Application "Fruit"
In the preparatory group, children know the names of many fruits and what they look like. Continuing the autumn theme, you can invite the children to cut out the ones they love most from colored paper and stick them on the base.
Several grapes are cut out of green paper, then they are glued to a dark branch. Orange is even easier to make. To do this, you need to draw a circle on the back of the orange paper. To make it even, have the child trace a suitable round object or template of that shape. When he glues the fruit, all that remains is to attach a small black circle with glue to the side. This will make the orange more realistic.
To make the apple look like a real one, you can cut out one half of it from yellow paper and the other from red or green paper. These fruits are placed in a vase or basket so that the child can see how they can be beautifully arranged not only on paper, but also on a real table.
Abstract of GCD in the preparatory group for application.
Topic: “Oak” team work. Prepared by the teacher of the MBDOU “general developmental kindergarten No. 11” in Maykop.
Zolotareva Lyudmila Nikolaevna. Target
: Develop a sense of teamwork.
Tasks:
— educational: continue to cultivate children’s interest in appliqué, use a brush and glue, a napkin correctly, and consolidate skills in working with templates.
— educational: teach to treat nature carefully and attentively. — developing: develop compositional skills. Materials:
Whatman paper, templates of leaves and acorns, brushes, glue, napkins, scissors.
Educator:
He is in the forest, like a hero - all huge - up and down! The leaf is beautiful, cut, green in summer and spring.
The autumn giant is glad to put on his brown outfit.
From the branches, as if for fun, he scatters acorns. (Oak)
Educator:
That's right, guys. Today we will talk about oak, and not only talk, but try to make a collective application. The oak tree is not afraid of rain and wind at all. Who said that oak is afraid of catching a cold? After all, until late autumn I remain green. This means I am hardy, this means I am hardened. Oak is a powerful, majestic tree. The trunk is thick, covered with brown-gray bark with sinuous cracks. The older the tree, the deeper the cracks. Oak is a light-loving tree. Have you noticed the oak branches? They are repeatedly curved, as if twisted; in old oaks they have bizarre bends. The fact is that the branches are constantly reaching towards the sun, towards the light. So they change the direction of growth depending on the lighting. Oak trees bloom in May. The fruits - acorns - ripen in the fall. Many forest dwellers like to eat acorns: wild boars, deer, field mice, jays. Pay attention, guys, I drew the tree itself for us and now you and I need to make leaves and acorns for our oak tree.
(children trace the templates on colored paper, then cut them out).
You're probably tired, let's play with you a little.
Physical education lesson “Oak”.
In the clearing, a green oak tree reached out to the sky with its crown. He hung acorns generously on branches in the middle of the forest. Well, we’ll walk a little. Raise our legs higher! They walked around, frolicked and sat down on the grass. Stretch - arms up. Stretch - arms to the sides. Walking in place. Now we sit down quietly and continue working. We have the leaves and acorns ready, so all we have to do is glue them onto our tree.
Application in kindergarten in the preparatory group helps children develop the following skills:
- Creative thinking
- fine motor skills
- Teaches how to combine disparate figures into a single composition
- Develops the ability to think through a plot and arrange fragments according to it
- They master various geometric shapes and learn to make whole pictures out of them.
- Sequencing
- Creative approach to work
- Aesthetic perception
- Recreating pictures from the surrounding reality on paper
- Independence and creative activity
- Strengthen the ability to cut out symmetrical objects from folded paper
- Master silhouette cutting