Showing posts with label fish. Show all posts
Showing posts with label fish. Show all posts

Saturday, June 17, 2023

Sea Shell

 Sea Shell
Amy Lowell


Sea Shell, Sea Shell,
Sing me a song, O please!
A song of ships, and sailor men,
And parrots, and tropical trees,
Of islands lost in the Spanish Main
Which no man ever may find again,
Of fishes and corals under the waves,
And sea'horses stabled in great green caves.
Sea Shell, Sea Shell,
Sing of the things you know so well.

Sunday, July 3, 2022

Find The Fish Puzzle

Puzzle - Find The Fish

Find The Fish
by Helen Hudson


A Joyful day it is for us,
Tommy and Richard and me,
For our friend Bill Jones is taking us
Where the biggest fish may be.

If it should be our luck to catch
The fish Bill tells about,
I really do not see quite how
We'd ever haul him out!

Saturday, July 25, 2020

Fish

       Fish. Among the vertebrates (back-boned animals), the fish are lowest in order of intelligence, but among the most important from an economic standpoint. From earliest historic times men have used the flesh of fish as food, and today there is hardly a country in the world whose people do not include it in their diet.

How to fish swim in harmony? by TED-Ed

19 Characteristics of Fish:
  1. Fish constitute the class Pisces, which is divided into about 13,000 species. 
  2. All are back-boned animals, living in water. 
  3. Notwithstanding the numerous species, fishes show a remarkable uniformity in appearance, for the greater number have elongated, compressed bodies, tapering toward both ends, with paired fins to take the place of limbs. 
  4. This form of body is well adapted to meet the pressure of water. 
  5. The body is generally covered with scales or bony plates, though a few species lack such covering.
  6. With the exception of a small family of fresh-water fish, which possess both lungs and gills, fish breathe wholly by means of gills, which are designed to extract oxygen from the water.
  7. They have cold, red blood, which is pumped through the system after being purified by passage through the gills. 
  8. The backbone is composed of vertebrae, and is so loosely jointed that the body can be turned and bent freely in all directions. 
  9. Fish possess in their air bladder, or swim bladder, an organ peculiar to themselves, which they are able to fill or empty at will. This bladder enables the fish the ability to control their buoyancy.
  10. The skeletons of some families of fishes are not of bone, but of a strong, thick cartilage.
  11. Geological investigations show that there have been many thousands of species of fish now wholly extinct, but those that survive are distributed throughout almost all the waters of the earth. 
  12. Those in temperate or tropical waters are more brilliantly colored and strikingly marked than the inhabitants of colder waters. 
  13. In most species the colors increase in intensity and beauty during the breeding season, much as the plumage of a bird grows bright. 
  14. Some fish feed on both animal and vegetable matter, others are flesh-eaters, and some eat only vegetable food. 
  15. They reproduce by eggs, these being laid in shallow water. 
  16. The eggs are usually left uncared for, though some species, like the stickleback, gather the eggs in nests and protect and care for their young. 
  17. Millions of eggs are laid by a single fish, but the young are preyed upon by so many enemies that relatively few survive. 
  18. In size fish vary from tiny minnows, an inch or so in adult length, to man-eating sharks thirty-five feet long. 
  19. Whales (which see) are mammals, though they bear certain resemblances to fish. 
More About Fish from The Web:

Monday, July 30, 2018

7 Books on Tide Pools for Children

Seven new titles have rotated into our class library for our last summer inquiry on tide pools. Check them out!
Ocean Soup by Stephan R. Swinburne. Student learn about different tide pool creatures through rap and rhyme.

Is This a House for Hermit Crab? by Megan Mcdonald. Readers follow a little hermit crab along the sandy shores as he searches for a new home.

A Swim through the Sea by Kristan Joy Pratt. An alphabet book about creatures from A-to-Z of both tide pools and the ocean deeps. There's specific facts per each animal given as well for older students to expand their knowledge further. 

In One Tidepool by Anthony D. Fredricks. Follow a young curly-haired girl to the beach as she explores the creatures that make their home in tide pools through a clever rhyming narrative.

