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Caterpillar songs
and poems
The Little Caterpillar
(Sung to Itsy Bitsy Spider)
The little caterpillar crawled up in a tree
Spun his cocoon and slept so quietly
All through the winter he didn’t make a sound
Her dreamt of his new life when he’d be flying ‘round
While he was sleeping the snow did gently fall
Winter came and went, then he heard the robin’s call
Come on Mr. Butterfly, out of your cocoon
Spread your wings and fly for me, while I sing my tune.
Caterpillar Change
There was a little caterpillar crawling all about. (Walk with
fingers on arm)
He worked and he worked without a doubt. (Wiggle fingers)
Wrapping himself in a snug cocoon. (Wrap other hand around
fingers)
Waiting and waiting, will it be soon? (Hold fingers)
Look, he’s coming out, my oh my! (Raise arms in excitement)
For now he’s a beautiful butterfly! (Cross thumbs and flap hands
like wings)
The Life of a Butterfly
(sung to Skip to My Lou)
I’m a caterpillar, wiggle with me
I’m a caterpillar, wiggle with me
I’m a caterpillar, wiggle with me
What will I be, my darling?
I’m a chrysalis, curl like me
I’m a chrysalis, curl like me
I’m a chrysalis, curl like me
What will I be, my darling?
I’m a butterfly, come fly with me
I’m a butterfly, come fly with me
I’m a butterfly, come fly with me
That’s what I am, my darling!
Now all together, let’s do all three!
A caterpillar (wiggle), a chrysalis (curl), a butterfly (fly),
three!
Move your body like this, with me,
The life of a butterfly, darling! (flying all around)
Caterpillar
(Sung to Itsy Bitsy Spider)
Creepy crawly caterpillar
Looping up and down,
Furry tufts of hair along
Your back of golden brown.
You will soon be wrapped in silk
Asleep for many a day;
And then, a handsome butterfly
You’ll stretch and fly away!
Once I saw a butterfly
(sung to Twinkle, twinkle little star)
Once I saw a butterfly
Dancing in the clear blue sky
Through the meadow he would go
Flying high and flying low.
Once I saw a butterfly
Dancing in the clear blue sky.
(Source:
www.prekfun.com/ThemeA_F)
The
Birds and the Bees… and Butterflies Too.
Robin in the Rain (song)
Robin in the rain such a saucy fellow
Robin in the rain mind your spots of yellow
Running through the garden on your nimble feet
Digging for your dinner with your long strong beak
Robin the rain you don’t mind the weather
Showers always make you gay
But the worms are wishing your would stay at home
Robin on a rainy day!
Five Little ducks and Five Little Quail –
a rhyme
Five little ducks went out to play (wiggle five fingers on one
hand)
The met five quail that were going their way (wiggle five fingers
on the other hand)
The five little quail went to get a snack
And the five little ducks went quack, quack, quack! (use hand to
form a duck-bill)
Lucky Duck – a poem
OH it was a bit of luck
That I was born a baby duck
With yellow socks and yellow shoes
That I may go wherever I choose!
Quack, quack, quack, quack!
Source:
www.everythingpreschool.com/themes/bugs/songs.htm
Five Little Robins
Five little robins waiting for spring,
The first little robin started to sing,
The second little robin flapped its wings.
The third little robin said “Tweet, tweet, tweet,”
The fourth little robin sang so sweet.
The fifth little robin Sid, “It’s a beautiful day,”
Then all five robins flew away.
Five Baby Birds
(Sung to “Five Little ducks”)
Five baby birds hatched out one day.
Inside their nest they wiggled away.
With a peck, peck, peck and a peep, peep, peep.
One little bird fell fast asleep.
(Repeat the verse for four, three, and two;
Then sing the verse below.)
One baby bird hatched out one day.
Inside his nest he wiggled away.
With a peck, peck, peck and a peep, peep, peep.
No one to play with, I may as well sleep.
Bees on the Wall
5 bees were on the wall (Hold up all five fingers)
How could they hurt me, they are so small! (Shrug shoulders and put
hands out)
I’ll spray some water so they will fall (Pretend to spray a spray
bottle)
Uh oh! I’d better run! They’re after me, five bees in all! (Wiggle
fingers)
Buzzing Bees
Bees, bees, bees, bees
Buzzing in bushes and buzzing in trees
Buzzing around, wherever they please
There’s nothing so sweet
As sweet as a honey bee.
Bee Hive - a rhyme
This is my bee hive (put hands out together)
But where are all the bees?
Hidden inside where nobody sees
One, two, three, four, five (raising up fingers)
There they go - off to the trees!
OH Ladybug,
Ladybug!
Ladybug
The ladybug's a beetle.
