*Note: this post contains Amazon Affiliate links. Any purchases made via the links provided go to support our literacy efforts.
May; A time of flowers blooming and thoughts of summer planting. In addition, the month of May reserves a special day for the foods BBQ, Egg, Hamburger, Salad, Salsa and Strawberry, as well as celebrating National Herb Week during the first week of the month. We suggest you plant an herb garden, even if it’s in a container or on the deck, to enjoy all summer long. You might even consider having the child in your life give mom or grandma an herb plant for Mother‘s Day along with a favorite recipe filled with herbs. Have dad or another family member help kids make mom a special dinner and dessert featuring favorite herbs. A prime day to learn about another culture is Cinco de Mayo. Consider sharing a bilingual storybook. Since National Chocolate Chip, Walnut and Devil‘s Food Cake Day fall during the week of World Baking Day, find a new recipe to try out with your child(ren) and let the flour flow!
The month of May is also Get Caught Reading Month. It’s a time for you and your children to go on an adventure and lose yourself in another world. This is not just for kids but for all people to take the time to get out a favorite book or a new one and just read! Check out the Get Caught Reading site and look at all the celebrities who got caught reading and take photos of your own family members reading and share them on your Facebook page or even ours. Don’t forget that reading can include cookbooks. Consider including some classics and then cook your way through the classics with The Storybook Cookbook by Carol MacGregor or Fairy Tale Feasts by Jane Yolen.
“Eating and reading are two pleasures that combine admirably.”
C.S. Lewis
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May
National BBQ, Egg, Hamburger, Salad, Salsa & Strawberry Month & Get Caught Reading Month
National Strawberry Month
Get Caught Reading Month
Get caught reading whatever tickles your fancy all month long and share your photos with us!
2nd: National Truffle Day
4th - 10th: Children's Book Week - Get in on the fun by reading your favorite children's books aloud and visit Every Child a Reader's website for celebration ideas and resources. #BookWeek2020atHome
4th: Star Wars Day - May the Fourth Be With You!
4th: National Orange Juice Day
5th: Cinco de Mayo
First Saturday: National Herb Day
13th: National Apple Pie Day
2nd Sunday: Mother‘s Day
15th: National Chocolate Chip Day
17th: World Baking Day
Hear a spectacular read aloud of How to Bake a Book (known as Recipe for a Story in the UK) on YouTube here.
17th: National Walnut Day
19th: National Devil‘s Food Cake Day
Bake the world a better place!
Happy baking and reading!
-Kate @ BTBL Author
We are three generations that seek a way to get back to basics. It’s not that we eschew technology, but sometimes simpler is better, especially in raising our children. Mom was a reading teacher, Amanda is an early childhood educator and Kate a children’s literature specialist and former school librarian along with the latest additions, a daughter (now 4) for Kate, and two sons (now 1 and a newborn) for Amanda. We advocate reading aloud, the simple toys that use imagination and encourage creativity and learning in the kitchen, which can be a fun mess but also teaches life skills. Join us in raising healthy, happy, inquisitive and intelligent children.
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*Note: this post contains Amazon Affiliate links. Any purchases made via the links provided go to support our literacy efforts.
We’re back with a week filled with yummy book suggestions and ideas. This week we are featuring the works of Laura Numeroff. You may not recognize her name right off but we are sure that you will know her books or at least their titles. This week we are specifically featuring:
There are several more fantastic books in this series. We have chosen to focus on certain of the food related titles as part of our Bookworm Bakers division.
**If you don’t have the actual book at home, read alouds can be found on YouTube**
These books are always a fun read and what we like to do with them is to actually make the food that the book features. Books and baking seem to go together and getting kids in the kitchen is not only educational but also builds life skills. Cooking with young children aids in hand-eye coordination and fine motor skills. Cooking can also be used for patterning, sequencing and basic math skills. Children who help with cooking and baking also gain confidence, a sense of pride and accomplishment and learn about responsibility, not to mention the social and creative aspect of cooking together. If you aren’t prepared or into cooking and baking, have kids make the featured food from paper, felt or other craft supplies. You can also include math skills by having your child(ren) count out chocolate chips, sprinkles etc., double or half a real recipe or figure out how many cookies, cupcakes etc. each member of your family will get to make it even.
To make things even easier on yourself and to offer more fun options to your child, visit Mouse’s website. There you can be introduced to all the characters, see a list of all the books and find related activities and games. You can even watch the animated series on Amazon Prime Video, which my daughter absolutely fell in love with since she is already familiar with the characters. Read the books or watch a read aloud online and then check out the animated series. It will be a fun addition to the books.
Happy reading and baking!
-Kate @ BTBL
Follow us on Instagram (@btbliteracy) to keep up with the books we're reading and activities we're doing.
Author
We are three generations that seek a way to get back to basics. It’s not that we eschew technology, but sometimes simpler is better, especially in raising our children. Mom was a reading teacher, Amanda is an early childhood educator and Kate a children’s literature specialist and former school librarian along with the latest additions, a daughter (now 4) for Kate, and two sons (now 1 and a newborn) for Amanda. We advocate reading aloud, the simple toys that use imagination and encourage creativity and learning in the kitchen, which can be a fun mess but also teaches life skills. Join us in raising healthy, happy, inquisitive and intelligent children.
*Note: this post contains Amazon Affiliate links. Any purchases made via the links provided go to support our literacy efforts.