Barnacle is Bored by Jonathan Fenske. Underneath the pier lives a barnacle who's grown bored with the predictable rise and fall of the tide life he lives. One day a bright, colorful fish swims by and barnacle learns a lesson that 'excitement' isn't sometimes all we imagine it to be.

Shell by Alex Arthur. From DK Eyewitness, all the information a young scientist could need about shells with corresponding photographs.

Flotsam by David Wiesner. A wordless book that tell the story of a young boy who is treasuring hunting along the beach--and treasure he does indeed find--through vivid illustrations.

Tuesday, January 23, 2018

two kissing fish...

"two kissing fish" Click directly on the image to enlarge it.
Questions/Activities for this fishy figurative design:
  1. How many narrow rhombus are in this design?
  2. Can you trace the hexagon shape with your finger?
  3. Now you can assemble your own set of fish and include some sea weed beneath them as well.

Monday, June 2, 2014

Craft an entire school of "Rainbow Fish" from paper plates!

"The Rainbow Fish" by Pfister.
      The Rainbow Fish is an award-winning children's book drawn and written by Marcus Pfister, Swiss author and illustrator, and translated into English by J. Alison James. The book is best known for its morals about the value of being an individual and for the distinctive shiny foil scales of Rainbow Fish. Decode Entertainment turned the story into an animated television series of the same name, which has aired on the HBO Family television channel in the United States since 1999. Read more...
      I designed my own versions of rainbow fish for my preschoolers from extra thick, large, white paper plates. Because I am working with preschoolers, I will need to assemble the project up to the point of coloring for these little ones.  However, 1rst and 2nd grade teachers may choose to teach every step to their students over a period of two to three sessions.     

Supply List Per Student
  • scissors
  • white school glue
  • magic markers
  • stapler
  • glitter or metallic paper for scales
  • pattern (below)
  • two large white paper plates
  • white typing paper
  • white string
Step-by-step Instructions:
  1. Print and cut out the pattern. Cut the body first and then trace it onto the inside of a large, white, paper plate. Then flip the pattern over and trace it again to the inside of an additional large, white, paper plate. Cut out these two fish and staple them together with the fins facing fan out.
  2. Cut out the face pattern and trace around it twice onto a piece of white typing paper. Then cut these two faces out and staple them both to the correct position on top of each side of the paper fish.
  3. Draw both the fins, eyes, and mouth onto each side of the dimensional paper fish.
  4. Paint or color the fish on both sides
  5. Cut additional fins (circles) from metallic paper and glue these between the fish face and body. 
  6. Then paste down the edge of the fish face to the paper fish body where the scales meet the fishy cheeks.
  7. Staple a long string between the two fish bodies to hang your school of rainbow fish from the ceiling.
Left, I cut and traced my xerox paper pattern onto a paper plate and cut this first fish to trace around for all of my other fish. Don't forget to trace this same fish in the reverse also in order to have both a front and a back fish. Center, See how the fish fits easily into the large paper plate so that students or teachers can duplicate this version's shape. Right, Students may then draw their own fins and face onto the assembled pattern. The face of the fish must be traced twice and cut from white typing paper. You will need to staple one on each side of the fish body.
I stapled two paper fish plates together to give my rainbow fish a bit of dimension and strength. In fact, this paper plate version could stand up to paint if teachers should prefer to use it. I took care not to staple the face onto the body near the edges of the fins. This will make it simpler to glue in the metallic fins.
The blue side of my teacher's sample.
This is the back side, orange version of my teacher's sample.
Print, cut and trace the fish body template and head both. Remember to reverse and cut/trace the body on a second paper plate. You will need to cut and trace two fish heads on regular paper in order to make both the front and back side of this rainbow fish craft. Because teachers will likely hang these paper fish from the ceiling, both sides of the fish should be colored.
More "Rainbow Fish" Crafts:

By Marcus Pfister. Read by Ernest Borgnine.
"The Rainbow Fish is an award-winning book about a beautiful fish who finds friendship and happiness when he learns to share. The book is best known for its morals about the value of being an individual and for the distinctive shiny foil scales of the Rainbow Fish." Visit Storyline Online for more videos.

