Christmas Tree Shapes {Free Printable}

Oh Christmas Tree!  Oh Christmas Tree!  How lovely are your branches!

Especially when we can use them to review our shapes!

Today, we’ll be focusing on the Christmas tree.  Kelli’s made a great Build a Christmas Tree Free Printable to help us review shapes and numbers.  I’ve also included a fun hand print Christmas tree craft.

If you want to adapt this lesson for an older crowd, you could research the history of the Christmas tree and ornaments.    The tiny ornaments on the printable would also be great for scissor and fine-motor practice .

Let’s Get Started!

Christmas Tree Shapes

What You Need:

  • Build a Christmas Tree Free Printable (click on link above)
  • Crayons or markers
  • Scissors
  • Glue
  • Construction Paper

What You Do:

After printing out the Christmas tree shapes, have your child color in the shapes.  You could discuss what the shapes are going to become so they can color appropriately or just leave it as a more free-ending project.  As you can see, my Chipmunk (age 3) decided to go for a monochromatic look.

We’ve been having a little forgetfulness when it comes to our numbers, so we numbered the oval ornaments in order to practice a bit.

After the coloring was complete, I cut the shapes out and got the glue sticks ready!

We started with the tree and trunk, asking about the shapes and  colors.

After the tree was in place, I handed Chipmunk one ornament at a time, counting as she glued them in place.

Continue in this pattern till your tree is complete!

Finished!!

Ready for another project??

Handprint Christmas Tree

What You Need:

  • Someone’s cute little hand
  • Green Paint and paint  brush
  • Gold Puffy Paint
  • Construction Paper

What You Do:

Paint child’s hand green with a paint brush.  Position it carefully onto paper and push down firmly.

After the paint dries, draw on a trunk and a star (optional)

Use the gold puffy pain to add lights or ornaments.

Finished!

Like this craft?  Stay tuned for tomorrow’s post where we make a whole calendar with hand print and foot print pictures.  Great gift idea!

Happy Learning!

About the Author

Lindsey Whitney is a blogger over at Growing Kids Ministry.  A blog designed to help parents, teachers, and Children’s Ministry workers who want to help the kids they love grow in their faith.   You can connect with her via twitter or on facebook.

 

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Christmas Tree {Letter Review}

Merry Christmas!

I hope you are enjoying the holiday season so far!  Are you doing an advent calendar this year?  Or are you more in the Elf on the Shelf camp?  Either way, I hope that the month is turning out memorable and special and not crazy!  Here’s a fun activities for you to do with your kids to review the letters in a Christmas-fashion way!

I stumbled upon this coloring page the other day at Santa Letter and was struck with an inspiration!

I’m not exactly sure what the circle/ornaments are for, but I assume they are for doing a sort of color-by-letter time of thing.  I thought it would be great to use it to review the letters, having the kids color in the letters one-by-one as I said them out loud.  However, I wanted to be able to do the activity again and again without printing the paper out again and again.  I could have gotten the paper laminated, but I decided to go a different route.

On one of those long pieces of construction paper I drew a ROUGH outline of a Christmas tree and then used a bottle cap to draw ornaments onto the tree.  You may remember our bottle cap counting activity from about a month ago.  Well, I have been continuing to save the bottle caps, but this time, I’ve been writing letters on them.   We used them in this project to play a little game.  Here’s how it went:

I would pick up a cap, say the letter and then Chipmunk would match it to an ornament.

In the next round, Chipmunk would pick her own letter, say it out loud, and then match it.

We also played by matching and then saying a word that STARTED with that letter.

All it all, it was a great activity. Now, we have the Christmas tree hanging on the side of the fridge and chipmunk often stops to look at it and name a letter.  The whole thing is a little chicka-chicka-boom-boom, only Christmas-themed!

Stay tuned for more Christmas Homeschool Fun next week!

More Christmas Resources to Check Out!

Christmas Preschool Printable Pack by Confessions of a Homeschooler

Truth in Tinsel Advent e-book  (we’re doing this in our house — follow along!)

Everyday Emmanuel e-book

Candy Cane Bead Project by Fountain Avenue Kitchen

Christmas Around the World ($6)

Felt Christmas Tree Counting Activity by Olives and Pickles

Montessori Inspired Christmas Activities 

 

About the Author

Lindsey Whitney is a blogger over at Growing Kids Ministry.  A blog designed to help parents, teachers, and Children’s Ministry workers who want to help the kids they love grow in their faith.   You can connect with her via twitter or on facebook.

 

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C is for Candy Cane {Free Printable}

It’s beginning to look a lot like Christmas!  Our tree is up!  The village houses are out! And I’m already dreaming about what kind of Christmas cookies we’ll be making this year.  This is the first year we’ll be using an Advent Calendar (in coordination with the Truth in Tinsel e-book) so I’m hoping that will go well!

Christmas Tree

Today we’ll be doing a few activities with candy canes — that wonderful Christmas candy!

We started with a simple pack of Christmas colored pipe cleaners that I picked up at Michael’s for $2.99.

I has my little assistant paint some toilet paper rolls in coordinating colors.  I had just thrown out my stash of toilet paper rolls in preparation for a house showing, so we only had two available.  As a result, we cut them in half in order to do all the colors, but keeping them whole would have been better for this activity.

After the toilet paper tubes were ready, we sorted pipe cleaners (cut in quarters to fit into the tubes better) into the matching  color tube.

Next we took pipe cleaner halves and twisted them to make mini candy canes.

More Candy Cane Activities:

Cut pipe cleaners into various sizes and sort by length

Counting Candy Canes (store-bought or the ones you just made)

Hide and Seek with a Candy Cane

And…

Color By Number Candy Cane FREE PRINTABLE!!

 

More Great Things to Check Out!

About the Author

Lindsey Whitney is a blogger over at Growing Kids Ministry.  A blog designed to help parents, teachers, and Children’s Ministry workers who want to help the kids they love grow in their faith.   You can connect with her via twitter or on facebook.

Related Articles:

**This post may contain affiliate links. Please see disclosure for exact details.**

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