1-2-3 Come Make Valentines With Me!
While looking for classroom charts today, I stumbled across the periodic chart. Boy did that bring back memories.
I LOVED chemistry lab, and could easily have become a mad scientist.
I'm always looking for ways for students to spell words, like using Scrabble tiles etc.
Since the periodic table is filled with letters and letter combinations, I frogged around half the morning dreaming up valentines.
There are 5 different sample valentines using the periodic chart to make the words.
You can use my templates or challenge students to think up their own.
I've included a periodic chart that you can shoot up on an overhead, so students can use it as a reference tool.
I hope they have a much fun as I did.
Hint: Think up something you'd like to say, and then see if any of the elements help you spell it.
Click on the link to view/download the We've Got Chemistry Valentines.
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Do you have a valentine you'd like to share? I'd enjoy hearing from you: diane@teachwithme.com or leave a comment here.
"Education is not received. It is achieved." -Unknown
Here's The Scoop-A Valentine & Writing Prompt All Rolled Into One!
Recycle those old newspapers and you’ve got yourself a really cute Valentine or writing activity for February.
Make templates from file folders for your students to use to trace onto a page of the newspaper.
They cut out their scoop of ice cream, glue it to their cone (which they cut out) and then top it off with a cherry heart.
I’ve also provided a template for the “cherries” or you can give students large sparkly-heart stickers to add that finishing touch.
Run off the “flipped-up” messages and give students a choice of what they want to do/write about, OR you could have them make this a valentine AND writing prompt and do both, then staple the pages together.
I “hinged” the completed cone with a small square of Scotch tape stuck to the cherry and attached it to a sheet of scrapbook paper.
Stores have all sorts of packs on sale at this time of year. If not, print off a 40-50% off coupon from one of the major craft chain stores.
These make a cute bulletin board on a black background with paper lace for the framed border. OR…
Hang them in a row in the hallway, just high enough so that people can flip and read. Send them home on Valentine’s Day.
click on the link to view/download the "Here's The Scoop" Valentine-writing prompt.
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"When I stand before God at the end of my life, I would hope that I would not have a single bit of talent left and could say "I used everything you game me." -Erma Bombeck
Valentine gifts: A Special Pencil.
When school supplies are on super sale during August, I buy packs of pencils for about a dollar.
I save them to decorate and pass out to my students during special times of the year.
You can make a class set of hearts and attach one to the end of a pencil, with a thick glue dot, in about 20 minutes.
Print a copy of the little card that I’ve designed to go with them. Cut 2 slits and insert the pencil and you’re set!
What a nice Valentine surprise left on their desk.
Valentine Gifts: A Bouquet of Love
As I was fooling around making the hearts, it occurred to me that they would be cute flowers if I stuck them to the top of a green Popsicle stick.
I LOVE how more ideas pop into my head as I’m “playing.”
Students can make 1, 2, or even 3 flowers for their Dixie cup vase. I folded a green strip in half and then in half again and cut the smaller strips, to make leaves.
You might want to make these strips skinnier so they look a bit different and fit on the Popsicle stick better. I used glue dots to adhere everything to the stick.
I looked for Dixie cups that were a solid color, or had a nice pattern that would look like a vase.
Tip the cup upside down; using a knife, make as many slits as you need and then insert the assembled heart flowers.
Adjust the height ‘til you have an appealing arrangement. I’ve also made a little card students can include with their bouquet. Click on the link to view/download the Heart Activities.
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“Finish each day and be done with it. You have done what you could; some blunders and absurdities have crept in; forget them as soon as you can. Tomorrow is a new day; you shall begin it serenely and with too high a spirit to be encumbered with your old nonsense.” –Ralph Waldo Emerson