Are there such things are real rainbow fish? The rainbowfish are a family (Melanotaeniidae) of small, colourful, freshwater fish found in northern and eastern Australia, New Guinea, islands in Cenderawasih Bay, and the Raja Ampat Islands. The largest rainbowfish genus, Melanotaenia, derives from the ancient Greek melano (black) and taenia (banded). Translated, it means "black-banded", and is a reference to the often striking lateral black bands that run along the bodies of those in the Melanotaenia genus. Read more...

More activities and lessons used with "The Rainbow Fish"

Sunday, November 10, 2013

Working With Melted Crayons


"This little video shows you how to use the melted crayon technique on a die cut and then etch into it to bring out details. The etched lines may then be covered in crayon again to darken them or left as light lines.

The die cut is available from www.paperthreads.com; just laury
For a limited time I will be giving away the die cut files for this little fish on my blog justlaury.paperthreads.com
( by downloading the little fish you are agreeing to abide by my terms of use as listed on my blog)"

Music is from superfan2010.com
Carly Comando's Cordelias Lullaby
find more of Carly's music at www.deepelm.com or on itunes
video by Laury Vaden

Monday, September 30, 2013

Paint, Cut and Paste a Leafy River Scene

      This fall leaf art lesson was inspired by a very popular children's book, "Leaf Man" by Lois Ehlert. View and hear the book below.
      The project may be completed over several consecutive days in an early learning center environment:
  • First day: Collect and share fall leaves from your center's playground and/or surrounding neighborhood.
  • Second day: Draw and cut many stencil patterns from the leaves that students have collected from the previous day. Let students play with the stencils, discovering how these can be layered or moved about in order to mimic the creatures depicted in the Leaf Man book.
  • Third day: Draw plastic combs through acrylic and glitter paints on construction paper to recreate the Autumn colors found in the student's leaf collection.
  • Fourth day: Trace the leaf stencils onto the decorated papers and cut them out. Now let each student paste together his or her own river scene depicting fish and turtles similar to those illustrated in the Leaf Man book.
  • Fifth day: Let the students help you display their dry art works in the hallway or classroom of their school. Serve up some warm cider or chocolate and talk about all the things they have accomplished while enjoying the fall leaves!

      Harcourt Trade Publishers also includes a fun teacher's guide for an alternative art project. Below I have linked to additional fall leaf lessons that young students may enjoy.
Students paint, cut and paste leafy fish and turtles to swim in their colorful blue river.
A detail of the paper turtle cut from papers combed with glitter paints.
Young students can achieve very professional looking results when they work
 from stencils. Collecting, tracing and cutting leaf stencils is a very complex
exercise for little students but it teaches them confidence, patience and a
set of tasks that will generate excellent results. Chunk down lofty goals into
 to smaller tasks that may be performed successfully and your little artists
will achieve great things!
This popular children's book is read by Jonah.

Saturday, August 31, 2013

Restored Antique Alphabet Prints

      These restored antique alphabet prints would look charming in a child's nursery/bedroom or a homeschool classroom. I've cleaned and restored them for your next alphabet craft. Enjoy and read the Terms of Use before printing them out.

The above image for pinning please.
A was and Apple, an Archer, an Arrow. B was a Bird, Bear and a Barrow.
C for Cat and D for Dish, E for an Elephant, F for a Fish.
G for Goose and Ha for Ham, I for an Inn and J for Jam.
K for Kite and L for Light. M for the Moon and N for Night. O for Owl and P for Prattle,
Q for the Queen and R for Rattle.
S for Ship and T for Tap, U for an Urn and V for Vat. W for Windmill, for Watch & Wren,
 X stands in English for no word but ten.
Y is for Yew, for Youth and for Yeast, Z is for Zebra a beautiful beast.
More Restored Alphabet Print by Kathy Grimm: