood #1368 “Front & Back” Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood #1541 “Self Portraits” Do a related activity Getting Dressed Front and Back Materials: Materials: • None 1. Ask the children if they can pretend to put on a pair of gloves. See if they can pretend to put on a variety of other clothes. 2. Encourage the children to pretend about tying shoes, buttoning a sweater and zipping a jacket. 3. You can play a guessing game by having one child pretend to put on an article of clothing and having the others try to guess what that child is trying to do. From the Mister Rogers’ Plan & Play Book, 1991, Family Communications, Inc. Used with permission. • Large mirror • Hand mirror • Paper • Markers and crayons 1. Talk with the children about objects in the room that have fronts and backs. How do they look the same? How do they look different? 2. Have a child stand with his/her back to the other children. Can the other children guess who it is? How can they tell? 3. The children can take turns standing with their backs to a large mirror. By holding a hand mirror they can look at their backs. 4. Encourage the children to draw themselves from the front and from the back. Have them draw the front on one side of the paper and the back on the other. From the Mister Rogers’ Plan & Play Book, 1991, Family Communications, Inc. Used with permission. 32 Turn to page 26 to find out how to access the PBS 45 & 49 program schedule. If You’re Happy and You Know It (Traditional) Little and Big Exercises Materials: Materials: • Music • None “If You’re Happy” 1. Play music that will encourage large and small movements. If you’re happy and you know it, Clap your hands. 2. Encourage the children to make large movements to the music. Do the same with small movements. If you’re happy and you know it, Clap your hands. 3. Alternating movements will help them develop self-control and the ability to manage body movements. If you’re happy and you know it, And you’re sure you want to show it, From Additional Activities From Mister Rogers’ Plan & Play Book, 1998, Family Communications, Inc. Used with permission. If you’re happy and you know it, Clap your hands. Verse 2: Stamp your feet Verse 3: Nod your head Verse 4: Shout, “Hurray” • Create more things to do with your body if you’re happy. For example: run in place, march in place, swing your arms, wiggle like a fish, blink your eyes, wiggle your ears, etc. Encourage the children to come up with their own movements. Read a related book Dem Bones By Bob Barner Herbert Hated Being Small By Karla Kuskin From Head to Toe By Eric Carle Hue Boy By Rita P. Mitchell The Human Body Newbridge Books Heather Hiding By Nancy White Carlstrom My Feet By Aliki Why Does That Man Have Such a Big Nose? By Mary Beth Quinsey My Hands By Aliki Spectacles By Ellen Raskin What Am I Made of? By David Bennett PBS 45 & 49’s Ready To Learn Caregiver Guide • PBS 45 & 49 Learning Triangle Activities 33 Celebrations Watch a clip of a program Program Celebrations Theme Arthur “Arthur’s New Year’s Eve” Arthur “Grandma Thora Appreciation Day” Arthur “The Long, Dull Winter” Arthur “Arthur’s Perfect Christmas” Barney & Friends “Shopping for a Surprise” Barney & Friends “It’s Tradition” Barney & Friends “Aunt Rachel Is Here” Barney & Friends “Birthday Olé” Bob the Builder “Surprises” Clifford the Big Red Dog “Clifford’s Big Surprise” (Surprise Party) Clifford the Big Red Dog “Clifford’s Big Heart” (Valentine’s Day) Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood #1009 “Weddings” Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood #1375 “Planning a Party” Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood #1450 “Birthdays” Postcards From Buster “Buster’s Lucky Year” Do a related activity Wrapping Paper Party Placemats Materials: Materials: • Tissue paper or brown paper bags • Sponge shapes or fruit halves • Tempera paint 1. Have the children spread the paper or bag out on a flat surface. • 12” x 18” construction paper placemats (one for each child) • Tempera paint • Markers • Contact paper 2. Allow the children to make designs by using the paint and utensils. 1. Have the children lightly paint one palm with the tempera paint. 3. Give the paint time to dry. Now the children can wrap that special present! 2. Have them press their hand carefully on their construction paper. From Barney’s Watch, Play & Learn, 1998, Lyrick Studios. Used with permission. 3. Allow the children to decorate around their handprints. Make sure you or the child writes his/her name on the placemat. 4. Depending on the occasion, you may want to encourage the children to make themed placemats. 5. Once the paint has dried, cover the placemat in contact paper. From Barney’s Watch, Play & Learn, 1998, Lyrick Studios. Used with permission. 34 Turn to page 26 to find out how to access the PBS 45 & 49 program schedule. A Wedding Cake A Gift for You Materials: Materials: • Your favorite cake recipe and ingredients • Measuring cups and spoons • Cake pans or cupcake pans 1. Make a list of jobs that the children can do. For example: • Wash hands • Fill the measuring cups • Add ingredients • Mix the ingredients • Grease the pans • Beat the eggs • Clean up 2. Follow your favorite recipe and allow the children to help. 3. Encourage the children to discuss what they know about real weddings. From the Mister Rogers’ Plan & Play Book, 1991, Family Communications, Inc. Used with permission. • Paper • Markers and crayons • Tape 1. Explain to the children that they are going to make a gift for someone special. 2. Have each child make a picture or write a message on a small piece of paper. 3. While they are working on their gift, cut paper into 6-inch squares. 4. The children can place their message or pictures in the center of the square. 5. Help the children by folding the opposite corners and taping them together. 6. Allow the children to fold in the last two corners and tape them together. 7. Ask the child to tell you whom the gift is for and write that person’s name on the envelope. 8. Discuss gift giving and how good it feels to give something to someone you love. From the Mister Rogers’ Plan & Play Book, 1991, Family Communications, Inc. Used with permission. Read a related book Mr. Rabbit and the Lovely Present By Charlotte Zolotow Happy Birthday, Moon By Frank Asch Happy Birthday Baby Bop! By Linda Cress Dowdy Happy Birthday Martin Luther King By Jean Marzollo Seven Candles for Kwanzaa By Andrea Davis Pinkney Hanukkah! By Roni Schotter Happy Birthday, Sam By Pat Hutchins PBS 45 & 49’s Ready To Learn Caregiver Guide • PBS 45 & 49 Learning Triangle Activities 35 Colors Watch a clip of a program Program Colors Theme Barney & Friends “Red, Yellow and Blue” Dragon Tales “Staying Within the Lines” Dragon Tales “A True-Blue Friend” Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood #1243 “Colored Snow” Teletubbies “Colours – Blue” Teletubbies “Colours – Orange” Teletubbies “Colours – Pink” Do a related activity Sidewalk Chalk Sun Catchers Materials: Materials: • Powdered tempera paint • Plaster of Paris • Water • Small paper cups • Plastic spoons • Measuring spoons • Paint smocks 1. Have each of the children measure out three (3) tablespoons of plaster of Paris and two (2) tablespoons of powdered tempera paint (the children may want to mix the colors to see what happens). 2. Have the children add three (3) tablespoons of water. 3. The children can now mix the colors with a plastic spoon. 4. Allow the mixture to harden. 5. After the mixture is hardened, have the children peel away the cup. • Colored glue • Wax paper • String • Scissors 1. Give each child a piece of wax paper to fold in half. 2. Invite the children to use their fingers to draw designs with colored glue on the wax paper. Apply the glue heavily. 3. Set the papers aside to dry. 4. When the paper is dry, the colored design can be peeled off the wax paper. 5. Tie strings through the designs and hang them in a window. From Using PTV Pointers With Early Learners, 1996, WGTE Public Broadcasting. Used with permission. 6. Talk about all of the different colors in the chalk. 7. Go outside and draw on the sidewalks/parking lot/playground. From Creative Science for Young Children by Betty Foster, et. al. 36 Turn to page 26 to find out how to access the PBS 45 & 49 program schedule. Color Telescope Skin Colors Materials: Materials: • Toilet paper tubes or paper towel tubes • Colored cellophane • Rubber band 1. Have colored shapes of cellophane spread out on a table. 2. Have the children choose one color to put on the end of a paper tube. 3. The children can secure the cellophane by using the rubber band. • Assorted liquid tempera paints • Several medium-sized containers with lids • Paint brushes • Masking tape • Pens • Painting smocks 1. Have the children place their hands side by side and decide how many different skin colors there are in the class — as many as there are children! 4. Have the children look at different objects through the different colors. 2. Working in small groups, have the children create custom-blended skin colors for members of their group. 5. Encourage the children to add different colors to their telescopes. 3. Have the children combine paint colors and blend the colors. 6. Discuss primary and secondary colors. 4. Help the children decide which colors to add to achieve the closest match. They may need to test the colors on their own skin! From Barney’s Watch, Play & Learn, 1998, Lyrick Studios. Used with permission. 5. The children can make personal portraits using their own special paint. Read a related book All the Colors of the Earth By Sheila Hamanaka Colors of the Day By Ruth Gembicki Bragg Freight Train By Donald Crews My Many Colored Days By Dr. Seuss Little Blue and Little Yellow By Leo Lionni Red Day, Green Day By Edith Kunhardt Who Said Red? By Mary Serfoza Elmer By David McKee Brown Cow, Green Grass, Yellow, Mellow Sun By Ellen Jackson Mouse Paint By Ellen Stoll Walsh PBS 45 & 49’s Ready To Learn Caregiver Guide • PBS 45 & 49 Learning Triangle Activities 37 Conflict Resolution Watch a clip of a program Program Conflict Resolution Theme Arthur “Arthur’s Big Hit” Arthur “Arthur’s Family Feud” Clifford the Big Red Dog “Cleo’s Fair Share” Dragon Tales “The Fury Is Out on This One” Dragon Tales “The Giant of Nod” Dragon Tales “Quibbling Siblings” Dragon Tales “No Hitter” Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood #1525 “Peaceful Solutions” Reading Rainbow “Enemy Pie” Do a related activity Clap and Stomp Rhythms The Feelings Mirror Materials: Materials: • Two signs — one with a picture of a hand and one with a picture of a foot 1. Talk about stomping and clapping as a way to help get rid of angry feelings. 2. Ask the children to clap when you hold up the hand sign and to stomp when you hold up the foot sign. 3. Practice stomping and clapping, then do it in rhythm patterns and invite the children to imitate your patterns. From the Let’s Work It Out Workshop Facilitator Guide, 1998, WGTE Public Broadcasting. Used with permission. • Large mirror • Poster board • Aluminum foil • Crayons • Glue 1. Talk about different feelings. 2. Have the children make faces in the mirror to match the feelings you talked about. Let the children construct their own “feelings mirror” by gluing foil to poster board. 3. Frame the mirrors by drawing pictures of faces showing emotion or by cutting out pictures from magazines. From the Let’s Work It Out Workshop Facilitator Guide, 1998, WGTE Public Broadcasting. Used with permission. 38 Turn to page 26 to find out how to access the PBS 45 & 49 program schedule. A Peaceful Solution Some Things Belong to Everyone Materials: Materials: • Plastic milk jug (with a narrow opening) • Clothes pins (not the ones with a spring) • String 1. Ask the children if they can think of times when conflicts happen in the classroom. Ask the question,”What should we do if two children want the same thing?” 2. Ask them, “What are some things we can do to solve that problem?” 3. Tie a piece of string onto a clothespin (one per child). 4. Have the children put the clothespins inside the jug with only the string hanging out (only three or four at a time). 5. Ask the children to see if they can pull out the clothespins all at the same time. • Paper • Paint, markers or crayons 1. Ask the children if they can think of anything that belongs to everyone, things that have to be “shared.” 2. Ask them to tell you about the things at home that belong to everyone. 3. Help them think of something that is all theirs. 4. To finish, have the children share the paint, crayons and markers to make their very own picture of a rainbow. From the Mister Rogers’ Plan & Play Book, 1998, Family Communications, Inc. Used with permission. 6. Ask them to think of a way to get all the clothespins out again. 7. Ask them if they can do it more easily by working together and taking turns. 8. Repeat the activity, this time taking turns. From the Mister Rogers’ Plan & Play Book, 1998, Family Communications, Inc. Used with permission. Read a related book No Fighting, No Biting! By Else Holmelund Minarik Mouse TV By Matt Novak Let’s Talk About Feeling Angry By Joy Berry Luka’s Quilt By Georgia Guback The Grouchy Ladybug By Eric Carle Rosie & the Yellow Ribbon By Paula DePaolo It’s Mine By Leo Lionni Matthew and Tilly By Rebecca C. Jones PBS 45 & 49’s Ready To Learn Caregiver Guide • PBS 45 & 49 Learning Triangle Activities 39 Cooperation Watch a clip of a program Program Cooperation Theme Arthur Arthur Arthur Arthur Arthur Barney & Friends Barney & Friends Clifford the Big Red Dog Clifford the Big Red Dog Clifford the Big Red Dog Dragon Tales Dragon Tales Dragon Tales Dragon Tales Dragon Tales George Shrinks George Shrinks Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood Postcards From Buster Reading Rainbow “Arthur’s Birthday” “The Big Blow-Up” “Arthur and D.W. Clean Up” “The Blizzard” “The World Record” “Classical Cleanup” “Easy Does It” “Clifford’s Carnival” “Team Spirit” “Clifford on Parade” and “Follow the Leader” “To Kingdom Come” (Sharing) “The Giant of Nod” “Emmy’s Dream House” “Not Separated at Birth” “Lights, Camera, Dragon!” “Ants in the Pantry” “Round Up the Usual Insects” #1109 “Cooperation” “Coming Together” “A Chair for My Mother” Do a related activity Cooperation Squeeze Problem-Solving Art Project Materials: Materials: • None • One very large piece of paper • Drawing supplies 1. Form a circle and hold hands. 