Showing posts with label Lesson Plans. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lesson Plans. Show all posts

CCD Teacher Resources

Whether your church calls it CCD (which stands for "Confraternity of Christian Doctrine") or just plain 'ol RE for "Religious Education", educating children about the faith is obviously a big passion of mine! When you sign up to be a CCD teacher, they provide you with a book and probably some outlines of what you should be covering with your class, but sometimes we're still left looking for more. 


My favorite online resource for CCD teachers is a site called The Catholic Toolbox. There are so many free resources for Catholics over on this site that I asked her to round up all the best CCD teacher posts to get us started, and her's what she sent to me:

 
Planning Ahead for CCD- What should be done before CCD starts
 
What Every Catechist Needs to Know- Here are a few things that I think every catechist should know about or do.
 
 
 
 

 

 
 
Celebrating the Mass Lesson Plans (for the new missal

There's so much on her site I could never list it all! Go check out the Catholic Toolbox, and go ahead and subscribe while you're at it. Otherwise, you'll be missing out on tons of  free Catholic resources! ;-)


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Catholic ABC's Preschool Curriculum - the free (abridged) version

*Check out my new Catholic ABC's (The Book!), and find more than 50% new content! It's easy to use, and all inclusive!* :-)

I am so excited that many of you have chosen for Catholic ABC's to be a part of your homeschooling curriculum this year! This post will tell you everything you need to know about how to use the curriculum, what supplies you need, and how to find what you're looking for. Even though Catholic ABC's is now available in a much more complete form as a book, I wanted to leave this older and shorter version up for anyone who was in need of a program that couldn't afford the book.



This is a Catholic curriculum for preschoolers that can be used at home, or with a co-op. However, I'm posting this here to be used by individuals or non-profit groups only! It is great if you link to this, but do not republish this information anywhere else. A more complete version of this program is now available as a book.

This preschool curriculum will help them to thrive on routine. The crafts will help improve their fine motor skills, and serve as reminders for reviewing what they've learned. By the end of the year they will have been exposed to numbers 1-5, every letter in the alphabet, and many saints and Catholic prayers.

We are starting with numbers 1-5, then moving onto the alphabet- learning one letter or number per week. By the end of the school year, we will make it through all the letters.

~Supplies Needed for Teaching Catholic ABC's~
first quarter
  • A Good Shepherd Set (You can make it yourself. This is the only unit study available online. You'll find 5 all new unit studies in Catholic ABC's The Book! )
  • A picture of the Good Shepherd (Print one)
  • A set of magnetic alphabet letters (You can get these at the Dollar Tree)
  • A Magnetic Dry Erase Board and marker (Also available at the Dollar Tree)
  • 2 bags (You can use paper lunch sacks or sew something fancy- it's up to you!)
  • A package of cross stickers

You will still need materials for the crafts each week, but these are the things you'll be using every week.

This program is going to be broken into quarters. The curriculum for the first quarter is below. This is the "script" you follow each week. Every Wednesday I will provide the letter or number of the week, and the coordinating craft, memory verse, and saint. Click here to see the newest post

Your preschooler(s) may not be able to handle all of this in one day, especially at the beginning of the year. You can always add more of this in as the year goes along, or break the activities up over several days. What the teacher says to the children is in red. The children's responses are in blue- you just help them with the responses until they are responding on their own.

First Quarter Catholic Preschool Script- The Good Shepherd

Begin class every week by singing this song 
(Tune London Bridge)

Can you stretch up to the stars, to the stars, to the stars? 
Can you stretch up to the stars? Up towards heaven!
Can you bend and touch your toes, touch your toes, touch your toes?
Can you bend and touch your toes? Now be seated!
(stretch up to each side and all round during first verse.
Bend over and stretch towards your toes for the second.
At the end be seated and ready for the lesson.)

~Opening~
-"Good Morning _____
-Good morning _____! 
-"How do we start our day?" 
-(With a prayer!) 
-"That's right! And how do we start a prayer?"
-(Wish the sign of the cross!)  
This is when you put a cross sticker on their right hand. Explain that this is their "right hand" and their "sign of the cross hand". 
-"Show me your sign of the cross hand! In the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit." (As you sign the cross)

(Pray this prayer together)
Good Morning, Dear Jesus
This day is for you.
We ask you to bless all we think (point to head) say (point to mouth) and do (palms reach up).
Saint _____, Pray for us. (Insert saint of the week here, which will be provided each Wednesday)
Amen.
(sign of the cross)

-"The Lord be with you."
- And also with you. 

