20 Best Tips

Eleven Books to Read in Kindergarten

Homeschool Preschool: Preschool and Kindergarten Community linkup at Homeschool Creations

There are eleven books on our kindergarten must-read list. With half of our school year behind us and looking ahead at the rest of the year, here are eleven books that we will be focusing on for the rest of the school year.

The learning goes so much deeper when we have a great book that is not only rich in story line, but one that has fun activities and crafts that we can tie into the learning. That allows us the opportunity to remember through the hands-on things that we do as well!

Books We’ll Be Reading Together

Eleven Must Read Books for Kindergarten

 

The following eleven books are ones that we’ll be reading together this year as a part of our homeschool time. If you like these books, you may also enjoy the Literature Based Printables and books we read in the past. Ready to see what’s on our list? Here they are…

Stopping By the Woods on a Snowy Evening by Robert Frost

Stopping By the Woods on a Snowy Evening by Robert Frost

The Little Rabbit by Jodi Dunn

The Little Rabbit by Jodi Dunn

Katy No Pocket by Emmy Payne

Katy No Pocket by Emmy Payne

The Carrot Seed by Ruth Krauss

The Carrot Seed by Ruth Krauss

The Big Green Pocketbook by Candice Ransom

The Big Green Pocketbook by Candice Ransom

I Am an Artist by Pat Collins

I Am an Artist by Pat Collins

Kittens for Keeps {also called Jenny’s Surprise Summer}

a Golden Book

Kittens for Keeps {also called Jenny’s Surprise Summer} a Golden Book

Play With Me by Marie Hall Ets

Play With Me by Marie Hall Ets  

Katy and the Big Snow by Virginia Lee Burton

Katy and the Big Snow by Virginia Lee Burton

Mike Mulligan and His Steam Shovel by Virginia Lee Burton

Mike Mulligan and His Steam Shovel by Virginia Lee Burton

Henry the Castaway by Mark Taylor

Henry the Castaway by Mark Taylor

What books and themes do you want to include in your school time the rest of this year? Leave a comment today {maybe the rest of us need some great ideas!!}.

  

 

Follow the PreK and Kindergarten Community Pinterest Board

Preschool Pinterest Board

Each week I am  pinning many of your links onto the Preschool and Kindergarten Community Pinterest Board. I’m a visual person, so having pictures to help me remember posts is super helpful. Be sure to jump over and follow the board – and find some fun ideas at the same time!

 

Were You Featured in the Preschool & Kindergarten Community?

If you were featured in one of the weekly posts, feel free to grab the button coding below and display it on your site!

Homeschool Preschool

 

Link Up with the Preschool and Kindergarten Community!

Share what you are doing with your kids! Please link your exact blog post to the Mr. Linky below and link back here too! Grab a button for your post and be sure to take a minute to visit the person who linked up before you.

  

Three Letter Word Cards ~ Free Printable

3 Letter Word Puzzle Cards

Looking for an fun {and colorful} way to have your child sound out and spell three letter words? The Three Letter Word Cards contain a list of 42 3-letter CVC words for children to sound and spell using fun picture clues and hands-on learning – and they are FREE especially for my email subscribers – yay!!

Are you already an email subscriber? Please go to this private page and enter the NEW password. You can find the password in your most current email at the very bottom. Become a subscriber HERE and receive instant access. 

 

The Three Letter Word Cards include:

  • 48 full color picture cards with word prompts {lightly shaded in gray}
  • 48 full color picture cards with no letter or word prompts
  • 2 sheets of color-coded letter tiles {upper and lower case}

Ideas for Using the Word Cards

Three Letter Word Puzzles

  1. For early learners – trace the shaded letters using Vis-à-vis markers or dry erase markers
  2. Match the correct letter tile to the letter on the puzzle card
  3. Spell the word with letter tiles using no prompts
  4. Write the letters in the squares using a vis-à-vis or dry erase marker

 


How We’re Using the 3 Letter Word Cards

3 Letter Word Cards - 42 CVC words for spelling and reading

We printed off our set onto cardstock and then laminated them to make them a bit more sturdy. {Note: This is how we laminate more inexpensively}. We’re using a cookie sheet as the base for our word cards and have added magnets to the back of the letters. If you are looking for magnets and an expanded set of GREAT letter tiles, All About Spelling has Letter Tile Magnets and Letter Tiles available that are already perforated ~ a huge help!

The letter tiles include vowels in both blue and pink. If you are teaching your child the difference between consonants and vowels, the pink tiles will come in handy to show that they are vowels in the CVC {consonant-vowel-consonant} words.

