Summary of OD in the middle group “Fedoreno Gore”, household work
Joint activity of teachers and children “Fedoreno Gore”, household work in the middle group (4-5 years old)
Author: Gribanova Anna Leonidovna Co-author: Sedelnikova Anna Evgenievna Position and place of work: teachers, MBDOU No. 109 “Kindergarten of a combined type”, Kemerovo. Description of the material: We bring to your attention a summary of the joint activities of the teacher and children in labor education. The material includes the following educational areas: “Cognitive development”, “Social-communicative”, “Speech development”. The notes may be useful for teachers working in the middle group. Goal: to expand children’s understanding of household work. Objectives: 1. Continue teaching how to care for dishes and instill self-care skills. 2. Fix the names of the dishes, types of dishes, material for production. 3. Develop the ability to compare objects, find commonalities, and see the geometric figure at the heart of an object. 4. Improve careful handling of dishes. 5. Cultivate a caring attitude towards dishes. 6. Develop the ability to work with both hands at the same time. 7. Promote team unity, relieve tension, correct shyness. 8. Develop the ability to enter into the image of an object, to show a non-living object with sounds, gestures, and facial expressions. Preliminary work: studying the topics: “Utensils”, “Profession - cook, teacher, junior teacher”, “Household duties”, reading the works of K.I. Chukovsky.
Equipment: a ball for the game, four sheets of geometric figures for the game “What’s What” and pictures of dishes, basins, sponges, aprons, dishes, towels, oilcloths for washing dishes, a cook doll, a teacher, a junior teacher. Progress of educational activities:
The teacher reads excerpts from fairy tales by K.I. Chukovsky, and the children guess which fairy tale the excerpt is from.
Educator: 1. Hey, you animals, come out, defeat the Crocodile, so that the greedy Crocodile will turn the Sun into the sky! Did you find out what work these words are from? Children: “Stolen Sun” 2. He is sitting under a tree. Come to him for treatment. Both the cow and the she-wolf? 3. The bears were riding a bicycle. And behind them the cat is backwards. Now let's blow really hard on the sea out of the confusion? Breathing exercises
Educator: you will listen to the next excerpt in the recording. The teacher plays a recording from the fairy tale “Fedoreno Grief”
: The sieve gallops through the fields, and the trough through the meadows.
The broom followed the shovel along the street. Axes, axes, just pouring down from the mountain, The goat got scared, widened her eyes: “What is it? Why? I won’t understand anything.” And I won't understand anything! Who was running away from whom? Children: Dishes from Fedora. Educator : Of course, you recognized this work? Children: yes, this is the fairy tale “Fedoreno Grief” Educator : which was written... Children: Korney Ivanovich Chukovsky. Next is a conversation about the dishes, about Fedora’s attitude towards them. Educator: 1. Guys, why did all the dishes run away from Fedora? 2. Why wash the dishes? You can buy a lot of pots and that’s it, why cook, eat, and then wash? 3. How did Fedora feel about her dishes? She did everything wrong, the dishes need to be loved and looked after. 4. What kind of dishes are there? (kitchen and dining room) We learn what the dishes are made of during the game. I will name the object, and you will name what it is made of (glass, plate, etc.) Guys, who in our kindergarten uses dishes? (cooks, assistant cook, teachers, children, junior teacher, dolls with toy dishes) The teacher helps the children answer this question with the help of dolls with the words “look who came to visit us?” Then they figure out why each of them needs dishes.
I have a poster with geometric shapes, and you have cards, you need to choose each card its place. The game “What's what?” is played, after the game Fedora comes in and cries.
Educator: And here is Fedora Egorovna, hello dear, come in. Why are you crying now? Fedora: all the dishes ran away from me. Educator : Guys, what should you do with your dishes so that they don’t run away from you? Children: wash and care for it. Fedora: But of course, I don’t know how. Educator: What should I do with you? Well, first of all, I need to return the dishes. Do you even remember what you had? Fedora : Yes, I have a whole list here, you just need to guess what I have there and show me the answer. - Soup, salad, mashed potatoes, cutlets Always served in... (Plate) - The teapot's friend Has two ears, Cooks porridge, soup for Yulia. And their name is... (Pan) - There will be delicious food With a golden crust, If you use... That's right,... (Frying pan) - They take them out on New Year's Eve, They pour drinks into them for the guests, And, famous for their vocals, They ring when the clock strikes... ( Glasses) - Tell me what to call her: Her teeth are all full of holes, But she grinds beets, radishes, horseradish, carrots deftly. (Grate) - A boat is floating on my plate. I put the boat of food into my mouth. (Spoon) - And for tea and curdled milk, substitute, my friend... (Cup) - On the stove is the boss of the pots. Fat, long-nosed... (Kettle)
Fedora, together with the children, prepares the work area, distributes sponges, towels, places basins and discusses who will do what (wash, rinse, wipe, take to dry).
The children and the teacher sort the dishes into two groups, kitchen and dining, and begin washing, showing them to Fedora.
After the activity, the teacher praises the children, and together they clean their workplace.
