Friday, December 2, 2011

Snowflake Paper Dolls and a Snowman Mosaic


Have you ever looked for shapes in the clouds? What about in snowflakes? That's what Will C. Howell challenges us to do in Zoo Flakes ABC, in which each page contains a photograph of a paper snowflake, with an animal cut into the design.


The text is extremely simple - A is for alligator. B is for bear - and so on, but the animal designs cut into the snowflakes are amazingly intricate. There are instructions at the back of the book, for a complicated to fold, but simple to cut, six-sided design.


I'm not sure exactly what animal it's supposed to be, a rat, an anteater, or an aardvark, maybe? But, whatever it is, the children were thrilled to watch it multiply as we unfolded the paper, revealing the completed "snowflake".


We also tried copying (sort of) one of the designs from the book. Below is our version of "T is for turtle."


Then, it dawned on us, that basically we were just making paper dolls in a circle - which meant really, we could use any design we wanted...


...as long as we left a portion of each side of the folded paper in tact.



Once we got going, we left Howell's complicated (though not difficult) folding instructions behind, and opted for the more familiar, six-sided, coffee filter, snowflake fold, starting with a circle...


...folding it in half...


...and then into thirds...



...before snipping away the bits around our shape, but as I said, leaving some part of the two sides attached.


A (age 10) spent most of the afternoon coloring in our creations...


...except for a few we saved to look more like snowflakes, by adding decorations with a hole punch, before they were unfolded.




We stuck, pretty much, with a six-sided design for our snowflakes, after learning from Jean Marzollo's I Am Snow, a Level 1, Hello Reader Science book, that real snowflakes have six sides. The book is a very easy reader, with just the one simple lesson about snowflakes, and instructions for folding, and cutting six-sided snowflakes from a square piece of tissue paper.


Nancy Poydar also includes instructions for cutting paper snowflakes in her Snip, Snip...Snow!, beginning with a circle, and following steps similar to the traditional method I detailed above, but with one extra fold, for a very pretty eight-sided design.


This book was probably the favorite pick of the three, for the younger girls. It tells the story of little girl (like them) named Sophie, waiting for the snow to fall. It has been very cold - wintry cold (like here), but without any snow (like here, since before Thanksgiving, when all of our snow melted).

To pass the time, with restless students, waiting for snow to arrive, Sophie's teacher allows her students to spend the afternoon cutting paper snowflakes.

My only complaint against the book, is the difficulty involved in reading it aloud, when "Sophie" and "snowflake" are alternated in almost every sentence. It's a tongue twisting task not to read the little girl's name as "Snowphie".

However, I really like that Poydar turns clean-up into playtime in the story, by having the children pretend to "plow up the snow", while sweeping away all of the paper scraps from the floor, and even suggesting recycling the scraps into a snowman mosaic.

My girls had a lot of fun with that, too.


It's great to be a homeschooler.

Linked with What My Child is Reading at Mouse Grows Mouse Learns.

16 comments:

  1. you are prob one of the most creative person out there! I just love your ideas!

    ReplyDelete
  2. I love these, thanks for sharing so many ideas. Sincerely,Mommy of two little blessings & so much more!

    ReplyDelete
  3. Aaaa! I did my first snowflake, thanks! It's the snowman one. I am so excited! Thanks again! Sincerely, Mommy of two little blessings & so much more!

    ReplyDelete
  4. THANK YOU for giving me yet ANOTHER resource for our snow unit...which won't occur here until January...or February...'cause that's how the snow "rolls" in East Tennessee... ;0)

    ReplyDelete
  5. This is such a fantastic activity- thank you for sharing all your resources, and then showing us how you came about your own method, and sharing that as well! I think we will be making some snowflakes today!

    Happy Holidays!

    ReplyDelete
  6. So very cute! I love all the creations.

    ReplyDelete
  7. This is fabulous! I love the zooflakes and the snowman flakes! Pinning to Pinterest :-)

    ReplyDelete
  8. Oh my goodness, after that post I just read "It's great to be a Snowflake" instead of "It's great to be a homeschooler!" ;)

    ReplyDelete
  9. That looks like a great book. I know my boy would love it. Last year we found this website:
    http://www.papersnowflakes.com/patterns.htm
    which shows how to cut out animal shapes in snowflakes.

    ReplyDelete
  10. Wow, so awesome! Great book about cutting snowflakes, getting it first thing tomorrow- it's always a challenge for us to cut fun things out :D

    ReplyDelete
  11. I hadn't ever really thought about how it's essentially paper dolls in the round.

    I saw a Darth Vader snowflake on Pinterest, that was intriguing.

    ReplyDelete
  12. Thank you so much for sharing this wonderful idea!!!!! We just made our first Snowman Snowflake and now we are working on more snowflakes to put on our windows:)

    ReplyDelete
  13. Wow, so many great ideas here. Pinning right now. We did some coffee filter snowflakes too, using 8 side fold. I have to learn folding them into thirds :)

    ReplyDelete

Comments