A guide for using our resources
Children will describe the Arctic habitat as they follow a walrus through its day.
Social Studies Focus: habitats, animal adaptations
Simple, spectacular ideas to boost your lessons.
Paired Text: Una morsa en mi jardín by Alex Nogués Otero
Paired Text: Una morsa en mi jardín by Alex Nogués Otero
- When a walrus shows up at this family's backyard they try to make it feel comfortable. But it eats tons of fish, and needs a proper place to sleep and take a bath.
- A fun book that shows why animals feel comfortable in their own habitats.
Draw the Word: colmillos
Draw the Word: colmillos
- Kids learned the word colmillos from the issue. Help make the word “stick” by having kids draw what the word means.
- Use our Dibuja la palabra skill sheet or have kids draw the word colmillos in a word journal.
Hands-on Activity: Títeres de morsa
Hands-on Activity: Títeres de morsa
Skill: art, oral language
Materials: brown paper lunch bags; two precut large brown paper circles and one small black paper circle per puppet; googly eyes; craft sticks; glue; crayons
- Give each child a lunch bag and a set of paper shapes. Have kids glue the brown circles to the bottom edge of the bag so they overlap and hang down from the edge.
- Then have them glue on the black circle for the nose and draw whiskers.
- To complete the walrus’s face, have them glue on googly eyes.
- Last, have kids glue or tape craft sticks to the back of the brown circles for tusks!
- Kids can use their puppets to act out the walrus’s day, using information from the issue.