2. The teacher squeezes the hand of the person next to him or her, that person squeezes the hand of the next person and so on until the squeeze makes its way around the circle. 3. Move the squeeze in the opposite direction around the circle. 4. Give the children the option of passing the squeeze along or sending it back. Children find this cooperative activity fun. For variety, pass a wink or a smile. From Using PTV Pointers With Early Learners, 1996, WGTE Public Broadcasting. Used with permission. 40 1. Ask the children to use the paper and drawing supplies to make a picture of themselves. 2. Invite the children to explore how they might cooperate on using one very large piece of paper to do this; for example, cut paper into smaller pieces, work together on one large picture, divide the paper into a section for each child, etc. 3. Let the children execute their own plan for producing the drawing. 4. Display the finished work. From The Puzzle Place Caregiver Guide, 1994, Lancit Copyright Corp., KCET. Turn to page 26 to find out how to access the PBS 45 & 49 program schedule. Lunch Factory Rope Challenge Materials: Materials: • Napkins • Cups • Drinks • Ingredients for a lunch menu planned by the children 1. Talk about the cooperation it takes to work in a factory. Explain how an assembly line works, with each person doing part of the job and passing it along to another to add the next piece. 2. Help the children plan a lunch menu for their Lunch Factory. 3. Supply the menu items. 4. Set up a lunch assembly line, giving each child a specific job; one child could pull apart the paper plates, the next could open two slices of bread on a plate, the next could add lunch meat, then cheese, etc. 5. Run the assembly line until all lunches are made and the last child sets the plates at each place at the table. • One clothesline • A large open space 1. Tie knots in the clothesline at one- to two-foot intervals. 2. Tie ends of the rope together forming a circle. 3. Ask the children to make a circle, with each child holding on to one knot of the rope. 4. Ask the group to create a series of other shapes with the rope: a square, a rectangle, an oval. 5. Talk about what each person needs to do so the group can succeed at making the new shapes. • Before the children start making shapes, have them scramble about while holding the rope. Some can pass over or under the rope to make a big tangle. You can even do this to music. When the music stops, cooperate to unscramble the rope without letting go of the knots. From Using PTV Pointers With Early Learners, 1996, WGTE Public Broadcasting. Used with permission. 6. Enjoy your cooperative lunch! From the Mister Rogers’ Plan & Play Book, 1991, Family Communications, Inc. Used with permission. Read a related book Harriet’s Halloween Candy By Nancy Carlson Subway Sparrow By Leyla Torres The Big Hungry Bear By Don & Audrey Wood The Lion and the Mouse By Ed Young The Rainbow Fish By Marcus Pfister It’s Mine By Crosby Bonsall Daddy Makes the Best Spaghetti By Anna Hines Katherine’s Doll By Elizabeth Winthrop Mole’s Hill: A Woodland Tale By Lois Ehlert Barney and Baby Bop’s Band: A Story About Sharing (book on tape) By Mark S. Bernthal A Chair for My Mother By Vera B. Williams PBS 45 & 49’s Ready To Learn Caregiver Guide • PBS 45 & 49 Learning Triangle Activities 41 Counting & Numbers Watch a clip of a program Program Counting & Numbers Theme Barney & Friends Barney & Friends Barney & Friends Barney & Friends Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood Reading Rainbow Reading Rainbow Reading Rainbow Reading Rainbow Teletubbies Teletubbies Teletubbies Teletubbies Teletubbies Teletubbies “First Things First” “Count Me In!” “One Nose, Two Eyes” “Numbers! Numbers!” #1447 “Numbers” #1462 “Card Sorting” “How Much is a Million?” “Hotel Animal” “Math Cure” “Saturday Sancocho” “Numbers (2)” “Numbers (1)” “Numbers (4)” “Numbers (6)” “Numbers (8)” “Numbers (5)” Do a related activity Peanut Take-Away Number Monster Materials: Materials: • Peanuts or another healthful finger snack • One bowl 2. Place a bowl of peanuts in the middle of the table. • Butcher paper • Markers • White paper cut into strips • Tape • Dice 3. Have the children guess how many peanuts are in the bowl. 1. Tape a large piece of butcher paper to the wall and draw an outline of a head on it. 4. Count the peanuts. 5. Have all the children eat a few peanuts. 2. Write the names of body parts on one side of the white paper strips. 6. Guess again how many are in the bowl and count again. 3. Tape the strips, word-side down, near the butcher paper. 7. Repeat: eat, guess, count, until all of the peanuts are gone. 4. Choose a child to be the first Monster Maker. 1. Seat the children around a table. From Explorations: Educational Activities for Young Children by Lucille R. Clayton. 5. Have the child roll the dice and choose a wordstrip. 6. If the child rolls a three and chooses a mouth, the child draws three mouths on the head of the monster. 7. Repeat until everyone has had a turn. 8. Display the monster. From The Learning Circle, 1998, by Patty Claycomb. 42 Turn to page 26 to find out how to access the PBS 45 & 49 program schedule. Number Mix Puppy Counting Materials: Materials: • 1⁄4 cup O-shaped cereal • 1 cup square-shaped cereal • 2 cups popcorn • 2 cups small crackers • 3 cups pretzel twists • One zip-top plastic bag for each child • 5 bowls • None 1. Have the children sit in a circle. 2. Tell them that this is a game that requires their imaginations. The children will close their eyes, get comfortable and make pictures in their minds while you tell the story. 3. Tell the children this story: 1. Decide on how many of each ingredient to put in each bag. You see a large box sitting on the floor. It is starting to shake! You can see a floppy ear at the top of the box. It is a puppy! It is jumping out of the box! Now it is resting on the floor. It has fallen asleep. 2. Seal the bag and shake. 3. Make enough for each child to have one bag. 4. Have the children look in their bags and guess which item they have the most of and which the least. Here comes another puppy. You can see its nose at the top of the box. It is jumping out of the box! Now there are two puppies asleep on the floor. 5. Ask them to take all of one particular ingredient out of the bag and count it. Another puppy is sliding down the box. Now there are three puppies! Look at the box again. There is a tail coming over the top. The puppy is coming out backwards! Now there are four puppies on the floor. 6. Have the children take the rest of the items out and sort them into piles. 7. Make a chart of the ingredients in their Number Mix bags. Help the children read the chart and compare it to the contents of their bags. Is that all the puppies? No! The box is shaking! You can see a paw at the top of the box. The puppy is jumping out. Now there are five puppies asleep on the floor. 8. Have the children make their own Number Mix bags. They should choose a number between one and five for each ingredient and put that number in the bag. 4. Have the children open their eyes and ask the following questions: 9. Eat and enjoy! • How many puppies jumped out of the box? • What parts of the puppies did you see at the top of the box? • What did the puppies do when they reached the floor? From The Learning Circle, 1998, by Patty Claycomb. Read a related book What Comes in 2s, 3s and 4s? By Suzanne Aker The Button Box By Margarette S. Reid How Much is a Million? By David Schwartz How Many How Many How Many By Rick Walton Count! By Denise Fleming Hotel Animal By Keith DuQuette Ten, Nine, Eight By Molly Bang Math Curse By Jon Scieszka Up to Ten and Down Again By Lisa Campbell Ernst Saturday Sancocho By Leyla Torres Ten Black Dots By Donald Crews One to Ten Pop-Up Surprises By Chuck Murphy Farm Counting Book By Jane Miller My First Book of Time By Claire Llewellyn PBS 45 & 49’s Ready To Learn Caregiver Guide • PBS 45 & 49 Learning Triangle Activities 43 Diversity Watch a clip of a program Program Diversity Theme Arthur Arthur Arthur Arthur Barney & Friends Barney & Friends The Berenstain Bears Clifford the Big Red Dog Clifford the Big Red Dog Clifford the Big Red Dog Dragon Tales Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood Reading Rainbow Reading Rainbow “Muffy’s New Best Friend” “Arthur and Los Vecinos” “The Boy With His Head in the Clouds” “Buster’s Amish Mismatch” “Any Way You Slice It” “Individual Differences” “The New Neighbors” “A New Friend” “The Truth About Dogs and Cats” “New Dog in Town” “Dragon Sails” #1234 “There’s No One Just Like You” #1322 “Talking About Disabilities” “Arthur’s Eyes” “Watch the Stars Come Out” Do a related activity Looks Can Be Deceiving Hello Materials: Materials: • A variety of bags (pretty gift bags, lunch sacks, grocery bags, trash bags, etc.) • A variety of familiar items (a popular toy, a wellliked snack, a spoon, an unappealing vegetable, a sock, etc.) 1. Place one item per bag, making sure there is no relationship between the appearance of the bag and its contents. 2. Have the children select a bag they think they’d like to open. 3. When the bags are opened and the contents revealed, lead a discussion about how they might have been fooled when they “jumped to conclusions” about the appearance of the bag. Talk about how we sometimes do that with people. 4. Remind the children of this activity the next time someone “jumps to conclusions.” • None 1. Help your children learn to say “hello” in a number of different languages. Use parents, other teachers and community members to help you develop the list of greetings and proper pronunciations. Additional activities: • Designate a language for each day of the week. Deliver all your greetings in that language. • Make labels in another language identifying familiar items in the classroom. Call the items by their foreign names. From Different and the Same Teacher’s Guide, 1995, Family Communications, Inc. Used with permission. From Different and the Same Teacher’s Guide, 1995, Family Communications, Inc. Used with permission. 44 Turn to page 26 to find out how to access the PBS 45 & 49 program schedule. Different and the Same Fans Inside-Outside Materials: Materials: • Strips of colored construction paper • Hole punch • Brass fasteners (one per student) • List of questions 1. Prepare a list of at least 10 questions to ask the class. Here are some examples: Who speaks a different language at home? Who is learning how to play an instrument? Who likes peanut butter and jelly sandwiches? Who has a dog? Who likes to go fishing? 2. Have each colored strip of construction paper represent each question. You may need several strips of the same color. 3. Ask the first question. If the child answers yes to the question, give him/her a colored strip of paper. 4. Continue asking the questions and have the children collect their colored strips. 5. After all of the questions have been answered, have each child stack his/her strips. Punch a hole in one end and fasten the stack together with a brass fastener. Spread the strips out to make a fan. 6. Discuss how many students have the same colors in their fans. The fans show how sometimes we are different and sometimes we are the same. From Different and the Same Teacher’s Guide, 1995, Family Communications, Inc. Used with permission. • Scrap paper • Pencils 1. Begin by telling the children that there is some information we can know about people by looking at the outside. An example would be sorting blocks by color, shape or size. Ask the children what they can tell about you by looking at you. An example would be your hair color or height. 2. Explain that there are some things they can’t tell about you by looking at your outside. Some things are inside. Then tell them something surprising about yourself that they don’t know. 3. Invite the children to think of something about themselves that no one knows. Instruct them not to share the information just yet. 4. While the children are involved in other activities, call individual children up and, if he/she is willing, write down the thing about that child that no one knows. You may have to help the children by asking some questions. 5. Write the secrets on the strips of scrap paper. 6. Call the group together again and see who can guess which secret belongs to which classmate. 7. Talk about the importance of looking on the inside of people and not just the outside. From Different and the Same Teacher’s Guide, 1995, Family Communications, Inc. Used with permission. Read a related book Red Dancing Shoes By Denise Lewis Patrick Potluck By Anne Shelby Mama Do You Love Me? By Barbara M. Joosse Faces By Shelley Rotner & Ken Kreisler On the Go By Ann Morris People By Peter Spier Bread, Bread, Bread By Ann Morris Mama Zooms By Jane Cowen-Fletcher Hats, Hats, Hats By Ann Morris Arthur’s Eyes By Marc Brown Shoes, Shoes, Shoes By Ann Morris Watch the Stars Come Out By Riki Levinson PBS 45 & 49’s Ready To Learn Caregiver Guide • PBS 45 & 49 Learning Triangle Activities 45 Exercise Watch a clip of a program Program Exercise Theme Arthur Barney & Friends Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood Postcards From Buster Postcards From Buster Postcards From Buster Teletubbies Teletubbies Teletubbies Teletubbies Teletubbies Teletubbies Teletubbies Teletubbies “D.W. Flips” “Play for Exercise” #1094 “Games With Balls” #1137 “Gymnastics” #1170 “Different Kinds of Exercise” #1173 “Basketball/Teamwork” #1329 “Stop and Go Game” #1493 “Daily Exercise” #1602 “Soccer” #1603 “Special Olympics” #1605 “Bowling” “Winter Gold” “Hools & Drums” “Swimming in the Desert” “Basketball” “Crawling” “Gymnastics” “Ice Skating” “Jumping” “Rollerblading” “Skipping” “Swimming” Do a related activity Feelings Dance Parachute Games Materials: Materials: • Streamers or scarves • Music 1. Give each child a streamer or a scarf. 