Two of the websites that I found to be user friendly and helpful for research were Greenland.com and Go North!
The Enchanted Learning website had an Inuit wooden mask to paint online, MonkeyD spent a while playing around with that. I also found a website with lots of great pictures to print out for free, First-School. From their selection, I printed out pictures of several of the animals that could be found in Greenland (not the penguins or the albatross! :-)) and gave them to MonkeyD to paint with her water colors. I also printed out the picture of the letter I with an igloo and the letter I with an icicle, but she wasn't interested in doing anything with those. She isn't into coloring with crayons or markers much, but I thought she would like painting. She was done after only painting three of the pictures, but I was happy because in addition to seeing some of the animals that are in Greenland she presented an opportunity for me to tell her about camouflage. After painting each animal she asked me if it was the color that it usually is in Greenland. So then we got to talk about their colors and that in the case of the ermine that she painted brown, that would be the color that he would be in the summer. But in the winter his coat would be white to help him camouflage with the snow.
I found a website to print out flags of the countries that we've learned about so far at Coloring Castle. These printables were fun because they had a color key to help with coloring in the right colors. MonkeyD wasn't too interested in coloring these though, as I mentioned she isn't into crayons and markers much. Lil' Pistol got ahold of the flag coloring pages and added her best scribbles though :-)
One of the books at we borrowed from the library was Crafts for Kids Who Are Wild About Polar Life by Kathy Ross. This book had a lot of fun ideas for crafts to make about animals in the arctic (and antarctic) regions. Based on the ease of the crafts and the materials that we had available (and the amount of time before Lil' Pistol would wake up), MonkeyD and I made an arctic tern one day and a walrus mask another day.
Another day I let MonkeyD play with a couple trays worth of ice cubes on a cookie sheet. She was making igloos. We had trouble getting the cubes to stack, but that didn't hinder her creativity. She played with them on and off until they were completely melted.
We read many books this week. Unfortunately, I didn't feel like I found any books on MonkeyD's level that were directly about the (current) lifestyles of the people in Greenland. However, I do feel think that through her curiosity and attention to the wonderful illustrations in these books, she probably got a feel for some parts of the culture. For example, several of the books showed the characters wearing their mukluks or mentioned them. The book, I is for Inuksuk explained what an Inuksuk was (a stone tower used as a guide) and then there were illustrations of Inuksuk in The Three Snow Bears, so we were able to point these out and remember what they were. The animals that we had talked about in our painting activities were in several of the books so it was rewarding to be able to say that she had painted a picture of that animal or done a craft about it. Many of the stories had pictures of sleds pulled by teams of dogs so we talked about that being a way to get around in the snow. Some of the books also incorporated pictures of the Aurora borealis, so although it wasn't mentioned in the story, we talked about it. In addition to some stories, we also read quite a few books that were just about the polar animals. Here is our book list:
Mama, Do You Love Me? by Barbara M. Joosse,
Kumak's Fish by Michael Bania,
The Big Fuzzy by Caroline Castle,
The Three Snow Bears by Jan Brett (a fun Goldilocks and the Three Bears type of story),
The Brave Little Seal by Rudyard Kipling,
Baby Polar Bear by Aubrey Lang,
What a Viking! by Mick Manning & Brita Granstrom (didn't really mention Greenland much, but I pointed out that at one time Vikings had been in Greenland),
I is for Inuksuk by Mary Wallace,
Alego by Ningeokuluk Teevee (written in Inuktitut and English, introduces many Inuktitut words),
Over in the Arctic Where the Cold Winds Blow by Marianne Berkes, and
Way Up in the Arctic by Jennifer Ward (these last two were very cute and written to the rhythm of "Over In the Meadow", so they can be sung to a familiar tune).
I thought that Polar Lands by Margaret Hynes would have been a good book for MonkeyD, but we never got around to looking at it. Maybe if she was a little older she would have liked it. It has large colorful pictures of animals from the arctic and antarctic as well as short paragraphs about how animals adapt, what they eat and other facts about the polar regions.
We also talked about the tundra and watched a relevant short clip on PBS EekoWorld. This video clip re-emphasized some things we had read in our stories including that in the winter it is dark all day long and in the summer it is light all day long. The following week I happened to come across a DVD at the library about polar animals, National Geographic's Really Wild Animals Polar Prowl. I added this to our Greenland activities.
A couple of books suggested doing some sort of paper snowflake craft. I just couldn't bring myself to make any snowflakes since it was early fall here though. Also, we didn't try out any Greenlandic recipes. I had trouble finding any traditional recipes that used ingredients I could find at our local grocery stores. I read a few suggestions to try out some Danish recipes, since there is quite a lot of Danish cuisine in Greenland. But, we didn't go that route, for whatever reason.
During this week I started wondering if what I'm doing - as far as trying to teach MonkeyD about other cultures - is making any sense to her. Sometimes I get caught up in thinking that she should be learning facts, like "this is the capital...this is where it is located...these are some of the words spoken there...this is what the weather is like there...etc." Then I realized, well, I am exposing her to new things - things beyond the normal peanut butter and jelly sandwich routine of our lives. She is learning that there are many different ways of life around the world. That's my original and ultimate goal anyways. Then, while she was playing with her ice cubes, she had a toy dinosaur peek between the cubes and she laughed and said, "He sees some plants growing outside but he is surprised because not much grows in Greenland." And I realized she is listening and taking things in. I told her that in the summer a few things can grow, but not a lot. She said, "Yeah. He just sees two plants." So maybe she is getting some little 'facts' out of it too :-)
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