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The Very Hungry Caterpillar
Math: Days of the Week
This book lends itself as the perfect opportunity for teaching days of
the week! You can use Eric Carle's Today is Monday book to
sing the days of the week. You can also use this fun song:
Days of the Week
to the tune of the Adams Family theme songDays of the week (snap, snap)
Days of the week (snap, snap)
Days of the week, days of the week, days of the week (snap, snap)
There's Sunday and there's Monday
There's Tuesday and there's Wednesday
There's Thursday and there's Friday
And then there's Saturday
Days of the week (snap, snap)
Days of the week (snap, snap)
Days of the week, days of the week, days of the week (snap, snap)
Sequence and Counting Cards
Before this activity, you need to print a set of
sequence cards (links below) and write the days of the week on index cards
After reading the story, discuss the word sequence. Ask your student,
what day did the story start? What day did it end? What happened on Monday?
Ask your student to put the days of the week in order. Then, ask him to
match the days of the week with the food that was eaten on that day. (For
a younger child, you may just want to put the foods in order). You can
also use the food for counting exercises. If you student is writing, you
may want to have him complete this sentence (after he completes the sequencing
activity)-- "On________________, he ate______________, but he was still hungry."
Sequence Cards
Language Arts List Making (and a Picnic Idea!)
Let your student make a list of all the things the caterpillar ate.
If you want, make
a picnic lunch out of the same items (just be sure not to get a stomach-ache!)
Apple
Pear
Plums
Strawberries
Oranges
Chocolate Cake
Ice Cream
Pickle
Swiss Cheese
Salami
Lollipop
Cherry Pie
Sausage
Cupcake
Watermelon
You can also use this list to teach alphabetical order.
Drama
Act out the story with these
Story Cards
from kiz club
Language Arts: Poetry
Using Eric Carle's book Animals, Animals, you will find some poems
that match this story
Caterpillar- pg. 19
Butterfly- pg. 12-13, 38
Discussion: Coming out of your cocoon
What does it mean "to come out of your cocoon?"
"...when I was a small boy, my father would say, "Eric, come out of your
cocoon." He meant I should open up and be receptive to the world around
me." Has Eric Carle come out of his cocoon? How?
Science: Stomachaches
What causes a stomachache?
Our stomachs have acid in them to aid in digestion (to break down the foods so
our bodies can use them). If there is too much acid in our stomachs, we
get a stomach ache. Eating certain foods (or too much of a certain food)
can cause the acid.
If your student is ready or if you have an older student following along with
this unit, you may want to study the stomach and the
digestive system.
Science: Life Cycle of the Butterfly
Butterflies at
Enchanted Learning
Make a
life cycle mobile!
Butterfly life sequencing cards
Butterfly life cycle mini-book
Butterfly Life Cycle
Printable
Order some butterfly larvae and monitor their progress in your nature journals
Science (and Art): What do Butterflies Eat?
Tell your student that butterflies drink nectar from flowers. The
pistil acts as a straw for the butterfly to slurp up its food. You can
take a flower apart and try to find some nectar at the base. Show your
child the straw (pistil). Mention that butterflies are attracted to
flowers by their bright colors and scents. Smell some different flowers in
your garden (if appropriate).
For a fun
project, paint a butterfly garden. Before painting, let your child use
some *scented* markers to draw flowers. The flowers will be bright and
smell good (just like the ones real butterflies are attracted to). After
she draws her flowers, let her paint (tempera or watercolor works fine) trees, a
sky, butterflies, bees, etc. for a beautiful butterfly garden.
Science Fun: Pretend to be Butterflies
Go outside (again!); it's time to smell the roses. If you have any
party favors (the ones that blow and uncurl), let your student pretend to be a
butterfly...collecting nectar from flowers with her new "tongue!"
Have fun!
Recipe for
Nectar (served in a flower cup!)
1/2 cup orange juice
1/2 cup cranberry juice
1 tablespoon honey
Mix the juices together, and taste first for sweetness before adding honey. Stir
the honey until dissolved.