Ready to have some fun?

Download the 3 Letter Word Cards

3 Letter Word Cards - 42 CVC words for children to sound and spell

This is a FREE download for email subscribers – and it is really easy to subscribe by simply clicking HEREor by entering your email in the box at the bottom of this post. 

Subscribe button

After you subscribe by email, you will receive a confirmation email. Once you confirm your subscription, you will be redirected to a page with a link, password, and directions to get your FREEBIE!! You can always email me if you have any questions and I’d be happy to help you out. 

If you would prefer not to subscribe, the 3 Letter Word Cards are also available for purchase in my Teacher’s Notebook store for $3.00. 

I’d love to hear how your children enjoy them!

 

Ready for Reading?

All About Reading Review-1 All About Reading Review-2

If your child is ready for reading, take a look at All About Reading Level 1. We’ve used it with both of our boys and LOVED it! Use the Reading Readiness Checklist to help you decide if the program is right for you.

 

Supplies for the 3 Letter Word Cards


Printables from A to ZEnjoy free printables? If you are looking for something in particular, be sure to check out my Printables from A to Z list, a complete list of every printable I’ve created over the years. Can’t find what you’re looking for? Leave a comment and I’d be happy to help you out!

Note: This idea came from a set of printables that I originally put together several years ago for Zachary, based on a thrift store find from a reader.

The Runaway Bunny Book Unit {BFIAR}

Preschool-and-Kindergarten-Community-Linkup.png

This week we read the book The Runaway Bunny and ‘rowed’ it {a Before Five in a Row book}. We loved reading Goodnight Moon by Margaret Wise Brown together and working on our Goodnight Moon Unit, so I knew that The Runaway Bunny book unit would be just as much fun. It’s been a few weeks since we’ve done a book unit, so Kaleb was very excited to see me pull out things for our study.

 

 

 

The Runaway Bunny Book

Here’s a quick summary of the The Runaway Bunny {in Kaleb’s words}:

“The bunny wanted to run away. He said he was going to be a fish. His mom said she was going to be a fisherman.  Then he would be a rock, and she would be a rock climber. Then he would be a crocus and she would be a gardener. Then he would be a bird and she would be a tree. Then he would be a boat and she would be the wind. Then he would be a tightrope walker and she would be a swinger. He would be a boy and the mom would be a mom. Then he wanted to be a rabbit. His mom said “Want a carrot?”

Comparing Pictures in the Story to Other Book

 

The Runaway Bunny Unit-1 The Runaway Bunny Unit-2

 

After we had read through The Runaway Bunny, Kaleb recognized a few of the pictures from another book. We pulled out our copy of Goodnight Moon and compared the pictures with pictures that were in The Runaway Bunny.

Some of the pictures hanging on the wall were almost the same, so we talked about the similarities and differences between the two. Pictures in one book might have been black and white, while others were color. The bunny mom sat in a rocker in both books and the picture of the mom bunny fishing for her son was hanging on the wall in the book Goodnight Moon. There are many other similarities, so you’ll have to see what you discover too!

Identifying Words in a Story

 

The Runaway Bunny Unit-5 The Runaway Bunny Unit-6

 

Kaleb l.o.v.e.s. using Do-A-Dot Markers, so we take full advantage and use them whenever we can! As we were reading the The Runaway Bunny together, Kaleb was on the lookout for words in the story {the find-a-word sheet is in the Runaway Bunny Printable Pack}. When Kaleb finds a word in the book, he uses a Do-A-Dot Marker to cover up the word {above you can see him finding the word carrot}.

Typically, I will read the words to him that are on the word sheet and he remembers many of them as we are reading through the story and then searches the page for the word. For him there is nothing more satisfying that stamping that word out!

Practicing Balance by “Tightrope” Walking

 

The Runaway Bunny Unit-4 The Runaway Bunny Unit-3

 

One of the things that the bunny says he is going to do is become a tightrope walker. Rather than string up a REAL tightrope, we put a jump rope down on the floor to see if Kaleb could keep his balance. Quite a bit safer than the alternative {and he had just as much fun doing it over and over again!}.

Making Crocuses From Handprints

 

The Runaway Bunny Unit-8 The Runaway Bunny Unit-9

 

This craft is thanks to Delightful Learning. We traced Kaleb’s hand on purple paper and then cut them out, rolled them up and added some leaves to make purple crocuses. He absolutely loved his flowers and stuck them up above his desk to save.

