I find that at the end of any holiday we celebrate at home or in my classroom, I often have a variety of different objects left over. A fun and simple way to use up those holiday left-overs is to invite your students to make their very own “Holiday in a Box!”…
To make a holiday in a box, you will need a box to start with. Â In the past, we have used shoe-box lids and cardboard jewelry boxes. Â This year, we used some left-over square gift boxes. We used both the bottom and the top of each box as a holiday box…
Oh, and to go along with our holiday boxes, we read the book “There Was an Old Lady Who Swallowed A Bell!” by Lucille Colandro. Â This book ties in nicely since it seems the old lady likes to swallow many of the things we used in our holiday boxes…
To fill our holiday boxes, we used items that we had on hand like bows, bells, candy canes, ribbon, ornaments, and glue. You can modify the objects you collect and set out to represent the holiday(s) your are celebrating in your own classroom…
To make the holiday boxes, the children set their boxes up at one table and made a large puddle of glue into the box…
Next, the children tilted their boxes different directions until the glue covered the entire bottom of the box…
I would say that the amount of glue varied in each box but we added enough so that the holiday objects would sit down into the glue just a little bit…
Once the children added the glue to their boxes, then the children went to the other table to select what they wanted to put inside their boxes. Â To slow the children down just a bit and to get them to think about what they wanted in their boxes, I told the children they could only select one item at a time from the table to put in their box then they could go back again and select another and so on…
As the children added things to the glue in their holiday boxes, they took their time to decide where they wanted the items to lay. In other words, they made their own designs…
We have done these types of glue boxes before so my students have a good grasp on what it means to take time to think about where they want things to go in their boxes rather than just rushing around and tossing things any old place in the box…
Once the children added their items to their holiday boxes, we set them aside to dry for a few days. Â The length of time for drying will depend on how much glue the children used to begin with. Â I find that if I set the boxes up where they are not laying completely flat on the floor, they will dry faster…
Here are a couple of our completed boxes…
And this is a set of our holiday in a box after they were almost completely dry (a few still had a little bit of wet glue dripping when we set them up on the shelf). Once the holiday boxes are all up where we can see them, we can play the “I Spy” game!…
Links to Grow on
Here are a few other glue boxes we made…
Math Glue Boxes by Teach Preschool
Nature Glue Boxes by Teach Preschool
And this is the holiday boxes made by The Seeds Network last year…
Seasonal Shadow Boxes by The Seeds Network
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