Flower Petal Cup Materials: Scissors, colorful construction paper, measuring
tape, large-size plastic cup, tape, plastic drinking straw
Cut a strip of paper that's 3 inches wide and long enough to circle the rim of
the cup, plus 1 inch. (Use the measuring tape for this.) On one edge of the
strip, cut scallops about 2 1/4 inches long, leaving a 3/4-inch border on the
other edge. Shape each scallop into separate petals. Wrap the uncut edge of the
petal strip around the plastic cup, and anchor it with tape. Fold the petals out
one by one. Then pour in the nectar and serve it with a curly straw.
Science: Design a Butterfly Garden
If it isn't time to
plant a garden, you can design one (on paper) to plant in spring/summer.
Here are some flowers that attract butterflies!
Perennials
Bee Balm,
Butterfly bushes, Butterfly weeds, Bronze Fennel, and Coreopsis. Butterfly
weed is a Monarch host plant meaning that the Monarch will lay eggs on the
leaves. The bronze fennel is a Swallowtail "host" plant. The Bee Balm,
Butterfly bushes, and Coreopsis are nectar plants that butterflies can drink
from.
Annuals
Zinnias, Cosmos, Lantana, Pentas, and Heliotrope
More information
Science: Caterpillar Bug Jug
Prepare a
caterpillar home using a small fish tank, a shoebox or milk carton with a hole
cut for viewing. Cover the hole with hosiery. Place a small twig or two in the
home for it to use during the pupation phase of its life. Take your student for
a caterpillar hunt. Look for caterpillars on the leaves and stems of plants. For
food, take a supply of leaves from the plant on which you found the caterpillar.
Sprinkle the leaves with a little water and keep them in airtight containers in
the refrigerator. Or take several small branches of the leaves and place them in
water.
Drama/Science
Act out the life cycle of a caterpillar/butterfly “My kids
especially liked acting it out (their idea) with blankets for cocoons and
wings.”
Health
Discuss the food pyramid. Classify the foods from the story into
the food groups. Is the caterpillar eating a balanced diet? What is
a balanced diet?
You may want to check-out the butterfly report forms and copywork pages on
Homeschool Share's Animal Forms page.
Just for Fun
Music Madame Butterfly
Field Trip Butterfly Conservatory
Snack Recipes
Butterfly Snack
1/4 section of a graham cracker
peanut butter (or tub of frosting)
6 mini pretzel twists
Break graham cracker section into three roughly equal pieces. Spread a
small amount of peanut butter onto each piece. Place two pretzel twists on
each graham cracker section, two curves outward to form butterfly wings.
Eat!
Caterpillar
Cocoons
1- 8 oz. tube refrigerated crescent rolls
8 breakfast sausages
1 squeeze bottle yellow mustard
Preheat oven according to directions on the crescent-roll
package. Prepare
the sausages according to the directions on the package. Remove
from frying
pan and allow to cool ten to fifteen minutes. Separate the
crescent-roll
dough into its pre-cut triangle pieces, and lay them flat on an
un-greased
cookie sheet. Place one sausage on each, squeeze a thin line of
mustard on
each. Roll and close all ends. Bake according to package
instructions.
Butterfly Salad
2 Pineapple rings
Lettuce leaf
Cottage cheese
Green olives sliced in 1/2
Food coloring
Celery stick
1. Place lettuce leaf onto a paper plate
2. Slice pineapple rings in 1/2 to use a an outline of the butterfly’s wings
3. Use celery stick as the body
4. Place cottage cheese inside of pineapple ring
5. Decorate the cottage cheese with food coloring, pineapple slices and olives
Resources
Links
Very Hungry Caterpillar Mini Book to make
more mini books at
Hubbard's Cupboard
Butterfly Word Search Puzzle
Butterfly Coloring Book
Paper plate Butterfly Puppet
Caterpillar Maze
Which Butterfly is
Different?
Craft Idea: Make a Butterfly from hand prints
The Very Busy
Spider
The Very Clumsy Click Beetle
The Grouchy
Ladybug
The Very Lonely Firefly
The Very Quiet Cricket