"The Very Hungry Caterpillar" counting experience

Read "The Very Hungry Caterpillar" then do some counting

Materials Required

  • Book "The Very Hungry Caterpillar" by Eric Carle or watch the animation below (or do both)
  • Household items to count - whatever you have (blocks, fruit, cutlery, pencils, toys)

Play experience profile

Play Experience Preparation

Read the book "The Very Hungry Caterpillar" by Eric Carle and/or watch the animation - Collect household items for counting up to 5 (or more).

Experience Steps

  1. Read the book "The Very Hungry Caterpillar" by Eric Carle and/or watch the animation.
  2. As you read the story pause to allow your child to count the food items. Can they point to each item and count along with their finger?
  3. Encourage your child to name each food item.
  4. After reading the story, encourage your child to cover their eyes while you set up a number of household items to count.
  5. Say "ready to count"- then have children uncover their eyes and count the items in front of them.

What to talk about, or questions to ask during the experience

  • What is this fruit called?
  • How many plums did the very hungry caterpillar eat?
  • How many oranges did the very hungry caterpillar eat?
  • Cover your eyes- no peeking. Are you ready to count?
  • How many cars can you see?
  • How many spoons do I have?

Build on this...

  • Encourage children to count up to 10 if they can.
  • Children could sort the counted items according to colour, size, material etc.
  • Draw pictures of each of the fruits (or search for printable templates) and then put these in the correct story sequence.
  • Look at the lifecycle of a butterfly in the story - egg, caterpillar, cocoon, butterfly.

WHO guidelines for physical activity and sedentary behaviour

Provide evidence-based public health recommendations for children, adolescents and adults on physical activity. Learn more

Go outside and search for caterpillars of butterflies - this will promote physical activity.


EYLF Outcomes

The Early Years Learning Framework has been designed for use by early childhood educators working in partnership with families, children’s first and most influential educators. View PDF

  1. Children develop dispositions for learning such as curiosity, cooperation, confidence, creativity, commitment, enthusiasm, persistence, imagination and reflexivity
  2. Children begin to understand how symbols and pattern systems work
  3. Children engage with a range of texts and gain meaning from these texts

EYLF Principle

Principle 3: High expectations and equity. Children progress well when they, their parents and educators hold high expectations for their achievement in learning.

EYLF Practice

Practice: Intentional teaching. Intentional teaching is deliberate, purposeful and thoughtful. They use strategies such as modelling and demonstrating, open questioning, speculating, explaining, engaging in shared thinking and problem solving to extend children’s thinking and learning.


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=75NQK-Sm1YY Animation

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3kZD6rlSLUw Life Cycle of a Butterfly

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SG0jzpZtfgs Learn about the 5 counting principles children need to know

https://www.earlystartdiscoveryspace.edu.au/discovery-at-home/?_sf_s=story Discover more stories shared by the educators at the Discovery Space, Early Start, University of Wollongong

https://storyboxlibrary.com.au/ Explore other stories read by the best storytellers

Author:

Have you tried this play experience? Tell us what you think

review experience
Leave your play experience feedback login to leave feeedback

Share Play Experience

Related Play Experiences

© 2024 Copyright Play + Learn Together
Website by Handmade Web & Design