Beruflich Dokumente
Kultur Dokumente
COOKING
UFO SANDWICH
Ingredients:
White Bread
Wheat Bread
Raisins
Star and round cereals
Peanut Butter or any sandwich spread of your choice
Grapes (green but if not available red would do)
Chocolate Chips
Bread Sticks/pretzel
Paper (color blue if not available white would do
Steps:
First place the paper in the students table, 1 piece per child and cut a 4-inch circle from the wheat
bread sandwich, then cut the circle in half.
Cut a 3-inch circle from the white bread sandwich, then cut off the bottom third.
Put peanut butter in one side of the bread and cover with the other piece
Arrange the white bread piece on top of the wheat bread piece.
Cut pretzel sticks into 1 1/2-inch pieces and arrange along the bottom of the UFO, with raisins at
the end.
Add three cereal pieces along the wheat bread sandwich piece.
For the stars, use the star cereal and scatter it around the sandwich
For the aliens, slice three green/red grapes in half and arrange on the bread with a chocolate chip
eye resting on top.
Place cereal around the UFO for a more galactic look. TIP: To help secure any pieces, use a dab of
peanut butter.
Cooking Photos:
Cooking Photos:
Growth
Splash Camp 2020 Knowledge
Kindergarten Department Virtue
www.bys.ac.th
Growth
Splash Camp 2020 Knowledge
Kindergarten Department Virtue
www.bys.ac.th
SCIENCE EXPERIMENT
BAKING SODA ROCKETS
Materials:
Vinegar
Baking Soda
Empty plastic bottle (any bottle will do)
Food coloring (Any color)
Rubber stoppers
Wooden Sticks (Depending on how many bottles you’re
setting up; you’ll need three for each bottle rocket.)
Tape (The stronger the better.)
Toilet paper (One-ply or just separate two-ply.)
Scissors
Steps:
Do this OUTSIDE! Even on a covered patio or indoors, these vinegar baking soda rockets will shoot
pretty high and cause a mess on the ceiling.
Cut three long piece of strong tape for each baking soda rocket you’re going to launch.
Place one stick at a time on the outside of the plastic bottle. Cover with tape while wrapping
around the bottle and adding the rest of the sticks.
Fill the bottle with vinegar half way.
Add desired food coloring. A few drops will do. You can mix colors to create secondary or tertiary
colors.
Rip off a square piece of toilet paper, the thinner the better, and add one spoon full of baking
soda in the center.
VERY QUICKLY put the rubber stopper in the open hole of the bottle, shake, and flip over with the
eraser side of the pencils resting on your table.
STAND BACK and watch the fireworks as these baking soda rockets for kids explode!!
Materials:
Small Pots
Poster Paint (light colors assorted)
Paint Brush No. 10 or 12
Small succulent plants
Planting soil
Googly Eyes (assorted size)
Fuzzy wires (assorted color)
Jewelry/Gem Stickers
Small white stones (colored stones will do)
Newspaper or used paper
Trowel (if not available you can use cup or small container)
Steps:
NOTE: This was a 2-day activity on the first day was the painting and the second day was the planting
Set up old newspaper or used paper in your art table to avoid **table painting**. Make sure you
tape it on the sides.
Give the brush to the students and show them how to paint the pot.
Give each students their pots and ask them what color they like to paint it with (show what
poster paint you have for options)
The kids can choose up to 3 colors for mixing for secondary or tertiary colors.
For the bigger kids: you can tell them that they can design their pots (some students designed
their pots with flowers)
Once done, let it dry and have the kids listen to a story or read them a story
On the second day, ask the students to fill their pots with soil using your trowel or cup, leave half
an inch from the top.
If the succulent is in a smaller pot, do not remove it, just create a hole in middle and put the
succulent pot.
Put the small white stones around the succulent
Cut the fuzzy wires in 4 and stick around the plant (you can do assorted colors)
Stick the googly eyes and jewel stickers
Draw a silly mouth on the pot.
Materials:
Yellow/white paper
Poster paint (blue, red, yellow, brown, orange and white)
Paintbrush No. 1
Steps:
Have the students paint their hands with color blue paint.
Help them do the stamping on the yellow paper to make
sure that color will transfer properly.
Let the students paint a triangle on top as the head and
wings of their space rocket with red.
Use brown to paint the muffler of the space rocket
Use yellow and orange paint as the smoke/fire that will fuel the takeoff of the space rocket.
Use white paint to write their name in the rocket body and brown paint to design the rocket
Materials:
Styrofoam ball as big as the tennis ball (if not
available a smaller one will do)
Used old cd
Poster paint (assorted color)
Paintbrush No. 8
Glue gun
Steps:
Cut the Styrofoam ball into half and write the name of the student underneath each piece.
Give each student their paintbrush and place assorted paint in one pallet
Have the students paint their Styrofoam ball and have them mix color for secondary/tertiary
color.
Wait for it to dry, once dry stick one piece of the Styrofoam ball to one side of the used cd and do
the same to the other piece, make sure that 2 pieces are aligned on top and under the cd.