How do Aeroplanes Fly? by Aditi Sarawagi and Lavanya Karthik is a book that will give a child's imagination wings!
Sarla wished she could fly high like an eagle or like an aeroplane. Of course you can fly, said her new teacher. Sarla shares all that she has learnt about flight and aeroplanes in this delightful book.
ACTIVITIES
Cargo Planes
(Source: http://kidsactivitiesblog.com/77853/stem-paper-airplane-challenge)
Resources
Construction Paper
Cellotape
A handful of coins of different sizes and weight
A doorway
Whistle
What to do
Ask each child to create a paper aeroplane using the YouTube tutorial shared here:
Once their plane is ready ask them to stick coins of different size and weigh to it using tape (this is why you need to use construction paper and not regular A4 paper)
Decide upon a start line and mark it with masking tape or even a long rope. Make sure it’s opposite a doorway!
Ask the children to line up together at the ‘starting line’.
When you blow the whistle they all launch their planes.
The plane that glides the farthest wins!
Straw Rockets
(Source: http://lifeasmama.com/10-rainy-day-activities-your-kids-will-love/6/)
Resources
Drinking straws
Paper
Glue or cellotape
Scissors
Crayons or markers.
What to do
Cut down pieces of paper and decorate to your desire.
Then lightly fold around the end of a straw and tape the paper together (not to the straw) like a cap
Then just blow! Kids can see how far each can blow their rockets or come up with their own games.
Target Practice
(Source: http://lifeasmama.com/10-rainy-day-activities-your-kids-will-love/7/)
This is a variation of activity 1, but a little more tricky!
Resources
Paper
Large sheet of thick board paper.
A doorway
Whistle
Scissors
Masking tape.
What to do
Ask each child to create a paper aeroplane using the YouTube tutorial shared here: https://youtu.be/qhuRw88A-8c
Cut out different sized holes on the board paper and hang it over an open door using masking tape
Ask children to line up at a pre-determined ‘starting point’ with their paper aeroplanes.
Blow the whistle. Kids must try and get their planes through the holes on the board sheet!
If you have some fun activities based on 'How Do Aeroplanes Fly' share them with us in the comments section below or on Twitter or Facebook.
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Basha and Sainabi are in a panic. Ammi is ill, and Saira aunty has just announced that she is arriving for lunch - with 23 other people! Budding chef Basha thinks he can cook Ammi's Dum Biryani, but her recipe only makes enough for 4 people. Math wiz Sainabi jumps in to help, declaring that she knows how to turn a 4-person recipe to a 24-person recipe. Do the siblings succeed in serving up a truly Dum Dum-a-Dum biryani?
ACTIVITIES
Ball Toss!
Resources
A ball
How to play
Have the children stand around in a circle.
Toss the ball to the next child, or any child if you want to make it mad.
Say a food ingredient while tossing the ball (keep this open across languages, for eg: haldi will do).
Every time the ball is tossed the child who catches it has to say the name of an ingredient.
First child to repeat or blank is out.
Play till you get 3 winners.
Weave-A-Story
Resources
Paper
Pens
What to do
Put up a picture or a first sentence as a writing prompt.
Prompts: My pet kangaroo was hungry and all I had in the fridge was a pod of garlic….
More Prompts: We, my sister and I, were making our first ‘all-by-ourselves’ cake for my mother’s birthday. What started out as a special day soon turned bizarre…to say the least…
And more: Remember the summer break when we managed to catch the ‘milk stealing thief’ of our colony.
Divide the children into small groups and have them create the story from that prompt.
Each child takes a turn writing one sentence to add to the story and passes it on to the next.
Keep it going in the group until they have finished it (maybe helpful to have a length or a time limit so that the stories don’t go toooo out of control)
When all the groups have finished, ask a volunteer to come up and read the story out!
This isn't a spoon! it's a...
Materials needed: A bunch of kitchen utensils (10): ladle/spoon, pressure cooker whistle, lid of a pan, fork, wooden spatula, lemon squeezer
What to do
Divide the group into clusters of 5 kids each
Hand over 2 utensils to each group.
Give the teams 15 minutes of preparation time to devise a play and use the utensils as creative props; use them for creative purposes other than their regular use. Is it a ladle or a microphone?
Other Teams and you act as judges and award points to each other.
Team with the highest points wins!
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We are excited to mark International Day of the Girl 2021 and World Space Week with the launch of a very special collaboration with mEducation Alliance, #InspirationSTEM, a campaign designed to celebrate and support young girls to pursue STEM education and careers — including those focused on space.
With this initiative, StoryWeaver hopes to inspire engagement with STEM themes using relatable storybooks, encouraging girls to continue aspiring.
We are thrilled to kickstart this campaign with ‘Gul in Space’. A level 3 storybook written by Richa Jha and illustrated by Lavanya Karthik.
What would you like to do on your birthday? How about taking a walk in OUTER SPACE! Here’s a story that will make you jump with joy… and if there’s no gravity under you, you might just stay exactly where you are! Get ready to explore space with Astronaut Gul.
Gul, the protagonist, is a young girl who dreams about going to space. When an opportunity presents itself in front of her, she takes it without waiting for any permission from anyone. Her actions are inspiring to children, encouraging them to invest in their dreams. The poetic language in the book captures the sheer joy and excitement experienced by someone who manages to fulfil their dream, subtly but effectively invoking the readers. The illustrations further connect readers to the concepts and way of life about space.
Read ‘Gul in Space’ here.
Be a part of this year-long engagement with StoryWeaver and the #InspirationSTEM campaign!
For more details about the #InspirationSTEM campaign, visit the mEducation Alliance page here.
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