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Going Green In Kindergarten!. How to be green in Kindergarten Presented by: Kristen Poindexter Kindergarten Teacher Spring Mill Elementary Indianapolis, INdiana. Going Green. It’s easy to go green! Teaches children about the world around them Where their food comes from
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Going GreenIn Kindergarten! How to be green in Kindergarten Presented by: Kristen Poindexter Kindergarten Teacher Spring Mill Elementary Indianapolis, INdiana
Going Green... • It’s easy to go green! • Teaches children about the world around them • Where their food comes from • Empathy and concern for the planet • How to care for the planet • How to be good stewards of the Earth
Today we will... • Learn about Monarch Butterflies and their migration every year to Mexico • Learn how to include some favorite literature into a green curriculum • Learn about composting and how it can work in your school or classroom • Make & Takes
Monarch Butterflies • Here are some great books that along with Monarch Butterflies:
Squishy Bags • Squishy bags are a fun way to incorporate science and sensory! caterpillar chrysalis butterfly egg
You will need… • One snack size baggie • One clear bead • One pipe cleaner part • One leaf • One butterfly bead • About 2 tablespoons of hair gel • READY, SET, GO!
Why do we want to learn about Monarch Butterflies? • There are fewer and fewer of them migrating • Scientists cannot figure out how they know to migrate to Mexico every year • Tie in cultural celebrations • You can send symbolic butterflies to Mexico each year through JourneyNorth.org
Monarch Bracelets • You will need: • One clear bead (egg) • One black bead (head) • Three yellow beads (body of caterpillar) • Three green beads (chrysalis) • One butterfly bead (butterfly—can use orange beads)
Monarch Butterfly Song • To the tune of “Up on the Housetop” • First comes a butterfly and lays an egg, • Out comes a caterpillar with many legs, • Oh see the caterpillar spin and spin • A little chrysalis to sleep in • Oh, oh, oh wait and see, • Oh, oh, oh wait and see • Out of the chrysalis my oh my! • Out comes a Monarch Butterfly!
Books about Seeds • Seeds by Ken Robbins • The Tiny Seed (World of Eric Carle) by Eric Carle • Seeds! Seeds! Seeds! by Nancy Elizabeth Wallace • From Seed to Plant (Rookie Read-About Science) by Allan Fowler • From Seed to Plant (Rookie Read-About Science) by Allan Fowler • What Kinds of Seeds Are These? by Heidi Roemer
Sponge Gardens • You can also use kitchen sponges and grass seed to make sponge gardens. • The kids can “mow” them and watch how grass grows! • Each child can have their own yard, or you can put them together to have a bigger yard.
Seeds • Other ideas about seeds: • Explore the differences between seeds and bulbs • Ask children to match seeds with seed packets • Challenge children to make a “Seed Book” where they glue on the seeds and then write the names in
Planting Magic Beans! • You will need one cd case for each student or one case for each pair of students. • The hinges of the CD case should be at the top. That way you can stand them up and dirt won’t fall out. Also this leaves a nice hole at the top for watering the plants with droppers. • Plant your bean high in the soil. If you plant it toward the bottom the roots will grow out the bottom! You can also use a paper towel!! • Tape the bottom shut. This will keep roots from growing out the bottom, and curious fingers from opening the case. • Use masking tape and permanent markers to label whose plant is whose. • Around day 5 or so I un-taped the cases overnight so that they could have a little bit of space to grow. I taped them back in the morning. By day 7 or so, you will be ready to label your plants. We used paint pens. • Plant your bean with the concave side down. It should resemble the letter “n,” not the letter “u.” I didn’t tell my kids this. I just let them discover it… which was a nice learning experience. Just depends on which way you’d rather teach it.
Planting Magic Beans cotyledon
Planting Magic Beans • You will need: • One CD case • 2-3 magic beans • One paper towel • Marker (to write your name on the outside) • Fold your paper towel in ½. Dampen the paper towel. Place in the bottom of your CD case. Place beans on paper towel, close, label with your name.
Compost • Other ideas about compost: • Children supply the food and record when and what they added • Children measure the worms once a month to chart growth • Write our own Diary of a Worm stories • We use the compost to plant milkweed in our nature center and to help our mother’s day plants grow
Questions?? • E-mail: kpoindexter@msdwt.k12.in.us • Blog: www.kpoindexter.wordpress.com • Thanks for coming!