Friday 9 April 2010

Rhyme: Five Little Pumpkins

Learning and reciting rhymes, poems, songs and chants increases the children’s confidence in using English whilst they become accustomed to the rhythms and sounds and structures of the language.


It is Halloween and my students are reticing the following poem:

Five Little Pumpkins
Five little pumpkins sitting on a gate.
The first one said, "Oh my, it's getting late!”
The second one said, "There are witches in the air!”
The third one said, "But we don't care".
The fourth one said, "Let's run, let's run".
The fifth one said, "Isn't Halloween fun?"
Then Woooooo went the wind, and OUT went the lights.
And five little pumpkins rolled out of sight.

I think this is quite a good poem for the younger students to prepare for Halloween, not only because the children absolutely love it, but because we can work on different linguistic aspects, such as:

1. Phonics: gate/late; air/care; run/fun; lights/sight
2. Ordinal numbers 1-5
3. The use of speech marks
4. Question and exclamation marks
5. The past simple tense

You can watch and listen to the children here:

http://cp.sanjuanbautista.madrid.educa.madrid.org/etw09/5pumpk.wmv

You can get ideas and free printable "Five Little Pumpkins" material in the Children's Songs Fairy Tales & Nursery Rhymes Section in the DLTK's Growing Together Website, which I strongly recommend.
And of couse, the children will love to carve a pumpkin!!
I hope you give it a go!

(Photo from www.flickr.com, Creative Commons) Thank you!

Story: The Enormous Turnip


This is another well-known classic tale the children really enjoy and allows the creation of endless characters.
Appart from learning and practicing new vocabulary in a meaninful contect through role-play, we could get our students to work on:

  • Fruits and vegetables

  • Plants, planting and how they grow
  • Writing character descriptions

  • Sequencing the steps of an action

This video shows a classroom experience with young children where the teacher is narrating the story and the students repeat some key sentences and perform it with the aid of some props and masks they have made themselves.

-If you want a free photocopiable play of the Enormous Turnip, here is one published by the Oxford University Press
-You might also want to use
Enormous Turnip role-play masks

Story: The Gingerbread Man

Children love this story and will want to listen to it and act it out again and again. The first time I read it I was teaching 4 year olds and was not too sure about it because I thought it was a bit harsh the fox eating the main character... obviously I was the only one!! They found it hilarious!! I have since then used it with older children, adapting the difficulty of the text and the follow-up activities and they all really enjoy it.

The really good thing about this story is that we can have as many characters as we want thus everybody gets to participate in its dramatization.

But appart from adding as many animals as we want, we can also create new characters that relate to what we are working on either in Literacy or other subjects, for example professions (the baker, butcher, teacher...).
If you do not know the story, the reading and the images in this video are, in my opinion, quite nice:




Some things we can do surrounding this story are:

  • Work on the Past Tense
  • Work on animals
  • Make masks
  • Make cookies and/or work on recipes
  • Write an alternative ending (to make me happy!)

-If you would like more ideas and material, I suggest you check out Teaching Heart´s Gingerbread Unit

(Both images are taken from www.flickr.com, Creative Commons)

Thank You!