2. Have the children move to music. 3. The children can move and dance depending on how the music makes them feel. 4. Change the music from time to time to represent different emotions. 46 • A sheet or a thin blanket 1. Have the children hold the “parachute” along the edges with both hands. 2. Have them walk in a circle while raising and lowering the parachute. 3. Sing a song and add additional movements for the children to make with the parachute. Turn to page 26 to find out how to access the PBS 45 & 49 program schedule. Tightrope Walking Physical Exercise Materials: Materials: • Two six-foot pieces of string or masking tape • Tape to fasten the string (if you use string) 1. Make a tightrope by taping a long piece of string or masking tape to the floor. 2. Show the children how to walk on the line by placing one foot in front of the other. 3. Help the children to walk on the line, but then let them try it for themselves. From the Mister Rogers’ Plan & Play Book, 1998, Family Communications, Inc. Used with permission. • Music 1. Explain to the children that exercise can make them feel good. 2. Play music and have the children follow your lead in doing some exercises. Some examples of movements are: • Raising hands over their heads • Lifting knees • Marching • Circular motions with arms • Touching heads, shoulders and toes • Twisting from side to side • Jumping with one or two feet 3. Let the children take turns leading the exercise. From the Mister Rogers’ Plan & Play Book, 1998, Family Communications, Inc. Used with permission. Read a related book Barney Plays Nose to Toes By Margie Larsen & Mary Ann Dudko Can You Dance, Dalila? By Virginia Kroll Jump, Frog, Jump! By Robert Kalan Sea Swan By Kathryn Lasky My Mom is a Runner By Mary Reimold Mrs. Armitage on Wheels By Quentin Blake My Feet By Aliki Shoes By Elizabeth Winthrop PBS 45 & 49’s Ready To Learn Caregiver Guide • PBS 45 & 49 Learning Triangle Activities 47 Families Watch a clip of a program Program Family Theme Arthur Arthur Arthur Arthur Arthur Arthur Arthur Arthur Barney & Friends Barney & Friends Barney & Friends Barney & Friends Clifford the Big Red Dog Dragon Tales Dragon Tales Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood Postcards From Buster Reading Rainbow Reading Rainbow Teletubbies “Grandpa Dave’s Old Country Farm” “My Dad, the Garbage Man” “Grandma Thora Appreciation Day” “Sue Ellen’s Little Sister” “Background Blues” “1001 Dads” “Kids Are From Earth, Parents Are From Pluto” “The Big Dig” (Time with grandfather) “Oh, Brother … She’s My Sister” “Aunt Rachel Is Here” “Grandparents Are Grand” “My Family and Me” “Clifford’s Doggy Reunion” “My Emmy or Bust” (Missing a sibling) “Baby Troubles” (Taking care of a baby) #1188 “Family” #1366 “Extended Family” #1476 “Divorce” #1534 “Grandparents” #1535 “Grandfathers” #1555 “What Is Adoption?” #1555 “We Are Family” (Mormon family) “A Chair for My Mother” “The Patchwork Quilt” “Little Baby” Do a related activity Family Collage Materials: • Magazine pictures of men and women • Magazine pictures of children, babies and teenagers • Poster board • Glue 3. Have the children glue the pictures to the poster board, creating various types of families from the pictures. 4. Display the collage and talk about all the different families. Adapted from A Planning Guide to the Preschool Curriculum, 1984, by Anne R. Sanford, et. al. 1. Cut pictures out of magazines. 2. Place the pictures in the middle of a large table and mix them up, leaving them face up. 48 Turn to page 26 to find out how to access the PBS 45 & 49 program schedule. Family Tree Family Quilt Materials: Materials: • Construction paper • Magazines • Glue • Scissors • Wallpaper scraps • Large sheet of paper • Glue • Non-toxic paint 1. Have construction paper tree trunks and leaves available for the children to cut out. 1. Have the children cut squares from the wallpaper scraps. 2. Help the children write the names of their family members on the leaves. 2. Glue the squares to the large piece of paper to make their quilt. 3. The children can glue the tree trunk and leaves to a large piece of paper. 3. Allow children to add names or pictures to their quilts. 4. It is also nice to allow the children to cut pictures out of a magazine that represent each person on their family tree. 4. Display the quilts and talk about family heirlooms. 5. Have the children glue the picture next to the corresponding leaf. Family Flag Materials: • Magazines • Large piece of paper • Felt • Fabric squares • Crayons, markers, glitter, etc. • Scissors • Stick or ruler 1. Have the children cut out pictures that remind them of special times they have had with their families. Adapted from Barney’s Watch, Play & Learn, 1998, Lyrick Studios. Used with permission. Read a related book The Big Big Sea By Martin Waddell On Mother’s Lap By Ann Herbert Scott Daddy Makes the Best Spaghetti By Anna Hines Abuela’s Weave By Omar Castaneda Mama Zooms By Jane Cowen-Fletcher 2. Glue the pictures to a large piece of paper. All Kinds of Families By Norma Simon 3. Encourage the children to decorate their family flags. The Patchwork Quilt By Valerie Flournoy 4. Attach the stick or ruler to the flag. 5. Let the flags fly high for everyone to see. From Barney’s Watch, Play & Learn, 1998, Lyrick Studios. Used with permission. Big Sister, Little Brother By Terry Berger Families Are Different By Nina Pellegrini A Chair for My Mother By Vera B. Williams PBS 45 & 49’s Ready To Learn Caregiver Guide • PBS 45 & 49 Learning Triangle Activities 49 Feelings Watch a clip of a program Program Feelings Theme Arthur Arthur Arthur Arthur Barney & Friends Clifford the Big Red Dog Clifford the Big Red Dog Clifford the Big Red Dog Clifford the Big Red Dog Dragon Tales Dragon Tales Dragon Tales Dragon Tales Dragon Tales Dragon Tales Dragon Tales Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood Reading Rainbow Reading Rainbow “So Long, Spanky” (Sadness and death) “D.W.’s Very Bad Mood” “Arthur’s Big Hit” “Jenna’s Bedtime Blues” (Fear of bedwetting) “Is Everybody Happy?” “Home Is Where the Fun Is” (Jealousy) “Boo!” “The Ears Have It” (Fear of fireworks) “Who Me, Jealous?” “The Forest of Darkness” (Fear) “Goodbye Little Caterpoozle” (Sadness and death) “Calling Dr. Zak” (Fear of the doctor) “The Fury Is Out on This One” (Anger) “Snow Dragons” (Fear of being lost) “The Big Sleepover” (Fear of spending the night) “Ord Sees the Light” (Fear of the dark) #1065 “Empathy” #1101 “Death of a Pet” #1140 “Expression Through Dance” #1177 “Jealousy” #1277 “Jealousy” #1354 “Crying” #1417 “Shyness” “Feelings” “Badger’s Parting Gifts” (Grief and death) Do a related activity The Feelings Mirror Materials: • Large mirror • Poster board • Aluminum foil • Scissors • Crayons • Glue 2. Have the children make faces in the mirror to match the feelings you talked about. 3. Help the children make their own mirrors by gluing a piece of foil to a round piece of poster board. 4. Encourage the children to draw faces on the back of the mirror that show the various expressions they discussed. 1. Talk about all of the feelings that were expressed in the television program. 50 Turn to page 26 to find out how to access the PBS 45 & 49 program schedule. Paper Plate Faces • If anger were a size, what size would it be? • Ask the children to draw their answer to this last question: If anger were a face, what would it look like? Materials: • Paper plates • Markers • Crayons • Popsicle sticks From Learn Along With Lamb Chop Activity Guide, 1994, Shari Lewis Enterprises, Inc. 1. Ask each child to draw a face on a paper plate that is showing an emotion. “I Feel Good” Book 2. Allow the children to decorate their face with a variety of materials. Materials: 3. Read the children a story and ask them to hold up their paper plate when you talk about that feeling in the story. If Anger Were A … Materials: • Paper • Stapler • Markers • Crayons • Magazines • Glue 1. Have the children draw or glue a picture of something on a piece of paper that makes them happy. • Paper • Crayons • Markers 2. The children should be encouraged to think of as many things as they can. 1. Ask the children each of these questions one at a time and give them plenty of time to respond: • If anger were a sound, what would it sound like? • If anger were a color, what color would it be? • If anger were an animal, what animal would it be? • If anger were the weather, what would it be like? 3. Have the children create one page per item. 4. Write why the thing makes them happy at the bottom of every page. 5. Turn the pages into a “happy” book. Provided with permission from Reading Rainbow: A Guide for Teachers, 1986. Read a related book I Love You as Much… By Laura Krauss Melmed Ira Sleeps Over By Bernard Waber The Kissing Hand By Audrey Penn Feelings By Aliki Mean Soup By Betsy Everitt Sometimes I Feel Like a Mouse: A Book About Feelings By Jeanne Modesitt I Was So Mad! By Norma Simon The Old Dog By Charlotte Zolotow Alexander and the Terrible, Horrible, No Good, Very Bad Day By Judith Viorst Chrysanthemum By Kevin Henkes PBS 45 & 49’s Ready To Learn Caregiver Guide • PBS 45 & 49 Learning Triangle Activities 51 Friends Watch a clip of a program Program Friends Theme Arthur “Buster’s New Friend” Arthur “Don’t Ask Muffy” Arthur “Arthur’s Faraway Friend” Arthur “Muffy’s New Best Friend” Barney & Friends “On the Move” (Old and new friends) Barney & Friends “A Package of Friendship” Clifford the Big Red Dog “Cleo Comes to Town” (Old and new friends) Clifford the Big Red Dog “False Friends” Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood #1363 “Friendship Dance” Postcards From Buster “Best Friends” Do a related activity Body Tracing Friendship Picture Materials: Materials: • Butcher paper • Crayons, markers or pencils 1. Have one child lie face up on paper, while the other child traces the child lying down. 2. Encourage the children to trade places. 3. After both children have been traced, have the children color the tracings, adding facial features, hair, clothing and so on. From the Mister Rogers’ Plan & Play Book, 1998, Family Communications, Inc. Used with permission. • Pictures of the children with a friend • Construction paper • Various art materials 1. Take a picture of each child with a friend. 2. Make two copies. 3. Give one to each child. 4. Have the children make a special frame out of construction paper and art supplies. 5. Display the pictures in a special place. From the Mister Rogers’ Plan & Play Book, 1998, Family Communications, Inc. Used with permission. 52 Turn to page 26 to find out how to access the PBS 45 & 49 program schedule. Friendship Pudding Friendship Dances Materials: Materials: • Instant pudding mix • Milk • Plastic jar with lid • Drum (an oatmeal box or empty coffee can will work) 1. Beat a steady rhythm on the drum. 1. Make the instant pudding (follow the recipe on the box). 2. Encourage children to join hands for the “friendship dance.” 2. Pour the mix and milk into a clean jar with a lid. 3. Have the children move in a circle and dance together to the drumming sounds. 3. Have the children take turns shaking the jar, counting to ten as they shake. 4. Each friend should take two turns. 5. Let the pudding set for a few minutes before spooning it out. 4. Allow the children to take turns being the drummer. From the Mister Rogers’ Plan & Play Book, 1991, Family Communications, Inc. Used with permission. From Barney’s Watch, Play & Learn, 1998, Lyrick Studios. Used with permission. Read a related book The Faithful Friend By Robert D. San Souci Frog and Toad By Arnold Lobel Big Sister, Little Brother By Terry Berger Barney’s Friends By Margie Larsen Little Blue and Little Yellow By Leo Lionni Do You Want to Be My Friend? By Eric Carle Chester’s Way By Kevin Henkes Corduroy By Don Freeman PBS 45 & 49’s Ready To Learn Caregiver Guide • PBS 45 & 49 Learning Triangle Activities 53 Health Watch a clip of a program Program Health Theme Arthur Arthur Arthur Arthur Barney & Friends Barney & Friends Barney & Friends Barney & Friends The Berenstain Bears Clifford the Big Red Dog Clifford the Big Red Dog Dragon Tales Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood Reading Rainbow Reading Rainbow Reading Rainbow “D.W. The Picky Eater” “Vomitrocious” (Getting sick in public) “Buster’s Breathless” (Asthma) “The Lousy Week” (Head lice) “A Picture of Health” “Let’s Eat!” “Good, Clean, Fun” “Snack Time!” “Too Much Junk Food” “Tummy Trouble” “Itchy Patch” “Calling Dr. Zak” (Fear of the doctor) #1138 “Food” #1297 “Taking Care of Your Teeth” “Gregory, The Terrible Eater” “The Milk Makers” “Germs Make Me Sick!” Do a related activity Visit a Farmer’s Market Super Smiles Materials: Materials: • Transportation and adult supervision 1. Visit a farmer’s market or the produce department of a supermarket. 2. Talk about all of the heathful fruits and vegetables, discussing their names, colors, shapes, etc. 3. Take home one or two unfamiliar fruits or vegetables to try. From Barney’s Watch, Play & Learn, 1998, Lyrick Studios. Used with permission. • Red construction paper • White paint • Paper plates • Scissors 1. Use the red construction paper to cut out smiles. 