Support Cancer research and win! Think Pink Giveaway with $800 in prizes

 

We are thrilled to be teaming up with CEO of Me, Inc and 30 other amazing family friendly blogs to bring you the Think Pink Giveaway to celebrate, remember & fight back for those who have been affected by Breast Cancer.

I am so excited to have Wendy Kennedy with Usborne Books as my sponsor for this event. She has gracesously donated two Usborne Sticker Dolly Books (up to $25.00 see slideshow for pictures ) as 1 of the prizes for this event! Please be sure to visit her website (link to website) to view her other products and show your support by liking her Facebook page. Thank you Wendy for donating a prize to our giveaway & supporting Breast Cancer Awareness!

Our mission with this giveaway is 3 fold.

1. To Raise Awareness about Breast Cancer, Breast Cancer Support and Resources.  Click Here to visit  The American Cancer Society’s Breast Cancer Site. Please take care of your body and go see a doctor if anything seems wrong.  Also if you or someone you know has cancer, reach out! There are numerous national and local charities and organizations that can help you regardless of your age or financial situation.

2. To Raise $ for The American Cancer Society. All bloggers paid a small fee to participate. 50% of that fee was donated to The American Cancer Society. The other 50% is a CA$H prize YOU can win!  If you choose to make a donation to The American Cancer Society, you will receive bonus entries for the prize giveaway! (donations not required to enter to win)

3. To say THANK YOU for being a fan, friend, follower and reader of our blogs by offering you over $800 in CA$H and Prizes!!!

That’s right you can win over $800 in CA$H & Prizes! Grand Prize #1 is $100 CA$H! Grand Prize #2 is a PINK RIBBON Themed Gift Basket full of pink items worth over $75! We have 18 other amazing prizes donated by several awesome sponsors!

See the slide show below for pictures of ALL the prizes!  

 

 

HOW TO ENTER TO WIN: Scroll down below the prize listing in the Rafflecopter form and enter! There are numerous ways you can earn entries to win, so take advantage of all of them!
Special Thank you to all of our Participating Blogs:

CEO of Me, Inc., Embracing BeautySweeties FreebiesSAVING with a Working MomMom with a dot comCoping with FrugalityShore Savings with PattiThe Tales of Bubba and MackThe Shopping DuckGrowth in GodCoupon SpiceWhole Lotta Mama!Freebie CornerCouponing In PADebt Free SpendingThis N That with OliviaTotally TembertonThrifty JinxyCrazy Coupon TrainFreebies 4 RealMyCouportieraSouthern Swag: Georgia’s CouponistasMark Your Savings With EThe Shopper’s ApprenticeMoney Saving ParentA to Z Learning TreeSeeking HealthyTeach Me 2 Save4 Little Monsters and MePlanet WeidknechtAnother Cent Saved & Coupon Pro.

Thank you to our wonderful Sponsors who donated prizes:

Regan Cameron, Gold Canyon & U-Neek Hats & Gifts, Leigh Moore, Scentsy, Nicole Johnson, Baskets of Inspiration, Amazon Rain, Sweet Robin’s Nest, Dorkwad Girl, JulRe Designs, Momma Goddess, Brenda Jones, Jordan Essentials, Olivia Douglass, Tupperware, Wendy Kennedy, Usborne, Teresa King, Premier Jewelry, Sandy Kearns, AVON, Carol Murray, Craft Emporium, Lynne Kitchen, Lindt Chocolate RSVP, Christy Silkaitis, Jen Billings, Close to My Heart, Amy Bomberry – Wrap n Tone in 45

Thank YOU for supporting Breast Cancer Awareness! 


 

November Holidays & Celebrations: Family fun activities for November

It’s fun to teach around special holidays, celebrations and events. November is best known for Thanksgiving but did you know that November also celebrates food and family with National Adoption Month, Peanut Butter Month, Sandwich Day, Homemade Bread Day and much more. You can use these celebrations to create fun and educational activities for home or the classroom.

November is also Harvest Month, Aviation History Month, Peanut Butter Lover’s Month, Doll Collection Month and International Drum Month. These month long celebrations offer many opportunities for field trips, tasting parties, enjoying making music and sharing.

