Thanksgiving
Praise God for wheat, so white and sweet,
Of which to make our bread!
Praise God for yellow corn, with which
His waiting world is fed!
Praise God for fish and flesh and fowl
He gave to men for food!
Praise God for every creature which
He made, and called it good!
Praise God for winter's store of ice!
Praise God for summer's heat!
Praise God for fruit trees, bearing seed;
"To you it is for meat!"
Praise God for all the bouncy
By which the world is fed!
Praise God ye children, all to whom
He gives your daily bread!
Friday, November 25, 2022
Thanksgiving by Anonymous
Wednesday, November 23, 2022
Drawing Skills Index
- Practice Shading An Owl
- Ed Emberley's Children's Books
- A Terrible, Horrible Cursive Exercise
- Create Fall Leave Patterns
- Draw a Scarecrow Emphasizing The Use of Pattern(s)
- Draw a Shaded White Spider Web
- Draw a Landscape Using Vincent Van Gogh's Drawing Technique
- Draw Klimt Figures
- Drawing Dragons
- When History Becomes Legend: Catapults and Dragons
- Draw Mardi Gras Performers
- Learning to draw birds
- Learning to draw by use of a grid system
Printable calendar pages for any year...
Teachers will need to fill in the correct numerical dates for the specific days that will change every year. However, the grid and titles of the days of the week, plus months are already printable on the following calendar pages.
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January calendar page. |
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February calendar page. |
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March calendar page. |
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April calendar page. |
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May calendar page. |
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June calendar page. |
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July calendar page. |
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August calendar page. |
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September calendar page. |
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October calendar page. |
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November calendar page. |
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December calendar page. |
Wrens Learning to Sing
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Wren mother teaches her young to sing. |
Apple Math Game for Bulletin Boards
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This Apple Math Pattern Illustration is in Creative Commons. |
The Game Rules: Above is a illustration of how teachers might assemble an apple tree on a bulletin board in their classrooms for students to participate in math exercises. One the left is a simple apple shape for cutting from red, green or yellow construction paper. Teachers may post either the answers or problems in advance to the board on her own set of apples. Then students may write out the answers to the apple math game on their own apples and post these on top of the teachers sample problems. For those who get the answers or questions wrong...their apples will fall beneath the tree when the teacher checks their answers.
Printable Clock Face with Hands
The printable clock can be arranged to keep the scores of school games and contests. Individual teachers will undoubtedly have many other ideas for adapting this template to their classroom work. When each student has his own clock with which to work, he or she can be taught the way the hands move, how the big hand goes fast while the little one moves more slowly, and how the clock shows but half a day's time, etc...
- "L is for lost time" alphabet coloring page
- Color-by-number: Time for bed
- Funny furniture friends to color
- "W is for wake up!" alphabet coloring sheet
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A traditional clock face with minute and hour hands. |
Friday, November 18, 2022
A squirrel pattern for classrooms
Thursday, November 17, 2022
Patterns for A Plains Indian Village
Both an illustration and a pattern with instructions for a Native American canoe are included below. There are also two native people, a man and a woman, that may be cut out and added to the canoe as well.
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Plains native paper dolls for your reconstruction of their village encampment. |
Print and cut from paper then trace around the teepee on top of cardboard to craft a template for young students to use while assembling a village representing Native Americans who once lived on the plains.
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A picture of what a Native American village might have looked like on the plains. |
The Dog and Goose
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A grateful companion. |
While the dog was ill, the goose never quitted him, day or night, not even to feed; and it was apprehended that she would have been starved to death had not a pan of corn been set every day close to the kennel. At this time the goose generally sat in the kennel, and would not suffer any one to approach it, except the person who brought the dog's, or her own food. The end of this faithful bird was melancholy; for when the dog died, she would still keep possession of the kennel, and a new house dog being introduced, which in size and color resembled that lately lost, the poor goose was unhappily deceived, and going into the kennel as usual, the new inhabitant seized her by the throat and killed her.
A Canine Sheep Stealer
Canine Smugglers
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The night delivery. |
Windmill Pattern for The Classroom
A variety of uses are intended for this design, in addition to the development of art projects, students may adapt it for a sand table or if the sails are attached separately at it's back with a pin, it could be placed where a current of air would make them move. Students might also enjoy painting cardboard versions of the windmill on a day when discussions about different countries is a part of the curriculum.
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A simple pattern of a windmill and gate for the classroom. |
Boy Pilgrim Pattern for Thanksgiving
The pattern of the boy pilgrim below shows a the place where the printed pattern may be folded in half and be placed alongside another folded paper and traced around before cutting. Make an entire set of paper cuts for your students. Then use the pattern as a guide to fill in the boy pilgrim's features before coloring.