2. Pour a small amount of white paint onto the paper plate. 3. Help the children press a thumb into the paint and gently onto the red smile to make healthy white teeth. From Barney’s Watch, Play & Learn, 1998, Lyrick Studios. Used with permission. 54 Turn to page 26 to find out how to access the PBS 45 & 49 program schedule. Doctor’s Office Play Chef Brockett’s Nutritious Snack Materials: Materials: • Bathroom scales • Oversized white shirts • Cotton balls • Adhesive bandages • Stethoscope • Stuffed animals or dolls 1. Discuss what happens at a doctor’s office. 2. Encourage the children to examine their dolls or stuffed animals as if they were the doctor. 3. Encourage children to take turns with the play materials. From Barney’s Watch, Play & Learn, 1998, Lyrick Studios. Used with permission. • Nonfat dry milk • Peanut butter • Margarine • Chopped nuts • Raisins • Graham cracker crumbs • Banana • Spoons • Mixing bowl 1. Combine one tablespoon of margarine and one cup of peanut butter (use a banana if you don’t like peanut butter). 2. Add 3⁄4 cup nonfat dry milk and mix thoroughly. 3. Add raisins and nuts. 4. Shape into balls and roll in cracker crumbs if desired. 5. Allow the children to help with adding the ingredients. From the Mister Rogers’ Plan & Play Book, 1998, Family Communications, Inc. Used with permission. Read a related book Who’s Sick Today? By Lynne Cherry Little Rabbit’s Loose Tooth By Lucy Bate Robby Visits the Doctor By Martine Davison Your Skin and Mine By Paul Showers Madeline By Ludwig Bemelmans Germs Make Me Sick! By Melvin Berger Barney and Baby Bop Go to the Doctor By Margie Larsen Good Enough to Eat: A Kid’s Guide to Food and Nutrition By Lizzy Rockwell Barney Goes to the Dentist By Linda Cress Dowdy Gregory, The Terrible Eater By Mitchell Sharmat The Milk Makers By Gail Gibbons PBS 45 & 49’s Ready To Learn Caregiver Guide • PBS 45 & 49 Learning Triangle Activities 55 Music & Movement Watch a clip of a program Program Music & Movement Theme Arthur Arthur Arthur Arthur Barney & Friends Dragon Tales Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood Postcards From Buster Reading Rainbow Reading Rainbow Teletubbies Teletubbies “My Music Rules” “Arthur Plays the Blues” “D.W. Dancing Queen” “Big Horns George” “We’ve Got Rhythm” “A Smashing Success” #1066 “Making Up Songs” #1076 “Folk Dancing” #1105 “Drawing a Song” #1159 “Opera” #1239 “Rhythm Exercises” #1266 “Singing Loud and Quiet” #1269 “Drums” #1325 “Singing” #1334 “Parade” #1399 “Orchestra” #1579 “Listening to Music” #1591 “Harmonica” #1446 “Expressive Dancing” #1484 “Dancing — Building Skills to Play Football” #1548 “Rhythms With Ella Jenkins” “Buster & Beatrice” (Conjunto music) “Ty’s One-Man Band” “Mama Don’t Allow” “Erhu Fiddle” “Flamenco Dancing” Do a related activity Marching Band B-I-N-G-O Materials: Materials: • Wooden spoons • Pots and pans • Drums • Horns • Flags • Batons • Hats • Marching music 1. Play a recording of a march. 2. Use the props to create a marching band. 3. Allow the children to take turns leading the parade, marching to the beat. From Barney’s Watch, Play & Learn, 1998, Lyrick Studios. Used with permission. • Poster board • Crayons • Your singing voice 1. Write the name BINGO across the top of a poster board. 2. Ask the children to draw a picture of a dog below the word BINGO. 3. Teach the song B-I-N-G-O by singing it through a couple of times. 4. Allow the children to join in. Repeat. 5. Point to the letters as you sing together. “There was a farmer who had a dog and BINGO was his name, Oh! B-I-N-G-O, B-I-N-G-O, B-I-N-G-O and Bingo was his name, Oh!” From Barney’s Watch, Play & Learn, 1998, Lyrick Studios. Used with permission. 56 Turn to page 26 to find out how to access the PBS 45 & 49 program schedule. Musical Jars Painting to Music Materials: Materials: • Five or six glass jars • Pitcher of water • Spoons or pencils • Paper • Non-toxic paint • Items for painting (paintbrushes, noodles, fingers, sponges, feathers, etc.) 1. Have the children pour water into the jars, pouring different amounts in each jar. 2. Ask the children to tap the jars with a pencil or spoon. What happens? 3. Let the children take turns tapping the jars to make different sounds. 4. Ask the children about the different sounds they hear. 5. Encourage the children to match the sounds they hear with their voices or to make up a song. From the Mister Rogers’ Plan & Play Book, 1998, Family Communications, Inc. Used with permission. 1. Encourage the children to listen to the music and think about how it makes them feel. 2. Have them paint to the music and the feeling it gives them. 3. Remind them that everyone’s painting will be different because each person will have different feelings about the music. 4. Display the paintings for everyone to see. From the Mister Rogers’ Plan & Play Book, 1998, Family Communications, Inc. Used with permission. Read a related book Ben’s Trumpet By Rachel Isadora Charlie Parker played be bop By Chris Raschka Max the Music Maker By Miriam Stecher Noisy Nora By Rosemary Wells Music, Music for Everyone By Vera B. Williams Zin! Zin! Zin! A Violin By Lloyd Moss The Philharmonic Gets Dressed By Karla Kuskin Ty’s One-Man Band By Mildred Pitts Walter Clap Your Hands By Lorinda Bryan Cauley Mama Don’t Allow By Thacher Hurd PBS 45 & 49’s Ready To Learn Caregiver Guide • PBS 45 & 49 Learning Triangle Activities 57 New Experiences Watch a clip of a program Program New Experiences Theme Arthur Arthur Barney & Friends Barney & Friends Barney & Friends Barney & Friends The Berenstain Bears Dragon Tales Dragon Tales Dragon Tales Dragon Tales Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood Reading Rainbow “Arthur’s Baby” “D.W.’s Baby” “All Aboard” (Trains) “On the Move” (Moving away) “First Day of School” “A Package of Friendship” (Moving away) “Go to the Doctor” “To Fly With Dragons” “The Big Sleepover” “A Liking to Biking” “A Cool School” #1002 “Moving Away” #1088 “Expecting a Baby” #1100 “Babies and Parents” #1116 “Taking Care of a New Baby” #1156 “Going to the Hospital” #1386 “Going to School” #1416 “Going to the Dentist” #1426 “Separation” #1434 “Moving Away” #1480 “Airplane Rides” “Gila Monsters Meet You at the Airport” (Moving) Do a related activity New Baby Play Food Tasting Materials: Materials: • Baby doll • Diapers • Baby clothes • Bottles • Diaper bag 1. Ask the children if they have ever had a new baby in their homes. Ask them what it was like. Did they help take care of the baby? 2. Allow them to care for the baby dolls. 3. Guide them and teach them responsibilities for taking care of a new baby, such as folding clothes, singing, talking and reading to baby, playing peek-a-boo and helping to pack a diaper bag. • Kiwi • Mango • Pineapple • Sugar cane • Coconut • Plantain 1. Explain that different countries are known for different foods. 2. Discuss that kiwi is from Australia, mango comes from the Caribbean, pineapple is grown in Hawaii, coconut comes from Hawaii and the Caribbean, and Africa grows sugar cane and plantain. 3. Encourage the children to try these exotic fruits. From Barney’s Watch, Play & Learn, 1998, Lyrick Studios. Used with permission. 4. Have the children describe how they taste. From Barney’s Watch, Play & Learn, 1998, Lyrick Studios. Used with permission. 58 Turn to page 26 to find out how to access the PBS 45 & 49 program schedule. X-Rays An Airplane Ride Materials: Materials: • An old X-ray • Boxes or chairs • Tote bag or small suitcases 1. Call a hospital or doctor’s office and ask if they have an old X-ray that you can use with your class. 1. Ask the children if they have ever been on an airplane. What was it like? Where did they go? 2. Explain to the children that X-rays are pictures of the bones inside our bodies. Ask them if they have ever had an X-ray and why you would need to have one. 2. Encourage the children to play as if they were going on an airplane ride. Discuss where they should put their luggage and how they should sit. 3. Explain that X-rays do not hurt. 3. Allow them to create their own trip. 4. Put the X-ray up to a light and allow the children to pretend to be X-ray technicians. From the Mister Rogers’ Plan & Play Book, 1998, Family Communications, Inc. Used with permission. From Barney’s Watch, Play & Learn, 1998, Lyrick Studios. Used with permission. Read a related book Bread, Bread, Bread By Ann Morris Houses and Homes By Ann Morris The Fire Station By Michael Martchenko A Tasting Party By Jane Moncure Flying By Donald Crews Barney’s Book of Trains By Linda Dowdy Arthur Babysits By Marc Brown This is My House By Arthur Dorros Everett Anderson’s Nine Month Long By Lucille Clifton Gila Monsters Meet You at the Airport By Marjorie Weinman Sharmat The Leaving Morning By Angela Johnson PBS 45 & 49’s Ready To Learn Caregiver Guide • PBS 45 & 49 Learning Triangle Activities 59 Pets Watch a clip of a program Program Pet Theme Arthur Arthur Arthur Arthur Arthur Barney & Friends Barney & Friends The Berenstain Bears The Berenstain Bears Bob the Builder Bob the Builder Clifford the Big Red Dog Dragon Tales George Shrinks George Shrinks Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood Reading Rainbow Reading Rainbow Teletubbies Teletubbies “Arthur’s Pet Business” “Arthur’s New Puppy” “Sick as a Dog” “Pet Peeved” “Flea to Be You and Me” “A Welcome Home” “Our Family, Feathered, Fishy Friends” “Trouble With Pets” “The Baby Chipmunk” “Taking Responsibility” (Pet sitting) “Animal Habitats” “A Bunny in a Haystack” “Wheezie’s Hairball” “The Lost World of George Shrinks” “Hound of the Bathervilles” #1497 “Pets” #1498 “Taking Care of a Pet” “Tight Times” “Best Friends” “Our Dog Alice” “Dog Training” Do a related activity Visit a Pet Shop Guess the Pet Materials: Materials: • Transportation and adult supervision • None 1. Prepare for the trip. Ask the children what kinds of animals they think they will see at the pet shop. Remind them of safety rules. 1. Give clues that describe different kinds of pets. 2. Visit the pet shop and discuss the different kinds of pets. Talk about how to care for a pet. 3. When you return, reflect on what the children saw at the pet shop. The children can draw pictures that can then be turned into a class book about the trip. Be sure to write down their descriptions of the pictures. 2. Act out simple movements and actions. 3. Repeat with many kinds of pets. 4. Have the children think of a pet and act out some clues for the other children. From Barney’s Watch, Play & Learn, 1998, Lyrick Studios. Used with permission. From Barney’s Watch, Play & Learn, 1998, Lyrick Studios. Used with permission. 60 Turn to page 26 to find out how to access the PBS 45 & 49 program schedule. Turtle Rhyme If I Had a Pet Materials: Materials: • Words and movements to the finger play • Paper • Crayons or markers 1. Recite and act out the finger play: 1. Ask the children if they have pets and ask them to describe their pets. If they do not have a pet, ask what kind of pet they would like to have. Ask: How many legs does it have? Does it have fur? Is it big or little? Where does it sleep? What does it eat? There was a little turtle who lived in a box It swam in puddles It climbed on rocks. It snapped at a mosquito It snapped at a flea, It snapped at a minnow And it snapped at me! 2. Have the children draw their pets. See if they can come up with names for their pets. 3. Write the name of the pet on the bottom of the picture. It caught the mosquito It caught the flea It caught the minnow But it didn’t catch me! From the Mister Rogers’ Plan & Play Book, 1998, Family Communications, Inc. Used with permission. From Barney’s Watch, Play & Learn, 1998, Lyrick Studios. Used with permission. Read a related book B.J. and Scooter By Mary Ann Dudko Pet Show By Ezra Jack Keats Can I Keep Him? By Steven Kellogg I Love Guinea Pigs By Dick King-Smith Guinea Pigs Don’t Read Books By Colleen Stanley Bare Tight Times By Barbara Hazen Let’s Get a Pet By Harriet Ziefert Best Friends By Steven Kellogg Millions of Cats By Wanda Gag PBS 45 & 49’s Ready To Learn Caregiver Guide • PBS 45 & 49 Learning Triangle Activities 61 Recycling & the Environment Watch a clip of a program Program Recycling/Environment Theme Arthur Arthur Barney & Friends Barney & Friends Barney & Friends Barney & Friends Barney & Friends The Berenstain Bears The Berenstain Bears The Berenstain Bears Bob the Builder Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood Reading Rainbow “Arthur Cleans Up” “The Shore Thing” “Shawn and the Beanstalk” “Trees” “Weather and Wind” “Ponds” “Hidden Treasures” “Once There Was a Tree” “Jack, the Seal and the Sea” “Don’t Pollute” “The Environment” #1205 “Recycling” #1365 “Recycling Collage” #1616 “Garbage” #1617 “Recycling Center” #1618 “Recycling Art” “Paul Bunyan” Do a related activity Let’s Use It Again Milk Carton Haulers Materials: Materials: • A box of discarded objects (toilet paper rolls, empty milk cartons, string, rubber bands, cash register receipts, foil, egg cartons, candy wrappers) • Liquid glue • Paper • Clean, empty paper milk cartons • Heavy string or cord • Scissors • Stapler 1. These haulers are great for carting pretend trash or anything else. 1. As you show the children each object, see if they can tell you what it is and what it was used for. 2. Staple the top of the milk carton closed and attach a piece of string or cord to the closed top portion. 2. Ask the children if the items can be good for something else. 3. Cut out one of the four side panels and turn the carton on its side to make an open wagon. 3. When the children have finished telling you their ideas, allow them to follow through by making something from a recycled item. (Older children may want to make “something” from the objects – a pretend horn, a puppet, a telescope. Younger children may just want to make a collage). 