My Winter Window Lesson Plan

What We Are Learning

 

Science Focus:

winter season

 

Vocabulary Theme Words:

evergreen tree, icicle

 

Class Discussion:

critical thinking

 

Pre-Reading Skills:

reading a diagram

  • Ezra Jack Keats’s The Snowy Day pairs perfectly with this issue! Show the cover, and ask children if this story is about a hot day or a cold day. How do they know? text pairing

Art: Paint Your Winter Window Scene

Materials: black marker, watercolors, watercolor brush, water, paper

  • Invite children to represent what they see outside their winter window.
  • Set up a table near a window so children can look outside. Put paper, watercolors, and markers on the table. If there’s no window available, walk with children to take a photograph outside.
  • Ask children to pick one thing they see outside to draw and paint. It is helpful to support children to focus on one thing, because trying to capture everything in a painting can feel overwhelming!
  • Invite children to use the marker to draw their object of choice. Then they can add watercolors.
  • Display the window paintings near the window with children’s descriptions of what they saw. observation
Boy holding a snowball

Materials: sensory bin, 10-15 lb. bag of baking soda, 6-8 cans of shaving cream, small toys

  • The winter fun won’t end with this “snow” — it doesn’t melt!
  • Tell children that you will be making pretend snow. Let them know that it will be different from real snow. Talk about real snow: What does it feel like? What does it look like? What happens when you bring it into a warm place?
  • Pour half of the baking soda into the bin. Allow children to feel it. Predict what will happen when you mix in the shaving cream.
  • Add the shaving cream a little bit at a time. Let children mix with their hands. “Snow” should begin to form! It is ready when you can form a “snowball” but it can still crumble and your hands are dry when you take them out. Adjust the recipe until you get this texture.
  • When it is finished, add some peg people and other small toys for children to imagine their own winter scene. sensory play