Subjects
- Arts and Humanities
- Health
- Mental Health
Grade
Brief Description
This lesson and a popular children’s book will help children over
their first-day-of-school jitters.
Objectives
- follow directions.
- develop fine motor skills.
- make decisions and use problem-solving skills.
Keywords
back to school, early childhood, self-esteem, emotions, health, kindergarten,
separation, anxiety
Materials Needed
- one sheet of 5-inch by 8-inch construction paper -- any color except
red -- per child
- one sheet of 8-1/2-inch by 11-inch paper (copier paper is fine) per
child
- pencils or crayons
- red paint or red construction paper
- heart-shaped sponges (optional)
- paint trays, brushes (optional)
The Lesson
Before the Lesson
Before the lesson, the teacher will need to prepare the following:
Use a printer or photocopier to print the following phrase on the white
copy paper sheets: ____________ came to school on the first day and
felt ______.
The Activity
Read aloud the children's book The Kissing Hand by Audrey Penn.
Your school or city library will have a copy or be able to order one for
you from the state library system. The following review of the book, published
on Amazon.com
provides an overview:
"Chester Raccoon doesn't want to go to school. He wants
to stay home with his mother. She assures him that he'll love school --
with its promise of new friends, new toys, and new books. Even better,
she has a special secret that's been in the family for years -- the Kissing
Hand. This secret, she tells him, will make school seem as cozy as home.
She takes her son's hand, spreads his tiny fingers into a fan and kisses
his palm -- smack dab in the middle: "Chester felt his mother's kiss
rush from his hand, up his arm, and into his heart." Whenever he
feels lonely at school, all he has to do is press his hand to his cheek
to feel the warmth of his mother's kiss..." - Reviewed by Karin
Snelson
Have the children trace their hands onto the 5-inch by 8-inch construction
paper. Then instruct them to cut out their traced hand to the best of
their ability and paste the hand onto the sheet of white copy paper.
Next, students will paste or paint a red heart onto the palm of the
hand. They might dip a heart-shaped piece of sponge into red paint; or
they might trace a heart shape onto red paper and cut it out.
Last, the children should be assisted in filling out their feelings
about the first day of school by filling in the blanks in the statement
(____________ came to school on the first day and felt ______.)
printed on the white paper.
Optional Activities
- For older children: Write the fill-in statement on the board and
have them write it onto the white paper.
- Have hands precut instead of having students trace and cut out their
own hands.
- Prepare a snack for students: Bake sugar cookies with chocolate kisses
in the palm.
- If you have more time, you might have students model their hands
with hearts from clay.
- For older students you might extend the activity into a weeklong
project. Each day, the students write their thoughts about school on
a different hand. Combine those hands into a journal to document the
first week of school.
- This also would be a nice activity to do pairing an older class with
your young students. Have two children place their hands on a page.
Assessment
No assessment required.
Submitted By
Amanda Dobson, Temperance, Michigan
Education World®
Copyright © 2003 Education World
08/15/2003
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