• Blog,  Book Lesson Plans,  Books About Emotions,  Books Just For Fun

    Book Review & Lesson Plan: The Book With No Pictures

    The Book With No Pictures book cover. A white book with black writing.
    (This post contains affiliate links. A purchase through these links supports Preschooligans at no additional cost to you and helps us continue to provide free educational resources. Thank you!)

    The Book With No Pictures (find at your local library or purchase from Amazon) is exactly what the title says — page after page of nothing but words. But what it lacks in illustrations, it more than makes up for in gut-clutching preschool- and kindergarten-level humor. Long story short, even if your head is made of blueberry pizza, you’ll still love this book.

    To be certain, the “silly” is the best part of this book, but amidst it all, there are lessons here for kiddos. First and foremost is that even before you can read, you can still enjoy a book that doesn’t have illustrations. And a couple of deeper lessons that kiddos may not realize they’re learning from this book are the importance of listening, and that words are powerful for eliciting emotions.

    Words can make you happy, sad, scared, excited, surprised. And in the case of this book, they can make you laugh. A lot. They can make grownups say funny things. Against their will. It’s more of an (air quotes) “Against their will,” but you get the idea.

    It’s funny to watch kids’ faces when you first start reading this book. When you explain to them that this book has no pictures and that might seem like “no fun” as the story says. The faces droop a little and glaze over a bit. You can see in their expressions, they’re sure this book is gonna be bleh. And then you read that line that goes like this:

    “Here is how books work:

    Everything the words say, the person reading the book has to say.”

    So now, we have a set of rules laid out that our reader is unswervingly required to follow, because of this on the next page:

    “No matter what.”

    Well now the deal is sealed with those three foreboding words. The fate of the reader has been set and mass chaos will certainly follow, because “no matter what,” you now know you’re about to make a monkey of yourself. (And you’re going to be admitting that you are a monkey, one who taught itself to read, and you are reading this book with your monkey mouth in your monkey voice. And then there’s robots. But I digress.)

    This hilarious story is from the mind of BJ Novak, who you may recall as “Ryan” on the U.S. adaptation of the television show The Office. All throughout the story the reader is required to read hysterical words and sounds, and then must immediately lament the craziness of those words. And beg to stop reading — which, as you’d expect, the roaring children listening to the story, will not allow.

    It puts the children in the audience in the delicious position of watching an authority figure essentially self destruct. And that is glorious.

    This fabulous read doesn’t particularly fit into any curriculum, it’s just plain fun. We read it during down times or slow days, or as an end-of-the-school-year “fun” book. We have read it after large-group, centers or movement activities and it helps that transition perfectly. But honestly, there’s really no bad time for a full-fledged belly laugh, so it’s a good read any time.

    We love this book for 3s and Pre-K on up to adult!

    (Below please find a list of reading comprehension questions and vocabulary words. This list is not exhaustive, and it may spark additional questions from your kiddos. As always, we recommend that you scaffold based on your age group and the wigglies of your kiddos.)

    * Downloadable/printable copy of lesson plan below

    Reading comprehension questions:

    Before reading: Show the cover. What is happening on the cover? Are there any pictures? What do you think this book might be about?

    After reading title: What do you think it’s about now? Is that the same as what you thought before we read the title? Do you think this sounds like it will be an interesting book? Do you think you will like this book? Explain that when we read books with no pictures, we have to imagine the pictures in our heads.

    After reading: Did this book turn out the way you thought it would? How was it different? How was it the same? What was your favorite part? At the end, why do you think the reader asks the kids to choose a book with pictures next time? How did the book make you feel? What did you imagine as you listened to the words? (This is a great segue into our enrichment activity, “Illustrating The Book With No Pictures,” below).

    Vocabulary words:

    • boring
    • serious
    • trick
    • ridiculous
    • hippo
    • history
    • entire
    • utterly
    • preposterous

    Enrichment Activities:

    Art: Encourage your kiddos to illustrate lines from The Book With No Pictures with our free printables. (Combine for a fun class book!) Download “I am a Robot Monkey” and “My head is made of Blueberry Pizza” below.

