My favorite storybook version of this classic children's song, takes place in the Southwest. I got it years ago with classroom book order p...
C is for Cookie Coloring, Free Letter C Tracing Worksheet PDF.
Once children are familiar with the shape of the letter it is important to practice identifying it and using visual discrimination skills to observe how it is different from other letters. Here is my worksheet set that gives great practice. Students first trace the letter, then find (color) the objects that contain the designated letter. Pages are illustrated with clean, appealing images that correlate with the phoneme (letter sound). There is additionally a prompt to have the students count up the letters/objects they colored to add a cross curricular math element. These are great for center work, homework pages, and can be used for intervention. Here are a couple of free preview pages to download. Click on each to download. They are formatted two to a page to help you conserve paper. If you like what you see, please click the image above to purchase the packet.
C is for cookie, that’s good enough for me. When Cookie Monster sings this song, he starts by saying, “Now, what starts with the letter C? Cookie starts with C. Let’s think of oth…
For her birthday this year, The Muffin got quite a few cooking-related presents. One of them was a fantastic cookbook called The ABC of Kids...
C is for Cookie Coloring Page, Free Cookie Flashcard for Kindergarten.
This free preschool alphabet cookie activity will be a perfect fit for practicing letter identification and tracing with your child at home.
Paper plate cookie craft for kids great tag along to If You Give A Mouse A Cookie book.
Shape: Square Stickers Create custom stickers for every occasion! From special mailings and scrapbooking to kids’ activities and DIY projects, you’ll find these stickers are great for so many uses. Add your own designs, patterns, text, and pictures! Dimensions: Available in 2 sizes: Large: 3" L x 3” W, 6 stickers per sheet Small: 1.5" L x 1.5” W, 20 stickers per sheet Printed on white acid-free paper Vibrant full-color, full-bleed printing Scratch-resistant front, easy peel-and-stick back Available in a matte or glossy finish Choose between 7 different shapes
Looking for a fun and easy kids craft idea? Check out this paper plate cookie craft! It's perfect for all ages, and requires minimal supplies. Paper Plate
C is for cookie...that's good enough for me! Anyone else think of Cookie Monster singing that song? If not, I'll refresh your memory! Well you guessed it, since we're learning about the letter 'C', it's
These free printable letter c crafts and activities are perfect for your toddler or preschooler letter of the week homeschool curriculum.
The song C IS FOR COOKIE for playing this fun ABC/Alphabet Books singing game. * C is for Cookie ABC Words and Music by Joe Raposo Song Coordinated and Adapted by ELEG for SBWE Arranged for Ukulele…
Grab cute, FREE printable If you Give a Mouse a Cookie Worksheets to practice letters, math, literacy, and more with Pre k & Kindergarten
Read “The Cow Loves Cookies” by Karma Wilson … available here. This is one of our very favorite books. All of the animals on the farm like their traditional food, but not the cow. He and the farmer have a deal. Before reading, ask the kids what different animals on a farm eat. What does a cow eat? Ask them to look at the cover and decide what this cow might like to eat! Do ‘C’ journal page Write “Cc” on the next blank page. Write “COOKIES”. Show your preschooler the word “cookies” on the cover of the book and let them copy the letters. Practice writing big C’s and little c’s. Add cookie stickers to the page. I printed several cookie ingredients on sticker labels and used those for stickers. To Print: Download the cookie sticker page here. Load a sheet of label stickers (Avery #8163) into your printer. Print and cut the labels apart between cookie images. Read “Mr. Cookie Baker” by Monica Wellington … available here. I love these stories by Monica Wellington. The text is simple. The illustrations are bright and fun. A great cookie book We noticed Mr. Cookie Baker’s hat and apron. We’ll be making those later! Cut and Paste “C is for Cookie” page … this is a simple and free page from 1+1+1=1. I love the cutting, pasting and beginning letter sound practice. Print “C is for Cookie” page here. Scroll down to the “Mr. Cookie Baker” unit and click on it to print. Look at the pictures together. Say the names. Cut on the dotted lines. Say the name of each picture together. Emphasize the beginning