4. The children may even want to link the haulers together to make a trash hauling train. From the Mister Rogers’ Plan & Play Book, 1991, Family Communications, Inc. Used with permission. 4. Display the items. From the Mister Rogers’ Plan & Play Book, 1991, Family Communications, Inc. Used with permission. 62 Turn to page 26 to find out how to access the PBS 45 & 49 program schedule. Sewing Card Card Puzzle Materials: Materials: • Old greeting cards • Hole puncher • Yarn (reinforce the ends with some tape) 1. Have the children bring in old greeting cards if possible. • Old greeting cards • Scissors 1. Have the children bring in old greeting cards if possible. 2. Remove the backs. 2. Punch holes one to two inches apart around the front half of the cards. 3. Have the children cut each card into four or five pieces. 3. Let the children practice lacing the yarn through the holes. 4. Allow the children to put the puzzles back together. 5. Give the children a chance to swap puzzles. From Barney’s Watch, Play & Learn, 1998, Lyrick Studios. Used with permission. From Barney’s Watch, Play & Learn, 1998, Lyrick Studios. Used with permission. Read a related book Fun With Nature By Dympna Hayes Paul Bunyan By Steven Kellogg What Did the Rock Say? By George Maxim Ross Bringing the Rain to Kapiti Plain By Verna Aardema Red Leaf, Yellow Leaf By Lois Ehlert Animal Tracks By Arthur Dorros In the Small, Small Pond By Denise Fleming PBS 45 & 49’s Ready To Learn Caregiver Guide • PBS 45 & 49 Learning Triangle Activities 63 Safety Watch a clip of a program Program Safety Theme Arthur “Lost!” Arthur “D.W., All Fired Up” Arthur “April 9th” (Fire) Barney & Friends “I Can Be a Firefighter” Barney & Friends “Play It Safe” Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood #1183 “Safety” Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood #1246 “Caution” Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood #1489 “Safe Play” Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood #1503 “Seatbelts” Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood #1594 “Bicycle Helmets” Do a related activity Traffic Light Fun Safety Walk Materials: Materials: • Poster board • Red and green crayons or markers 1. Have the children cut two rectangles from the poster board. 2. They can draw three circles on each rectangle. • Enough adult supervision 1. Take a walk in your neighborhood and practice rules for crossing the street and walking safely on a sidewalk. 3. The children can color one as the green light and one as the red light. 2. Talk about staying on the sidewalk, crossing at corners, looking both ways and holding an adult’s hand. 4. When you hold up the green light, the children can “go.” When you hold up the red light, your children can “stop.” From Barney’s Watch, Play & Learn, 1998, Lyrick Studios. Used with permission. 5. Allow the children to try the game on their own. From Barney’s Watch, Play & Learn, 1998, Lyrick Studios. Used with permission. 64 Turn to page 26 to find out how to access the PBS 45 & 49 program schedule. Cleaning Up Caution Materials: Materials: • Words to the song 1. Learn the words to Barney’s “Clean Up” song. • Paper • Markers • Tape 2. Sing along with the children to cue clean-up time. 3. Ask the children what they think might happen if they never cleaned up the room. Discuss how a clean room is a safe room. “Clean up, clean up, everybody everywhere. Clean up, clean up, everybody do your share.” From Barney’s Watch, Play & Learn, 1998, Lyrick Studios. Used with permission. 1. Ask the children if they can think of objects at the child care center that can be dangerous at times (doors, steps, stove, swing set, etc…). 2. Make several small caution signs for the items you have discussed. 3. Allow the children to tape signs on the dangerous objects. From the Mister Rogers’ Plan & Play Book, 1998, Family Communications, Inc. Used with permission. Read a related book I Read Signs By Tana Hoban Make Way for Ducklings By Robert McCloskey Red Light, Green Light By Margaret Wise Brown Red Riding Hood By Janus Marshall Barney Says, “Play Safely” By Mary Ann Dudko & Margie Larsen A Chair for My Mother By Vera Williams PBS 45 & 49’s Ready To Learn Caregiver Guide • PBS 45 & 49 Learning Triangle Activities 65 Self-Esteem Watch a clip of a program Program Self-Esteem Theme Arthur “Buster’s Best Behavior” Arthur “It’s a No Brainer” Bob the Builder “Self-Esteem” Clifford the Big Red Dog “The Great Race” Clifford the Big Red Dog “Nobody’s Perfect” Clifford the Big Red Dog “Tough Enough?” Clifford the Big Red Dog “Stars in Your Eyes” Clifford the Big Red Dog “T-Bone, Dog About Town” Dragon Tales “The Talent Pool” Dragon Tales “Dragon Sails” Dragon Tales “The Ugly Dragling” Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood #1326 “The Song, ‘Children Can’” Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood #1421 “Being the Best You” Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood #1610 “The Song, ‘I’m Glad I’m the Way I Am’” Reading Rainbow “The Tortoise and the Hare” Do a related activity The “I Like” Game Who’s Who? Materials: Materials: • One ball for rolling • Baby photographs of each child 1. Have the children sit in a circle. 1. Have the children bring photographs of themselves as babies from home. 2. Roll the ball to a child. That child should hold the ball and say, “I like …” and name something such as a food item, an activity, an animal, etc. 3. The child then rolls the ball to another child who does the same. 4. Continue until everyone has had a chance to share his/her “likes.” 66 2. Have the children sit around the table. 3. Spread the photographs out on the table. 4. Let the children look at all of the photos. 5. Have each child try to guess which classmate is in each picture. Turn to page 26 to find out how to access the PBS 45 & 49 program schedule. We Are All Winners! Toast Faces Materials: Materials: • Reproducible activity sheets with a prize ribbon • Scissors • Crayons and markers 2. Help the children think of something they are good at. Let them design their ribbons. • Different types of bread (white, wheat, pumpernickel, etc.) • Biscuit cutters or large drinking glasses • Plastic knives • Cream cheese • Peanut butter • Toaster • Items for decorating (raisins, alfalfa sprouts, grated carrot, cereal, olives, etc.) 3. Write the titles they have chosen on their ribbons. 1. Allow each child to choose a slice of bread. 4. Make a display and label it, “We Are All Winners!” 2. Have each child cut out a round portion with the biscuit cutter or drinking glass. 1. Give each child an activity sheet with a prize ribbon on it. Explain that they are going to make their own prize ribbon. 3. Save the leftover bread pieces for the birds. From Wimzie’s House Caregiver Activity Guide, 1998, courtesy of the U.S. Public Television Managament Group, CINAR Corporation. 4. Toast the bread circles. 5. Allow the children to create self-portraits by spreading the cream cheese or peanut butter and designing a face out of the other ingredients. Encourage the children to try an item they haven’t tried before! 6. Have the children admire their classmates’ creations before eating them. From Teaching Snacks, 1994, by Gayle Bittinger. Read a related book Verdi By Janell Cannon I Can By Helen Oxenbury Stellaluna By Janell Cannon The Fish Who Could Wish By John Bush ABC I Like Me By Nancy Carlson Regina’s Big Mistake By Marissa Moss Am I Beautiful? By Else Holmelund Minarik Playing Right Field By Willy Welch Wonderful Nature, Wonderful You By Karin Ireland The Tortoise and the Hare Adapted by Janet Stevens The Important Book By Margaret Wise Brown PBS 45 & 49’s Ready To Learn Caregiver Guide • PBS 45 & 49 Learning Triangle Activities 67 Shapes Watch a clip of a program Program Shapes Theme Barney & Friends “Three Lines, Three Corners” Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood #1001 “Round” Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood #1220 “Cookie-Cutter Shapes” Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood #1348 “Sorting Shapes” Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood #1280 “Shape Designs” Teletubbies “Circles” Do a related activity Circle Art Expanded Shapes Materials: Materials: • A collection of lids from various containers (mason jars, margarine, yogurt, coffee cans, etc.) • White paper • Colored markers 1. Give each child some paper and markers. 2. Allow them to choose a lid and trace around it. 3. Encourage them to use different lids and different colors to create different patterns. • Colored construction paper • Scissors • Glue 1. On different colors of construction paper, one for each child, draw a circle, square, rectangle, triangle and diamond. Have the children draw the shapes if they can. 2. Give each child a different color of construction paper and a sheet of the construction paper with shapes on it. 3. Discuss the shapes on the sheet and their properties (number of sides, corners, etc.) 4. Have the children cut out the shapes and then cut each shape into two to four sections. 5. Glue the “expanded” shapes with just a little room between the sections to the construction paper. 6. Ask the children if the shape can still be identified after it has been expanded. 68 Turn to page 26 to find out how to access the PBS 45 & 49 program schedule. Shape of the Day Secret Envelopes Materials: Materials: • Creativity! 1. Choose a particular shape and celebrate that shape on a particular day. 2. Celebrate by making signs and foods that match the shape. 3. Look around for everything you can find with that shape. From Barney’s Watch, Play & Learn, 1998, Lyrick Studios. Used with permission. • Crayons • Envelopes • Assorted flat objects (pennies, buttons, keys, paper clips, toothpicks, etc.) 1. Show the children the assortment of objects and see if they can name them. 2. Slip some of the items into random envelopes. 3. Can the children guess what items are inside by feeling the envelope? 4. Using the crayons, the children can rub over the items until shapes appear. 5. Can they now guess what is in the envelope? 6. Play this game again by switching envelopes and rubbing on the other side. From the Mister Rogers’ Plan & Play Book, 1991, Family Communications, Inc. Used with permission. Read a related book The Shape of Things By Dayle Ann Dodds Go Away, Big Green Monster! By Ed Emberley Fuzzy Yellow Duckling By Matthew Van Fleet Shapes for Lunch! By Melinda Lily Look Around! A Book About Shapes By Leonard Fisher Shapes, Shapes, Shapes By Tana Hoban Shapes and Things By Tana Hoban Sea Shapes By Suse MacDonald Circles, Triangles and Squares By Tana Hoban PBS 45 & 49’s Ready To Learn Caregiver Guide • PBS 45 & 49 Learning Triangle Activities 69 Special Needs Awareness Watch a clip of a program Program Special Needs Awareness Theme Arthur “Prunella’s Special Edition” (Braille) Clifford the Big Red Dog “A New Friend” Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood #1592 “Mister Rogers Visits a Blind Musician” Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood #1603 “Special Olympics Practice Session” Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood #1678 “Wheelchair Basketball” Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood #1726-1730 Various special-needs topics are addressed in this series of episodes Reading Rainbow “Knots on a Counting Rope” Reading Rainbow “The Adventures of Taxi Dog” Reading Rainbow “Silent Lotus” Reading Rainbow “Arthur’s Eyes” Do a related activity Rainbow Containers Looks Can Be Deceiving Materials: Materials: • Tissue paper in a variety of colors • Glue • Water • Brushes • Jars or plastic containers • A variety of bags (pretty gift bags, lunch sacks, grocery bags, trash bags, etc.) • A variety of familiar items (a popular toy, a wellliked snack, a spoon, an unappealing vegetable, a sock, etc.) 1. Have the children mix the water and glue until it is the consistency of paint. 1. Place one item per bag, making sure there is no relationship between the appearance of the bag and its contents. 2. Allow the children to cut or tear small pieces of tissue paper. 3. The children can glue the paper onto the jars by “painting” over them with the glue. 4. Discuss how beautiful it looks when you add more colors. From the Mister Rogers’ Plan & Play Book, 1998, Family Communications, Inc. Used with permission. 2. Have the children select a bag they think they’d like to open. 3. When the bags are opened and the contents revealed, lead a discussion about how they might have been fooled when they “jumped to conclusions” about the appearance of the bag. Talk about how we sometimes do that with people. 4. Remind the children of this activity the next time someone “jumps to conclusions.” From Different and the Same Teacher’s Guide, 1995, Family Communications, Inc. Used with permission. 70 Turn to page 26 to find out how to access the PBS 45 & 49 program schedule. Different and the Same Fans Inside-Outside Materials: Materials: • Strips of colored construction paper • Hole punch • Brass fasteners (one per student) • List of questions 1. Prepare a list of at least 10 questions to ask the class. Here are some examples: Who speaks a different language at home? Who is learning how to play an instrument? Who likes peanut butter and jelly sandwiches? Who has a dog? Who likes to go fishing? • Scrap paper • Pencils 1. Begin by telling the children that there is some information we can know about people by looking at the outside. An example would be sorting blocks by color, shape or size. Ask the children what they can tell about you by looking at you. An example would be your hair color or height. 2. Have each colored strip of construction paper represent each question. You may need several strips of the same color. 