Preschool Pirate Books
It's pirate week for my preschoolers! Here's a peek at some speech and language ideas for preschoolers! The book I read.
I Spy Parrots Materials needed: white paper, variety of colors of paint and brushes; glue, googly eyes and feathers. The children paint the paper in bright colors. They squirt glue randomly on paper. They stick colorful feathers onto the glue.
They glue on 2 googly eyes. Very creative parrots!!! Paper Pirates Materials needed: plain white paper, black paper, scissors, googly eyes, markers, fabric, glue, crayons/markers. The children cut a piece of black paper into an eye patch (let them practice cutting-don't worry about which shape it ends up being!) and glue it and one eye onto the paper.
- Children's Humor; Children's Action & Adventure Books; Children's Holiday Books; Children's Cat Books; Children's Books + See more; Children's Interactive.
- Captain Flinn and the Pirate Dinosaurs by Giles Andreae and Russell Ayto Picture Book AND One day, Flinn finds a pirate crying in the supply closet at school.
They then use the fabric and/or crayons/markers to make a headband on the paper for a pirate hat. They draw on the rest of the face (nose, mouth, beard, etc.) of their choice and print their name.
Flags Show pictures of different flags. Encourage the children to paint their own flag! Headbands Provide paper that you have pre-drawn thick, black lines on for the children to cut out into a headband strip (great scissor practice). Provide crayons, stickers and stamps. Let the children decorate their headbands to wear this week! Classroom Treasure Chest Materials Needed: Cardboard box, construction paper, paint brushes, glue and glitter glue The children use their hands to tear pieces of construction paper-big and small (no scissors! This is to help develop their hand muscles!) After you have your 'paper tearing' party, provide the children with bowls that have glue in them and paintbrushes.
They brush glue on the box and press the pieces of construction paper on the glue. Cover the entire box (outside only! Not the inside) and cover the lid of the box this way as well.
When dry, brush over the paper with glitter glue (the teachers can do this-it's fun and therapeutic and a great activity to do during a staff meeting!). It is AWESOME and SHINY when dry! When dry, you will have a BEAUTIFUL treasure box for your classroom! You can use this in any way you want! Some things to use this box for: A holder for your stuffed animals.
A box to place written acts of kindness you notice this week (Pirate Sue helped Matey Joe open his snack). A storage box for your themed books. A suggestion box for parents. Themed Block Center Ideas Shipmates! Provide and add them to your block area this week along with!
Ask parents if they have a toy pirate ship they might want to donate! In our classroom all year long! We didn't need a theme to have fun with it! Themed Circle Time Ideas Circle Time is such a great time for children to learn the social skills of being together as a large group AND to learn more about your theme! Our High Seas Tale Materials needed: A white board or chart paper Tell the children that you are all going to make up a pirate story! Draw a picture of a ship on the board/paper. Say: Once upon a time, there was a Pirate ship.
On the ship there was: Take it from here! Let each child add items or ideas to your story! You can make suggestions if they are stuck or get offtrack such as: What type of animals did the pirates in our stories have? Should we have one?
What is it's name? What does it say when it speaks? Where is our ship going? What will we find when we get there? What type of weather are we having on the ocean today? If someone can record or write down the story and who said what, that would be great!
You could then read the story to the children at another circle time on another day! EXTENSION: If you do write down what each child says, ask them to illustrate it either at the art table or the writing table. This would be a small group activity. 'Cheryl, you said there was a beautiful parrot on the ship who liked to sing. Would you draw me a picture of the parrot?' Then you print what they said on the bottom of their illustrations.
Put them in the order of the story to make a class book. If you can, also make color copies of the book-one for each child to take home!
Aye Spy, Matey! Have a list of items you want the children to find in the classroom. Set them up in pairs (safety in numbers!). Give the 2 children going first paper towel tubes or binoculars. Give them a verbal description of what they need to find or a picture (a parrot, a glue stick, whatever).
When they have found it, they come back to Circle and place the items in front of you. You could have all the pairs search at the same time and then come back. EXTENSION: Once all items are brought to you, play 'What's Missing?' They all hide their eyes, you remove one or two items. They open their eyes and then guess what is missing. Snack Recipe Ideas to Cook Up for Your Theme! Cooking with children helps develop their math skills and helps them to learn how to follow directions.