~Good Shepherd Lesson~ 

Show the Good Shepherd picture. 
-"Who is this?" (The Good Shepherd or Jesus)
-"That's right, and he loves his sheep very much, just like he loves you!"
 
Now bring out your Good Shepherd set and use it to act out the story for the little ones. All the directions for making and using the Good Shepherd set are included in the Good Shepherd post. You will use this story for the first quarter of the year.

~Jesus Loves You~

Now look at each child in your group, and make eye contact. Then say...
-"(name of child), Jesus loves you." Do this for each child in the group separately.
-"Jesus loves everyone! Lets sing our Jesus Loves Me song! Show me your ME fingers." (hold up pointer finger and have them do the same. Tell them to point to themselves each time we say "me" in the song.)
-Sing Jesus Loves Me, waving your finger around for the length of the song and pointing to yourself each time you say "me".

Jesus loves me this I know,
For the Bible tells me so,
Little ones to him belong,
they are weak but he is strong.
Yes, Jesus loves me!
Yes, Jesus loves me!
Yes, Jesus love me!
The Bible tells me so.

~Letter of the Day~

-"Now we're going to learn about our ABC's! Lets sing the alphabet song!"
-Sing the alphabet song
-Review previous letters and what they stood for (the craft you made with them) You can draw the letter on the dry erase board, and ask the child to recall the craft. This will be easier for them if you have kept their crafts displayed somewhere in your home.
- "Today we're going to learn about the letter __. It looks like this." (draw it on the board; upper case and lower case). "And it sounds like this. __ ."
-"Now we're going to sing the alphabet song again, but we'll stop at the letter__!" (insert letter of the week)
-"Now lets see how many __'s we can find!" (again, letter of the week)
-Dump all of your magnetic alphabet letters on the floor, and let them search for the correct letter. When they find them, stick them onto the magnetic dry erase board. Tell them they did a good job.
-Sing the Barney clean up song and pick up the remaining letters on the floor. (Clean up, clean up, everybody everywhere. Clean up, clean up, everybody do your share!)

-"Now it's time for our grab bag! In this bag, there are many things that start with the letter __. Lets see what they are!"
-Bring out your grab bag filled with items starting with the letter of the week. If you're teaching multiple children, call their names one at a time and have them come pull something out, and go sit back down. Then have them tell everyone what they got. Repeat the name of the item, stuttering the first sound. If items remain after each child has a turn, the teacher takes them out to show. Avoid items with mixed sounds such as "Ch". Keep the sounds of the letters "typical".
-"______, can you bring your ____ and put it back in the bag?" Continue until all items are back in the bag.
* If you're only teaching one child, they may pull the items from the bag you are holding one at a time and you can talk about each item.*
** If you're looking for ideas of things to put in your grab bag, scan the dictionary**

~Memory Verse~

Your child(ren) may be too small to memorize long phrases, but this is a good way to expose them to the idea of memorizing bible verses, and expose them to different prayers. I will provide a coordinating memory verse of some kind each week. If it is a bible verse, look it up and read it to them straight from the bible. This will give them exposure to the idea of reading from the bible.

-"Here's our memory verse of the week." (hold up the your paper) "Let me read it to you." (run your finger under the words as you read it out loud to them. You can talk about the verse here.
-"This time, you repeat after me..." (read it in small chunks having the children repeat it).
-"Good job everyone! Now lets try it all together. Say it with me!" (read it again slowly and see if they can try to keep up.)
-"Great job!" (set it to the side)
-Implement the week's memory verse each night at the end of your bedtime prayers.

*Due to time restraints, the bible verses were never included on the letter pages. They can be found in Catholic ABC's The Book.*

~Craft~

Now it's time to do your craft. The coordinating crafts for this program are posted each Wednesday. I have now made a directory of the crafts for this program, and update it as I post them. See below and find your current week: *I do provide crafts from A-Z here, but many of the crafts have been improved upon in Catholic ABC's The Book. In the book, you will find lessons to read aloud to your children, which were not included in this free, online version of the program.*

~Closing Time~

- "Alright. Can you show me your "little light" finger?" (hold up your pointer finger) "Who is the light of the world?"
- (Jesus!)
- "And we all have his little light inside of us. Jesus gave us this light when we were baptized. It is called the Hold Spirit. Yes, you have it inside of you. It helps you be good, brave, and happy. You will have this light forever. You will let your light shine for everyone to see how good, brave, and happy you are. You won't hide it away, like under a bushel basket; and you won't let any bad people blow it out! Let's sing about your little light. You can sing and do what I do."
- Sing This Little Light of Mine.

This little light of mine, I'm gonna let it shine!
This little light of mine, I'm gonna let it shine!
This little light of mine, I'm gonna let it shine,
Let it shine, let it shine, let it shine!
(hold up your finger as your "little light")

Hide it under a bushel? No! I'm gonna let it shine!
Hide it under a bushel? No! I'm gonna let it shine!
Hide it under a bushel? No! I'm gonna let it shine,
Let it shine, let it shine, let it shine!
(put one hand over your "light" when you say 'under a bushel' and remove suddenly when you proclaim "no!")

-"We had a good class today! Time for our blessings!"
- Finish with "God bless you and may your angel watch over you today" while you do a sign of the cross on each child's forehead.

That's it!

I'll be adding more to the script for the second quarter, but the letters will continue all year. Definitely print this out and keep it with you during class to refer to.

To read more about this program or to find Catholic ABC's The Book, click here.
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Good Shepherd Learning Activity and Craft

Today I'm posting an activity you can do with children to teach them the story of the Good Shepherd. After you have done it with them several times, they should be able to do it on their own as kind of a Catholic Montessori activity. My preschoolers love this! And the best part is- I'm going to provide you with the necessary printables and directions to make your own set!.


How to use  your Good Shepherd Set-The directions are below. What's in red you say to them, and what's in parenthesis you "act out" for them using the new Good Shepherd set you're going to craft yourself :-)
(Based on John 10 and Luke 15)

"This is the Good Shepherd, and these are his sheep" (hold up coordinating pieces and set them inside the fence as you talk) "The Good Shepherd always enters through the gate." (bring the shepherd in through the gate) "The sheep know his voice. He calls his own sheep by name, and leads them out" (Take out shepherd, and take out the sheep one at a time behind the shepherd. Have him call them by your kid's names. For example: "Come on Lydia!" (bring a sheep out) "Come along Julian!" (bring out the second sheep). "When he has brought out all his own, he goes before them, and his sheep follow him because they know his voice." (Walk the shepherd around to other side, and have the sheep follow him one at a time.) "A stranger they will not follow, but they will flee from him, for they do not know the voice of strangers." (Continue with the shepherd around with the sheep following, and have him bring them back inside the fence) "I am the Good Shepherd. I know my own, and my own know me." (hold up the Shepherd) "The Good Shepherd lays down his life for the sheep." (Lay the Shepherd on his side, using his body to close the fence and keep the sheep in- shown below) "I am the Good Shepherd. I know my sheep, and my sheep know me- Just as the Father know me and I know the Father- and I lay down my life for the sheep." (Now put one of the sheep outside the fence at the length of your arm) "And I have other sheep that are not of this fold; I must bring them also, and they will heed my voice. So there shall be one flock, one shepherd. If a shepherd has 100 sheep and one of them gets lost, will he leave the others and go in search of the lost one." (Have the shepherd go and find the lost sheep). "And when he has found it, he lays it on his shoulders rejoicing! And when he comes home, he says 'Rejoice with me because I have found my sheep which was lost' and all the sheep are filled with joy! They are all together again with the Good Shepherd." (Put them all back inside the fence along with the shepherd.)

 (Demonstration of the Good Shepherd "laying down his life" 
for his sheep. And yes, he was happy to pose like this for me.)

Then ask them questions about the story:
-"Who is this? What kind of animal does God say that we are like sometimes? Who's voice do the sheep listen to? Who's voice should we listen to? Who is our Good Shepherd?"

