
Classic Dr. Seuss full of rhymes and silliness. But really, this is a good book to use when you want to talk about letting someone into the house when your parents are not home.
Materials
- 5 copies of the hat to color and one copy of the cat
- Bag of puff balls , a Timer, Tongs
- A set of rhyming word cards
- Box of cornstarch and red food coloring
- Simple kite for each child. Paper, yarn, ribbon, and 2 straight straws or sticks. https://www.instructables.com/Easy-Paper-Kite-for-Kids/
- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A55bwVVDQTU
Vocabulary
- Safety (to be protected from danger)
- Stranger (someone person or animal that you do not know or have not been introduced to)
Before Reading the Story
Tell the children that you want to talk to them about safety today. Ask them what they think being safe means? Explain that there are lots of things that are unsafe in the world. Allow the children to comment if they choose. Tell them that today you want to spend a moment talking about strangers. Do the children know what a stranger is? Explain that sometimes there are strangers who are not kind to children and so it is important that you do not go with them or let them fool you into getting into a car with them or eating food that they give you. If your parent or teacher says it is ok, then you may go. But if someone just walks or drives up to you say “No,no I won’t go”! Have the children practice saying this loudly. Tell them that today’s story is about a stranger that the children let into the house. Ask the children if they think this is a good idea, why/why not? Let’s read the story and find out what happens.
Physical Health & Development/Health Status & Practices; builds awareness and ability to follow basic health and safety rules such as fire safety, traffic and pedestrian safety, and responding appropriately to potentially harmful objects, substances, and activities.
Reading the Story
As you turn to page 1, ask the children if they can tell what kind of a day it is? On page 6, stop and ask the children if they should let a stranger into the house? What do you think might happen? On page 29 where the cat introduces the box, ask the children to guess what they think is inside? On page 61, ask the children what would you do? and allow them to respond.
Literacy/Book Knowledge & Appreciation;demonstrates progress in abilities to retell and dictate stories from books and experiences; to act out stories in dramatic play; and to predict what will happen next in a story.
After Reading the Story
Remind the children about stranger danger. Do not go with a stranger and do not let a stranger into your house unless your parent says it is ok.
Physical Health & Development/Health Status & Practices; builds awareness and ability to follow basic health and safety rules such as fire safety, traffic and pedestrian safety, and responding appropriately to potentially harmful objects, substances, and activities.
Make copy of the Cat in the Hat items and cut around each. Make a loop of masking tape to attach each to a board or wall where all the children can see. Cover the board and take away one object. Turn it back for the children to see and tell which object is missing.
Approaches to Learning/Reasoning & Problem Solving; grows in recognizing and solving problems through active exploration, including trial and error, and interactions and discussions with peers and adults.
If your children are capable of sitting for a few minutes more, play the video Stranger Danger for them. If not schedule it into another part of your day. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A55bwVVDQTU
Physical Health & Development/Health Status & Practices; builds awareness and ability to follow basic health and safety rules such as fire safety, traffic and pedestrian safety, and responding appropriately to potentially harmful objects, substances, and activities.
Discovery
Make oobleck ahead of time and put it out with cookie sheet for the children to experiment with.
Science/Scientific Skills & Methods; begins to use senses and a variety of tools and simple measuring devices to gather information, investigate materials, and observe processes and relationships.
Music and Movement
Teach the children, The Cat Came Back https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OE8gsYejpQc. Make up a simple verses and have the children help sing the chorus. There was a man who lived in Raleigh, the cat got out and the man said golly. But the cat came back…..
Sing What Are You Wearing? https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C0Z8euLE5Fw Have the children follow the directions. Make one last verse about wearing stripes.
Language Development/Listening & Understanding; shows progress in understanding and following simple and multiple-step directions.
Sing Rhyming Words Sound the Same to Looby Loo
Rhyming words sound the same. Rhyming words sound the same. Rhyming words sound the same, Rhyming words sound the same. Hold up a rhyming words picture and see if the children can make a word that rhymes with it. (cat=hat, boy=toy, frog=log)
Literacy/Phonological Awareness; progresses in recognizing matching sounds and rhymes in familiar words, games, songs, stories, and poems.