It also allows for some great conversation! Ask many questions while cooking with your children to encourage conversation! Be sure to ask specific themed questions while making these fun snacks! Orange Slice Boats Help children cut oranges into wedges. Sit orange, peel side on the table. Insert a toothpick into the meat of the orange.
Stick a piece of a healthy breakfast bar onto the top of the toothpick for a sail! Boat Load of Salad! You will need a large watermelon and a variety of other fruit (oranges, pineapple, strawberry, etc.) and plastic knives. In advance, cut the watermelon in half lengthwise. Scoop out the center. Place different fruits in different bowls.
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Let children choose fruits to help cut into smaller chunks. Assist them in cutting the fruit. They place the cut fruit into the scooped out watermelon. You now have a boat load of fruit salad for snack! Add a large craft stick with a piece of paper on the top with the name of your school! Themed Ideas to Transform Your Dramatic Play Area The Hide Out!
Add a large box (refrigerator box or other appliance box) to your dramatic play area. Add a skull and crossbones picture to it. Encourage the kids to decorate the hide out so that others 'can't find it'! They can add large leaves that they have cut out or color it to match the walls! Provide magnifying glasses, eye patches, hats, binoculars and, of course, a treasure chest with treasure in it!
Themed Ideas for Your Easel- More Than Just Painting (Although that is always THE favorite in our classroom)! Feather Painting Use feathers to paint with this week!
Themed Large Group Games to help the children build their muscles while they have fun together! Walk the Plank Create an obstacle course for you kids to follow to find a treasure chest! Use your balance beam to 'walk the plank'; provide a thin strip of blue fabric for the children to 'jump over the water', include areas for them to hop (perhaps they can hop from one paper to the next and each paper has a large letter 'X' on it to mark the spot!)-have fun! Fishing You will need: Thin dowel posts (for fishing poles), yarn, magnets to tie onto the end of the yard (thick magnets with holes in the middle), paper clips. In advance, tie yarn to each dowel post and tie the magnets on the other ends of the yarn.
These are great to have for MANY themes so it is well worth taking the time to make and keep all year! What will the children fish for? Well, that's up to you!
Are you working on letters? Plain, old visual discrimination? Make pictures in fish shapes for what you are working on (print numbers or letters on fish; cut out different colored fish; cut out different themed items-such as a ship, skull and cross bone, pirate hat, parrot, fish, ocean, etc.). Laminate your pictures. Attach a metal paper clip to each one. Place pictures on the floor for the children to fish for them (or place them in a wading pool with no water in it!).
Themed Ideas for your Preschool Library Book Suggestions for the Library by Kathy Tucker by Melinda Long and David Shannon by Scholastic by Samantha Berger by Sudipta Bardhan-Quallen and Jill McElmurry by Corinne Demas by Alice McLarren by June Sobel Themed Math and Manipulatives Activities to help your preschoolers develop their math skills and those small muscles in their hands! Treasure Counting In advance, collect the small miniature cereal boxes (or other small boxes you may have). Decorate them to look like treasure chests. Print a different number on the top of the boxes (1-10 or higher depending on where your class is at). Provide gold coins. Encourage the children to count out the corresponding number of coins into the boxes. Pirate Playdough Use your favorite home made play dough recipe.
Add black tempera paint and gold glitter for some great play dough! High Seas Board Games Make your own simple board game. Using large paper, add dots or circles in a slightly curvy path on the paper. Print 'Start' at one end and 'Finish' at the other end. Perhaps add a picture of a pirate at the Start side and a ship at the end side. Add instructions that your own students can follow and/or understand.
You might put ' + 2 ' on a dot (if a student lands there, they move 2 spots more). Use bingo chips or other items for play pieces.
Provide dice with 1-3 dots on it (or 1-6 would be fine also). Let the children freely explore the game and make up their own rules to this game! Treasure Sort Materials needed: Egg carton, jewels (colored, glass ones found in craft stores), spoon to scoop a jewel with.
