Mel’s Desk

Storytimes, early literacy, parent education, staff training...it's all good.

Beyond “5 Little Whatsits”

Filed under: Flannelboards, Preschool Storytime — Melissa at 8:44 pm on Friday, February 26, 2010

You know what I’m talking about! Scarecrows, jellybeans, pandas, roses…How many sets of five do you think you have counted in your storytime career? “Five little owls by the old barn door/One flew away, and then there were four.”

These are great standbys, and they fit every storytime, but sometimes I just kind of hit the wall. I can’t always get excited about “Four little thingummies playing happily” or “One little whosis having so much fun.” So I’m trying to branch out a little.

But the “Five Little” rhymes are so good at filling up little nooks and crannies of a storytime plan! What am I doing to help fill the gaps?

One thing I’m doing is ditching the rhyming piece. Don’t get me wrong, I still have plenty of rhymes in my storytimes, because they are lots of fun and great for building preschoolers’ phonological awareness skills.

But I’m not worried about making every single thing I do on the flannel board be a rhyme. Talking with kids about pictures and ideas, and asking them open-ended questions, and giving them time to answer, are also excellent ways to build children’s language skills. This type of dialog also lets you model to the caregivers how they can talk with their kids, too.

Here’s an example: I went into Microsoft Word clip art and found 5 photo images of familiar tools.

Instead of using them to recite “5 Little Tools,” I just put them all on the board. Sometimes I’ll say, “Wow, look, our workbench is a little messy! We better clean up our tools. Let’s start by cleaning up the tool that you use to hit nails. Which tool is that?” I give the kids time to answer, or tell me about the time THEY used a hammer, or to tell us that Uncle Andy has a hammer…you know how it goes! Then I say, “Right! You use a hammer to hit nails! This is the hammer.”

Or instead of establishing a clean-up scenario, I might just say, “Our last book was about building a house. Here’s some tools you might use to build a house! Which tool is the screwdriver? Do you know?”

Another way to start is to pick up a tool and say, “This tool is a saw. What do you know about saws? Right! Saws are very sharp and cut wood.”

Either way, there’s no rhyme to memorize, and the kids get a chance to really engage with you about something related to your storytime theme. Easy-peasy. Other things you could “clean up” might be toys, or clothes, or tableware. What else?

Another type of non-rhyme flannelboard I’ve put together is the astronaut and his spacesuit!

I might say, “If you were in outer space, you’d have to wear some special clothes! What do you think you’d have to wear?” Then one by one, we’d talk about the helmet, boots, and gloves, and finally I would put out the astronaut, all suited up. (I’ve done this with the babies, even, by emphasizing body parts: “This is a helmet! You wear a helmet on your head. Where is your head?”)

What other sets of clothes and equipment could you do? I have a cowboy set! What about a king or queen, with a robe, crown, and scepter? This is great for vocabulary building!

A final non-rhyme flannel board I’ve used is the Guessing Game. I have a few of these now!

In one type, I laminate clip art images, or color copies from a book’s illustrations, or make lift the flap houses. I put them all on the board, with a small image tucked behind one of the pieces. For the houses, I put a picture under one of the door flaps.

Then I say, “Blue Bird, are you in the red tree? Which tree has red leaves?” Or, “Puppy Dog, are you in the green house?” We just keep looking until we find them!

For another type of guessing game, I used clip art to make several sets of one big animal and one small animal in matching pairs. I’ll put the big animals all on the flannel board, then show the kids one of the small animals. “Little bear, can you find your Mommy? Is this the mommy bear? No! This is the big blue whale! Here is the mommy bear! She is brown just like her baby.”

I’ll never stop using the “Five Little Whatsits” rhymes completely, but by not using them as often, I’m keeping them fresher for my storytime kids–and for me. If you’d like to give some of these non-rhyme flannel boards a try, here are some of my image files to get you started. Help yourself!

