The importance of instilling the concept of...
This beautifully illustrated book follows a father and his daughter as they gather supplies and plant a window box to surprise the child’s mother for her birthday. Each page flows with simple text that follows a repetitive pattern and engages the reader with an organic rhyming rhythm as the soon-to-be garden moves from checkout stand to box to bus to stairs, and finally to its new home on a window sill overlooking the city. As you read this story aloud, engage children by asking questions and defining difficult vocabulary before, during, and after reading. Here, we share a few ideas:
Book: Flower Garden
Kindergarten Common Core Standards
Literature: Key Ideas and Details
RL.K.1 With prompting and support, ask and answer questions about key details in a text
Literature: Range of Reading and Level of Text Complexity
RL.K.10 Actively engage in group reading activities with purpose and understanding
Before Reading:
Display the book cover and read the title, pointing to each word. Lead a brief discussion that allows children to make some preliminary predictions about what will happen in the story.
Review each of the flowers shown on the cover and give a brief, child-friendly definition of each. If you have access to the real versions, place them in a vase on a science table where children can see and smell them up close.
During Reading:
As you read, define difficult vocabulary words as they come up (see the list below for some more child-friendly definitions). Stop briefly to ask questions about some of the illustrations. For example, for the illustration on pages 3-4, you might ask:
More Flower Garden child-friendly definitions
garden: plants growing in soil
flower: the part of a plant that makes the seeds
soil: dirt for growing plants
trowel: a small shovel for digging holes for seeds and small plants
window box: a garden container that fits on a window sill
After Reading:
Have children compare their original predictions with the actual outcome in the story. Encourage children to make self-to-text connections by asking the following questions:
Have you ever made a gift for someone?
Let children share their favorite parts of the story and why. Then, let children stand and shake out their sitting and listening muscles with this related movement activity.
We'll Take Some Dirt
Original Author Unknown
We'll take some dirt
And put it in the pot
We'll plant the little seeds
and water it a lot.
We’ll put it in a sunny spot,
But make sure it isn’t too hot.
We'll wait and start to see
A little flower looking at me.
Print Flower Pot printable and let children trace the flower pot and draw flowers.
What you need:
Colorful scarves
CD player
Classical musical selections
Recommended CD:
My First Classical Music Album
What you do:
Explain to children that they will pretend to be flowers and dance to a selection of music. Before beginning the movement part of the activity, play the musical selection once through and have children describe the ways they think flowers might move during different parts. Then, give each child two colorful scarves and play the music again. Encourage children to wave their scarves as they pretend to be flowers and dance according to the music’s tempos and moods.
Preschool Activities: |
Preschool Activities: |
Flower Garden Literacy Activity | Planting a Flower Box Sequencing Cards |
Preschool Activities: |
Preschool Activities: |
Six Flowers in a Row Emergent Reader | Six Flowers in a Row Emergent Reader Booklet |
Preschool Activities: |
Preschool Activities: |
Favorite Flowers Graphing (Social Studies and Math) | I'm a Little Flower Pot Rhyme |
Preschool Activities: |
Preschool Activities: |
Flowers Word Wall | The Surprise Sight Words Emergent Reader |
View more preschool and kindergarten flowers activities, crafts, and games
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