Blocks
As the children play with the blocks today, encourage them to put the blocks away by like kinds. If you have not already done so, label your block shelves so the children learn to sort as they cleanup.
Mathematics/Geometry & Spatial Sense; begins to determine whether or not if two blocks are the same size and shape.
Art
Make simple kites and decorate. Depending upon the skill of your children, you might want to make some or all of the kites ahead of time. Let the children decorate the kite with stickers or markers. Remind the children what happened in the story when the things flew kites in the house. Tell the children that you will take the kites outside when you go to the playground.
Physical Health & Development/Fine Motor Skills; progresses in abilities to use writing , drawing, and art tools, including pencils, markers, chalk, paint brushes, and various forms of technology. AND Language Development/Listening & Understanding; shows progress in understanding and following simple and multiple=step directions.
Library and Writing
Make a copy of the picture showing “The sun did not shine”. Ask each child to tell you something they like to do on rainy or very cold wet days. Write their responses on a piece of paper and hang it on the wall under the picture. (I watch tv, My cat sleeps with me, My brother and me made a tent).
Literacy/Early Writing; begins to represent stories and experiences through pictures, dictation, and in play.
Sand and Water
Fill the table with puff balls. Explain to the children that you are going to have a puff ball race. When the timer begins they will use the tongs to pick up puff balls and put them in a basket. When the timer stops they will count how many puff balls they were able to pick up in the alloted time. Set the time for one-minute.
Mathematics/Number & Operations; begins to use one-to-one correspondence in counting objects and matching groups of objects.
Dramatic Play
Remind the children that in the story, the cat picked up all his playthings. Encourage the children to really clean and organize the center today. Give them damp paper towels to wipe down the shelves and challenge them to put all the toys away where they belong. As they work, keep an eye out for broken or ripped items that should be thrown away.
Social & Emotional Development/Knowledge of Families & Communities; develops growing awareness of jobs and what is required to perform them. AND Approaches to Learning; Engagement & Persistence; shows growing capacity to maintain concentration over time on a task, question, set of directions or interactions, despite distractions and interruptions.
Math and Manipulatives
Tell the children that the cat’s hat had stripes on it. Cut out many strips of construction paper for the children to make and copy patterns with.
Mathematics/Patterns & Measurement; enhances abilities to recognize, duplicate, and extend simple patterns using a variety of materials.
Set out a balance scale and one-inch cubes. Challenge the children to put a item into one side of the scale and then add one-inch cubes to the other until they are balanced. How many one inch cubes equal a toy car, a wooden rectangle block, a paintbrush, etc.
Mathematics/Patterns & Measurement; shows progress in using standard and non-standard measures for length and area.
Outdoor Play
In the story the cat balanced on the ball. Encourage the children to practice their own balance. Can the walk on a balance beam or the edge of the sandbox? Can they stand and hop on one foot? Can they walk on clomper stompers without falling off?
Physical Health & Development/Gross Motor Skills;shows increasing levels of proficiency, control, and balance in walking, climbing, running, jumping, hopping, skipping, marching, and galloping.
Bring your art kites outside for the children to run with.
Physical Health & Development/Gross Motor Skills;shows increasing levels of proficiency, control, and balance in walking, climbing, running, jumping, hopping, skipping, marching, and galloping.
Transitions
Make 5 copies of the hat to color. On each one make the colors of the stripes white and ________(one red, one blue, one green, etc. of colors that you are working on. Put the hats in the center of the circle and have a child hide their eyes. Put the cat under one of the hats so that it is hidden. The child must guess which hat the cat is under by naming the color of the stripes. You can also write letters of the alphabet on the hats, numbers, or shapes depending upon which concept you are working on.
Social & Emotional Development/Cooperation;develops increasing abilities to give and take in interactions; to take turns in games and using materials; and to interact without being overly submissive or directive.
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