letter sound. Glue the /C/ sound pictures to the large letter C. Chocolate Chip Cookie Match Game … this was a lot of fun. Just a traditional matching game, but somehow much more fun when we’re matching cookies Print 2 copies of the matching game below (4 pages total) and cut out each circle. Print the cookie backs above (print 4 copies). Glue the circles to the back of each cookie. I held the cookie paper up to the light and eyeballed where to glue each circle. Laminate the four cookie pages. Cut out each cookie. To Play: Shuffle the cookies. Lay out face-down on the table. Turn over two cookies, trying to find a match. If not a match, turn back over. TIP: To play with younger children, turn over two cards and leave them face up. Take turns turning over two cards until a match is found. Read “Baker, Baker, Cookie Maker” by Linda Hayward … Available here. Dress up like a cookie baker! … dressing up makes everything more fun Make an apron. I purchased a blank child-sized apron from Michaels. About $5 before coupon. Several options available here. Use fabric markers or sharpies to decorate the apron! I wrote my preschooler’s name. She decorated it then added her own drawings. I love it! Make a chef hat. I used this tutorial from Cara at The First Grade Parade. Scroll to the bottom of her post for great pictures. Cut a piece of white cardstock in half, lengthwise. Tape together to make a long band (she uses a sentence strip). Use one piece of white tissue paper. We didn’t have white, so pink tissue paper worked just as well The tutorial is great, but in short, pinch and tape the bottom edge of the tissue paper to half the paper headband … kind of like gathering. Measure the headband around your head and tape. Finish pinching and taping the top edge of the tissue paper to the other half of the headband. Poof the tissue paper and wear! Make Cookies! … now that we’re all fancied up with an apron and chef hat, we’re ready to bake some cookies. Take it slow. Make sure you have plenty of time to let your preschooler help scoop and measure and stir (and lick!) Let them help find the 1 cup and 1/2 cup. Let them try cracking the egg and measuring the vanilla. It will definitely make a bigger mess, but it makes great memories too This is our favorite cookie recipe: Chocolate Chip Cookie Counting … an easy game to play while you’re waiting for the cookies to bake. Cut out 10 circles from brown foam craft paper. On one side, use a sharpie to write “1 one” and “2 two” … etc, up to “10 ten” On the opposite side, draw the matching number of dots. Help your preschooler arrange the cookies from 1 to 10. Give her a bowl of chocolate chips. Let her put one chocolate chip on each dot. I asked my 4-year-old to point to the cookie that showed how old she was. Which cookie shows how old your brother is? Which cookie has 5 chocolate chips. Which one has 7? We did a lot of counting
This week Wes and I read Mmm, Cookies! He thought this book was hilarious and asked me to read it over and over again. If you aren't familiar with Robert Munsch, you have to check out some of his books. Kids think that they are so funny. Here are my children's Munsch favorites. Mmm, Cookies! A boy tricks his family with play dough cookies. Stephanie's Ponytail (Annikins) A little girl tries to be original by wearing unique hairstyles. Alligator Baby Kristen's parents just can't seem to do anything right. First they have their baby at the zoo, not in a hospital. Then, they accidentally bring home an baby alligator instead! Here are some of the activities we did to go along with Mmm, Cookies: 1. A Cookie Jar Game - I printed the cookie jar blackline and chocolate chip cookie printables. Then I made a set of number flash cards. Wes would pull a card, identify the number, and place that amount of cookies in the cookie jar. When Wes was finished with the game he chose a final flash card, identified the number on it, and glued that amount of cookies onto the cookie jar. 2. Play Dough Cookies - Wes made a big, huge play dough cookie and tricked his sisters with it! 3. Letter "C" Collage -Wes cut pictures of cookies out of grocery store circulars and glued them to the large "C". Printables for C is for Cookie *The entire Mmm, Cookies unit is part of Bo's Curriculum for December (Year 1). The download can be purchased here. For more What My Child is Reading visit Mouse Grows Mouse Learns. For more Learning Through Love visit My Family My Forever.
This free preschool alphabet cookie activity will be a perfect fit for practicing letter identification and tracing with your child at home.