It's shaped like a pea.
Its colour is a bright red
With lots of spots to see.
Although the name is "ladybug",
Some ladybugs are "men"
So why don't we say "gentleman bug"
Every now and then?
Five Little Ladybugs
Five little ladybugs climbing on some plants,
Eating the aphids, but not the ants.
The first one said, "Save some aphids for me."
The second one said, "They're as tasty as can be."
The third one said, "Oh they're almost gone."
The fourth one said, "Then we'd better move on."
The fifth one said, "Come on, let's fly!"
So they opened up their wings and they flew through the sky.
Ladybug
Ladybugs all dressed in red
Strolling through the flowerbed.
If I were tiny just like you
I'd creep among the flowers too!
Maria Fleming
Ladybug
Lady bug wears
An orange cape.
It opens up
And changes shape -
Now two wings lift her
into the air.
I wish I had
Such a cape to wear!
Dee Lillegard
Little Red Bug
Little red bug, oh so cute,
Here's a black spot for your suit.
Now you go and have some fun
With your spot, your very first one.
Little red bug, oh so cute,
Here's a black spot for your suit.
It's so nice to own a few,
So enjoy these lovely two.
Little red bug, oh so cute,
Here's a black spot for your suit.
We are very pleased to see
How nice you look with all three.
Little red bug, oh so cute,
Here's a black spot for your suit.
You might feel that you need more,
So we proudly give you four.
Little red bug, oh so cute,
Here's a black spot for your suit.
Heaven, heaven, sakes alive,
Look at you, you're wearing five!
Susan M. Paprocki
Source: www.canteach.ca
Summer Pretend Play Ideas
Birds and Bees and Butterflies too.
·
Using hair bands, add some pipe cleaner antennae. Twist and
curl colours together, make any shape you would like. Add ping pong
balls on the ends for safety, dab on some glue to hold them.
Encourage the children to be a bee, or a (wrapped in a nice cloth,
comforter or scarf) a caterpillar. Sing or say some of the rhymes
and songs below, and do the actions.
·
Use old sheer curtains to create scarves, capes or wings
that you can use in pretend play. Fly like the wind! (Make sure
all curtain hooks are removed.)
·
Use the music from the Flight of the Bumble Bee
by
Nikolai
Rimsky-Korsakov (from his
opera
The Tale of
Tsar Saltan,
1899-1900)
to inspire dance and movement.
·
Act out
the story The Very Hungry Caterpillar. Use real food that you
actually eat, or pretend food or even photographs.
Pretend Play Outdoors
Take
some costumes or props outside and use the physical environment as a
basis for pretend play. Hills, gullies, play structures are good
beginnings to create a scene, or fort etc. Make sure that your
costumes are not too long, or tied around the neck.
Climbing in costumes can be dangerous.
Science and pretend play
Have
a prop box with a Professor Bugilicious lab coat, magnifying glass,
specimen jars, labels, insect identification posters or books, etc.
You may add fossils and photos of nature. Encourage the children to
observe and gather information on how the insects behave. Talk
about it. Make notes. How many bugs can you find in a square of
grass 3 ft X 3 ft? Are they more bugs at the front of the lawn in
the sun, or at the back, in the shade? Make a graph. ON rainy
days, watch some movies about insects – animated movies or
non-fiction. Learn more about your favourite bug characters.
Here
are some
excellent summer pretend play ideas
from
www.perpetualpreschool.com/dramaticplaythemes.html
(If
you would like to add your ideas, or see more, visit this great web
site.)
Literacy-based pretend play
Be
sure to provide a variety of literacy materials in your dramatic
play area. I built a child-sized desk that holds a keyboard, phone,
and adding machine. I also include planning books, calendars, phone
books, pens/pencils, phone message pads, papers, maps, or whatever
else I can find. Make sure to clean out the used papers and trash to
keep the area attractive and inviting. Watch how creative your kids
will be while practicing pre-literacy abilities!
Construction
Zone
We
have used this idea with our class and they love it! Provide the
children with large and small blocks, play tools, tool belts and
hard hats. Make some signs i.e. "kids at work" or "danger
construction zone" and the kids have a great construction zone
dramatic play.
Garage
We
have a "Garage Prop Box." Actually, my husband collected these
things for me. There are old gas filler nozzles with hoses attached,
air pumps, grease guns, safety glasses, tools galore, clip boards
full of car diagnostic papers, neat car service diagrams, estimate
sheets,flashlights, receipt books, car magazines, tool catalogs, car
advertisements from the news paper, he even got patches from Chevron
and Ford that I sewed on white shirts.
