Thursday, October 13, 2011

Fall or Four Seasons Bulletin Board for Sunday School

      Children may draw and color pictures of an apple tree in each of the four seasons: fall, winter, spring, and summer. Staple these together and insert them into a book jacket shaped like a large apple. This book jacket may be cut from red or green construction paper. The title of the book should be the same as the scripture included on the bulletin board, just left. 

God has made the summer and winter. Psalm 74:17

In the open areas of the bulletin board, staple pictures or photographs of an apple tree in every season so that students may be given ideas about what they may include in their own drawings. I will include some clip art below that depicts apple trees during different seasons for this use. Read the Terms of Use before downloading.
Apple trees have pink blossoms during spring season.
Apple trees have delicious fruit during the fall season.
Snow clings to the branches of apple trees during the winter season.
Links to apple templates for the four seasons bulletin board:

A Thanksgiving Bulletin Board for Sunday School

Place a large horn of plenty in the center of the board, as well as some fruits and vegetables in each corner. Write the verse over the Horn of Plenty.

Give thanks to the Lord for He is Good! Psalm 106:1

Children may draw or use patterns to fill the horn of plenty. Have them memorize the verse and write it on a picture of their own horn of plenty.

Links to more horn of plenty themed activities and fruit templates:

Monday, October 10, 2011

Easter Bulletin Boards

Children celebrating the coming of Spring with bunnies and cookies.
Write an egg-citing story
"Bunny Tales" bulletin board
"Announcing The Egg Factory"
The next set of photos above show young students celebrating Easter in their classroom. The essays were about bunny tales that the children made up. There is also ''an egg factory" depicted above that was located in the reading corner of her classroom. Children colored their own eggs for this display. It is good to design bulletin boards that give children the opportunity to participate actively in decorating their classroom. This reinforces their sense of ownership and accomplishment in their own education. Their learning spaces should look positive and fun by all means! If children want to decorate their eggs with shapes, colors or even religious symbols, teachers should let them express themselves freely. It is not up to the teacher to control every child's "way" of integrating their own faith or interests into art projects. A compassionate teacher merely provides the space and opportunity for the freedom of expression and learning in the arts. Public school teachers may be tempered by the state, but the children are certainly free to express their own religious beliefs. The government pays teachers with taxes that originate from people with many religious faiths and this is why teachers should be tolerant of the religious differences of their students. But students are free participants in public schools and operate under less restrictive policies. In my mother’s rural classroom, most all of the children came from some sort of Christian culture. In contrast to the classrooms of yesterday, essays and art assignments that make room for multiple perspectives on faith topics should be anticipated in contemporary, public school districts.

More ideas for Easter Bulletin Boards:

Autumn Celebrations Bulletin Boards


A Pumpkin Patch bulletin board
"Purr-fectly Wonderful Cat Tales!"
"It's Owl-oween!"
"It's Owl-oween," up-close.
"Haunted Helpers"
      Above are some marvelous ideas for fall bulletin boards that are sure to please, not frighten, little ones. My favorite is the pumpkin patch at the top. It's full of autumn colors; I can almost smell the cinnamon in the air and feel the crunching of leaves under my rake.
     The Purr-fectly Wonderful Cat Tales bulletin board is for children's essays. In this exercise, the students were assigned the task of writing a creative tall tale about a cat. It's Owl-oween displayed essays by children based on facts, not superstitions, about owls. Children learned the difference between what is true about these remarkable creatures and what is folklore. They also completed a fun art project with paper owls to go along with the unit. And the small "haunted helpers" bulletin board showed students which classroom duties they would be assigned that week. Each child would have a little ghost assigned to him with his name on it. If your ghost was seen behind the tombstone with a certain chore written on the front, then you where expected to take care of that duty.

More links to Autumn Bulletin Board Ideas:

Thanksgiving Bulletin Boards


Natives and Pilgrims are displayed on the bulletin board
A pilgrim girl with a very large turkey leg
A corner view of Thanksgiving bulletin boards.
A Mayflower corner
      My mother always used Thanksgiving time as an opportunity to teach her young students about the discovery of the new world and also about the lives and identities of Native Americans and Pilgrims. Students would often write stories about Thanksgiving themes or papers about American history. These would then become part of the bulletin board display.
      The migration of geese is a bit more unusual subject for autumn bulletin boards but it is nice to study a less traditional theme now and again during the holidays as well. Migration is an ordinary and noisy event here in the mid-west. As a child I would look forward to watching the gathering and flight patterns of giant flocks of birds, not just geese, during the Autumn season. Including reminders of these kinds of everyday changes in the environment of a child's education can help them to remember practical scientific information.

"Some Like It Hot!" a unit on migration

Matter, Math, Industry, Continents, & Planet Bulletin Boards

"What's The Matter"
"Action Fractions"
How we use plants
The continents
Fast facts about the planets
   The five sample bulletin boards above show students how to subcategorize information about the topics they are studying. This helps develop important methods of retrieving information from their memories. Many studies have shown that if children can learn "how" to think visually about what they know and how to retrieve facts from those visualizations, they will test better. In this way teachers are stimulating the learning processes, not just decorating their bulletin boards. 

More Ideas for Science Bulletin Boards:

Winter Subjects for Bulletin Boards


      Winter subjects are sometimes practical ways to resolve the problem of working for the state and balancing student sensitivities during religious holidays. Teachers frequently must find ways to entertain or instruct that will help all children to enjoy learning and participating in the classroom during the holiday season. For some of you reading here, this is not a problem because you are teaching in parochial schools. However, my mother taught in a public school, so many of her bulletin boards had to address topics that all of her students could relate to.
      The above bulletin board called, "winter safety" displayed a very large penguin with illustrated ideas that depict winter safety rules. The rules included in this bulletin board were: don't stand on your sled, don't skate on thin ice, dress warmly and don't throw snowballs. Although, I don't really know what else one should do with a snowball. Perhaps, Johnny got into a little trouble for "winter zeal" over his holiday?
      The next photograph of a bulletin board was of a winter theme called, "Cold Catch." This project was about short stories describing igloos, penguins and Eskimos. 

More links to winter themed bulletin boards: