Today, as you get your Halloween Festivities started, I want to share a few monster themed books that will keep you in the spirit AND help your kiddo burn off some of that extra energy they’re bursting with this week.
Waltz of the Snowflakes
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The holiday season is approaching quickly and with it many traditions. One of my favorite traditions happens in my classroom. For years I’ve devoted one class in December entirely to dancing along to the Nutcracker. First we read the story and then we dance our way through all the parts, playing all the familiar Tchaikovsky songs along the way. It’s a high energy class that is full of story and action and leaves everyone sweaty and happy at the end.
While this is a great experience that works for me, it’s hard to share it beyond the four walls of my own classroom. Parents can’t help their children continue the dancing at home unless they are already familiar with the ballet and all its parts. Educators (especially non-dance educators) have the same problem - plus they are often limited by the existing structure of their lesson plans where they teach.
Which is why I was SO EXCITED when I came across this board book version of the The Nutcracker. It’s one of many board books in the BabyLit series - which introduces favorite classics to little ones. This book is perfect for making a tradition of dancing the Nutcracker at home or in the classroom.
Simply put on your favorite Nutcracker tune (mine is In the Pine Forest - which happens right before the Waltz of the Snowflakes) and read along. Each page introduces you to different characters and their movements: Mice prancing, soldiers marching, snowflakes swirling… it’s all right there for you and it only takes a few minutes! Easy peasy.
I hope this helps you incorporate the Nutcracker into your holiday fun!
Silly Song
What do you stand for?
Run and Hide!
I almost didn't go
A couple weeks ago I participated in the Women's March in Chicago. It was a beautiful, moving, soulful experience for me. It was inspiring to be surrounded by people who were standing up for beliefs that I hold near and dear to my heart. It was comforting to see and feel that I am most certainly not alone. Perhaps, most importantly, I felt myself noticing not just who was there but also who wasn't - and contemplating ways to shift my life to be more inclusive of people who are different than me.
But, I almost didn't go...