Action Verses & Stories About Food (PreK-1)
Corn Stalk
Grow little seed so brown and small, (children
curl up on floor)
Grow into corn stalks, grow up tall, (children begin to slowly stand
up)
Grow into the rain so quietly (reach arms up high)
Open your leaves (or branches) for all to see. (spread arms apart)
Tune is a simple C major scale, two notes per line. Start on Middle C
and end on C above Middle C.
For dramatic play let one child be sun and "shine" on the seeds. Let
another child be "rain" and sprinkle imaginary drops on the seeds. The rest
curl up and be seeds. Teacher should play, too.
Cheese, Peas, and Chocolate Pudding
The following story invites listener
participation. Each time the story-teller pauses, the children should join
in and repeat the refrain, "cheese, peas and chocolate pudding."
There was once a little boy who ate cheese, peas and chocolate pudding.
Every day he ate the same thing:cheese, peas and chocolate pudding.
For breakfast, he would have some cheese, any kind: cream cheese,
American cheese, Swiss cheese, Dutch cheese, Italian cheese, cottage
cheese, bleu cheese, green cheese, yellow cheese, even leiderkrantz. Just
cheese for breakfast.
For lunch, he ate peas: green or yellow peas, frozen peas, canned peas,
dried peas, split peas, black-eyed peas. No potatoes, though; just peas for
lunch.
And for supper he would have cheese and peas and chocolate pudding, for dessert. Cheese, peas and chocolate pudding. Cheese, peas
and chocolate pudding. Every day, the same old thing: cheese, peas
and chocolate pudding.
Once, his mother bought him a lamb chop. She cooked it in a little
frying pan on the stove, and she put some salt on it and gave it to him on
a little blue dish. The little boy looked at it. He smelled it (it smelled
delicious!). He even touched it. but -- "Is this cheese?" he asked. "It's a
lamb chop darling," said his mother. The boy shook his head. "Cheese," he
said. So his mother ate the lamb chop herself, and the boy had some cottage
cheese.
One day, his big brother was chewing on a raw carrot. It sounded so good
and crunchy, the little boy reached his hand out for a bite. "Sure!" his
brother said, "Here!" He almost put the carrot into his mouth, but
at the last minute he remembered and asked, "Is this peas?" "No, it's a
carrot," said his brother, "Peas", the little boy said firmly, handing the
carrot back.
Once his daddy was eating a big dish of raspberry pudding, It looked so
shiny red and cool, the little boy came over and held his mouth open. "Want
a taste?" asked his daddy. The little boy looked and looked at the
raspberry pudding. He almost looked it right off the dish. "But, is it
chocolate pudding?" he asked. "No, it's raspberry pudding," said his daddy.
So the little boy frowned and backed away. "Chocolate pudding!" he
said.
His grandma bought him an ice cream cone. The little boy shook his head.
His aunt and uncle invited him for a fried chicken dinner. Everybody ate
fried chicken and fried chicken and fried chicken, except the little boy.
And you know what he ate? Cheese, peas and chocolate pudding. Every day the same old thing: cheese,
peas and chocolate pudding
But one day -- ah, one day a very funny thing happened. The little
boy was pretending to be a puppy. He lay on the floor and growled and
barked and rolled over. He crept to the table where his big brother was
having lunch. "Arf, arf!" he barked. "Good Doggie!" said his brother,
patting his head. The little boy lay down on his back and barked again. But
at that moment, his big brother dropped a piece of something right into the
little boy's mouth. The little boy sat up in surprise because something was
on his tongue. And that something was warm and juicy and delicious!
And it didn't taste like cheese. And it didn't taste like peas. And it
didn't taste a bit like chocolate pudding. The little boy chewed
slowly. Each chew tasted better. He swallowed the something.
"That's not cheese," he said. "No, it's not," said his brother. "And
it's not peas," he said. "No, not peas," said his brother. "It couldn't be
chocolate pudding." "No, it's certainly not chocolate pudding," said his
brother, smiling, "It's hamburger."
So the little boy thought very hard. "I like hamburger!" he said.
So ever after that, the little boy ate cheese, peas, chocolate pudding
and hamburger.
Until he was your age, of course. Then he ate everything!
(DeKalb
County Special Education Association)
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