Find the Hiding Runaway Bunny

 

The Runaway Bunny Unit-10 The Runaway Bunny Unit-11

 

In the story, the runaway bunny hides in the flowers of the garden and his mom finds him. We used the Runaway Bunny Printables and our table top pocket chart to ‘hide’ our paper bunny and then Kaleb had to name a number and peek behind that number to see if it was the one hiding the bunny.

He had just as much fun hiding the bunny from me and would only give me three guesses to find the missing bunny. I would say a number and he would pull the number off the pocket chart to see if I was right.

Sequencing a Story

 

The Runaway Bunny Unit-13 The Runaway Bunny Unit-14

 

We used the story sequencing strips from The Runaway Bunny Printables for this activity. The first 2 days, I left all of the strips together so that Kaleb could put them in sequential order by number {i.e. 1st, 2nd, 3rd}. The last two days I cut the picture off the strip and he first ordered the numbers in the correct sequence. He then tried to remember the order the events in the story took place and would check the book when he was done to see if he put them in the right sequence.

Clap the Syllables

 

The Runaway Bunny Unit-7 The Runaway Bunny unit syllables

 

Part of The Runaway Bunny Printables have one and two syllable words from the story. I would read Kaleb one of the words and he would clap it out and then tell me how many syllables the word had and sort it under the right number.

Differences in Sketches and Paintings

The Runaway Bunny Unit-12

The artwork in The Runaway Bunny goes back and forth between paintings or watercolors and pen sketches. I picked one of the simpler pictures in the book and sketched it out using pencil and pen for Kaleb to look at and decide which looked more like what was in the story.

Helpful Links for The Runaway Bunny

More Early Learning Links and Printables

Ready to Link Up?

Share what you are doing with your kids! Please link your exact blog post to the Mr. Linky below and link back here too! Grab a button for your post below and be sure to take a minute to visit the person who linked up before you. You can read more in the updated guidelines for Preschool Corner.

Be specific in your ‘link title’. Leave either your blog name or theme and provide an age range for your activities. Something a little like this:

Police Officer Theme {ages 4-5}

 

Preschool Corner

 

 

Jolanthe Signature affiliate button

Elves and Angels – creating heirloom quality wooden toys for 25 years!
Free Homeschool Deals – Get FREE stuff everyday for your homeschool family at FreeHomeschoolDeals.com!

 
Seeds Family Worship

The Red Carpet Book Unit ~ PreK & 5K Corner

The Red Carpet - Copy



Although I put the printables for the book The Red Carpet together at the end of last school year, we had a lot of other things that we did instead. I was really excited to do the Red Carpet book unit with Kaleb because we had read The Red Carpet by Rex Parkin several times together. {Note: I found a used copy on Amazon for a great price, but check your library too for this fun story!!}.

Not sure what the story is about? Here is Kaleb’s summary of the book:

“The doorman kicked the carpet and it rolled all over the city. It kept rolling and rolling. A bunch of policemen tried to catch it. Then it kept rolling still and the policemen were catching up to it. The boat came and the carpet stopped. The car came out and drove on the red carpet all the way to the hotel.”

Kaleb’s favorite part of the story was when the policemen were chasing the carpet to arrest it – because {as he says} “Would you arrest a carpet? No!”

Rolling Out the Red Carpet

The Red Carpet Unit-1-2

Probably one of the things all of the kids enjoyed was setting up a town and then using a red streamer to roll out the red carpet to welcome the Duke of Sultana to the Hotel Bellevue.

The Red Carpet Unit-1-7

I used chalkboard spray paint on some of our wooden blocks and then we added the names of different places around town after the Kaleb and I lined up streets.

The Red Carpet Unit-1-5

We used red paper streamers as our carpet and made it turn right and left all over town…just like in the story.

The Red Carpet Unit-1

Zachary found a car that looked so much like the motorcar the Duke was escorted in, so it was perfect for our mini-town.

Following Directions

Throughout the story we read about turning right and left and so many other forms of directions. This was a great chance for us to talk {and learn} left from right – we’re still practicing that! {grins}

The Red Carpet Unit-1-3

We also worked on following directions. One of the Red Carpet book Printables has to do with listening to oral directions and finding the correct object on a map. Kaleb really liked this one!!

Counting to 50 Cents

The Red Carpet Unit-1-4

We used nickels, dimes, and quarters to count fifty cents – a great chance to practice counting by 5’s and 10’s!