  • Addition,  Blog,  Counting,  Math,  Small Groups

    Domino Math

    Preschool children place black dots on oversized blank domino canvases. They roll the dice in plastic cups and write the numbers with dry erase markers.

    Dominoes are fantastic for teaching all kinds of math concepts in pre-k: counting, one-to-one correspondence, subitizing, addition and so on. This Domino Math freebie from Recipe for Teaching features several different domino-themed math tools. Today we are using the blank, oversized domino canvas, which helps preschool kiddos practice all of the aforementioned concepts in one.

    We used this page a little differently than it is demonstrated on the RfT site. First, we slid the blank domino sheets into plastic page protectors for use with dry erase markers (laminating works as well). We die-cut a supply of small black circles, and provided a dry erase marker, eraser, die and a “dice containment cup” for each kid.

    We asked each kiddo roll their die, determine the number (subitizing!), count out that number of black dots (counting! one-to-one correspondence!), and place them on one side of the domino. Then we asked them to write that number on the corresponding space below. Then, they repeated the process for the second side. After they completed the two sides, then we asked them to finish the (addition!) equation.

    This activity also helped with following multi-step directions, working independently and problem solving, and they LOVED it!

  • Addition,  Blog,  Counting,  Math,  Small Groups

    Roll, Add & Build a Skyscraper City Math Game

    We love to use dice games in math small groups with our Pre-K kiddos, and our Roll, Add & Build A Skyscraper City game is one of our favorites. We created it after a student noted how the side-by-side stacked cubes resembled New York City skyscrapers! Indeed they do.

    You’ll need two dice per child, and a whole slew of linking cubes or small blocks that can be stacked. Then turn those kiddos loose to add, subitize, identify numerals, connect numerals to quantity and strengthen their one-to-one correspondence skills.

    Ugh, isn’t it just like us teachers (and parents) to make everything fun a learning experience?

    Get the free download below and let us know how your kiddos enjoy it!

  • Literacy,  Reading,  Small Groups

    Cookie Jar Syllable Game

    Cookie Jar Syllable Game -- features three cookie jar images labeled 1, 2 and 3 syllables, and cookies with 1,2, and 3-syllable words and images for sorting.

    This Cookie Jar Syllable Sort game from Fairy Poppins for Playdough to Plato was a HUGE hit in our class! Our pre-k kiddos not only loved it, but many seemed to grasp the concept of syllables after one time playing.

    The set features labeled “cookie jars” in which preschool kiddos sort the adorable cookies, which feature one-, two- or three-syllable images. This is a set you’ll want to laminate before you cut it out, because it will get some use!

    We used this in small groups with about 3-4 kiddos at a time. We handed out one one-syllable cookie first to each child to get a feel for the game. For subsequent rounds we got a little harder with two- and three-syllable words, then we mixed them up randomly.

    The kiddos turned it into a guessing game on their own, and that created anticipation as the rounds went by and kept their attention on what their peers were doing, The “oooh, what are you gonna get — one, two or three?” increased the appeal of this game beyond our expectations.

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    Welcome to Preschooligans!

    Free preschool printables about page, child's artwork with a person made out of shapes.

    We’re new around here so thanks for joining us! So what is Preschooligans? It’s a one-stop spot for some of our favorite free preschool printables and resources.

    There are tons of sites on the Internet for preschool learning, and many feature both free and paid resources. But it can sometimes be hard to cull through it all and find what you need when you need it.

    So, that’s where we come in. Here, our goal is to create a site with links to our favorite free preschool printables, ideas, projects, etc. We will also offer our own original content, like book reviews with reading comprehension questions, vocabulary and lesson planning resources. But the key here is that we want to highlight the free stuff that we love!

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    We’re preschool teachers and parents too, so we’re looking forward to sharing some of the cool things we’ve learned, links to our favorite preschool activities and resources, some cool new original content, and your suggestions. We’re also looking forward to learning some new things along the way ourselves.

    So…feel free to drop us a note, and while you’re here, take a look around! Welcome to Preschooligans!