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Mother's Day Magic: Today's Gift, Tomorrow's Treasure

Do you want some terrific ideas for student-created Mother's Day gifts? Education World offers ideas -- plus online resources to help educators find dozens more on the Web!

Tired of the Mother's Day art project you've been using for the last three years? This week, Education World offers ideas for unique, inexpensive, easy-to-make Mother's Day gifts! Put your students to work on a masterpiece, and help them create a memory this Mother's Day!

Mother's Day is not a modern-day event. It dates back at least as far as 17th-century England. On the fourth Sunday in Lent, young English apprentices and servants returned home, carrying small gifts for their mothers. Julia Ward Howe, who wrote the words to the "Battle Hymn of the Republic," introduced the Mother's Day idea in the United States. By 1911, Mother's Day was a national holiday. Although every celebration does not occur at the same time, people in Australia, Belgium, Denmark, Finland, Italy, Turkey, and the United States all celebrate Mother's Day on the second Sunday in May.

You can find many inexpensive, easy-to-make, unique, and exciting Mother's Day gift ideas on the Web. Before choosing a project for students to tackle, though, teachers need to remember that not all children live in traditional family units. For those kids who live in one-parent homes, who have two people they call "mom," or who live with guardians other than a natural parent, making gifts a "special person" might be a good idea.

This week, Education World explores creative ways children can honor their moms. You can help your students create gifts for this Mother's Day that just might become tomorrow's treasures.

 

SEND A SCENT

Easy potpourri. Iram Khan, who teaches in Kamloops in British Columbia, Canada, told Education World that for this Mother's Day, her kindergarten and first graders made potpourri. The students dried petals of fragrant flowers and herbs on large pieces of paper. Khan then ground up the mix in a blender. (If a blender isn't available or practical, kids will love to use two rocks to do the grinding!) Forming a funnel with the paper, Khan poured the dried pieces into baby food jars, one for each child, with these instructions: "Pour this into a bowl and let it sit on its own. Or have an adult help you pour some boiling water over it, and let it work its magic."

For a variant of this activity, have kids pour the dry, fragrant pieces into the middle of a small piece of fabric, gather the edges, and tie them together with ribbon. Everyone loves a sachet to freshen up a drawer or closet.

"The children have fun mashing the dried flowers," said Kahn, "and the mothers love it too." For more projects, see Recipes for Homemade Gifts. She has posted many super ideas there.

Decorative soaps. Do you have a microwave available? If so, try Kathy Johnston's method of making decorative soaps, posted on the Kid's Domain Web site. "There is no dangerous lye to work with," said Johnston, so "kids like to do this a lot!" To make decorative soaps: Cut bars of glycerin soap into about three pieces each. (Neutrogena bars are great, adds Johnston!) Place one piece each into microwavable cups or paper cups and heat on high for about 10 to 15 seconds. Pour the melted soap into candy molds or soap molds if available. (Click on the above link for additional details.)

 

LOVE AND KISSES

Love notes. Students can create "love notes" to place around the house. A variant of this is to type or print "I remember when ..." on an index card and attach it to a glass jar. On each strip of paper placed inside the jar, the student can write a different memory about mom or different things mom did that the student appreciated -- and mom can read one every day. For more ideas, check out the Billy Bear's Happy Mother's Day Web page.

The Mother's Day Themes and Activities for Kids Web site has a treasure trove of easy, wonderful activities. One idea is to trace your students' hands and then cut them out. After measuring each child's arms, attach a long piece of yarn to each cutout hand. Put the two hands and yarn into an envelope with a note that says, "Mom, [or Grandma, etc.] I love you THIS much!"

You can find some "wearable art" Mother's Day projects at that site too. Among those ideas are two broaches.

 

  • Create a colorful broach by putting crayon shavings in small plastic pill bottles and baking them until they melt. (The kids may think it is really cool to watch the bottles shrink and the crayons melt!)

     

  • Another type of brooch can be made with large pieces from children's puzzles. Children can spray-paint puzzle pieces with gold paint, glue pictures of themselves to the middle of the puzzle pieces, and add colorful sequins or glitter around the pictures.

Both broach ideas call for gluing a broach pin to the back of the broach, of course. Craft stores carry those broach pins, which cost less than 25 cents.

One more idea from the Mother's Day Themes page is a colorful candleholder. The directions are quite simple: Have students cut different-colored tissue paper into small squares. They can use a watercolor brush to paint baby food jars with a glue-water mixture and then stick small pieces of colored tissue paper to it. Have kids glue a thin ribbon around the rim and place a small candle inside the jar. These holders can be customized to any season or event, depending on the colors of tissue paper used. Kids can also use cleaned-out salad dressing bottles to create bud vases.

For details about any of the above activities or for additional ideas -- including a "book of kisses," a pencil holder, and refrigerator magnets with kids' pictures on them -- be sure to check out the Mother's Day Themes and Activities for Kids.

 

THE 'QUEEN' OF MOTHER'S DAY RESOURCES

About.com has done a great job of gathering Mother's Day resources! For kids and teachers looking for project or recipe ideas, the Mother's Day Kids' Exchange offers a one-stop shopping compendium of Web sites to visit. Don't miss this encyclopedic resource with links to sites that offer such things as printable coupons, clip art, and "Best Mom" certificates.

 

CYBER CARDS

For mothers who are online, why not devote some computer lab time to sending virtual cards and songs. Many online resources, such as the Mom's Day from Wendy's World of Crafts Web site, will enable students to do that.

Happy Mother's Day!

LINKS TO MORE INFORMATION ABOUT MOTHER'S DAY

 

Glori Chaika
Education World®
Copyright © 2000 Education World

 

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05/01/2000