2. Explain that there are some things they can’t tell about you by looking at your outside. Some things are inside. Then tell them something surprising about yourself that they don’t know. 3. Ask the first question. If the child answers yes to the question, give him/her a colored strip of paper. 3. Invite the children to think of something about themselves that no one knows. Instruct them not to share the information just yet. 4. Continue asking the questions and have the children collect their colored strips. 4. While the children are involved in other activities, call individual children up and, if he/she is willing, write down the thing about that child that no one knows. You may have to help the children by asking some questions. 5. After all of the questions have been answered, have each child stack his/her strips. Punch a hole in one end and fasten the stack together with a brass fastener. Spread the strips out to make a fan. 6. Discuss how many students have the same colors in their fans. The fans show how sometimes we are different and sometimes we are the same. From Different and the Same Teacher’s Guide, 1995, Family Communications, Inc. Used with permission. 5. Write the secrets on the strips of scrap paper. 6. Call the group together again and see who can guess which secret belongs to which classmate. 7. Talk about the importance of looking on the inside of people and not just the outside. From Different and the Same Teacher’s Guide, 1995, Family Communications, Inc. Used with permission. Read a related book We Can Do It! By Laura Dwight My Brother Sammy By Becky Edwards Friends at School By Rochelle Bunnett Howie Helps Himself By Joan Fassler What is the Sign for Friend? By Judith Greenburg Mama Zooms By Jane Cowen-Fletcher Dad and Me in the Morning By Patricia Lakin Silent Lotus By Jeanne M. Lee See You Tomorrow, Charles By Miriam Cohen Knots on a Counting Rope By John Archambault My Buddy By Audrey Osofsky The Adventures of Taxi Dog By Debra Barracca Cookie By Linda Kneeland Arthur’s Eyes By Marc Brown PBS 45 & 49’s Ready To Learn Caregiver Guide • PBS 45 & 49 Learning Triangle Activities 71 Storytelling Watch a clip of a program Program Storytelling Theme Arthur Arthur Arthur Arthur Clifford the Big Red Dog Dragon Tales Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood Postcards From Buster Reading Rainbow Reading Rainbow Reading Rainbow Reading Rainbow Reading Rainbow “Arthur Writes a Story” “I’m a Poet” “Rhyme for Your Life” “D.W. Tale Spins” “Islander of the Year” “Quetzal’s Magic Pop-Up Book” #1198 “Poetry Day” #1340 “Tag Stories” #1390 “Puppet Show” “The Music Mystery” “Liang and the Magic Paintbrush” “Simon’s Book” “The Tortoise and the Hare” “Abiyoyo” “Rumpelstiltskin” Do a related activity Puppet Show Family Picture Materials: Materials: • Paper plates • Popsicle sticks • Art supplies 1. Encourage the children to create faces on the paper plates. 2. Help them to glue or tape the popsicle sticks to the plates. 3. Allow the children to perform a puppet show. • Pictures of the children and their families 1. Ask each parent to bring in a family picture. 2. Allow each child to talk about the picture. 3. Ask each child to tell you a story about his or her family. From Barney’s Watch, Play & Learn, 1998, Lyrick Studios. Used with permission. From Barney’s Watch, Play & Learn, 1998, Lyrick Studios. Used with permission. hy ap r g Bio 72 e Po try Turn to page 26 to find out how to access the PBS 45 & 49 program schedule. What’s Going On in the Picture? Our Newspaper Materials: Materials: • A storybook that’s mostly pictures 1. Choose a book that’s not very familiar to the children. 2. Show the children the pictures in the book without reading the words to them. 3. The second time you show them the pictures, have them tell you their version of the story. 4. You can emphasize that there are many ways to tell a story. From the Mister Rogers’ Plan & Play Book, 1991, Family Communications, Inc. Used with permission. • Large sheets of paper (plain shelf paper will do) • Markers • A newspaper 1. Show the children a newspaper and see if they can tell you about it. Ask them what newspapers tell us. 2. Cut the large paper into smaller sheets. Fold them over to make the newspaper pages. 3. Ask the children what they think should be included in the newspaper. You might want to include the day’s menu, activities and weather. 4. Have the children draw pictures for the newspaper. You will write down what they say about the pictures. 5. Help them to stack and fold the pages to resemble a newspaper. 6. Have it available for the parents to look at when they come and pick up their children. From the Mister Rogers’ Plan & Play Book, 1991, Family Communications, Inc. Used with permission. Read a related book The Snowman By Raymond Briggs Three Billy Goats Gruff By Ellen Appleby Amazing Grace By Mary Hoffman The Fisherman and His Wife By Margot Zemach Baby Bop Pretends By Mary Ann Dudko Liang and the Magic Paintbrush By Demi It Looked Like Split Milk By Charles Shaw Simon’s Book By Henrik Drescher Abuela By Arthur Dorros The Tortoise and the Hare Adapted by Janet Stevens Look! Look! Look! By Tana Hoban Abiyoyo By Pete Seeger Frances Facemaker: A Going to Bed Book By William Cole Rumpelstiltskin Retold by Paul O. Zelinsky Where the Wild Things Are By Maurice Sendak re tu n ve Ad PBS 45 & 49’s Ready To Learn Caregiver Guide • PBS 45 & 49 Learning Triangle Activities ry sto i H 73 Television/Media Literacy Watch a clip of a program Program Television/Media Literacy Theme Arthur Arthur Arthur Arthur Arthur Arthur Arthur Barney & Friends The Berenstain Bears The Berenstain Bears The Berenstain Bears Clifford the Big Red Dog Dragon Tales Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood Postcards From Buster Postcards From Buster Reading Rainbow “Arthur Makes a Movie” “Sue Ellen Gets Her Goose Cooked” “Best of the Nest” “Arthur’s TV Free Week” “Arthur’s Almost Live Not Real Music Festival” “The Contest” “The Last of Mary Moo Cow” “A Very Special Mouse” (Computers) “Too Much TV” “The Big Blooper” “The Bad Dream” “Circus Stars” “Lights, Camera, Dragons!” #1383 “Real Vs. Pretend” #1384 “Making Your Own Television” “Buster’s League of Champions” “Beats by the Bay” “The Bionic Bunny Show” Do a related activity Background Music Pictures of Things Materials: Materials: • Musical instruments • Television • A video of a program with background music 1. Talk to the children about background music. Discuss how the music helps you know what is happening on the program. 2. Play a part of the video that has music to it. Ask the children how the music made them feel. Was it soft music? Loud music? Did it make them sad? 3. Give each child a musical instrument. 4. Play a part of the video, but be sure to turn off the sound. 5. Allow the children to watch the scene and make music for whatever is happening on the screen. 74 • Real objects (toys, clothing, food, etc.) • Magazine photo ads of similar things 1. See if the children can name the real objects as you point out each one. 2. Then show them magazine pictures or ads of the same objects. 3. Ask the children if the real-life object and the picture look different. 4. This is a good time to point out that television and magazines sometimes make things look different than they do in real life. From the Mister Rogers’ Plan & Play Book, 1991, Family Communications, Inc. Used with permission. Turn to page 26 to find out how to access the PBS 45 & 49 program schedule. A Television Program Our Newspaper Materials: Materials: • Large cardboard box • Markers • Paint and paintbrushes (optional) • Puppets, dolls and other toys for props 1. Create a television program with the children. Explain that everything they see on television is something that has been made by a person. Discuss that what they see on television is a story made up by someone else. 2. Cut one side out of a large cardboard box (the children will enter the box from this side). • Large sheets of paper (plain shelf paper will do) • Markers • A newspaper 1. Show the children a newspaper and see if they can tell you about it. Ask them what newspapers tell us. 2. Cut the large paper into smaller sheets. Fold them over to make the newspaper pages. 3. Ask the children what they think should be included in the newspaper. You might want to include the day’s menu, activities and weather. 3. Cut a hole the size of a television screen out of the opposite side. 4. Have the children draw pictures for the newspaper. You will write down what they say about the pictures. 4. The children might enjoy painting and decorating the television. 5. Help them to stack and fold the pages to resemble a newspaper. 5. When the paint is dry, they can add knobs and dials with a marker. 6. Have it available for the parents to look at when they come and pick up their children. 6. Using the puppets and toys, the children can take turns putting on television programs. From the Mister Rogers’ Plan & Play Book, 1991, Family Communications, Inc. Used with permission. From the Mister Rogers’ Plan & Play Book, 1991, Family Communications, Inc. Used with permission. Read a related book Take a Look, It’s in a Book: How Television Is Made at Reading Rainbow By Ronnie Krauss The Bionic Bunny Show By Marc Brown When the TV Broke By Harriet Ziefert Arthur’s TV Trouble By Marc Brown Box-Head Boy By Christine M. Winn Television: What’s Behind What You See By W. Carter Merbreier & Linda Capus Riley PBS 45 & 49’s Ready To Learn Caregiver Guide • PBS 45 & 49 Learning Triangle Activities 75 The Five Senses Watch a clip of a program Program The Five Senses Theme Barney & Friends “Five Kinds of Fun!” Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood #1025 “Smell” Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood #1199 “Tasting New Foods” Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood #1258 “Guessing Game” Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood #1364 “Sounds” Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood #1422 “Sound” Do a related activity Mystery Scent Letter Bag Materials: Materials: • Empty baby food jars • Scented items (garlic, cinnamon, vanilla, cocoa, coffee, lemon juice, baby lotion, paint, etc.) 1. Blindfold a child. 2. Offer an open jar for him/her to sniff. 3. Have the child guess what is in each jar. 4. Repeat for each child. 5. If the child likes the smell, ask him/her to relate it to foods or experiences. • A pillow case or bag • Small objects that begin with the same letter 1. Fill a bag with small objects. The objects should all begin with the same letter. 2. Have each child reach in the bag and describe each object. 3. Challenge the children to find more objects that begin with the same letter. From Barney’s Watch, Play & Learn, 1998, Lyrick Studios. Used with permission. 76 Turn to page 26 to find out how to access the PBS 45 & 49 program schedule. Shake and Guess Homemade Butter Materials: Materials: • Half-pint milk cartons • Paper • Tape • Permanent marker • A box large enough to store the milk cartons • Items to fill the milk cartons (sand, stones, nuts, bolts, rice, dried peas, etc.) • One clean baby food jar for each child • One pint of whipping cream • Crackers • Flavoring (garlic powder, honey, almond extract, etc.) • Plastic knives • Clean hands 1. Place the sound-making objects in the milk cartons, making sure that the same object is in two cartons. 1. Fill half of a baby food jar with whipping cream and tighten the lid. 2. Flatten the flaps of the milk cartons and tape them closed. 3. Mark the bottom of each milk carton with a symbol to show which cartons contain matching contents. 4. Cover the storage box with paper and draw two ears on it. 5. Place the milk cartons in the storage box. 6. Have each child shake the cartons and listen to the sounds. 7. Allow him/her to match up the cartons with the same sound. 8. Ask the children which pair made the softest or loudest sound. 2. Have the children guess what will happen when you shake the jar. 3. Shake the jar for a few minutes and observe the changes in the whipping cream. It’s turning into butter! 4. Fill each child’s jar with whipping cream. Ask them if they would like to add any flavoring to the butter. 5. Tighten the lids and allow the children to shake their jars. It will take about five minutes for the butter to form. 6. Eat with crackers or refrigerate and enjoy later! From Teaching Snacks, 1994, by Gayle Bittinger. From Creating Innovative Classroom Materials for Teaching Young Children, by Marianne Debelak and Judith Herr, et. al. Read a related book Polar Bear, Polar Bear, What Do You Hear? By Bill Martin, Jr. My Five Senses By Aliki The Listening Walk By Paul Showers Smelling By Richard L. Allington I Hear By Rachel Isadora A Tasting Party By Jane Moncure I See By Rachel Isadora How Do I Know It’s Yucky? and Other Questions About the Senses By Sharon Cromwell Good-Night, Owl! By Pat Hutchins See, Hear, Touch, Taste, Smell It Newbridge Books Touch and Read By Tiziano Sclavi PBS 45 & 49’s Ready To Learn Caregiver Guide • PBS 45 & 49 Learning Triangle Activities 77 Weather Watch a clip of a program Program Weather Theme Arthur “The Blizzard” Barney & Friends “It’s Raining, It’s Pouring” Barney & Friends “Easy, Breezy Day!” Barney & Friends “It’s a Rainy Day” Barney & Friends “A Sunny, Snowy Day” The Berenstain Bears “Bears for All Seasons” The Berenstain Bears “Spring Into Fun” Dragon Tales “Stormy Weather” Dragon Tales “Blowin’ With the Wind” Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood #1294 “Thunder and Lightening” Postcards From Buster “Spring Break” Reading Rainbow “Bringing the Rain to Kapiti Plain” Teletubbies “Rain” Do a related activity A Thunderous Band Parachute Play Materials: Materials: • Metal pots and pans • Wooden spoons • Flashlights • Parachute or large sheet • One small ball 1. Have the children grab the sides of the parachute. 