Simply provide these materials and let the children sort, scoop, and place in the cartons as they wish. The purpose of this activity is not so much to learn counting, but to build up those small muscles by scooping the jewel with the spoon and then turning their wrist to drop it in! Sometimes we get so caught up in the 'academics' of math, that we forget about the muscles required to do some of the writing activities we provide! Themed Music and Movement Activities and Ideas to get your Preschoolers Movin' and Groovin!
Bandana Dance Use bandanas as dancing scarves while playing different tempos of music. When you stop the music, the children freeze. Give instructions if you'd like about 'how' to move: Walk the Plank (walk in a straight line) Hoist the Sails (wave the bandanas up and down as they squat down and jump up) Shipwrecked Band! Give the children musical instruments to make music together! Themed Activities for Your Sand and Water Table Booty in the Sand! Add treasure to your sand table! Add play necklaces, seashells, gold coins, rings, etc.
Keep the sand a bit moist and add shovels and spoons and a box or two that are decorated like treasure chests to collect the booty in! High Sea Adventure Add blue food coloring to the water and small plastic boats, corks, little people and gold coins.you will NOT need to give any instruction! EXTENSION: On some days, add ice cubes to the water.be careful not to hit the icebergs! Themed Science Activities for your Preschool Scientists in Training! Discovery Bottles I LOVE discovery bottles-for any and every theme!
For this theme, add sand and theme related items (small plastic parrots, seashells, shiny stones (jewels), bracelets, gold coins, etc.) The children move the bottles around to find all the items. EXTENSION: In advance, make a picture list of all the items in the bottles. Laminate the list and provide a low-odor, dry erase marker.
The children them look for each item on the list and check it off as they find it! Individual Storm Bottles Collect a small, plastic pop or juice bottle with the cover for each child; vegetable oil, water, blue food coloring, sand, hot glue gun Help them to fill their bottle half way with water. They add a few drops of blue food coloring. Add a little bit of sand. They fill it the rest of the way with vegetable oil. Add a few beads or glass jewels (or metallic confetti!).
Hot glue the cover on. The child can make waves with their bottle (by moving it back and forth), or make a storm (shake it and then set it down and watch the layers separate again). Writing Activity Ideas for Your Preschool Theme! Personalized Telescopes In advance, paint paper towel tubes (of course, you could have this as an art project!
However, make some on your own as well, the children tend to make the tubes pretty soggy when they paint!). In advance, cut out the bottoms of large, paper (colored) cups so that the paper towel tubes fit in. Provide markers and crayons for the children to decorate one of each (a tube and a cup). They insert the tube into the bottom of the cup and, voila! Telescopes for ya, matey! (Go to the Pirates Theme on my Pinterest account to see one example of this!
Click on the Pinterest link at the bottom of this page). Treasure Maps Provide small, brown lunch bags. (In advance, cut them open so they are larger). The children draw their own maps, complete with drawing 'X' whereever they want. They print their name on their map. Show them how to crumple up and then open up the map to make it look old!
Show them how to roll up their maps as well. Your children will have too much fun pretending they are following a map around the classroom to find a treasure!. Hey there! Welcome to Preschool Plan It! I’m Cheryl, a preschool teacher of over 20 years.
I KNOW, I know, you spend hours of time developing your preschool themes, activities and preschool lesson plans each week. You are commited to planning preschool themes and activities that are engaging hands-on, interactive, fun AND meet the goal of supporting each child’s level of growth and development. I am commited to providing you, the preschool teacher, with everything you need to develop preschool lesson plans and preschool activities for your classroom all in one place!
Appealing to the imagination of children can be a beautiful event to experience. With your help, the children can be exposed to a new world, the world of imagination.
Preschool Pirate Printables
You will teach them how to live in a world that they themselves can create with their minds. In this world, they will actually make up the rules as they go along or they can have no rules at all. Their world or their creative kingdom is one where they can learn, too. If you are able to incorporate yourself into their utopian universe, you can teach them about many subjects.
You can guide them while they play, even teaching them about pirates. Prior Knowledge: Before beginning the lesson, have the students answer questions like:. Do you know what a pirate is?. Do you know what a treasure chest is?.
Do you know what a map is? After you receive their responses, be prepared to show them a photo that will give them a visual of what the answer should be for each question. The Pirate Book Pirates are a great topic for children of all age groups. They can become pirates and learn the pirate language such when to use the word 'Ar!' Children can also learn the mannerisms of pirates.