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Self-care for middle group children
Involving children in helping their peers is successful only if the former know in advance in what form this help can be provided and master these skills. If a child, for example, does not know how to fasten his own shoe, he will not be able to do it for another. Thus, the key to successfully connecting a child to help another is self-service. A child whose actions have been consolidated and whose skills have been developed, with great desire and interest, agrees to come to the aid of another. At the same time, practice shows that children, even having the skills of dressing and undressing, sometimes cannot apply the learned method of action in relation to their peers. Children begin to get lost, feel insecure, and turn to the teacher for help. This is explained by the fact that the guys were not taught how to transfer their skills to other conditions and situations. Therefore, the teacher’s task at first, when involving children in providing assistance, is to remind (and perhaps show and explain) what needs to be done and how. This instills in them confidence in their abilities and convinces them of their skills. Around the second half of the year, the teacher increasingly limits it to general reminders: “Do everything the way you do it for yourself, so that it is neat, correct, beautiful.” Systematic work on involving children in helping each other has a positive impact on the formation of the ability to come to the rescue without the constantly repeating demands of the teacher, independently. By the end of the fifth year of life, children not only strive to fulfill the adult’s task of helping someone, but also try to “teach” the person under their care how and what actions need to be performed. The form of assistance is becoming more advanced: in addition to direct practical actions, elements of training are increasingly appearing. When strengthening self-service skills in children, the teacher increasingly turns to their consciousness. He points out to children the permanent responsibilities in this type of work, explains why they need to be performed, and shows their importance to others. Sometimes in children by the age of 5 one can observe a decrease in interest in self-care work. This is caused by the simplicity and monotony of actions, frequent repetition of activities (dressing, putting away toys, eating, etc.), as well as the child’s insufficiently developed skills of independence, neatness and cleanliness at the previous stage. Therefore, it is necessary to interest them in the diversity of this work and create a certain emotional atmosphere. Thus, consolidating self-service skills, turning them into habits, and at the same time a condition for the formation of independence in everyday activities is maintaining interest in it. This is facilitated by the emotional experiences that the child experiences when undressing and dressing. That is why, at this age level, encouragement and objective assessment of his activities are so necessary. The emergence of a positive emotional state in self-service activities is also facilitated by the fact that the teacher brings to the consciousness of children what is good in their behavior, emphasizing the importance of independent activity for others and for the group of children as a whole. The teacher says: “Look how quickly Vanya and Sasha got dressed today. Sveta and Sonya helped them. Now let’s all play together.” Analysis of the results of work, their objective assessment becomes an effective method of raising children if the teacher strives to strengthen their desire to perform their duties better, faster, and on time. The adult gradually teaches the children to evaluate their own achievements in self-service and correct shortcomings on their own initiative. The whole atmosphere of life in a peer group helps to develop self-esteem in children of the average group. If one of the children has an incorrect attitude towards his duties (did not make the bed well, did not get dressed for a long time, and delayed the children for a music lesson), the teacher, together with his comrades, condemns him. As before, children in the middle group imitate their elders in performing self-care work, but they do it more consciously. The teacher becomes an authority for the children. They exactly repeat his actions, imitate even in small things. It is important that children feel in the tone of adults the obligation to fulfill their demands. At this age, you can already demand much more from children than from little ones.
Summary of educational activities for the development of self-service skills
Grenz Ekaterina Sergeevna
MADOOU "Kolobok", Noyabrsk
Educator
Summary of educational activities for the development of self-service skills
Target:
Continue to teach children to independently care for their appearance and the condition of their clothing.
Tasks:
1. Strengthening children’s ability to put things back in their place
2. Formation of clothing care skills;
3. Formation of a desire for neatness; to the ability to notice and correct imperfections in appearance in oneself and other children;
4. Improving the ability to dress independently in the correct sequence;
5. Enrichment of vocabulary with the help of proverbs and sayings on the topic
Progress of the lesson
There's a knock on the door.
Educator:
Children, do you hear, someone came to visit us. Vika, let's go, open the door and meet the guest.
(An upset doll enters the group, introduces itself, begins to take off its outerwear and scatters things as it goes.)
Educator:
Hello! What happened, why are you so upset?
Doll:
"Hello! My name is doll Masha. My girlfriends don't invite me to go out with them! So I'm upset. They say I'm sloppy, sloppy! Guys, tell me what these words are, what do they mean? I came to you for help, you know everything in kindergarten and can do everything!
Educator:
Doll Masha, we will help you! First, children, let's remember what these words mean - sloppy, sloppy?
(This is a person who does not keep his things orderly and clean and does not take care of his appearance.
)
What did the doll Masha do wrong when she joined our group? ( I scattered my things.
) Let's tell you what you actually need to do with them.
Children's individual answers:
- put the boots on the shoe rack,
- hang the jacket on a hook in the locker,
- Put the hat on the top shelf in the locker.
Educator:
And now Vanya and Nikolina will help me put Masha’s doll’s things back in their places.
So that our advice is not forgotten, remember the proverbs and sayings about neatness that our children know.
Kirill:
“The whole world is kept up by neatness”
Alice:
“Where there is neatness, there is neatness”
Daniel:
“Whoever is neat is pleasant to people.”
Educator:
All things need to be looked after not only when they are old, but also when they are still new.
Doll:
Oh, I still have a lot of things here!
They're all mixed up and I don't know what to do with them! Teach me how to lay things out! ( Pours things out of the bag.)
Several children help the doll Masha sort things into pairs, and neatly fold unpaired things or hang them on a chair.
Educator:
And our children also know that they need to not only carefully put things in their places, but also wear them carefully and take care of their appearance. Guys, let's look at our guest - what's wrong with her outfit?