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This simple pattern of a boy pilgrim has a collar, a hat, and a face. |
Odd Fraternity
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Eating soup together. |
A gentleman traveling through Mecklenburg was witness to the following curious circumstance in an inn at which he was staying. After dinner, the landlord placed on the floor a large dish of soup, and gave a loud whistle. Immediately there came into the room a mastiff, a fine Angora cat, an old raven, and a remarkably large rat with a bell about its neck. These four animals went to the dish, and without disturbing each other, fed together; after which the dog, cat, and rat lay before the fire, while the raven hopped about the room.
A Singular Interposition
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Cat to the rescue! |
A lady had a tame bird which she was in the habit of letting out of its cage every day. One morning as it was picking crumbs of bread off the carpet, her cat, who always before showed great kindness for the bird, seized it on a sudden, and jumped with it in her mouth upon a table. The lady was much alarmed for the fate of her favorite, but on turning about instantly discerned the cause. The door had been left open, and a strange cat had just come into the room! After turning it out, her own cat came down from her place of safety, and dropped the bird without having done it the smallest injury.
The Dinner Bell
It is customary in large boarding-houses to announce the dinner hour by the sound of a bell. A cat belonging to one of these houses always hastened to the hall on hearing the bell, to get its accustomed meal; but it happened one day that she was shut up in a chamber, and it was in vain for her that the bell had sounded. Some hours after, having been released from her confinement, she hastened to the hall, but found nothing left for her. The cat thus disappointed got the the bell, and sounded it, endeavored to summon the family to a second dinner, in which she doubted not to participate.
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A cat in need of her dinner! |
Filial Duty
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Feeding their own kind. |
Wednesday, November 16, 2022
Air Transportation Silhouettes
The air transportation silhouettes include the following:
- Montgolfier Balloon (A.) - first successful balloon 1781
- Gifford's Balloon (B.) - first powered airship 1852
- Dirigible - Zeppelin (C.)
- Lilienthal's Glided (D.) - first successful glider 1898
- Wright Brother's Plane (E.) - first successful motor driven plane 1903
- Lindberg's Plane 1927 (F.)
- Streamlined Plane (G.)
The Cat and Crows
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The crow defends her young. |
A pair of crows once made their nest in a tree, of which there were several planted round the garden of a gentleman, who, in his morning walks, was often amused by witnessing furious combats between the crows and a cat. One morning the battle raged more fiercely than usual, till at last the cat gave way, and took shelter under a hedge, as if to wait a more favorable opportunity of retreating into the house. The crows continued for a short time to make a threatening noise; but perceiving that on the ground they could do nothing more than threaten, one of them lifted a stone from the middle of the garden, and perched with it on a tree planted in the hedge, where she sat, watching the motions of the enemy of her young. As the cat crept along under the hedge, the crow accompanied her, flying from branch to branch, and from tree to tree; and when at last the cat ventured to quit her hiding-place, the crow, leaving the trees and hovering over her in the air, let the stone drop from on high on her back.
The heroism of a hen
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Hens to the rescue! |
A contest of rather an unusual nature took place in the house of a respectable innkeeper in Ireland. The parties concerned were, a hen of the game species, and a rat of the middle size. The hen, in an accidental perambulation round a spacious room, accompanied by an only chicken, the sole surviving offspring of a numerous brood, was roused to madness by an unprovoked attack made by a voracious cowardly rat on her unsuspecting chirping companion. The shrieks of the beloved captive, while being dragged away by the enemy, excited every maternal feeling in the affectionate bosom of the feathered dame ; she flew at the corner whence the alarm arose, seized the lurking enemy by the neck, writhed him about the room, put out one of his eyes in the engagement, and so fatigued her opponent by repeated attacks of spur and bill, that in the space of twelve minutes, during which time the conflict lasted, she put a final period to the nocturnal invader's existence; nimbly turned round, in wild but triumphant distraction, to her palpitating nestling, and hugged it in her victorious bosom.
Halloween Silhouettes for The Classroom
These silhouettes (cut from black paper for decorating windows or cut from white paper for decorative borders) are made by folding a sheet of paper into three sections as show below. The folded sections are then folded once more to make three sections of equal size. Sketches for the silhouettes should be made twice the width and exactly the height of the paper in its final fold. When satisfactory sketches are completed and after care has been taken to have them symmetrical and with no cutting to be done through the lefthand folds of the paper, one half of the sketch (vertically) should be sketched or traced on the folded paper and cut out.
