I. love. the. farm. So much so that we're extending our Social Studies curriculum to teach "On the Farm" for 2 weeks {who can do it in only two 45 minute lessons?!} plus doing fall leaves, apples and pumpkins separately in science from pretty much now to November. :)
We used
Shannon's farm circle map to record what we saw on the farm as we watched
Let's Explore: Around the Farm on Discovery Education.
We, of course, had to learn about baby animals and the various animal types so we made a farm book to tell each name. {click for file.}
Farm Animals: A first look was another great Discovery Ed video to give us the information before we recorded it in our books!
Enchanted Learning also has a list of female/male/baby animal names but
BE WARNED: the female dog is listed as a
B*. Thankful today that my kids
can't read yet since I pulled it up on the SmartBoard!!!! We just called both adult dogs "dogs." LOL
I also made a Farmer, Farmer, What do you see? book based on Bill Martin. Students fill in sight words
I, see, a & me as they read the predictive text to practice colors, one-to-one correspondence and sight words. {click the pic for the file!}
I'm all over the animals and apples and pumpkins {coming soon!} but realized that I never really did a great job of teaching the crops and produce that come from a farm in the past! So after seeing
Kinder by Kim's garden unit, we decided to spice it up a little bit by learning about crops. If you haven't read it,
Tops and Bottoms by Janet Stevens is a GREAT place to start!
We created the above bulletin board after reading the story and categorizing crops by how they grow and what part we eat. I got pictures from the internet and the writing structure says ____ is a _____ I can eat.
{click for the file} We added a little something extra to everything to jazz it up:
The apples got glitter for shine. The tomato got a tissue paper stem. The peapods got pom pom peas stuck inside. The celery got green yarn for strings. The potatoes got googly eyes for eyes. {yes, I know this is totally inaccurate but I just couldn't help myself!} The lettuce got glitter for some leaf depth. The carrots got orange pipe cleaner ridges and the corn got tissue paper husks.
And what's a great garden without a scarecrow to protect the crops?! We completed this scarecrow glyph {click the pic} to tell all about our favorite things of fall. You'll notice the drawn crops and popsicle stick post. ;) I might blow it up next year to make it a little bigger because some of my kids had a hard time cutting out the small pieces but I think it's still cute!
How do YOU celebrate the farm??? :)