Pete the Cat Freebies- Guided Drawing, and More!



Pete the Cat "fever" has swept through my classroom and indeed, my school!  All of the Kindergarten classes at my school are now reading and enjoying all of the Pete the Cat books and activities that we are finding on blogs and other places online!  So I decided to hop on the "Pete Bandwagon" and make a few of them myself.




 
My favorite drawing is the one with just three legs, LOL!  It's SO Kindergarten!


I haven't posted a good guided drawing lesson in quite a while, so I thought that a nice Pete the Cat guided drawing freebie would be just the ticket to help close out the school year for those of us that are still plowing our way through it! 


We do the whole cat with a black marker first, and don't pass out crayons until we are done.



The Pete the Cat Guided Drawing activity was lots of fun and very successful.  The kids didn't find it challenging at all, other than the shoes.  This was the first time that I had tried to do this project with the children, so of course there were a few kinks to work out.  The only real problem we had with it was that some children started out by making the head way too small, and then wound up with the whole drawing too small.  So if I were to do it again, I may just go ahead and draw the first "rainbow" line of the forehead (between the ears) lightly with a pencil ahead of time on the paper, right where it should go, making it the size it should be.  That way, everyone would be able to continue without a problem.  The issue is that once the head has been formed to small, they really can't put in the details of the eyes and nose very well, and the feet also come out too small.  That means that the legs and shoes come out very small as well, and many of the children can't make a very small shoe.  They can make a large shoe, but not a very small one.


We always do our guided drawing on the floor with clipboards in our laps.


Also, I should have given the directions for the shoes four separate times.  What I did was give the directions once, and then let them complete the other three shoes on their own.  This was perfect for the top half of the class, but not so great for the bottom!  Those children that struggle a bit more couldn't quite remember the steps to making the shoes, and just sort of scribbled their way through the rest of the shoes.  That gave them one shoe and three scribbles on the bottom of their cats' feet!  Oh, well!  Live and learn!  I am anxious to try it again and see if I can get it right next time, LOL!  In any case, click here for the free download of the Pete the Cat Guided Drawing Activity.

Download these directions to teach your students how to draw Pete the Cat!



I also made a Pete the Cat color word sheet.  I used it as a time filler for when the children finished their dictation test, and it really came in handy!  For a copy of the Pete the Cat color words sheet, click here.



The children really enjoyed the fact that I didn't put any color words on Pete himself, which left him open for any color at all.  So some of them really went crazy with it once they finished coloring the shoes!




Then I took those same drawings and made them into a patterning worksheet to help us review for our patterning test.  If you would like a copy of this patterning worksheet free download, click here.





The last thing I want to give you is this Pete the Cat Nonsense Words sheet!  My class hasn't had a chance to try it out yet, so I don't have any photos of the children's work.  But we have done several nonsense word worksheets in the past, and they have never had any trouble with them, so this one will probably also be fine, I think!  All they have to do is read the CVC word in the button and decide if it is real, or nonsense.  If it is real, they color it red.  If it is nonsense, they color it the color of their choice.  I did not put any words on Pete again, so that they could color him as they choose, just for fun!  (For more CVC words activities and worksheets, click here.  For multisensory phonics songs and activities, click here.)




Click here for a copy of the Pete the Cat Nonsense Word Worksheet!  I hope you enjoy this "labor of love!"  If you have enjoyed reading this blog and like the freebies, please sign up for the email updates, and tell a friend!  I love hearing from you, too, so leave me a comment or two and tell me how you like the worksheets and activities, and tell me what you would like to see next.  And don't forget to visit our website for great Common Core teaching resources for Pre-K, K, and First Grade!

If you liked this post, you may also enjoy this one:
A Pete the Cat Freebie, and a Brand New Wiggles Book!


----------------------------------
Follow me! Did you enjoy this post? Do me a favor and share it with your friends! And follow this blog by signing up for my email updates here, or follow on Bloglovin', or follow me on TPT! I'm also on Pinterest, Facebook, Twitter, InstagramGoogle+ and YouTube, too! Don't forget to sign up for our email newsletter for special deals and promo codes that you won't find out about anywhere else.

Popular posts from this blog

Creepy Crayon: Free Craft Template!

How to Help Children That Have a Hard Time Learning the Alphabet

Fun with STEM: A "Punkin Chunkin" Catapult with Craft Sticks!

A Creepy Pair of Underwear Craftivity FREEBIE!

Teaching Kids to WRITE the Numbers! – FREE Number Poems!

Getting Control of a Very Difficult Class: TAKE TWO

Teaching Phoneme Segmentation: Separating Sounds in Words (Freebies!)

An EASY Critical Thinking Game for K/1 Kids!

Creepy Carrots: A Free Halloween Craftivity!

Teaching CVC Words: What to Do When They Are STILL NOT GETTING IT