The story is about a boy who stumbles on a bug’s dance club.
It describes a myriad of insects and how they shake it to the buggy-wuggy beat.
The book’s rhyming text is lyrical and after a few readings, we started to
sing the “chorus.” The book starts:
I was strollin’ on home through the woods the other night,
When I saw something a-flashin’ – it was shinin’ mighty bright!
It was blinkin’ and a-winkin’ near the bottom of the tree,
So I scurried on over just to see what I could see.
To say that Warren Hanson’s masterpiece is one my most
favorite children’s books is an understatement. It’s the kind of book you give
as a gift, you are glad your child asks you to read over and over, and reminds
you how magical the world seemed when you were young.
When I pulled it out to read with this activity, my son was
thrilled (he hasn't tired of this book even after two years)! We also read a great non-fiction book from The Cat in the Hat
Learning Library – On Beyond Bugs by
Tish Rabe. It’s cleverly written and filled with fun facts about all kinds of
insects.
After we’d finished reading, I gave my son a die and two
pages of bug body parts.
First I had him pick the bug body of his choice, cut
it out, and glue it to another piece of paper. Then he rolled the die to
determine what he’d add to the picture. If he rolled a three, he could add a
leg. I left it up to him whether his creation was an insect or spider (i.e. 6
or 8 legs).
Download a 2-page PDF of bug bodies and parts here. |
Every time he rolled a four, he added more spots, a two
meant he had to keep building his bug’s habitat (first, he added clouds, then a
tree – his bug was flying!). He used examples from the sheet I made to help him
know what to draw and how many of each (the number of body parts is noted above
the die on the ‘parts’ page).
How cute! I love all the great ideas you have! Fun stuff!
ReplyDeleteThis is brilliant and thanks for sharing this bug book. By the way, I was wondering if you will be interested in joining an Afterschool linky crew in January. Please drop me email if you are interested, and I'll give you details.
ReplyDeleteOooh fun activity! And certainly to interest the boys!
ReplyDeleteThanks for sharing on Kids Get Crafty!
Maggy
What a fun game! Great book suggestion too!
ReplyDeleteI love this! It's such a great idea.
ReplyDeleteWe Love the book On Beyond Bugs at our house! I'm going to have to try this game with my oldest! Looks like fun! Thanks!
ReplyDeleteI love the game! Bugtown Boogie is such fun! I love to the rhythm in the words.
ReplyDeleteAdorable!! Love this freebie! Thanks for sharing at Thrifty Thursday!
ReplyDeleteVery cool! I am going to check out that book!!! Thanks for linking up to TGIF! Happy New Year,
ReplyDeleteBeth =-)
Sounds like a great project! Flying spiders... that's a scary thought. :P
ReplyDeleteCongrats! You were one of the top clicked links at Thrifty Thursday! Check it out!
ReplyDeletehttp://www.playingwithwords365.com/2012/01/thrifty-thursday-5/
Very cute- love interesting activities for boys. Thanks for sharing.
ReplyDeleteMy daughter would LOVE this! Thanks for sharing!
ReplyDeleteWhat a fun idea! My daughter would freak out the entire time- she hates bugs :-/ Thank you for sharing your ideas with us on The Sunday Showcase Have a happy New Year!
ReplyDeleteThis look like fun, my two boys would love it. Come share your posts at Bacon Time's Anything Goes Linky up Fri-Monday.
ReplyDeletehttp://bacontimewiththehungryhypo.blogspot.com/
I love this activity! Found it through For the Kids Friday link up. Think I will try it with my preschoolers! Thanks
ReplyDeleteLori
Thanks for linking up to Serenity Saturday link party
ReplyDeleteHope to see you there again this week
http://serenityyou.blogspot.com/search/label/Serenity%20Saturday
Natasha
Thanks for sharing. I love this activity!
ReplyDeleteI hope you don't mine. I posted a link to this blog entry over on my blog for art teachers. It would make such a nice art sub lesson. http://artsublessons.blogspot.com/2016/09/build-bug.html Jan
ReplyDelete