Gathering: Make Bags for Our Valentine Cards
I wanted to make our Valentine mailbags with umbrellas and hearts to go with our book.
Materials needed: White paper bags, small heart stickers, 3 cupcake liners per child (we used cute Valentine themed ones), 3 pipe cleaner halves, glue,crayons, letter stickers for names
1-Glue cupcake liners upside down to look like umbrellas. Bend the pipe cleaner to look like an umbrella handle and add it to the bag.
2-Place heart stickers on the bag to look like it is raining hearts.
3-Add letter stickers for their names.
4-Place valentine cards inside for our friends.
Circle Time: The Day it Rained Hearts
We read The Day it Rained Hearts by Felicia Bond. It is a very sweet and simple story of a little girl who makes Valentines for all of her animal friends one day that it rained hearts from the sky.
We sang a sweet song together after our story. My little girl has sang it all week long.
I wrote one letter on each of five hearts, and took one away each time we sang the song.
Heart-o (tune of bingo) Instead of clapping, we blew kisses, each time we took a heart letter away.
H-e-a-r-t. H-e-a-r-t. H-e-a-r-t and Heart is it’s name-o.”
Art: Heart Garland
In the story the little girl strings together 7 hearts to make one of the valentines.
Materials Needed: 7 large hearts per child (hole punch the hearts on each side to make for easy threading), yarn or ribbon, glue, crayons, sequins, stickers, any other collage materials you might want to bring
1-It was easiest to FIRST let the children thread their hearts together.
2-Decorate the hearts with collage materials provided to make your own garland.
Snack: Valentine Popcorn, Strawberries, and Pink Milk
We enjoyed yummy Valentine Popcorn we made from this recipe at Nest of Posies. It is VERY ADDICTIVE!
We rounded out the treat with strawberries and pink milk!
Heart Activities
1-Conversation heart scoop “relay”
We had two buckets set up across the room from each other. One child begins at the starting line next to a bucket filled with conversation hearts. Give each child a measuring cup scoop (Target had heart shaped ones in the dollar section). The children carried the filled cup and emptied it into the bucket across the room. Then they returned the cup to the next friend waiting.
Helpful hint:
Don’t make it a competitive game. But do supply enough materials for two or three “teams.” (6 buckets, 3 scoops) That will give each of the children several turns, but still an opportunity to practice taking turns while their partner goes.
2- Let It Rain Hearts
We used paper and foam hearts to rain down on our little ones.
This was a fun idea inspired by Totally Tots!
(Idea based on activity found here).
3-Stacking Conversation Hearts
Give the children large conversation hearts and allow them to try and make the tallest tower they can before it falls. They loved this game and kept trying over and over again.
Love these ideas. This is one of my favorite Valentine books from my childhood.
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