Painters Unite
I
purchased inexpensive nail aprons, disposable paint hats, empty
paints cans (pint and quart sizes)and a variety of paint brushes
from my local hardware store. My class "paints" the classroom. When
the weather warms up, we bring the paint cans outside and fill them
with water. The children paint the side of our brick building with
water. They love it!
Pretend pool-time
Purchase an inexpensive blue table cloth and tape to the floor, this
is your pool. Add rafts, balls etc.
Safari
Do a
"camp safari" theme. Set up tents in the dramatic play and create
your own jungle in your preschool room. make giant stuffed animals
by letting the children decide what animal to draw, cutting two
shapes of that animal out, stapling or taping it together, and
stuffing it with newspaper. Hang them all over the room and create
your own zoo!!
Space
With
each unit we change our dramatic play area. For example we changed
it into a space ship for our sun, moon and stars unit just by
hanging space pictures and putting in an out dated computer that the
kids could punch around on. You could use old ice cream containers
with a box cut out as helmets... Backpacks are great space packs and
old soda containers are perfect oxygen tanks. The ideas are endless
and it doesn't take much time to do a quick make over for any unit.
Apples
I
recently made two trees using construction paper and hung them in
our dramatic play area. I attached paper apples of various sizes
with velcro. The children are allowed to pretend to apple pick. I
left our baskets to sort the different sizes. You could also use
different color apples. It was a great way to reinforce classifying
objects.
When
studying apples, we read the story, How to Make an Apple Pie and See
the World. I then put white and red playdough in the dramatic play
area along with lots of cooking utensils and the recipe for the
apple pie out of the book. Students could then pretend to make apple
pies. It was amazing how detailed their pies really were!
Wild
West
One
of my favourite Dramatic Play themes is Pioneers or The Old West. We
take our rectangular art table and turn it into a covered wagon
using flexible tent tubes, a large white sheet, and lots of tape. We
put two rocking horses (or you can use saw horses with stick horse
heads) in front of the covered wagon and away they go! We add bails
of hay, hats, boots, a pretend camp fire with wood scraps and orange
and red tissue paper and a grate from our art room drying rack. Put
sand and water in the water table along with "gold" nuggets and
"pan" for gold. Hang a rug over a string and use a rug beater or
paddle to "beat" it clean. Great fun!
Camping
When
you think of summer you think of camping. For our camping unit we
rolled up newspaper into paper logs and tied them with rubber bands.
The children then painted them brown. After they dried(the next day)
we set them up for our campfire adding red and orange cellophane and
a flashlight to the middle. We sat around the "campfire" singing
songs and telling stories. The children loved it.We ended our
campfire time by eating 'smores. It was great!
Island Fun
Another great theme idea for the dramatic play area is to create an
island. The children can call it Queen Charlotte Island, Hawaii,
Anticosti Island, etc. Get a few grass skirts, sunglasses, toy
cameras, make palm trees, add shells and a sand box and for extra
fun add your water table with blue food coloring for the island
water. Your kids are sure to have a blast!
Ice
Cream Store
My
Preschool and Pre-K kids love our ice cream store dramatic play
area! I made yarn pompom balls in "ice cream colors" for scoops of
ice cream, ice cream cones out of cardboard covered in burlap,
plastic ice cream scoops, play money, aprons, menu signs, and added
lots of containers donated from a local ice cream place. Lots of
neat interactions happen in this center!
Pretend House – washing dishes
After showing the students how to do this activity, I place a tub of
soapy water, clean water, and a towel in the dramatic play area for
students to wash dishes. They love this! It is also helpful to have
them wear a vinyl type apron or smock as to not get too wet.
Folding Landry
place clean, unfolded towels and cloth diapers in the dramatic play
area for the students to fold. I also provide a rebus type picture
sequence that outlines how to fold in 1/2 and then in 1/2 again.
Folding is something that has been presented to them both in circle
time and individually. This is good for motor skills as well as for
fractional concepts.
Adpot-a-theme
I
have my dramatic play area reflect the theme we are studying if at
all possible. For example, while doing a unit on Clifford, the Big
Red Dog, I put a Dr. Kit along with a leash, dog toys, dog bones and
some stuffed animal dogs in the dramatic play area. The kids could
then pretend to be a vet, or to just take their pet for a walk.
Favourite story act along
Turn
your dramatic play into the three bear's house. Make some ears
(either construction paper or if you sew fake fur) and attach them
to headbands. Get a little girl's headband with a bow on it for
goldilocks. Set up your housekeeping area like normal with a few
exceptions: make sure you put 3 sets of everything in if possible in
the different sizes. Use coloured masking tape to make a "path" for
the bears to follow when they leave their house. Reinforce the
dramatic play area by reading the story Goldilocks and the three
bears during circle time.
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