Read “The Cow Loves Cookies” by Karma Wilson … available here. This is one of our very favorite books. All of the animals on the farm like their traditional food, but not the cow. He and the farmer have a deal. Before reading, ask the kids what different animals on a farm eat. What does a cow eat? Ask them to look at the cover and decide what this cow might like to eat! Do ‘C’ journal page Write “Cc” on the next blank page. Write “COOKIES”. Show your preschooler the word “cookies” on the cover of the book and let them copy the letters. Practice writing big C’s and little c’s. Add cookie stickers to the page. I printed several cookie ingredients on sticker labels and used those for stickers. To Print: Download the cookie sticker page here. Load a sheet of label stickers (Avery #8163) into your printer. Print and cut the labels apart between cookie images. Read “Mr. Cookie Baker” by Monica Wellington … available here. I love these stories by Monica Wellington. The text is simple. The illustrations are bright and fun. A great cookie book We noticed Mr. Cookie Baker’s hat and apron. We’ll be making those later! Cut and Paste “C is for Cookie” page … this is a simple and free page from 1+1+1=1. I love the cutting, pasting and beginning letter sound practice. Print “C is for Cookie” page here. Scroll down to the “Mr. Cookie Baker” unit and click on it to print. Look at the pictures together. Say the names. Cut on the dotted lines. Say the name of each picture together. Emphasize the beginning letter sound. Glue the /C/ sound pictures to the large letter C. Chocolate Chip Cookie Match Game … this was a lot of fun. Just a traditional matching game, but somehow much more fun when we’re matching cookies Print 2 copies of the matching game below (4 pages total) and cut out each circle. Print the cookie backs above (print 4 copies). Glue the circles to the back of each cookie. I held the cookie paper up to the light and eyeballed where to glue each circle. Laminate the four cookie pages. Cut out each cookie. To Play: Shuffle the cookies. Lay out face-down on the table. Turn over two cookies, trying to find a match. If not a match, turn back over. TIP: To play with younger children, turn over two cards and leave them face up. Take turns turning over two cards until a match is found. Read “Baker, Baker, Cookie Maker” by Linda Hayward … Available here. Dress up like a cookie baker! … dressing up makes everything more fun Make an apron. I purchased a blank child-sized apron from Michaels. About $5 before coupon. Several options available here. Use fabric markers or sharpies to decorate the apron! I wrote my preschooler’s name. She decorated it then added her own drawings. I love it! Make a chef hat. I used this tutorial from Cara at The First Grade Parade. Scroll to the bottom of her post for great pictures. Cut a piece of white cardstock in half, lengthwise. Tape together to make a long band (she uses a sentence strip). Use one piece of white tissue paper. We didn’t have white, so pink tissue paper worked just as well The tutorial is great, but in short, pinch and tape the bottom edge of the tissue paper to half the paper headband … kind of like gathering. Measure the headband around your head and tape. Finish pinching and taping the top edge of the tissue paper to the other half of the headband. Poof the tissue paper and wear! Make Cookies! … now that we’re all fancied up with an apron and chef hat, we’re ready to bake some cookies. Take it slow. Make sure you have plenty of time to let your preschooler help scoop and measure and stir (and lick!) Let them help find the 1 cup and 1/2 cup. Let them try cracking the egg and measuring the vanilla. It will definitely make a bigger mess, but it makes great memories too This is our favorite cookie recipe: Chocolate Chip Cookie Counting … an easy game to play while you’re waiting for the cookies to bake. Cut out 10 circles from brown foam craft paper. On one side, use a sharpie to write “1 one” and “2 two” … etc, up to “10 ten” On the opposite side, draw the matching number of dots. Help your preschooler arrange the cookies from 1 to 10. Give her a bowl of chocolate chips. Let her put one chocolate chip on each dot. I asked my 4-year-old to point to the cookie that showed how old she was. Which cookie shows how old your brother is? Which cookie has 5 chocolate chips. Which one has 7? We did a lot of counting
This was our third letter-of-the-week unit, and we had a lot of fun! Check out the links below to revisit similar themes, or keep scrolling to see what we did this week: Letter C - 2012 C is for Car - 2015 Books We borrowed two books from the library this week, combined with two from our own collection. The favorites were of course the mouse books (notice we don't even have a cover for "If You Give a Mouse a Cookie" because it is so well-loved). I was surprised at how many times we read "Mr. Cookie Baker" too though. It is a perfect length for the attention span of a 2.5 year old. Simple, relatable text. Letter C - Fine Motor For our letter recognition activity this week, we placed miniature cookies (the cereal) onto our dot marker sheet. This she followed through until the end. And afterward, she enjoyed her new snack! Cookie Craft I had intended to paint for this week's craft, but realized I didn't have any brown! My paint stash from Honey Pot and Little M&M's younger days is running low so it's time to replenish. In the meantime, I cut up little strips of brown paper, and supplied Sweet E with some glue and a foam brush. We painted the plate with glue, then stuck on some brown pieces of paper. She had to climb onto the couch, and reach over the arm of it to complete it, of course! Almost finished! Next we glued on some black circles to represent chocolate chips. She pretended to eat it, and thought it was very silly! Here is the finished product! Playdough - Big vs. Small + Counting + Pretend Play We pretended to make cookies with our playdough today! First we rolled it out. Then we cut out shapes, both big and small circles, which sparked a dialogue