PRE-K4 February Curriculum
Valentine’s Day: January 30- February 13th
Colors: February 15-17th & February 27 & 29th
Religion: (please see February’s Religion subpage for each day’s specific religion topic)
God does all that He can to help us whenever possible.
In turn, God wants us to give freely to others, without hesitation.
Even as young child, there is much you can do to help others.
God wants us to show our support by not only helping others, but by praying for others.
Thematic Concepts & Topics:
Valentine’s Day:
We celebrate Valentine’s Day by showering our friends and family with love and affection.
Red and pink are the customary colors of the day and we exchange hearts to let others know we love them.
Valentine’s Day is a wonderful time to say thank you to God for all of the love he has given us through our family, friends and from Him.
Colors:
There are three primary colors: red, blue, yellow.
Secondary colors are made by mixing two primary colors together (red + blue=purple).
Brown is made by mixing all 3 primary colors together.
Black is a mixture of all colors.
Tertiary colors are made by mixing a primary color with a secondary color (e.g. yellow-green).
Our sight sense uses light to see different colors.
Circle Time Activities & Games:
Playing “Pass the Heart Around”- similar to “Musical Squares”
Playing “Heart Numbers”. This game involves each child finding the friend who has the half a heart that matches the number on that child’s heart (e.g., the #4 half goes with the half that has 4 dots on it).
Going on a color scavenger hunt that requires each child to collect certain color objects.
Having children bring me the color cards needed to make a secondary color (e.g., “I want green. Who has two colors I can use to make green?”).
Following the directions (using our color wands) in Hap Palmer’s “Colors” song.
Science and Sensory Activities:
Mixing red and white to make the color pink
Melting two primary colored ice cubes together to create a new, secondary color
Deciding how to make green milk and tasting it- yum!
Engaging in “Color Unmixing”, a process we’ll use to separate secondary colors back into primary colors
Making tertiary colors using shave cream and food coloring
Adding secondary or tertiary colors to homemade play-doh
Math Activities:
Playing “Memory” with Valentine cards
Estimating how many conversation hearts are in a jar
Matching wallpaper hearts
Matching numbered hearts to numbered clothes pins
Sorting hearts by color and size (smallest to largest)
Fine-Motor Activities: (fine-motor activities develop small muscles in the fingers and hands, as well as improve eye-hand coordination)
Making hearts out of Valentine play-doh
Tracing heart pictures
Finding and cutting out matching pairs of heart pictures
Sorting through red confetti to find foam hearts
Cutting out pieces of “heart puzzles” and using them to create a completed puzzle
Learning to cut out hearts by drawing them on the fold of a sheet of paper then cutting
Writing Valentine letters and mailing them in our class mailbox
Making Valentine pictures using valentine stamps and stamp pads
Gross-Motor Activities: (gross-motor skills include whole body, large-muscle movements)
Valentine Heart Matching Game (children find friend who has a matching heart and lines up with him/her)