1. Have some of the children make thunderous sounds with the pots, pans and wooden spoons. 2. Have some children use the flashlights to make lightening. 3. Explain that far-away thunder will sound softer, and as the storm moves closer it will get louder. From the Wimzie’s House Caregiver Activity Guide, 1998, courtesy of the U.S. Public Television Management Group, CINAR Corporation. 78 2. Place the ball in the middle of the parachute. 3. As you name different warm items such as the sun, a bonfire, cuddly sheets, a pillow, etc., have the children gently shake the chute to make the ball jiggle. 4. When you name cold items such as ice cream, lemonade or milk shakes, everyone pops the chute up and the ball flies up high. 5. Have the children think of items that are warm and cold. Turn to page 26 to find out how to access the PBS 45 & 49 program schedule. Weather Wear Pretend Rain Soup Materials: Materials: • Several large boxes • An assortment of clothing appropriate for different weather • Notecards with different types of weather on them. Notecard suggestions: • Hot and sunny • Cold and rainy • Stormy • Cloudy • Foggy 1. Separate clothing into boxes. Have a box for shoes, coats, regular clothes and accessories such as hats, sunglasses, mittens, umbrella, etc. 2. Have each child come up and take a card. 3. Read the card and have the child dress in clothing appropriate for the type of weather on the card. 4. Talk about the decisions each child made regarding how to dress. 5. The child can then put back his/her items and take a seat. • One large container • Water • Small bags • One long stick 1. Take the children out for a walk after a rain shower. 2. Give each child a small bag and have the children collect wet items such as rocks, leaves, grass, sticks, etc. 3. Ask them to notice how the rain has changed the appearance of things. Have them notice how the air smells. 4. Back in the classroom, tell the children you are going to make pretend rain soup. Fill the container with water. 5. Have each child place the rain objects into the water. 6. After each child does this, allow him/her to stir the soup with the big stick. 7. Discuss how rain changes the appearance of things. Encourage and acknowledge every observation and discovery that the children make. 6. Repeat until each child has had a turn. Read a related book Cloudy With a Chance of Meatballs By Judi Barrett Little Cloud By Eric Carle Thunder Cake By Patricia Polacco The Cloud Book By Tomie de Paola The Snowy Day By Ezra Jack Keats The House of Four Seasons By Roger Duvoisin Snowballs By Lois Ehlert The White Marble By Charlotte Zolotow The Wind Blew By Pat Hutchins Bringing the Rain to Kapiti Plain By Verna Aardema PBS 45 & 49’s Ready To Learn Caregiver Guide • PBS 45 & 49 Learning Triangle Activities 79 PBS 45 & 49 Curriculum Planning Pages Planning Page File these sheets away to keep track of your video library. The children’s programs on PBS 45 & 49 are designed to enhance the development of the whole child — in the thinking, social, emotional and physical areas. Young children are given opportunities for new learning experiences. Therefore, children begin to develop important skills for school readiness. Existing skills are reinforced and appropriate behavior is modeled. A strong emphasis is placed on positive pro-social skills, such as making friends, sharing, cooperating and using good manners. The lists below categorize some of PBS 45 & 49’s children’s programs into child growth and development areas: Cognitive Social & Emotional Arthur Barney & Friends Between the Lions Bob the Builder Clifford the Big Red Dog Cyberchase Dragon Tales George Shrinks Postcards From Buster Reading Rainbow Sesame Street Teletubbies Physical Arthur Barney & Friends The Berenstain Bears Bob the Builder Clifford the Big Red Dog Dragon Tales George Shrinks Maya & Miguel Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood Reading Rainbow Sesame Street Teletubbies Barney & Friends Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood Reading Rainbow Sesame Street Teletubbies Educational Goals of Programs Program ____________________ Program ____________________ Program ____________________ ____________________________ ____________________________ ____________________________ Child Growth and Development Child Growth and Development Child Growth and Development Social/Emotional Cognitive Physical _______ _______ _______ Curriculum Areas Art Cooking Reading/Literature Gross Motor Skills Social Studies Sensory Activity Music/Movement Discovery/Science Dramatic Play Social/Emotional Cognitive Physical _______ _______ _______ Curriculum Areas _______ _______ _______ _______ _______ _______ _______ _______ _______ Art Cooking Reading/Literature Gross Motor Skills Social Studies Sensory Activity Music/Movement Discovery/Science Dramatic Play Social/Emotional Cognitive Physical _______ _______ _______ Curriculum Areas _______ _______ _______ _______ _______ _______ _______ _______ _______ Art _______ Cooking Reading/Literature Gross Motor Skills Social Studies Sensory Activity Music/Movement Discovery/Science Dramatic Play _______ _______ _______ _______ _______ _______ _______ _______ Any Others ___________________ Any Others ___________________ Any Others ___________________ _____________________________ _____________________________ _____________________________ _____________________________ _____________________________ _____________________________ PBS 45 & 49’s Ready To Learn Caregiver Guide • PBS 45 & 49 Curriculum Planning 83 Curriculum Planning Sheet I want the children to learn: ______________________________________________________________________________ Active Viewing: Program Title: __________________________________________________________________________________________ Date and time I will record the program: ___________________________________________________________________ Date we will watch the program: _________________________________________________________________________ Open-ended questions I will ask when we view the program: ________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________________________________________ How will I get the children actively involved? ______________________________________________________________ Storybook Reading: I will read the following books: 1. _____________________________________________________________________________________________________ 2. _____________________________________________________________________________________________________ 3. _____________________________________________________________________________________________________ What open-ended questions will I ask during the reading? How will I make the connection between the television program and the story? __________________________________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________________________________________ Activity: Plan an activity that extends or prepares for the lesson of the program. What activity will I do? What materials will I use? How will I make the connection between the television program, the story and the activity? 84 Book List by Theme ABCs Celebrations The Guinea Pig ABC By Kate Duke Mr. Rabbit and the Lovely Present By Charlotte Zolotow A My Name Is Alice By Jane Bayer Happy Birthday Baby Bop! By Linda Cress Dowdy Farm Alphabet Book By Jane Miller Seven Candles for Kwanzaa By Andrea Davis Pinkney We Read: A to Z By Donald Crews Happy Birthday, Sam By Pat Hutchins My First ABC of Animals By Fiammetta Dogi Happy Birthday, Moon By Frank Asch Black and White Rabbit’s ABC By Alan Baker Happy Birthday Martin Luther King By Jean Marzollo A to Z Picture Book By Gyo Fujikawa Hanukkah! By Roni Schotter 26 Letters and 99 Cents By Tana Hoban Chicka Chicka Boom Boom By Bill Martin, Jr. & John Archambault The Folks in the Valley: A Pennsylvania Dutch ABC By Jim Aylesworth Body Awareness Dem Bones By Bob Barner From Head to Toe By Eric Carle The Human Body By Newbridge Books My Feet By Aliki My Hands By Aliki Spectacles By Ellen Raskin What Am I Made of? By David Bennett Herbert Hated Being Small By Karla Kuskin Hue Boy By Rita P. Mitchell Heather Hiding By Nancy White Carlstrom Why Does That Man Have Such a Big Nose? By Mary Beth Quinsey Colors All the Colors of the Earth By Sheila Hamanaka Freight Train By Donald Crews Little Blue and Little Yellow By Leo Lionni Who Said Red? By Mary Serfoza Brown Cow, Green Grass, Yellow, Mellow Sun By Ellen Jackson It’s Mine By Leo Lionni Mouse TV By Matt Novak Luka’s Quilt By Georgia Guback Rosie & the Yellow Ribbon By Paula DePaolo Matthew and Tilly By Rebecca C. Jones Cooperation Harriet’s Halloween Candy By Nancy Carlson The Big Hungry Bear By Don & Audrey Wood The Rainbow Fish By Marcus Pfister Daddy Makes the Best Spaghetti By Anna Hines Mole’s Hill: A Woodland Tale By Lois Ehlert A Chair for My Mother By Vera B. Williams Subway Sparrow By Leyla Torres The Lion and the Mouse By Ed Young Mouse Paint By Ellen Stoll Walsh It’s Mine By Crosby Bonsall Colors of the Day By Ruth Gembicki Bragg Katherine’s Doll By Elizabeth Winthrop My Many Colored Days By Dr. Seuss Barney and Baby Bop’s Band: A Story About Sharing (book on tape) By Mark S. Bernthal Red Day, Green Day By Edith Kunhardt Elmer By David McKee Conflict Resolution No Fighting, No Biting! By Else Holmelund Minarik Let’s Talk About Feeling Angry By Joy Berry The Grouchy Ladybug By Eric Carle PBS 45 & 49’s Ready To Learn Caregiver Guide • PBS 45 & 49 Curriculum Planning Counting & Numbers What Comes in 2s, 3s and 4s? By Suzanne Aker How Many How Many How Many By Rick Walton Ten Black Dots By Donald Crews One to Ten Pop-Up Surprises By Chuck Murphy 85 Book List by Theme Farm Counting Book By Jane Miller Exercise I Was So Mad! By Norma Simon The Button Box By Margarette S. Reid Barney Plays Nose to Toes By Margie Larsen & Mary Ann Dudko Count! By Denise Fleming Jump, Frog, Jump! By Robert Kalan Ten, Nine, Eight By Molly Bang My Mom Is a Runner By Mary Reimold Up to Ten and Down Again By Lisa Campbell Ernst My Feet By Aliki My First Book of Time By Claire Llewellyn Can You Dance, Dalila? By Virginia Kroll Sometimes I Feel Like a Mouse: A Book About Feelings By Jeanne Modesitt How Much Is a Million? By David Schwartz Sea Swan By Kathryn Lasky The Old Dog By Charlotte Zolotow Hotel Animal By Keith DuQuette Mrs. Armitage on Wheels By Quentin Blake Chrysanthemum By Kevin Henkes Math Curse By Jon Scieszka Shoes By Elizabeth Winthrop Saturday Sancocho By Leyla Torres Families Alexander and the Terrible, Horrible, No Good, Very Bad Day By Judith Viorst Ira Sleeps Over By Bernard Waber Feelings By Aliki Friends The Faithful Friend By Robert D. San Souci The Big Big Sea By Martin Waddell Big Sister, Little Brother By Terry Berger Red Dancing Shoes By Denise Lewis Patrick On Mother’s Lap By Ann Herbert Scott Little Blue and Little Yellow By Leo Lionni Mama Do You Love Me? By Barbara M. Joosse Daddy Makes the Best Spaghetti By Anna Hines Barney’s Friends By Margie Larsen On the Go By Ann Morris Abuela’s Weave By Omar Castaneda Corduroy By Don Freeman Bread, Bread, Bread By Ann Morris Mama Zooms By Jane Cowen-Fletcher Do You Want to Be My Friend? By Eric Carle Hats, Hats, Hats By Ann Morris All Kinds of Families By Norma Simon Chester’s Way By Kevin Henkes Shoes, Shoes, Shoes By Ann Morris The Patchwork Quilt By Valerie Flournoy Frog and Toad All Year By Arnold Lobel Potluck By Anne Shelby Big Sister, Little Brother By Terry Berger Faces By Shelley Rotner & Ken Kreisler Families Are Different By Nina Pellegrini People By Peter Spier A Chair for My Mother By Vera B. Williams Diversity Mama Zooms By Jane Cowen-Fletcher Arthur’s Eyes By Marc Brown Watch the Stars Come Out By Riki Levinson 86 Feelings Health Who’s Sick Today? By Lynne Cherry Robby Visits the Doctor By Martine Davison Madeline By Ludwig Bemelmans I Love You as Much … By Laura Krauss Melmed Barney and Baby Bop Go to the Doctor By Margie Larsen The Kissing Hand By Audrey Penn Barney Goes to the Dentist By Linda Cress Dowdy Mean Soup By Betsy Everitt Little Rabbit’s Loose Tooth By Lucy Bate Book List by Theme Your Skin and Mine By Paul Showers Houses and Homes By Ann Morris Germs Make Me Sick! By Melvin Berger A Tasting Party By Jane Moncure Good Enough to Eat: A Kid’s Guide to Food and Nutrition By Lizzy Rockwell Barney’s Book of Trains By Linda Dowdy Gregory, the Terrible Eater By Mitchell Sharmat The Milk Makers By Gail Gibbons Music & Movement Ben’s Trumpet By Rachel Isadora Max the Music Maker By Miriam Stecher Music, Music for Everyone By Vera B. Williams The Philharmonic Gets Dressed By Karla Kuskin Clap Your Hands By Lorinda Bryan Cauley Charlie Parker Played Be Bop By Chris Raschka Noisy Nora By Rosemary Wells Zin! Zin! Zin! A Violin By Lloyd Moss Ty’s One-Man Band By Mildred Pitts Walter Mama Don’t Allow By Thacher Hurd New Experiences Safety I Read Signs By Tana Hoban Red Light, Green Light By Margaret Wise Brown This Is My House By Arthur Dorros Barney Says, “Play Safely” By Mary Ann Dudko & Margie Larsen Gila Monsters Meet You at the Airport By Marjorie Weinman Sharmat Red Riding Hood By Janus Marshall Pets B.J. and Scooter By Mary Ann Dudko Can I Keep Him? By Steven Kellogg Make Way for Ducklings By Robert McCloskey A Chair for My Mother By Vera Williams Self-Esteem Guinea Pigs Don’t Read Books By Colleen Stanley Bare Verdi By Janell Cannon Let’s Get a Pet By Harriet Ziefert Stellaluna By Janell Cannon Millions of Cats By Wanda Gag ABC I Like Me By Nancy Carlson Pet Show By Ezra Jack Keats Am I Beautiful? By Else Holmelund Minarik I Love Guinea Pigs By Dick King-Smith Wonderful Nature, Wonderful You By Karin Ireland Tight Times By Barbara Hazen The Important Book By Margaret Wise Brown