4 pages.
A quick, easy and fun way to teach the parts of an apple. Run the apple cover off on red, yellow and green construction paper and give students a choice. Older children can label their apple by writing on the lines, younger students can cut and glue the word-labels.
15 pages.
These are great activities to do after reading Dr. Seuss' (Theo. LeSieg's) book, Ten Apples Up On Top. Students can simply choose an animal from the story and color it, and then cut and glue their apples on top of their character. (I've included blank red apples, blank black and white apples, as well as numbered apples in color and in black and white.) or older students can roll the dice to see which apple they should glue up on top. Numbered strips are provided for the game. There's also a graphing extension.
4 pages.
Mazes are a nice little something for a table top morning activity, or for "early finishers." There are 4 different levels: easy, medium, hard, difficult.
After reading Dr. Seuss' (Theo. Lesieg) Ten Apples Up On Top , have students write their name on red, green and yellow apples and then glue them in an ABCABC pattern, on top of their head shot.
6 pages. Common Core State Standards: K.CC.4a, K.CC.4b, K.CC.4c, K.OA.1,K.OA.5, K.CC.6, 1.MD.3 This is an easy project that helps review quite a few standards in a fun way.
2 pages. Use the labeled poster as an anchor chart, use the blank one as an assessment tool. This FREEBIE is part of my jumbo 83-page 4 Seasons Of My Apple Tree packet in my TpT shop. For your convenience, I've included a PREVIEW with the free poster & worksheet here.