• Home
  • About/Contact
    • About Charity
    • Marketing Inquiries
    • Reviews
    • Guest Blogging
    • Disclosure Info
    • Contact Us
  • Learn
    • Video Library
    • Webinars
  • Resources
    • 500 Fans
    • TBTS/TpT
    • QR Codes
  • Blog
  • The OC Magazine
  • The OC Store
    • Your Cart
Subscribe blog updates
  • Home
  • Categories
  • Tags
  • Search
  • Archives
« Do You Have Pinterest Frenzie?
Do You Have Pinterest Frenzie?
Win some free Sticky Notes! »
Win some free Sticky Notes!
  • Subscribe to updates
  • Print
  • PDF
  • Bookmark |

Monster Caps Craft and Graphing Freebie

Tabitha Carro
Tabitha Carro
After six years of teaching kindergarten, I am now a 4th grade Spanish immersion
User is currently offline
Oct 10 Guest Blogs
Tweet

 

First of all, I just want to give a big thanks to Charity for allowing me the opportunity to be a guest blogger and to have the chance to share my ideas with a larger audience. ¡Muchas gracias, OC Blog!

 

Now, let's get to those cute, little guys up there! The other day I ran across an amazing blog called Crafts by Amanda where Amanda Formaro transformed simple, ordinary bottle caps to adorable, fun monsters. Although I'm a fourth grade teacher, I was determined to make them with my students and turn them into a great learning experience in math.

 

So, here's what I did:

 

1) First of all, no need to reinvent the wheel. Please check out Amanda's fantastic post on what you need to make these little guys.

 

2) She explains briefly about how to make them into magnets, but I'll show you how I did that part. I used krazy clue in the pictures, but I think it's best to maybe have a parent volunteer do the magnet part the day before with just some form of tacky glue.

 

First, I put a small ball of modeling clay inside the middle of the cap and secured with glue (I tried filling the whole cap with modeling clay, but it was too heavy for the magnets to hold.)

 

 

Then, I cut a small cardboard square from a rice treat box and put it on top (necessary? I'm not sure, but that was in Amanda's instructions.)

 

 

 

Lastly, I glued the magnet on top of the square, and now the caps were ready for the students. (The magnets were cut from 1" adhesive magnetic strips that I bought at Wally World, also.)

 

 

 

3) I put all the materials on a work table and had the students come in small groups while the rest worked on independent activities.

 

 

I will tell you, in order to do the graphing freebie I'm attaching with this post, you must have wiggly eyes! That is the crucial step. I purchased these from Walmart, and they have lots of different colors, sizes and designs.

 

 

This was more than enough for 37 students.

 

4) Now, you'll see in this picture that my students have a lot of gravity-defying hairdos (The monster with the Bruno Mars do was made by a student who actually had that fuzz piece in his book bag for some reason. I love it!). So, it was a little tiresome, but they would position the chenille stems first, and then I would attach them with hot glue.

 

 

 

5) Then, the students stuck them on our whiteboard and wrote their names by their monster. On their own, they started giving their monsters nicknames, which I found very adorable and will now incorporate into a lapbook that we will be doing this week with these little cutie-patoodies.

 

 

 

6) So, finally we can get to the educational piece! This week, my students are going to graph the number of eyes each monster has. They will first do tally marks, a bar graph, change the scale increments of the bar graph from 1 to 2, and then answer questions about the data from their graph. I know most teachers who would attempt an activity like this are in the younger grades, so I've also created a simpler graphing sheet for them. And for any dual language teachers, there is a Spanish graph included since that is the language in which I teach.

 

Click the worksheet below to download the free graphs:

 

 

I don't teach writing, but I'm sure this activity would make for a great creative writing activity, also.

 

Thanks so much for reading and stopping by the OC blog! Happy Teaching!

Tags: monsters, freebies, FlapJack, graphs, graphing, free, bottle caps
  • « Do You Have Pinterest Frenzie?
  • Win some free Sticky Notes! »
  • Related Posts

Related Posts

  • Spring Has Almost Sprung! (Folding Book Freebies)

    Hello, everyone! Here in South Carolina it is really warming up, so before I take a ride with my husband to the beautiful town of Charleston, I wanted...
    By Tabitha Carro on - Mar 10 in Guest Blogs
  • A Fellow Fan Freebie!

    Hope everyone is well today!   OK - at the bottom of the page is the link for your free eBook from yesterday's Collaboration Wednesday question abou...
    By Charity Preston on - Aug 18 in Guest Blogs
  • Fundraiser Freebie!

    For those of you who may be new to The OC Blog, I want to personally welcome you!  Every Wednesday evening on The OC Blog Facebook Fan Page, we do a...
    By Charity Preston on - Aug 25 in Guest Blogs

Comments

© 2011-2015 PEN Group Online, Inc.

FREE Newsletter! Freebies!

Receive

New Digital Magazine!

Click to read the newest issue!

 

Grab The OC Blog Button!

The OC Blog Button

Watch It Now!

Follow the OC Blog!

Follow this blog

Visit Our Sister Sites!

 

 

Classroom freebies

Classroom DIY

 

 

 

 

 

Classroom Freebies Too

 

 

 

 

Proud Contributor of...

 

Blogging Tips!

Click on your Fairy Blogmother below to find all posts related to blogging!  Enjoy!

© 2011-2015 PEN Group Online, Inc.