If you're following along with Catholic ABC's, the first quarter will concentrate on The Good Shepherd. I will be posting the preschool script and class layout tomorrow, which will include needing this set, or something similar.

How To Craft Your Own Good Shepherd Set- I designed these printable sheep and the shepherd for my printable nativity set. When you click on the links to the files below, download them before you print because otherwise they print the wrong size. Trust me on this.

Free Printables:


All you do is print, color, cut, and then glue them around toilet paper tubes with a glue stick. It's that easy! You can make as many sheep for your set as you want. I would say one for each child you're teaching, but you need at least 2. Now for making their little pasture with a fence.

Supplies Needed for Pasture:
  • Foam Board (from the Dollar Tree. $1)
  • Green Paper
  • Glue Stick 
  • Something for "hole poking" (I used a corn on the cob holder)
  • Pipe Cleaners (also from the Dollar Tree. $1)
  • School Glue 
  • Scissors

Make Your Pasture:
  1. Trace a circle onto your foam board and green paper using a mixing bowl, and cut them out. It will be easier to cut the foam board using a box cutter if you have one on hand.
  2. Glue the green paper circle onto your foam board circle with a glue stick.
  3. Poke holes around the outside edge of the "pasture" for the fence. Leave an opening for the sheep to come in and out. (see pictures below)
  4. Cut the pipe cleaners into thirds and insert them into the holes for the fence. You can put one drop of glue on each hole before inserting the pipe cleaner for a permanent hold.
When poking your holes and inserting your pipe cleaners, go all the way around the circle putting them side by side first, like this:

Then poke holes in between each section of fence and insert a second layer of pipe cleaners, so that the fence pieces appear to cross each other. Don't forget about leaving your opening!



Now you're ready to start teaching your kids about the Good Shepherd! Come back tomorrow to get the preschool script that coordinates with this set! I'm so excited about this preschool curriculum!




Hope your kids enjoy this set! Let me know if you make this, or better yet, send me pictures! Getting pictures is my favorite! :-)

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Nicene Creed Craft- One God

Today we start the new Catholic preschool curriculum- Catholic ABC's! Yay! For the first week, we are learning the number 1. Here's the craft we made (this craft is a good one for preschoolers with adult assistance, and a good one that elementary school aged children could do themselves).


Supplies needed:
  • 2 colors of paper
  • pencil
  • glue stick
  • a piece of yarn, string, or ribbon
  • scissors
  • marker
  • hole punch
Only you know your child's abilities, but I would always encourage you to allow your child complete a craft as independently as possible, helping only when you're needed. The finished product doesn't have to be perfect.
  1. Start by having your child trace his or her hand on the paper, and cut it out with scissors. Assist where necessary. 
  2. Have your child use a glue stick to glue the thumb and middle finger together, then fold the ring finger and pinkie down so only the pointer finger is pointing up as a number "1". 
  3. Cut out fingernail shapes for your child out of a seperate color of paper, and have him or her glue them onto the finger tips. You can help with the placement. Again, nothing has to be perfect.
  4. Write out the beginning of the Nicene creed for your child "We believe in one God, the Father the Almighty, maker of heaven and earth. Of all that is seen and unseen". I wrote ours out lightly with a pencil, and had my 4 year old trace over it with her marker.
  5. Punch a hole in the bottom of the hand, and the top of the prayer. Your preschooler can lace the yarn or string through the holes, and you can tie them together.
  6. Practice drawing the number 1 on the hand, and/or write out the word "One". 

The hopes of this craft is to teach your preschooler to recognize the number 1, be able to draw a number 1, and know that we believe in only one God. This seems very basic, but when I first told my 4 year old yesterday that we believe in one God, her reply was "No, Mommy. There are lots of Gods in all the churches!". Glad I decided to start with the basics...


My 4 year old really surprised me with her ability to trace such a long prayer. I haven't been giving her enough stuff to work on for sure!

If you don't want to write out the prayer, I created this image that you can print and hang from the bottom of your hand in stead. (Each week for this preschool we are also going to be working on a memory prayer or bible verse that coordinates with the theme, and for the first week this is it).
I know I promised curriculum- not just crafts, and it's coming! Over the next 2 days I'll be posting everything you need to teach the first quarter with your preschooler at home. :-) I'm very excited about this!



