Christmas salt dough recipe :: Joy!
Let’s use salt dough to create a candy cane-coloured set of letters that you can use as decorations or for spelling work.
Watch our Playdough Masterclass
Click play on the video above to see our playdough masterclass.
This video gives you everything you ever wanted to know about play dough: how to make homemade playdough with quick and easy recipes; the benefits of playdough for children; and lots of sensory play activities using play dough including playdough math activities, playdough literacy activities, and playdough fine motor skills activities.
Plus find out how to get printable playdough recipe cards and printable play mats. It’s an excellent beginners guide to play dough!
Subscribe to NurtureStore’s YouTube channel to get more gardening and nature study videos!
Materials needed:
:: large bowl
:: flour
:: salt
:: water
:: wooden spoon
:: baking tray
:: red and white acrylic paint
:: paint brushes
:: Modpodge or varnish (optional)
To make salt dough take a large bowl and in it mix:
:: two cups flour;
:: two cups salt; and
:: one cup water
Use a wooden spoon or your hands to bring the ingredients together to form a dough.
Then you can use the dough to make any shapes, numbers or letters you like.
You might like to make a whole alphabet. To bake your shapes, place on a baking tray and cook in a cool oven (Gas 1/2, 120C, 250F) for about 2 – 3 hours. (Thicker shapes may take longer.)
Once they’re baked and cool, paint your shapes with red and white acrylic paint. You can use different patterns of spots, stripes and swooshes.
Add a layer of Modpodge or varnish if you would like, for extra durability.
Download your ready-made Nativity UnitDownload the Play Academy’s ready-made Nativity Unit and you’ll have everything you need to lead a set of activities to introduce your children to the Nativity story.
This Unit includes artist-drawn puppets/colour-in nativity scene characters and printable Bible verse cards, that your children can use year after year.
In this Nativity teaching unit your children can:
:: learn about the Nativity and create their own Nativity book or small world scene using colour-in puppet / nativity scene characters
:: learn about Mary and Joseph’s journey, and explore junk modelling
:: learn about the shepherds role, and explore loose parts
:: learn about Jesus’ birth
:: learn about the three wise men, and complete their book / re-tell the story in their small world
Bonus Nativity thematic unit printables
The Play Academy’s thematic units come with practical printables that make the lessons more engaging for your children and easier for you to teach.
No need to go searching for printables to accompany your lessons, they’re all included when you download your chosen unit.
In this Nativity Unit you’ll receive these bonus printables:
:: My Nativity Story book to write, colour and complete to tell the Nativity story
:: a set of artist-drawn My Nativity Puppets to colour, cut out and use to re-cap and act out the Nativity story
:: Nativity Vocabulary Cards to recap and consolidate learning
:: Nativity Bible Verse Cards to read, narrate your own acting out of the story, and perhaps to memorise
How to download this Nativity thematic unit
You can download this unit along with over 50 more from NurtureStore’s Play Academy.
If you are already of the Play Academy, you can download this unit straight away from our Library here.
If you are not yet a member, find out more and choose your first unit here. Your teaching is about to get a whole lot easier!
Salt dough Christmas candle holders
An easy salt dough recipe you can use to make this sparkly salt dough candle holder craft.
Christmas sensory play activities with play dough
Five ideas for Christmas sensory play activities with play dough, for lots of hands-on, creative fun.
The top 10 play dough ideas :: Simple Play
Today’s invitation in the Stay at Home, Screen Free Activities Programme is all about play dough.
Never made it before? Run out of ideas for something new?
Here are my top ten play dough ideas – and an easy recipe for homemade playdough.
Simple play with play dough [Read more…]
Play dough pizza parlour
A play dough pizza parlour is a fun sensory play activity that encourages lots of imaginary play and conversation skills.
Play Dough Pizza Parlour
Watch our Playdough Masterclass
Click play on the video above to see our playdough masterclass.
This video gives you everything you ever wanted to know about play dough: how to make homemade playdough with quick and easy recipes; the benefits of playdough for children; and lots of sensory play activities using play dough including playdough math activities, playdough literacy activities, and playdough fine motor skills activities.