Making Pretzels

The Red Carpet Unit-1-6

The poor pretzel man in the story had his cart overturned…but we had to make pretzels for everyone. Kaleb wanted it to be a surprise for everyone, so while everyone played, he and I worked together making pretzel bites.

The Red Carpet Unit-2

He helped roll out the dough {not so much}, but did a great job cutting the dough up into little bits.

The Red Carpet Unit-1-8

We ended up with a big, yummy pile of pretzels to share with everyone. The kids thought they tasted great…I wasn’t quite as convinced. {grins}

Looking at Maps and More

The Red Carpet Unit-3

In the story, there are several different countries mentioned: France, the United States, England and also Japan. Kaleb and Laurianna put together a GeoPuzzle of the United States and found Washington D. C. on the map.

The Red Carpet Unit-4

We then pulled out our children’s world atlas and looked up the other countries in the story, put a star where the cities mentioned were, and labeled them as well {printable is from the Red Carpet Printables}. We pulled out our globe as well to see how far apart the cities were from each other.

A few more things {not pictured}:

~ We put together a ‘telegram’ to Daddy and talked about how telegrams were very expensive to send, so we had to make it short, but still make sense. Here was Kaleb’s telegram:

Dad.

Dinner tonight fettucine. No soup. Cookies for dessert.

Kaleb

~ We talked about road signs and the different signs we saw in the book. When we were driving we went on a scavenger hunt for signs.

That {for the most part} sums up our week. We also used our vocabulary cards from the book, read the ‘telegram’ words {simple words from the story that Kaleb could sound out and are a part of the Red Carpet Printables}.

 

 

 

Other Helpful Links for The Red Carpet by Rex Parkin

Red Carpet Collage

~ Homeschool Share resources and lapbook
~ All of a Kind blog
~ Delightful Learning blog

Ready to Link Up?

Share what you are doing with your kids! Please link your exact blog post to the Mr. Linky below and link back here too! Grab a button for your post below and be sure to take a minute to visit the person who linked up before you. You can read more in the updated guidelines for Preschool Corner.

Be specific in your ‘link title’. Leave either your blog name or theme and provide an age range for your activities. Something a little like this:

Police Officer Theme {ages 4-5}

 

Preschool Corner

 

 

 

Jolanthe Signature affiliate button

Grapevine Studies ~ effective and easy-to-use Bible curriculum for ages 5 to adult

Red Wagon Tutorials ~ online live feed, online recorded and DVD science classes for grades 7-12

Little Passports

The Runaway Bunny Printables

The Runaway Bunny copy

The Runaway Bunny is one of those books that will stay on our bookshelf even after the kids are ‘too big’ for the story. I love Margaret Wise Brown’s books and this one is no exception. We’ll be doing a unit on The Runaway Bunny this fall, so these printables were created as a go-along to use with the book. Printables in this pack can be used for preschool as well as kindergarten aged children.

Here’s a peek inside The Runaway Bunny printables:

Runaway Bunny Printables

 

The Runaway Bunny printables include fun activities to tie in with the story ~ vocabulary words, word tracer cards, amazes, syllable counting, story sequencing, 1:1 counting and more! These are intended to help extend some of the learning from the story itself.

Download The Runaway Bunny Printables

 

More Runaway Bunny Helps

runaway bunny book

~ The Runaway Bunny Read! Build! Write! Cards

~ The Runaway Bunny lapbook from Homeschool Share

~ Goodnight Moon printables {also by Margaret Wise Brown}

~ More Early Learning Printable Packs

 

Jolanthe Signature affiliate button

Grapevine Studies ~ effective and easy-to-use Bible curriculum for ages 5 to adult

Red Wagon Tutorials ~ online live feed, online recorded and DVD science classes for grades 7-12

Little Passports

The Red Carpet Early Learning Printables

The Red Carpet PrintablesReady for a few more printables based on a great book? These printables were created to use with The Red Carpet by Rex Parkin {check your library to see if they have a copy ~ this is a great story!}.

I found a used copy on Amazon for a great price, so keep checking if you don’t find one right away! The prices for the used books change often.

Red Carpet Collage

Pin It

 

The printables for the book The Red Carpet include fun activities to tie in with the story ~ vocabulary words, word tracer cards, counting cards, counting by cents, a scavenger hunt check sheet for road signs in the story, early mapping skills, telegram words and more!

Download The Red Carpet printables pack!!

 

Don’t Miss These Either!

~ The Red Carpet word cards for the Read! Build! Write! vocabulary mats

~ Resources from Homeschool Share

~ More Literature Based Printables

Jolanthe Signature affiliate button

Visit these great companies!