about recognizing sizes. Which cookie cutter is the biggest? Which cookies are small? Etc. I gave her the smallest tray I could find in my kitchen, for her to place her cookies onto. Then she added chocolate chips (beads). We took the time to count how many were on each cookie. This was great math practice! We pretended to put the tray in the oven, and once it was all done baking we removed each with a little turner from her play kitchen. After putting it all away, she wanted to play again! So we made another tray of cookies! It was a fun activity, with so much learning throughout. Feeding Cookie Monster - Shapes I printed out a cookie monster face, colored it (Sweet E helped, if you can see some purple there), cut it out and taped it to a small sand pail. I also found a basic shapes worksheet online, added some chocolate chip clipart to it, colored each one light brown, and cut them out. While I did all this, Sweet E practiced her scissor skills on my scraps. Now we were ready to play! Here he is from the side: Using my best cookie monster voice, I said things like, "Me love cookies! Can you find a heart cookie?" She would find the right shape, and put it right into his mouth! She LOVED this game! We honestly went through the entire batch of shape cookies three times in a row! "Num num num!" I kept this out for the rest of the week, and we played it often! Little M&M and Honey Pot even enjoyed playing it with her too! Baking Cookies - Kitchen Science We had to end our week by actually making cookies! We made the dough early in the morning, then rolled it out, just as we did with playdough. Then we chilled it in the refrigerator for a bit. She loves to have a taste of the dough when we're done! Later, we cut out shapes from the rolled dough. We chose the Mickey Mouse cutters, because they are big and easy to hold! And cute too! Before baking, we scattered some sprinkles onto them, and pressed on some mini M&Ms! Here they are! YUM! Sweet E was so happy to taste her cookies. She had helped from start to finish! And although these were big cookies, she had the whole piece! Next week we move onto the letter D! See you then! * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
This cookie craft is so simple and fun to make. Great for practicing fine motor skills too. Make is a C is for cookie craft easily.
Paula's Preschool and Kindergarten is a blog about learning and teaching with young children.
Now that Owen is 4, we are getting a little more academic with our preschool efforts! He is interested in learning letters, and starting to understand that letters have sounds and make words. I decided that it would be fun (and easy) to do a “letter of the week” this year. Last week, we did […]
1) Toy Car Painting from The Measured Mom: My two loves his toy cars, so I knew today would be a lot of fun. Roll the car tires in paint a...
With the free printable templates this Letter C Cookie Craft is an easy project for preschoolers to create when they are learning all about the letter C.
Explore Leo Reynolds' 198757 photos on Flickr!
This simple cupcake craft is a fun paper craft for kids of any age. Download the free craft template, cut out the pieces and put it together. Then dig into your kids' craft bag for whatever you want to decorate the cupcake craft. It can even be turned into a letter c craft...c is for cupcake. Great for preschoolers or toddlers.
Check out this fun c is for cat craft made from a chocolate chip cookie. All those c's make for an educational and yummy time in the kitchen.
With this worksheet, you can use it to address the letter C, the sound letter C makes (cookie) as well as incorporate math/counting with the dots in each cookie! I've used dot markers to incorporate fine motor skills as well!
There are some things we just have to do. Making cookies for the letter C is one of them! What a fun "have-to-do" it is! We did two cookie projects this week. For the first, I spread peanut butter on graham crackers, and the children used cookies and candies to turn it into a "camera". Another day we made cookies from scratch! As always, we started by washing our hands. The children helped me a few at a time, but everyone had a turn to do something. They measured and poured, cracked eggs, sifted flour, and mixed. To make our cookies C shaped, the children rolled the dough in their hands to make a snake shape, then bent it on the cookie sheet to form the letter. It was hard to not eat them right away! I baked them as the children got up from nap, and we had warm cookies and cold milk for snack. :-) Like Cookie Monster says, "C is for cookie, that's good enough for me!" " Cookie, cookie, cookie starts with C!"
Never planned to homeschool, now wouldn't trade it for the world
This Carnival Letter A cookie cutter is ideal for creating unique and custom cookies for baking gifts, cake tops, party favors, and other occasions. It can also be used for cutting fondant. Every cookie cutter is 3D-printed with 100% food-safe plastic. Material and Color: Each cookie cutter is 3D printed with pure white food-safe PLA plastic. The actual color may vary. Care: Hand washes only. This cookie cutter is not dishwasher-safe. Avoid washing it with water temperature higher than 60 degrees (C) or 140 degrees (F). Size: The measurements are of the longest span (either horizontally or vertically). The depth of the cookie cutter is 3/4". Warranty: All of our cookie cutters are backed by our complimentary one-year warranty. Cutter is broken (although our cutters rarely do)? No worries -- let us know and we replace your broken cutters for free! (Shipping costs may apply.) Shop with confidence :)
This free preschool alphabet cookie activity will be a perfect fit for practicing letter identification and tracing with your child at home.
This C is for Cupcake preschool craft is perfect for your letter of the week lesson plans. It also pairs well with If You Give a Cat a Cupcake!
My favorite storybook version of this classic children's song, takes place in the Southwest. I got it years ago with classroom book order p...