Plus find out how to get printable playdough recipe cards and printable play mats. It’s an excellent beginners guide to play dough!
Subscribe to NurtureStore’s YouTube channel to get more gardening and nature study videos!
Play dough is such a good material to use in pretend play. With a child’s imagination play dough can be turned into just about anything.
It adds a extra sensory dimension into their play and really it’s not too messy to tidy up, so you can use it in the dolls house, play kitchen, home corner, train set, garden… wherever!
This week my girls have been having a fabulous fun time using play dough to make pizzas. Yesterday Janet Lansbury wrote that play is enough and I thought I’d show you how this works in our house.
A simple batch of play dough plus a few added extras turns into hours of play with math, science, language and social skills incorporated naturally as part of the children’s play.
We started by making some play dough of course. We made our easy no cook play dough recipe for our pizza dough, adding in some herbs from the garden for extra sensory fragrance: rosemary and oregano are great pizza smells.
We also made a batch of play dough with red food colouring in, which was to be the tomato sauce topping on our pizzas.
What children are learning about as they play:
:: reading a recipe
:: measuring ingredients
:: counting,
:: science: observing the properties of materials
:: sensory skills: smelling and feeling
:: types of plants in the garden
:: using a knife to chop: fine motor skills
Once the ingredients had combined it was time to knead the dough.
This is such a comforting process, as the dough is still warm and each push and squash releases the fragrance from the herbs.
What children are learning about as they play:
:: the principles of making bread
:: gross motor skills
:: developing finger strength and dexterity.
Then it was time to make pizzas!
We set out our restaurant kitchen on the table, with different stations: a place to take orders, boards where the children could roll out their pizza bases, a ‘toppings’ assortment and baking trays at the other end, so their pizzas could be taken off to bake in our toy cooker.
Items to offer the children as topping for their pizza could include:
:: pompoms
:: bottle tops
:: pasta pieces
:: buttons
:: marbles
:: dried beans
:: rice
:: lentils
:: fresh or dried herbs
You know your children so pick items to suit them ~ nothing small enough to swallow if you have young children playing
What children are learning about as they play:
:: using imagination
::thinking creatively
:: trying out a real life situation in play
:: co-operating with others
:: sharing
:: working as a team
:: counting
:: making choices and decisions
:: picking up small items: fine motor skills
Including chopped herbs in the dough and a variety of toppings to choose from introduces lots of interesting textures to the children’s play – so much more interesting than only playing with plastic toy food.
The addition of a telephone gave the game a whole new twist – people could ring in to place pizza orders!
We worked together to make some Pizza Parlour order sheets, so the children could take notes of each order to pass to the pizza chefs.
This brought new elements to the play: reading, writing and having telephone conversations.
There was much excitement when I sneaked into the other room and called our home phone from my mobile to place a real order! {L whispered to B: It’s mummy in real life and she wants a pizza!}.
What children are learning about they play:
:: communication
:: real life situations: how do you answer the telephone /order a pizza
:: reading and writing
:: size comparisons: small, medium or large pizzas
:: how addresses and telephone numbers work
:: team work.
So much lovely writing going on ~ and all with a very practical purpose in the play.
If you’d like a template of the sheet we used you can download one here.
Setting up a simple restaurant area completed our Play Dough Pizza parlour and gave the children another aspect to include in their play ~ with lots of conversations going on as they took care of their customers.
Printable pizza play dough play mat
Download your copy of The Amazing Play Dough Printables Pack and get this fun pizza play dough mat. Your children can use play dough to add all their favourite toppings!
The Amazing Play Dough Printables Pack gives you a whole year of brilliant play dough play mats. You’ll always have an activity on hand. Simply print a mat, add play dough, and play!
Click here to get your set of Amazing Play Dough Printables!
- « Previous Page
- 1
- …
- 8
- 9
- 10
- 11
- 12
- …
- 15
- Next Page »