Can do cat hat game




















Thanks for the giveaway…we have several Dr. I love just finding new activities every year for my kiddos! They both love Dr. Seuss books and we read them frequently, but doing crafts and coloring pages just adds to their experiences!

Our favorite way to celebrate Dr. Seuss is to read as many Dr. Seuss books as we can and even a few videos! My oldest son shares Dr. My kids love reading all of the stories!

We celebrate along with their school celebrations with green eggs and ham and making Cat in the Hat headwear! We read them! My grandmother bought my children a wonderful collection of his books and we will read them to celebrate! We love to learn facts about Dr. Seuss and see how his life impacted his books. We also eat green eggs and ham — they taste better than they look! We celebrate at school by having cupcakes for his birthday and reading Dr. Seuss books during story time for the whole week!

There are so many to choose from! I love taking my kids to local Dr Suess parties! We love to read Dr. Seuss books and look for fun foods and craft projects on pinterest which relate to them! My school reads the high school students a book a day and we allow the students to dress up 2 days. We are at an Alternative School so many of these students have never had anyone read to them at all. Thank you. I grew up with Dr.

Suess books — I am so glad that they are still around to read to my children. He has some of the wittiest little sayings. It would be fun to celebrate by making some Seussy crafts and maybe cooking up some green eggs and ham! We actually like to make green eggs and ham. I have done this for all 4 of my kids over the years. I love Dr. Seuss quotes!! They make such memorable phrases to add in cards or notes.

Today was fun. Tomorrow is another one. We taught all three of our boys how to read and rhyme with these books.

My favorite way to celebrate is reading all his books. Favorite of ours is Green Eggs and Ham. Gotta love Dr. I have memorized Dr Seuss books, me and the kids will recite them for fun. LOVE Dr. Seuss week!

Seuss books. Some consider me a little extreme when it comes to celebrating his birthday. I am a Pre-K teacher and have 12 year old students in my class.

They all seem to love Dr. Seuss as much as I do, so I have put a lot of thought into our celebration this year. Tomorrow, when they arrive, they will be greeted by the Cat in the Hat Me, Mrs. Rodriguez in a costume. They will have a Happy Birthday Dr. Seuss color sheet to come in and begin working on as their morning work. We will read every Dr. Seuss book that I have in my classroom, however we will start with the favorites that have wonderful activities to accommodate.

First I like to read The Cat in the Hat. After reading we start with a simple question quiz to promote higher order thinking and promote comprehension. I will attach it to a paper head band and they will get to be the cat in the hat for the remainder of the day. We are studying rhymes right now so I have a template for the -at word families on each stripe of the hat.

So after it is colored, we are going to come up with 5 -at words to complete our hats before wearing and fill in the beginning sound letter. When this is completed, I put a blanket down on the floor for the background and duplicate the balancing act of the cat in the hat for a photo opportunity.

I place the fish bowl, umbrella, picture of cake, ball, etc on the ground around the child laying down. After the items are arranged around them to look like the scene in the story, I get up on a stool, and take their picture from above. I then print them each a picture of their day as the cat in the hat. They wear their hat that they created themselves for this picture as well. Next I like to read Green Eggs and Ham. For many kids, the idea of green eggs is completely disgusting. So after reading, we break open a carton of eggs, counting each one that drops into the bowl and discuss their appearance.

We then add green food coloring after discussing what might hypothetically happen to the eggs. When they are fully cooked, each child gets a plate of green eggs and ham to try. We then graph the results of who likes green eggs and who does not.

This incorporates our math in with the science and language arts. The ABC Book is the next one on my list. I like to read this story and of course answer the quiz questions I have, in order to promote comprehension. I write the letters on the board uppercase and lowercase for the children to see one at a time , and the children copy the letter on the board onto their table in the shaving cream. This promotes hands on learning through the senses. After we have made it from Aa-Zz, they will have a contest to see who can order magnetic refrigerator letters in order from A-Z the quickest.