Find out here about all of the special days in November like Prime Meridian Day, November 1st, complete with activities to celebrate each day.

Pumpkin Art Lessons for Preschool Teachers

As part of a fall theme, many preschools, home day cares and families will be using pumpkins to celebrate, learn and play together. There are a plethora of pumpkin art ideas that can be picked from the Internet vine.

Pumpkin art brings up a good point about preschool art.

Once upon a time I entered a preschool and an excited young boy ran up and grabbed my hand. “I want to show you my pumpkin!” he explained as he pulled me across the room.

In front of us was a wall of pumpkins, or jack-o-lanterns really. Each was made from a paper plate painted orange with a glued on green stem and black facial features cut from construction paper. It’s a popular and fun pumpkin art idea that allows preschoolers to explore the concepts of colors and shapes and practice painting and gluing skills.

The excited little boy searched and searched each row and finally, disappointed, he said, “I don’t know which one is mine.” Continue Reading …

Preschool & Kindergarten Math Games with Playing Cards

Four year olds are little sponges when it comes to learning.  With one year to go before your child starts kindergarten, many parents wonder what math skills their child will need and how they can work on those math skills at home.

Of course daily living provides many opportunities for math, even folding socks.  How many socks are in a pair?  How many pairs of socks are Daddy’s?  Whose pile has the most pairs of socks?

In addition to making math part of your daily activities there are several simple and fun math games that you can play at home or in a preschool with four year olds.  All of these games can be played using a deck of “Go Fish” cards but the games are varied, fun, hands on and even active.

Standards for kindergarten math under “numbers and numbers sense” include recognizing numbers, counting with one to one correspondence and understanding more, less or the same.  Math games with Go Fish cards will reinforce identifying numbers, counting sets up to four, and understanding more or less.

Traditional Go Fish:  Remember this?

Everyone is probably familiar with traditional Go Fish games but here’s a refresher if needed.  Go Fish usually includes passing out 7 cards to each player.  Each player will in turn ask the next “Do you have any fours (or whatever number they have chose)? A player can only ask for a card they hold and all cards held must be handed over if asked for.  If a player does not have the card asked for, the next player will reply, “go fish.”  The asker will then draw a card from the deck and if they draw what they asked for they can go again.  If not the game moves on.  Whenever a player has gathered four matching numbers they can put down a match.  The first player to unload all of their cards wins.

Sounds simple right?  Until you try to play it with your four year old. Here are some variations to play with beginners or younger children until they get the hang of it.

Easier Variations:  It can be done and it can be fun!

Hand out only 5 or even 4 cards per person at first.

Go through the deck and take out only the 1, 2, 3, 4 and 5 cards for one game and the use only the 6, 7, 8 and 9 cards for another.  You can personalize by choosing numbers you know your child needs to work on but always include a couple they know well for a balance of challenge.

If they are agreeable, let the new player have a partner.  Try to use words like “team” as opposed to “helper” with these little ones.

Allow the beginner to place their cards down on a placemat to organize them and let everyone play as they would if they could not see the cards.

Teaching tip:  Identifying numbers can be done two ways, receptively and expressively and kindergarteners will need to do both.  An example of receptive is when a child points to (or hands over a card in a game of Go Fish) a number when asked to find a number. Expressive of course is when a child verbalizes that number such as in “What number is this?”  “Seven.”

Often young children playing Go Fish will simply show you a card and ask, “Do you have any of these?”  Ask them to name it.  Tell them you need to be sure about which number they want and ask them to tell you its’ name.

Along with building kindergarten math skills, playing Go Fish also practicing other important kindergarten skills like taking turns, organizing manipulatives (cards) and staying on task until finished.

There are other fun ways to use Go Fish cards to teach kindergarten math skills that don’t involve sitting a table. Continue Reading …

Safety tips about Face Paint

Whether it is face paint for the school play, Halloween or even at a local festival, it is important to know what is safe for our child’s face and skin and what is not.

