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1. Students design their own Tooth
Fairies on paper or with a program like Kid Pix. Then students can
create a web with Kidspiration to describe what their tooth fairy
looks like. Last, students can write about their creations.
2. Print out all the emails you receive
from your group during the project. Bind them together into a Tooth
Tally book. Share the book in class and allow students to read it
during free time. Students can also make a book about what the Tooth
Fairy does with all the teeth she collects.
3. Sentence Scramble! Print
out this worksheet. (requires Acrobat Reader) Students should
cut the sentences apart on the lines. Put each sentence in an envelope
or baggie. Students read the words and make a sentence out of them.
Great vocabulary activity!
4. Books to read:
The Tooth Witch by Nurit Karlin,
Throw Your Tooth on the Roof - Tooth Traditions from Around the
World by Selby Beeler
5. Read The Tooth Book by Theo. LeSieg.
That's Theo Geisel spelled backwards (otherwise known as Dr. Seuss).
Have a backwards day and spell your own name backwards!
6. Story Starters:
The tooth fairy quietly slipped into Reggie's room. She reached
under his pillow for his tooth. Hmmm...that didn't feel like a tooth!
When she pulled the object out, she was surprised to find...
7. Make a list of all the things the
tooth fairy might make out of the teeth she collects.
8. Use this project as a springboard
into a mini-lesson on plurals:
One tooth, two teeth.
One mouse, two mice.
One goose, two geese.
9. Practice rhyming words:
tooth - booth
lost - cost
fairy - hairy
loose - goose
wiggle - giggle
brush - crush
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