The importance of instilling the concept of...
Learn all about squid anatomy and build big blue squids from plastic bottles and bubble wrap!
What You Need:
Squid Anatomy Poster printables (members only)
Large empty soda bottles
Blue paint
Paintbrushes
Bubble wrap
Blue or white duct tape
Blue streamers
Blue, white, and black craft foam
Glue or tape
Scissors
What you do:
Print, cut out, and assemble the Squid Anatomy Poster. Post it in an area where children can easily view the diagram during circle time. Prepare one “squid body” per child by cutting the tops from large soda bottles and lining the cut edges with blue or white duct tape to protect fingers from the sharp plastic. Recycle the bottle bottoms.
Review the Squid Anatomy poster with children. Provide the following information:
As a separate sensory activity, let children paint a large sheet of bubble wrap blue. Once dry, cut the bubble wrap into long, thin strands. Cut 8 strands per child. These strands will be the arms for each squid.
Give each child the top of a plastic bottle with the edge lined with blue duct tape. Let children paint the bottle tops blue.
Give each child two blue streamers cut a bit longer than the bubble wrap strands. Show children how to cut shapes from blue craft foam to make their squids’ clubs. Have them glue the clubs to the ends of their blue streamers to make their squids' tentacles. Then, have children cut circles from the white and black craft foam to make their squids’ eyes.
Show children how to tape, staple, or glue (depending on developmental ability) their squids' arms and tentacles around the edges of the blue soda bottle tops. To complete their squids, children glue the eyes to their squids’ heads.
The completed squids can be hung from the classroom ceiling to give the room an underwater ambiance.
Squid Vocabulary:
arm
suction cup
tentacle
club
beak
siphon
mantle
fin
ink sac
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