Create a colorful mobile with your favorite flying creatures. Combine various bug body types into a delightful display.
1.
Discover the different body types in common insects, such as ants, beetles, butterflies, and bees. Look at pictures of mobiles, such as those created by Alexander Calder, to see how important balance is to their construction.
2.
Cut out your insects. Draw a large insect with Crayola® Erasable Colored Pencils on the back of Crayola Color Explosion Paper. Erase if needed to make it as accurate as possible. Keep any legs or antennae wide so you can cut them out easily. Fold your paper over so the black sides touch. Cut out a pair of insects with Crayola Scissors. Repeat to make as many pairs of insects as you want for your mobile.
3.
Decorate the insects. Place each set of insects with the black side up. Use Color Explosion Markers to decorate them. Think of interesting natural patterns and designs to make your creatures unique.
4.
Lay one end of a thread on the back of an insect. Bend and place chenille stems on the back for legs and antennae. Cover the back of the matching insect with Crayola School Glue. Place it on top of the first piece, so the chenille stems and thread are sandwiched between. Repeat for all insects. Air-dry your insects.
5.
Prepare your hanger. Trim construction paper to cover a cardboard tube. Poke the thread ends from the insects through the paper and them tape to the back. Wrap the paper around the tube (with the threads inside). Glue the paper to the tube. Attach paper
6.
On more paper, use Crayola Crayons to create decorative details (maybe a sun and clouds). Cut them out. Glue them on the covered tube. Air-dry the glue.
7.
Punch a hole at each end of the tube. Attach yarn to hang your mobile in a classroom display.
Create a replica of a tropical island, complete with palm trees, coral reefs, and other wildlife.
Capture amazing rain forest birds with a scratch-out crayon technique.
Bugs are flyers and crawlers, diggers and wigglers! Discover the biology of arthropods and then show insects at their be
Nature is a powerful force! Convey the drama of hurricanes, typhoons, cyclones, tornadoes, and other powerful storms in
How do you use water, every day or for fun? With your classmates, create a book about why water is important to each of
Investigate the birth of human communities in locations where land and water meet.
In temperate climates, winter brings rain, sleet, freezing rain, hail, and snow. How is water changed into so many diffe
What causes high waves to form? Set up these colorful science experiments to better understand the world’s oceans!