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Students will need either black, white, or orange construction paper and a pair of scissors to assemble this paper Halloween craft. |
Halloween Lantern Designs for The Classroom
Illustrated below are two simple methods for cutting and assembling paper Halloween lanterns for the classroom. Included also are a few simple silhouettes that students may copy to emphasize the theme: a black cat, a black bat, a witch with a cane and Jack-o-lantern.
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Students will need black construction paper, scissors, a ruler and glue to complete these projects. |
Monday, November 14, 2022
Craft a moving squirrel cut-out...
Directions for Making the Squirrel:
- Trace the pattern onto a sheet of cardboard or thick drawing paper.
- Color the parts of the squirrel. Squirrels may be grey, brown, reddish brown or black.
- Cut out the pieces care fully.
- Fasten the front paws to the squirrel's body with brads.
- Fasten his tail to the body next with a brad.
- Fasten his front leg next using a brad. The wholes are marked on the printable cut-out.
- When you are done, your squirrel will look like the small sketch in the corner.
Remorse
The Newfoundland Dog
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The Newfoundland with his lantern. |
Studying
A Faithful Companion
A gardener, in removing some rubbish, discovered two ground toads of an uncommon size, weighing no less than seven pounds. On finding them, he was surprised to see that one of them got upon the back of the other, and both proceeded to move slowly on the ground towards a place of retreat; upon further examination he found that the one on the back of the other had received a severe contusion from his spade, and was rendered unable to get away, without the assistance of its companion!
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The toad carries his wounded friend. |
A False Alarm
Sagacious Bruin
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The clever, hungry bear. |
A Strange Mouser
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The chicken was a strange mouser. |
A gentleman once had in his possession a hen, which answered the purpose of a cat in destroying mice. She was constantly seen watching close to a corn rick, and the moment a mouse appeared, she seized it in her beak, and carried it to a meadow adjoining, where she would play with it like a young cat for some time, and then kill it. She has been known to catch four or five mice a day in this manner.
Making Sure
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Teaching the crows to speak. |
The Power of Music
A Conversing Parrot
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The parrot who answered questions. |
During the government of Prince Maurice in Brazil, he had heard of an old parrot that was much celebrated for answering like a rational creature many of the common questions put to it. It was at a great distance; but so much had been said about it that the prince's curiosity was roused, and he directed it to be sent for. When it was introduced into the room where the prince was sitting, in company with several Dutchmen, it immediately exclaimed in the Brazilian language, "What a company of white men are here!'' They asked it, ''Who is that man?" (pointing to the prince). The parrot answered, "Some general or other." When the attendants carried it up to him, he asked it, through the medium of an interpreter (for he was ignorant of its language), "Whence do you come?" The parrot answered, "From Marignan." The prince asked, "To whom do you belong?" It answered, "To a Portuguese." He asked again, "What do you there?'' It answered, "I look after chickens." The prince laughing, exclaimed, "You look after chickens!'' The parrot in answer said, "Yes, I; and I know well enough how to do it;" clucking at the same time in imitation of the noise made by the hen to call together her young. The prince afterwards observed that although the parrot spoke in a language he did not understand, yet he could not be deceived, for he had in the room both a Dutchman who spoke Brazilian, and a Brazilian who spoke Dutch; that he asked them separately and privately, and both agreed exactly in their account of the parrot's discourse.
Mimic
A priest once brought up an orangutan, which became so fond of him that, wherever he went, it was always desirous of accompanying him. Whenever therefore he had to perform the service of his church, he was under the necessity of shutting it up in his room. Once, however, the animal escaped, and followed the father to the church; where silently mounting the sounding-board above the pulpit, he lay perfectly still till the sermon commenced. He then crept to the edge, and overlooking the preacher, imitated all his gestures in so grotesque a manner, that the whole congregation were unavoidably urged to laugh. The father, surprised and confounded at this ill-timed levity, severely rebuked his audience for their inattention. The reproof failed in its effect; the congregation still laughed, and the preacher in the warmth of his zeal redoubled his vociferation and his action; these the ape imitated so exactly that the congregation could no longer restrain themselves, but burst out into a loud and continued laughter. A friend of the preacher at length stepped up to him, and pointed out the cause of this improper conduct; and such was the arch demeanor of the animal that it was with the utmost difficulty he could himself command his gravity, while he ordered the servants of the church to take him away.
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The orangutan mimics the priest. |
Wednesday, October 12, 2022
Template of Apples on A Branch
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Large pattern of an apple branch with fruit and leaves. |