I know of a great book that will have your students requesting repeat readings: written by Melinda Long and illustrated by David Shannon. This addictive little book on pirates will take your class into a world within a world, leading them in play tactics using their imaginations. This book will definitely become one of their favorites. The book How I Became a Pirate is one that has colorful illustrations and catch phrases that the children will simply adore. Among the numerous reviews given to this work of art, one stuck out because it is from a learning institution. Here is a portion of their review: ' A must-have for your classroom. Children's books do not get much better than this.
Reviewed by the Education Oasis Staff' Reading this book with an overemphasis on some of the more exciting parts and accentuating the pirate language will bring amusement to your children. After reading the book, you can have a quick discussion with them about the book. Reviewing the book with them will prove they understood what was read. This review is the perfect time to give your students a preview of the activities and crafts that are ahead of them.
It is the best time to rehearse one or two of the pirate phrases for fun when they go on their pirate adventure. Please continue to page two for the activities and assessment for the preschool pirate theme. Activities. Spyglass Telescope - Materials: Empty paper towel tubes, colorful construction paper, scissors, and glue or tape. Instructions: Use one color of construction paper to cover the paper towel tube.
Use a one to one and a half inch piece of another color on the end opposite of the eye. Have the children help cover and glue the materials onto the telescope. Pirate Patch - Materials: Black felt fabric, scissors, 1/4 inch silky or satin black ribbon, and black construction paper. Instructions: Cut out the eye patch from the fabric or construction paper.
Cut a hole through the patch. Thread the ribbon through each hole in the patch, and tie at the back of the child's head. Treasure Chest - Materials: Large shoebox, brown and gold construction paper, glue, toy coins, plastic beaded necklaces, plastic rings, stapler, candy of various types including miniature chocolates and hard candies, and other trinkets. Instructions: Cover the shoebox with brown construction paper. Cut at least twelve one-inch golden or yellow strips of construction paper, and glue them down on the back, bottom, and front of the box. Staple one or two pieces of brown construction paper over the top of the box; this should resemble a loop or large tunnel.
It needs to be stapled to the front from the inside flap, then folded in a half loop that should be open. Staple it to the back from the inside of the box. Use more of the golden strips to connect in the same pattern as before. Cut one of the strips in half and use for handles on each side. Cut out what should resemble a lock and glue in the front of the chest.
Fill the box with all of the goodies. Sword: Materials: Gray spray paint, cardboard, black construction paper, scissors, glue, and (optionally) stickers. Instructions: Spray the cardboard and let dry. Cut out the swords with a handle from the cardboard paper about six inches in length.
Cover the handles with black construction paper. Have the children help to cover their swords. Help them put their names on them. Bandanas or Scarves - Have the children bring one from home and tie them on their heads.
Ship - Use a very large piece of paper to draw a ship, but do not make the ship too elaborate. Tape the ship onto small chairs, long enough to for the back of five chairs. Map - Draw a map of your classroom with key places or landmarks the children will recognize. Draw this map to lead to the treasure chest. Treasure Hunt - Have the children dress up in their pirate gear. Have them use some of the pirate language while everyone follows the map to the buried treasure. You can 'bury' the treasure outside or in another classroom.
You will actually teach them how to read a map with this activity. While in the ship, have them use their swords when they say words like 'Ar.'
Have them pretend all at once to swab the deck when you say. Alas, have fun finding the matey's treasure chest. You can end your pirate adventure by finding the treasure chest full of goodies that is fun for any boy or girl pirate! Assessment Assessment: After your class has had their fun hunting for treasure, you can quiz them on what they have learned. Ask them if they like being a pirate. Ask them what is a map. You can ask the children any other questions that will help to reiterate what they have learned from this lesson plan.
Preschool Pirate Coloring Pages
In summary, this preschool lesson plan on pirates send an important message to them. This lesson should teach them that your imagination is a awesome way to learn. The pirate theme for preschoolers will help them learn how to read a map. Reading the map will take them to a wonderful chest full of pirate's booty.
Once you see their eyes light up after opening the chest, you will know that your collective experience is priceless.