This blog is a place for 406 Curriculum & Instruction: Fine Arts students at UNBC to review course content and suggestions for enrichment. More importantly, it is a place for the students to connect with each other and share their leraning. See the links to a blog created by each student to document his or her participation in the course and creative development during the few weeks that we are together.
Tuesday, December 3, 2013
Hi, Everyone,
As I was reading Alex's blog about having children make Christmas ornaments to take home, I remembered the invaluable pom pom fork strategy. When my class chose the Alaskan malamute as their mascot and named themselves the Husky Team, we made husky face ornaments out of 7 black and white fork pom poms, two googly eyes, a tiny plastic nose, a red ribbon tongue, and a red ribbon at the neck. Also a gold looped thread to hang it on the tree. 5 pom poms were glued on the dog face background of black felt, basically an oval with ears at the top, then two more on top for the cheeks...wish I had a photo to post but I haven't unpacked my ornaments yet! But the magic of fork pom poms is that they can be made with scraps of yarn donated by children's crafty relatives and they can be put to so many uses in various crafts or kid creations. I used to have children put a short piece of yarn to tie the pom pom through the middle of the fork first, and then weave the yarn in and out of the tines until the fork was full before having someone - a partner - tie the knot tightly as they slid the woven yarn off the fork. None of the websites I visited tonight suggest the weaving - people just wrap the yarn several times around the fork. I wonder if kids would find it hard to tie that way? I guess it depends on the age and dexterity of the kids. Also, we didn't cut the loops, as in these instructions, and our pom poms looked fine. I found was that once children had mastered this little skill, they were quite proud of themselves and wanted to make more!
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