This article is adapted from the Education World Early Childhood Newsletter. Each month,
the newsletter shares some ideas on a familiar teaching theme. You can sign up for a FREE subscription
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Baby Animals
Use this
rhyme at any time during a unit that covers the topics of Animals, Spring, The Farm, The Rain Forest...
Baby animals
Soft and sweet.
Tiny mouths,
Eyes still asleep.
Some have feathers
Some have fur
So brand new
They hardly stir.
Baby animals
Oh so small,
Come in spring.
We love them all!
MATCH
IT!
Collect pictures of baby animals and their adult counterparts. Glue each picture onto a sheet of tag board,
write the name of the animal, and laminate the card. Invite children to identify which animals are babies and
to then match the babies with their parents.
ANIMAL TIC-TAC-TOE
Use masking tape to create a tic-tac-toe grid (3 boxes X 3 boxes) on the floor. Divide students into two teams,
the Xs and Os. Call out the name of a mother animal for one team. The first player must identify that animal's
offspring. If the player answers correctly, he or she takes a place in a box on the floor grid. The first team
to fill a row of three boxes makes the noises of each animal identified. The game continues until everyone has
had a turn.
WOOLY
LAMBS
Give each child a baby lamb shape cut from black construction paper. Help children glue the shapes onto pieces
of white drawing paper. Encourage children to use crayons to add the sky, sun, grass, and trees to their white
paper. Next give children cotton balls to glue onto their lamb shapes for wooly lambs.
WHO HATCHES?
Read to children Chickens Aren't the Only Ones, by Ruth Heller. Talk with children about the many kinds
of animals that hatch from eggs. Provide children with egg-shaped pieces of drawing paper. Encourage children
to choose a baby animal that hatches from an egg to illustrate. Write the animal name on each picture. Bind
the drawings into a classroom booklet titled "Who Hatches?"
GRAPH IT!
Create on a piece of poster board a grid consisting of seven or eight vertical rows each having six to eight
boxes going across. At the bottom of each column, glue a picture of a baby animal. Provide coloring pages of
each baby animal shown on the grid. Invite children to choose their favorite animal page to color. Paste each
child's colored picture in one of the grid's boxes above the corresponding animal's name. Discuss the completed
graph with children and pose questions they can answer by using the graph.
Check
out the following Web sites for additional background and activities.
BillyBear4Kids
Download baby animal jigsaw puzzles for kids to complete online. http://www.billybear4kids.com/jigsaw-puzzles/BabyAnimals/puzzles.html
Baby Animals
Visit some cute babies -- polar bears, pandas, tigers, and lions. Get some fun activities too! http://keep3.sjfc.edu/students/dsd2658/e%2Dport/unitplan/
Enchanted
Learning
Find out the correct male, female, and baby name for a comprehensive list of animals. http://www.enchantedlearning.com/subjects/animals/Animalbabies.shtml
Small Wonders
See some great photos of babies that have been at Sea World. http://www.seaworld.org/animal-info/small-wonders/
'Babying'
Young Animals
Get some helpful information about what to do if you see a wild baby animal -- from the Kansas State Veterinary
Medical Teaching Hospital. http://www.mediarelations.ksu.edu/WEB/News/InView/40705babyanimals.html
It's aimed at early-grades teachers, but the ideas are easy to adapt to home use, too! /newsletter_form to
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