If you have older children you'd like to do a "We believe in ONE God craft" with, try making some God's eyes! Hope you and your kids enjoy this craft- I know we did! Send me pictures of your kids with their completed crafts if you can :-)

Lydia with her "1 God" craft. She's so proud!

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Know Your Catholic ABC's?


This year, I am teaching my son's class for our preschool co-op, and I'm really excited! You should be excited, too. Want to know why? Because I'm going to be posting it here for all of you. Want to follow along with your kids? You got it! The curriculum will be for preschoolers, but a lot of the crafts/food etc will be great for elementary aged kids as well.


Our curriculum will be covering numbers, then moving onto the alphabet- one letter per week. There will be a different craft for every number 1-5, then a craft for every letter of the alphabet. I'll be posting one themed craft each week on Wednesday, starting September 1st!

In celebration, we're kicking off this school year with this Catholic ABC themed muffin tin meal! A is for Angel, B is for bible, and C is for cross. (Second row- A is also for apple, B is for banana, and C is for carrot.)


The angel is made from a bugle, some pretzels, an oyster cracker, and a cheerio- all stuck together with cream cheese frosting. (I'll be posting some more detailed directions for these later this week).


The bibles are made from fig newtons. I got the idea to make books from fig newtons over on Shower of Roses. I'll be posting the full directions for making the bibles later this week as well.


So watch for Catholic Preschool A-Z starting here at Catholic Icing on September 1! 

Also, check out other alphabet themed muffin tin meals today over on Muffin Tin Mom! She's a good bloggy friend of mine. She's a Christian cancer survivor, and she posts lots of great food and craft ideas for kids :-)



Muffin Tin Monday at Her Cup Overfloweth


*Updated in an Attempt to Clarify Some Questions*
I am going to be teaching my son's preschool for our co-op. His class is for ages 2 1/2 - 3 1/2. However, I really wanted my daughter to learn her letters this year, and she is 4. So the curriculum will be flexible for all preschoolers through kindergarten. The crafts will also be good for older kids- they will just need less help. I am going to post the whole curriculum, not just crafts. Class is exactly the same each week, but doing the same routine with the new letter. The craft each week will be different to coordinate with the letter (or number) and I will post the new craft each Wednesday. Each week will also have a coordinating bible verse OR prayer for them to learn, and may or may not include a snack idea, song, or coloring page. I am homeschooling both of my preschoolers this year in addition to teaching this co-op, but I will only be posting the Catholic stuff here.
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Who's Ready to Celebrate Pentecost?

Pentecost is coming up this Sunday- 50 days after Easter (the official end of the Easter Season). It is also the birthday of the church. On Pentecost, the holy spirit came upon the 12 apostles and gave them "tongues of fire". Because of this, the color for Pentecost is red and is often symbolized with fire. You also see a lot of doves for Pentecost because doves are the most common symbol of the holy spirit. Intrigued? Read up some more on Pentecost. Looking for some fun celebration ideas? Read on, my friends!

Lets start with the basics- wear red to mass! This is a fun tradition 
I remember from being a child, and you'll fit in amongst 
the red crowd in the pews- plus you'll match the priest! :-)

Try giving your kids red hots or fireballs as treats on 
Pentecost so they too can have "tongues of fire". :-P

Make the church a birthday cake! May I suggest red velvet in keeping
with the Pentecost theme? These Pentecost cakes are from 4 Real 
Forums. Tons of symbolism going into these- your family could learn a lot!

The Catholic Toolbox has multiple posts on Pentecost! :-)
Endless great links- don't miss these posts!

Gladdest Hours celebrated Pentecost with these great cupcakes
and more! Check out the post to see it all.

And don't forget about this Pentecost Coloring Page
from Sermons for Kids.

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Holy Week Games and Lesson Plans

Alright, The Catholic Toolbox has so many amazing Holy Week resources that I haven't had time to run yet! Aah! So I'm just going to run them all together real quick ;-)

Holy Week Memory Game- free and printable!

Find this Holy Week File Folder game and
Holy Week Bingo at this post.

And find a million (slight exaggeration ;-) 



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