Read the Label Before You Face Paint

First, know what face paint and make up ingredients are FDA approved. The FDA.gov website can provide you with information oncolor additives that are permitted to be used in face paint and cosmetics, (as well as foods and other products) product safety information, and how to report problems with cosmetics and face paint to the FDA.

Continue reading Safety tips about Face Paint 

Eggs-trodinary Halloween Crafts

Are you looking for a unique Halloween crafts? A picture says a thousand words to crafty parents and teachers but here are some instructions and tips for creating these eggs-trodinarily easy Halloween crafts.

Halloween Bulletin Board Ideas

Need fun and easy Halloween bulletin board ideas?  This idea also doubles as a fun Halloween party game and learning center too.  Get the “most” out of the “ghost” this Halloween with a cool rhyming words Halloween bulletin board.  Parents can do this one at home as well.

Halloween/Harvest Preschool Arts and Crafts Lesson Plans: Spider Webs & Ghost

Preschool teachers, parents, home caregivers, and even play groups can have fun with these inexpensive and easy to create Halloween and Harvest Art Activities. Many schools and play groups no longer refer to the holiday as “Halloween” so these arts and crafts include many harvest themed crafts.

Theme: Spiders

Spider Webs: Using two popsicle sticks glued together (you may want to do that prior to the children or allow them to do it the day before to make sure it is dry – a glue gun works best) provide the children with strings or white yarn. They can twist and turn and twine the yarn around the Popsicle sticks creating their own spider webs.

Variation 1: Give children white chalk with black construction paper and allow them to trace or draw spider webs on the construction paper.

Variation 2: Give children black construction paper, straws and paint. They can blow straw spider webs across the paint. Talk about how each design is different, just like spider webs are different for different spiders.

Theme: Ghosts

Ghosts Feet: Trace the children’s feet on white construction paper. Cut out the tracing and decorate with googly eyes, glitter or allow them to color (colored pencils work best, as done card stock paper) Punch a hole in the top of the “ghost” and tie string. Hang around the room, on a string along the wall on your bulletin board.

Reading Together: 4 parts of every book you shouldn’t overlook

We all know how important it is to read to our children from a great variety of books. Children can learn so much from the stories themselves but there are also many opportunities for learning outside of the story.
Here, I’ll show you four not-to-be-missed parts of a book and how you can use them to teach concepts and make connections.

The author and the illustrator bio:

While many parents and teachers read the names of the author and the illustrator to children as they begin a book, take an opportunity at the end to look for the author and illustrator photos and biography. I’ll be the first to admit that some are dry but others are interesting and even humorous. These short bios will expose your child to a variety of home states and even countries.

If your child enjoyed the story or the pictures let them know that often other books they’ve written or illustrated will be listed on this page. It is so neat when kids start to look at books and make comments like, “that looks like a Jan Brett book.”

The publishing date:

Reading the publishing date, or having your child do it, can help children learn to read years. It is also a good opportunity to introduce the idea of centuries as today’s young readers have a plethora of books available from the last century.

Observing the publishing date can also teach children to make time associations. My daughter loves knowing that her copy of Miss Spider’s Tea Party was published in 1999, the year she was born. My son knows one of his all-time favorite books, Truck Duck, was published when he was just one year old and he got it for his first birthday in 2004. Of course when I point out that Little Bears Friend was published in 1960, before Mommy was even born, my children know that this copy is “really old.”

My daughter was surprised, O.K. shocked, to discover Curious George smoking a cigar in a children’s book. This gave us an opportunity to check the publishing date and talk about how societal views have changed this book had been published. Continue Reading …

Halloween Crafts: Make a Haunted House from a Milk Carton

If you’re looking for a fun Halloween craft that you can make together as a family (and for pennies no less) then consider the Milk Carton Haunted House.  Got milk?  If you have a half gallon milk carton then your Haunted House craft has a frame.  Got a newspaper?  Well then you’re own your way to Creepyville.  Get complete directions here for the Haunted House Milk Carton

No half gallon milk cartons on hand?  How about a shoe box?  There are lots of fun and super cheap ways to create a Halloweeen diorama scene.  These easy Halloween crafts are creative and green.