After we made pumpkin soup with the fresh pumpkin, we moved on to another project with pumpkins the following day. I set out canvases over the four tables and set out
one small pumpkin for each child to paint. I placed a bit of red and
blue tempera paint on a paper plate and set one plate next to each
pumpkin along with a paintbrush. Then the painting begun:
Most children used the red
and blue paint separately, while others mixed the red and blue paint
together with their brushes, then with their hands on the pumpkin.
They noticed that red and blue mixed made “purple!” When the
pumpkins were finished I noticed various textures and designs,
including lines, swirls, circles, dots, completely painted pumpkins
and even faces with “hair.”
The following day, JH
got to paint his pumpkin first thing in the morning. He used the
paintbrush first and then found his hands to be much more efficient!
Later that day the
preschoolers broke open one of the larger pumpkins outside and
harvested the seeds from them. I cooked the pumpkin and made pumpkin
bread and roasted some of the seeds to eat with the bread for
afternoon snack. The rest of the seeds were planted in one of the
large barrels in the back yard in hopes of producing more pumpkins
for us to enjoy next Fall!
Being able to use pumpkins that were locally grown for numerous activities and planting the seeds in hopes of growing our own pumpkins in the future, allows for the children to learn about sustainability. Not only is sustainability part of our philosophy at TPH, living green by using many parts of an object and reusing has become something the children get excited about and continually want to explore!
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