Spring is in the air with showers and the anticipation of blooming flowers. April is also the month that celebrates BLT’s, grilled cheese, pecans, soft pretzels and garlic. Quite the combination, but it is also Poetry and School Library Month and includes National Library Week. So, in this “Open” month, why not open a cookbook, a book of poems and an account at your local library or for that matter, open any book in April and read! Combine National Picnic Day with Earth Day and Arbor Day and pack a picnic basket with foods you’ve made with your family and kick back and take the time to enjoy a good book, good food and good company. Once again, look over our food calendar and choose a date, choose a food and choose a book and enjoy! Don’t forget to consult our book lists for suggestions and ideas. **Note: unfortunately, the Coronavirus has changed our daily lives, how we go about them and what we do. Sheltering at home can still include reading books, telling stories and writing poems and even picnicking in the backyard. Keep little brains engaged with books. Reading and listening to stories and baking in the kitchen are excellent for home learning. Enjoy and stay safe!
April
National BLT, Garden, Garlic, Grilled Cheese, Pecan, Poetry, School Library, & Soft Pretzel Month
National Garden Month
To learn about the benefits of having children help in the garden, refer to our previous blogs: The Power of a Garden and Why Get Kids in the Garden?.
“For children, most importantly, being in the garden is something magical.”
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My mother always encouraged us to help in the kitchen and often asked us to help out with little tasks at dinnertime. I still remember the mess my siblings and I created cutting out and decorating Christmas cookies or heart cookies at Valentine’s Day and then the joy of getting to lick out the bowl. Those are memories that I cherish and skills that I have built upon and now include my own daughter in the kitchen. Unfortunately, it seems that many millennial parents don‘t actually prepare meals from scratch today and their busy schedules often keep them from cooking at all. That is why we at Back to Basics Literacy added Bookworm Bakers to help parents creatively combine books with everyday cooking.
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Use time in the kitchen with your child(ren) to:
- Help plan menus and decide how to alter recipes to suit different tastes or needs.
- Identify different foods.
- If time permits point out colors, textures, sizes, smells etc. (for example the differing vegetables in a salad).
- When allowing children to help cut vegetables or other foods discuss halves, thirds and quarters etc. and then count how many total pieces.
- Don‘t be afraid to let your child handle a knife when helping in the kitchen (under close supervision, of course). For further reading on the benefits of letting kids use knives, take a look at this article from Wellness Mama.
- Don‘t be afraid to let your child handle a knife when helping in the kitchen (under close supervision, of course). For further reading on the benefits of letting kids use knives, take a look at this article from Wellness Mama.
- Discuss various kitchen tools and their uses.
- Allow children to help decide how to change up the menu or a recipe.
- Discuss where our food comes from and perhaps consider planting a garden or visit a fresh market or farmer’s market.
Remember that involving kids in the kitchen helps to develop:
- Fine Motor Skills – This is especially important in young children who are learning simple life skills such as working buttons and snaps on clothing, tying shoe laces and holding a pencil. Helping in the kitchen with chopping, peeling, whisking, measuring, washing and stirring helps to develop fine motor coordination.
- Communication – Not only is this a great time to bond with your child but also a time to converse about what you are making, what you need to do and how to best accomplish the task. This also helps to increase vocabulary. Make it fun by working to music and reading a short story in between steps.
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Reading & Writing – The two skills that are necessary to a full life. Recipes are wonderful not only to develop reading skills but also for following directions and sequencing. Create visual recipe cards for pre-readers and readers can help to choose recipes, create menus and write out shopping lists. For an example of visual recipes cards read A Mom with a Lesson Plan‘s blog post: Teaching Math and Reading with Cooking.
- Math & Science – Almost all cooking involves math through counting, adding, subtracting and measuring using whole numbers and fractions. Double or halve a recipe to further utilize math skills. Baking is pure science with each ingredient having its own function. Observe and discuss the physical and chemical changes that take place.
- Cultural Awareness – With the plethora of international foods, it‘s rather easy and fun to explore different cultures. You can use the celebration of a particular holiday such as St. Patrick‘s Day or Cinco de Mayo to prepare the food of that culture and then research the history behind the holiday and its country of origin. This way you can include geography and history in your cooking adventures and an appreciation of other cultures.
- Life Skills – Cooking is an essential life skill that allows for independence and builds self-confidence. Skills that you can help your child learn are planning, budgeting, flexibility and adapting to various situations. Let them help with menu planning, making a shopping list, participating in actual shopping and perhaps make some surprise changes along the way to teach them how to adjust when unexpected situations arise. Most of all, have fun and keep a sense of humor.
-Kate @ BTBL
Author
We are three generations that seek a way to get back to basics. It’s not that we eschew technology, but sometimes simpler is better, especially in raising our children. Mom was a reading teacher, Amanda is an early childhood educator and Kate a children’s literature specialist and former school librarian along with the latest additions, a daughter (now 4) for Kate, and two sons (now 1 and a newborn) for Amanda. We advocate reading aloud, the simple toys that use imagination and encourage creativity and learning in the kitchen, which can be a fun mess but also teaches life skills. Join us in raising healthy, happy, inquisitive and intelligent children.
Author
We are mom Sandra and daughters Amanda and Kate, all with backgrounds in literacy and education, who want to share our philosophy of taking the basics of life; books, simple toys that encourage play, imagination and creativity, and using cooking and baking to teach math and real life skills to raise happy, inquisitive children. Join us in exploring the old and the new and sifting through the myriad of research to consider what is best for our children.
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