Blue Bird and the Fall Trees
Five Tools
Animal Pairs

Kindergarten Zoo Storytime

Filed under: Preschool Storytime — Melissa at 7:03 pm on Wednesday, May 6, 2009

I had a chance to do an outreach storytime visit to a local kindergarten this week. For their silent auction fundraiser every year, this school asks if they can put a storytime on the auction list! Every year we say yes! The family that wins the bid gets to schedule a storytime just for them and their friends at the library. This year, the family who won donated the storytime to their daughter’s kindergarten room. Next week the class is going to the zoo, so they requested some zoo stories.

It’s always fun to plan a longer storytime for older kids. This is what I did!

BOOK: Be Nice To Spiders by Margaret Bloy Graham.
(Totally one of my favorite books from when I was little.)

SONG: Over at the Zoo
(This I adapted from Grandpa’s Farm. I used some of the animals from the Polar Bear Polar Bear flannel kit from Lakeshore, and adapted the words like this:

We’re on our way, we’re on our way
On our way to see the zoo
We’re on our way, we’re on our way
On our way to see the zoo
Over at the zoo there is a polar bear
Over at the zoo there ia a polar bear
That bear, she makes a noise like this:
Growl, growl!
That bear, she makes a noise like this:
Growl, growl!

The other animals I used were:
Boa Constrictor…ssss
Big strong lion…roar
Black & white zebra…yi yi yi (Have you actually heard one? It’s weird!)
Elephant…brrrrr

TELL: Draw & Tell Elephant story
from Tell & Draw Stories by Margaret Olson, 1963. This is one of those books that has been in our children’s workroom forever. In this story, two boys go to a zoo and you wind up drawing an elephant. It’s pretty cute.

MOVE: Elephant Goes Like This

The elephant goes like this like that
clasp & swing hands in front like a trunk
He’s terrible big
hold arms out to sides
and terrible fat
puff out cheeks
He has no fingers he has no toes
wiggle fingers and toes
But goodness gracious! What a nose!
mime trunk

SONG: I Came to the Zoo
(Sing to My Bonnie Lies Over the Ocean. I had the kids raise & lower their arms when they heard an animal name…so hands up at “lions” and hands down at “elephants” and hands up again at “tigers”…We did it once, then again super fast. Lots of giggles.)

I came to the zoo to see lions,
Elephants, tigers, and bears.
I came to the zoo to see zebras.
I love all the animals there!
Lions, tigers,
Elephants, zebras, and bears,
And bears!
Lions, tigers,
Elephants, zebras, and bears!

BOOK: Move! by Steve Jenkins

“Now that we’ve read about how animals move, are you guys ready to move, too?”

BOOK: From Head to Toe, by Eric Carle
(At the end, go back and look again at crocodile and monkey pictures.)

SONG: 5 Little Monkeys Sitting in a Tree

5 little monkeys sitting in a tree
hold up five fingers
Teasing Mr. Alligator, “Can’t catch me!”
put thumbs in ears and waggle fingers
Along came the alligator quiet as can be
put palms together like an alligator mouth and weave back & forth
And SNATCHED that monkey right out of the tree!
open palms wide and clap loudly on “snatched”

(You can do “scared” instead of “snatched” if you have some tender hearts in your audience.)

BOOK: Goodnight Gorilla, by Peggy Rathmann

CRAFT: Noisy Oval Animals

The teachers requested an activity or craft that incorporated writing, since that was something they had been working on with the kids.

So I cut out a bunch of ovals for animal bodies, in different animal-y colors like green, black, white, tan, orange, and pink. I cut “zoo signs” and word bubbles.

I told the kids we were going to work with cut paper, like Eric Carle and Steve Jenkins, and use word bubbles just like Peggy Rathmann. I showed the ovals to the kids and we talked about what animals each color could be. Then we talked about how the ovals didn’t have legs, arms, heads, or stripes or spots. I said it was their job to dream up an animal, draw whatever that animal needed, write the name of the animal on the zoo sign, and think of something for the animal to say and write that in the word bubble. It could be “Roar!” or it could be “Good Night” or it could be something silly. My daughter made a sample for me and her penguin said, “Like my new tuxedo?”

Sorry for the blurry pics, I was using my phone!

This flamingo says, “Do I need skinny legs?”
flamingo

And this horse says, “Ta-dah! I made some spots!”
horse