Nursery–I am thankful for my eyes
Jul 14th, 2008 by Bethany
Okay, this is a little later than I wanted to post this, but better late than never. I taught the “I am Thankful for my Eyes” lesson (#19) in Nursery yesterday. I stuck to lesson materials, but adapted it for the little ones and our schedule. In our Nursery, the schedule goes in this order (most of the time).
1. Playtime, then clean up
2. Opening (prayer, catch up on kids’ news, quick review of previous lesson, intro to today’s lesson)
3. Walk (outside or in building)
4. Lesson
5. Singing Time
6. Snack
7. Activity
8. Playtime
9. Cleanup, closing prayer, bubbles until parents arrive
So, my job was to be in charge of steps 2, 3, 4, and 7. Here’s how I did it.
2. For the Opening, we had a child say the opening prayer, then reviewed last week’s lesson about ears by asking them where their ears are and what things they heard during Sacrament Meeting that morning. Then I told them we’d be talking about how we’re thankful for our eyes today. I asked them where their eyes were, and had them look at each others’ eyes. Then we made glasses with our hands to sing “Popcorn” and I asked them if we went outside if they thought we’d see popcorn. I told them we were going for a walk and we’d look around and see what our eyes can do.
3. We have a rope in our Nursery that the kids hold on to when we go for a walk to keep them all together. We went outside and sat on a bench, had them use their hands as “glasses” like in the Popcorn song, and I asked them what they could see. I asked them if they could see anything green, then blue, then gray, etc. Then I asked if they could see things of different shapes. Then we went for a little run in circles to let them see what’s on the ground and to get some energy out. Then we walked back inside, holding on to the rope.
4. We sat down in the Nursery room, I asked them what they could remember seeing outside with their wonderful eyes, and we sang “Two Little Eyes That See.” I told the children that some people can’t see very well and have to wear glasses or contacts to help them see better. I showed them which of the Nursery workers wore glasses, then asked them to raise their hands if their moms or dads wear glasses or contacts. Then I told them some people can’t see at all with their eyes and got a volunteer to let me blindfold him and I pretended to be a guide dog and lead him around the room.
(At this point our Primary Chorister came in and we did Singing Time, then returned to the lesson)
I let a couple more kids be “blind” or the “guide dog.” We talked about how hard it is to do things without our eyes, and how our eyes are a blessing.
Then I pulled out the Jesus Healing the Blind Man picture and told the story very simply. I told them that Jesus spat on the dirt and made mud. We talked about who likes mud and who doesn’t like mud (that conversation was a hit). Then Jesus put the mud on the blind man’s eyes (I showed them the picture up close then, and asked if they could see Jesus putting mud on his eyes). Then Jesus told him to go wash his eyes off. The blind man was obedient and did what Jesus said, and then he could see again! I asked the kids if they think Jesus showed he loved the blind man because he made his eyes work again. Then I told them that Jesus loves them too, and their eyes are one way they can tell that Jesus and Heavenly Father love them. I bore my testimony of how the Lord loves us, and how I’m thankful for my eyes.
7. For our activity, I prepared paper bag puppets with open and closing eyes for the kids to color as illustrated at the end of the lesson. On the back of the bag I wrote “I am thankful for my EYES” and then as the kids colored we wrote their names on the bags. The older kids especially liked opening the eyes and closing them again with the puppets.
This rendition of the lesson worked quite well. I think it helped a LOT that we had a predictable schedule that we’d been using for a few weeks and the kids were used to it. They were attentive and interested almost the whole time. They were pretty afraid of the blindfold during the guide dog activity, so I think that one might have been too much for the little ones. They were very interested in the part of the lesson that talked about Jesus. They liked opening and closing their eyes and showing me their eyes. I had prepared another “just in case” activity that we didn’t use–the one in the manual where you “hide” a small object and have them look around for it. I brought a little rainbow colored stuffed animal to use for that.