After this is completed, they will complete a missing letters page. There is an uppercase and lowercase version that they will complete by filling in the missing letters. This will be completed as a table group assignment. Doing both of the activities promotes the kinesthetic or hands on learning and reinforces it with a fine motor skills handwriting worksheet. There are uppercase fish and lowercase fish that they child must draw a line and match the uppercase letters to their lowercase match.

This promotes letter recognition as well as being able to match the pairs together. After these books and crafts have been completed, we then read through the remainder of Dr. Seuss books in my classroom. This winds down our day of celebrating Dr. Seuss day with my kiddos tomorrow and hope you are as well. Have some fun with your students in celebration of Dr. Such cute rhymes! The quotes make good wall art too.

We all celebrate Dr. I love to read the Dr. Seuss books and do simple things like food coloring to make Green Eggs, and ham. I celebrate Dr. Seuss by sharing my birthday on the same day as him! We celebrate by reading his books all week long and incorporating art projects along with each book we read, as well as a theme dinner :.

I love all of these ideas, especially the Thing 1 and Thing 2 hand prints and the costume! I plan on reading Dr. Seuss books all week as bedtime stories. We all love Dr. Seuss at our house, we celebrate by reading a book, usually Green Eggs and Ham and we will sometimes make Seusscakes cupcakes! We also celebrate with the librarian at school. My favorite way to celebrate Dr. Seuss would be sharing his wonderful quotes with friends through notes or online posts. You have feet in your shoes.

You can steer yourself, any direction you choose. My son loves Dr Seuss books to read and would love to celebrate his birthday by making hats. I have a Dr. Seuss themed 1st grade classroom so we spend an entire week celebrating his birthday.

Each day we read at least one of Dr. We actually do a few of the activities on here in preparation for his birthday. We do the a cat-in-the-hat craft and write rhyming words on the stripes. We also do the thing-one and thing-two handprint craft. We do a couple of writing prompts after different books are read throughout the week complete with original illustrations. On Dr. Either as the Cat or as Sally We have a guest reader, my dad that comes and reads The Sneetches to the class. After that he hands out a Dr.

Seuss activity packet, pencil and book mark they may use the rest of the day. In the packet is biographical information on Dr. Seuss that we read during reading groups, writing prompts, rhyming activities, and math activities we do throughout the day all focused around different Dr. Seuss stories. Once we finish this week my students begin writing their own stories. Every year, I send in red and white frosted cupcakes for his class, and they love it!

My two-year-old daughter loves watching the show on PBS and reading the interactive book on my tablet. We celebrate with green eggs and ham, and a few favorite Dr. Seuss stories while wearing the Dr. Seuss striped hat and cuddling up to the giant Sam I am. I used to teach elementary, hence the fun items! Now I teach high school so I celebrate with my son!

Seuss pin, and striped hat of course, and carry around a Dr. Seuss book or two, just in case some of my patients are up for a quick story! My favorite is tacky day. Thank you! We always find a new Dr. And the kids celebrate at school with a Dr. Seuss read-in which is fun as a parent because I always get to be one of the readers. This game teaches and reinforces early reading skills: children look for letters that form words and learn to recognize words as they see them paired with pictures.

The game also features counting, matching, and introductory strategy skills. Since the game is not over until the last player reaches Finish, every player stays involved in the game until the very end.

When the last player reaches Finish, the player with the most Picture Cards wins the game. The player with the most Picture Cards wins the game. Parents' Rules Summary Players take turns spinning the spinner and moving along the board from Start to Finish. Momo the muse. The original concept for the game involved a magic cat making a soup that was so good, it raised the dead. Connecting soup to Halloween proved too abstract, so the team shifted to the idea of a wizard school.

This opened the door to a more robust world filled with interesting characters and paw-some themes. We had lots of fun ideas for the resident foe of each level, including a chef ghost, a venn diagram ghost, and a big whistle ghost that summons other spirits.

Early mock-up of gameplay.



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