Best Friends By Steven Kellogg I Can By Helen Oxenbury Recycling & the Environment Fun With Nature By Dympna Hayes Bread, Bread, Bread By Ann Morris What Did the Rock Say? By George Maxim Ross The Fire Station By Michael Martchenko Red Leaf, Yellow Leaf By Lois Ehlert Flying By Donald Crews In the Small, Small Pond By Denise Fleming Arthur Babysits By Marc Brown Paul Bunyan By Steven Kellogg Everett Anderson’s Nine Month Long By Lucille Clifton Bringing the Rain to Kapiti Plain By Verna Aardema The Leaving Morning By Angela Johnson Animal Tracks By Arthur Dorros PBS 45 & 49’s Ready To Learn Caregiver Guide • PBS 45 & 49 Curriculum Planning The Fish Who Could Wish By John Bush Regina’s Big Mistake By Marissa Moss Playing Right Field By Willy Welch The Tortoise and the Hare Adapted by Janet Stevens Shapes The Shape of Things By Dayle Ann Dodds Fuzzy Yellow Duckling By Matthew Van Fleet Look Around! A Book About Shapes By Leonard Fisher 87 Book List by Theme Shapes and Things By Tana Hoban Baby Bop Pretends By Mary Ann Dudko The Listening Walk By Paul Showers Circles, Triangles and Squares By Tana Hoban It Looked Like Split Milk By Charles Shaw I Hear By Rachel Isadora Go Away, Big Green Monster! By Ed Emberley Abuela By Arthur Dorros I See By Rachel Isadora Shapes for Lunch! By Melinda Lily Look! Look! Look! By Tana Hoban Good-Night, Owl! By Pat Hutchins Shapes, Shapes, Shapes By Tana Hoban Frances Facemaker: A Going to Bed Book By William Cole See, Hear, Touch, Taste, Smell It Newbridge Books Sea Shapes By Suse MacDonald Special Needs Awareness We Can Do It! By Laura Dwight Friends at School By Rochelle Bunnett What Is the Sign for Friend? By Judith Greenburg Dad and Me in the Morning By Patricia Lakin See You Tomorrow, Charles By Miriam Cohen My Buddy By Audrey Osofsky Cookie By Linda Kneeland My Brother Sammy By Becky Edwards Howie Helps Himself By Joan Fassler Mama Zooms By Jane Cowen-Fletcher Silent Lotus By Jeanne M. Lee Knots on a Counting Rope By John Archambault The Adventures of Taxi Dog By Debra Barracca Arthur’s Eyes By Marc Brown Storytelling The Snowman By Raymond Briggs Amazing Grace By Mary Hoffman 88 Where the Wild Things Are By Maurice Sendak Three Billy Goats Gruff By Ellen Appleby The Fisherman and His Wife By Margot Zemach My Five Senses By Aliki Smelling By Richard L. Allington A Tasting Party By Jane Moncure Liang and the Magic Paintbrush By Demi How Do I Know It’s Yucky? and Other Questions About the Senses By Sharon Cromwell Simon’s Book By Henrik Drescher Touch and Read By Tiziano Sclavi The Tortoise and the Hare Adapted by Janet Stevens Abiyoyo By Pete Seeger Rumpelstiltskin Retold by Paul O. Zelinsky Television/Media Literacy Take a Look, It’s in a Book: How Television Is Made at Reading Rainbow By Ronnie Krauss The Bionic Bunny Show By Marc Brown When the TV Broke By Harriet Ziefert Arthur’s TV Trouble By Marc Brown Box-Head Boy By Christine M. Winn Television: What’s Behind What You See By W. Carter Merbreier & Linda Capus Riley The Five Senses Polar Bear, Polar Bear, What Do You Hear? By Bill Martin, Jr. Weather Cloudy With a Chance of Meatballs By Judi Barrett Thunder Cake By Patricia Polacco The Snowy Day By Ezra Jack Keats Snowballs By Lois Ehlert The Wind Blew By Pat Hutchins Little Cloud By Eric Carle The Cloud Book By Tomie de Paola The House of Four Seasons By Roger Duvoisin The White Marble By Charlotte Zolotow Bringing the Rain to Kapiti Plain By Verna Aardema Activity Index by Curriculum Area Art Cooking Alphabet Collage ................................................................ 30 Chef Brockett’s Nutritious Snack ..................................... 55 Body Tracing ........................................................................ 52 Food Tasting ........................................................................ 58 Card Puzzle .......................................................................... 63 Friendship Pudding ............................................................ 53 Caution ................................................................................. 65 Homemade Butter .............................................................. 77 Circle Art .............................................................................. 68 Lunch Factory ...................................................................... 41 Different and the Same Fans ....................................... 45, 71 Number Mix ........................................................................ 43 Expanded Shapes ................................................................ 68 Pretend Rain Soup .............................................................. 79 Family Collage .................................................................... 48 Toast Faces ........................................................................... 67 Family Flag .......................................................................... 49 A Wedding Cake ................................................................. 35 Family Quilt ......................................................................... 49 Family Tree .......................................................................... 49 The Feelings Mirror ...................................................... 38, 50 Friendship Picture .............................................................. 52 A Gift for You ....................................................................... 35 “I Feel Good” Book ............................................................. 51 If Anger Were a … ............................................................... 51 If I Had a Pet ........................................................................ 61 Let’s Use It Again ................................................................ 62 Letter Rubbing ..................................................................... 30 Milk Carton Haulers ........................................................... 62 Our Newspaper ............................................................ 73, 75 Painting to Music ................................................................ 57 Paper Plate Faces ................................................................ 51 Dramatic Play An Airplane Ride ................................................................ 59 Doctor’s Office Play ............................................................ 55 Getting Dressed ................................................................... 32 Milk Carton Haulers ........................................................... 62 New Baby Play .................................................................... 58 Puppet Show ....................................................................... 72 A Television Program ......................................................... 75 Traffic Light Fun .................................................................. 64 Weather Wear ...................................................................... 79 X-Rays ................................................................................... 59 Language & Literacy (Circle Time Activities) Party Placemats ................................................................... 34 B-I-N-G-O ............................................................................. 56 Problem-Solving Art Project .............................................. 40 Clap and Stomp Rhythms ................................................. 38 Rainbow Containers ........................................................... 70 Cooperation Squeeze .......................................................... 40 Sewing Card ........................................................................ 63 Different and the Same Fans ....................................... 45, 71 Sidewalk Chalk ................................................................... 36 Family Picture ..................................................................... 72 Skin Colors ........................................................................... 37 The Feelings Mirror ...................................................... 38, 50 Super Smiles ........................................................................ 54 Front and Back .................................................................... 32 We Are All Winners! ........................................................... 67 Getting Dressed ................................................................... 32 Wrapping Paper .................................................................. 34 Guess the Pet ....................................................................... 60 PBS 45 & 49’s Ready To Learn Caregiver Guide • PBS 45 & 49 Curriculum Planning 89 Activity Index by Curriculum Area Language & Literacy (Circle Time Activities) cont’d. Music & Movement Background Music .............................................................. 74 Hello ..................................................................................... 44 B-I-N-G-O ............................................................................. 56 The “I Like” Game .............................................................. 66 Clap and Stomp Rhythms ................................................. 38 If Anger Were a … ............................................................... 51 Cleaning Up ......................................................................... 65 Inside-Outside ............................................................... 45, 71 Feelings Dance .................................................................... 46 Letter People ........................................................................ 31 Friendship Dances .............................................................. 53 Looks Can Be Deceiving .............................................. 44, 70 If You’re Happy and You Know It .................................... 33 A Peaceful Solution ............................................................. 39 Little and Big Exercises ...................................................... 33 Pictures of Things ............................................................... 74 Marching Band .................................................................... 56 Puppy Counting .................................................................. 43 Musical Jars .......................................................................... 57 Rope Challenge ................................................................... 41 Painting to Music ................................................................ 57 Safety Walk .......................................................................... 64 Parachute Games ................................................................ 46 Shape of the Day ................................................................. 69 Parachute Play ..................................................................... 78 Some Things Belong to Everyone ..................................... 39 Physical Exercise ................................................................. 47 Song Activity ....................................................................... 31 Song Activity ....................................................................... 31 Visit a Pet Shop .................................................................... 60 A Thunderous Band ........................................................... 78 Weather Wear ...................................................................... 79 Tightrope Walking .............................................................. 47 What’s Going On in the Picture? ...................................... 73 Turtle Rhyme ....................................................................... 61 Who’s Who? ......................................................................... 66 Science Math Color Telescope ................................................................... 37 Card Puzzle .......................................................................... 63 Food Tasting ........................................................................ 58 Expanded Shapes ................................................................ 68 Letter Bag ............................................................................. 76 Friendship Pudding ............................................................ 53 Musical Jars .......................................................................... 57 Number Mix ........................................................................ 43 Mystery Scent ...................................................................... 76 Number Monster ................................................................ 42 Pretend Rain Soup .............................................................. 79 Peanut Take-Away .............................................................. 42 Secret Envelopes ................................................................. 69 Puppy Counting .................................................................. 43 Shake and Guess ................................................................. 77 Sidewalk Chalk ................................................................... 36 Sidewalk Chalk ................................................................... 36 A Wedding Cake ................................................................. 35 Sun Catchers ........................................................................ 36 Visit a Farmer’s Market ..................................................... 54 X-Rays ................................................................................... 59 90 PBS 45 & 49 1750 Campus Center Drive P.O. Box 5191 Kent, OH 44240-5191 (330) 677-4549 www.pbs4549.org