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Dental Health Curriculum Guide ?

Question:

Dental Health Curriculum Guide ?


Answer: 1. The dentist helps keep our teeth healthy. 2. Teeth are used to chew food. 3. Teeth should be brushed after each meal. 4. A hygienist helps the dentist. 5. A dentist removes decay from our teeth. 6. Pictures of our teeth are called X-rays. 7. A toothbrush and paste are used to clean teeth. 8. Dental floss helps clean between teeth. 9. The dentist's office has special machines. 10. We can keep our teeth healthy by brushing them every day and eating foods that are good for us.

SUGGESTED ACTIVITY CENTERS

1. Display books about visiting the dentist in the library.

2. Display pictures of teeth, children brushing their teeth, etc. in the quiet area.

3. Provide pink paint at the easel for the children to explore.

4. Place some safe dental products on the sensory table. Include a mirror, dental floss, toothbrush, toothpaste, etc. A dentist may even lend you a model of a set of teeth.

5. Provide construction paper, splatter screens and discarded toothbrushes. The children can splatter paint onto the paper using the toothbrush as a painting tool.

6. Provide paper, toothbrushes of varying sizes and shapes, and paint at the art area.

7. Add toothbrushes and water to the sensory table.

8. Make playdough with peppermint extract to give it the smell of minty toothpaste.

9. Mix dry cornstarch, water and food coloring until the mixture achieves a smooth, paste-like consistency. Do not add all of the cornstarch at first so that you can compensate if too much water is added. Note: This is a messy activity, so small groups of children are best.

10. Select a variety of objects including tools, foods, and other materials that could fit in a person's mouth but that may or may not be appropriate there. Include objects in a variety of sizes so that size is not the only criterion influencing children's decisions. Invite the children to identify what they should and should not put into their mouths and the reasons for those decisions.

11. Make a folder game by making five mouths. Draw the numbers 1-5 on the mouths with teeth to fit at the corresponding number of teeth. Number the inside of the folder 1-5 and have the children match the number of teeth to the numeral.

12. Ask each child to bring an empty toothpaste box to school. Put each child's name on his or her box when it comes in, so the child can identify it. Help children create a graph by gluing or taping their containers to a piece of cardboard. Group identical brands so that children can compare the number of each.

13. Make a tape recording of sounds made by the mouth being used for different purposes, such as chewing, coughing, biting, swishing, gargling, brushing teeth, drinking whistling, talking and singing. Show the children pictures of people involved in these actions. As you play the tape, encourage the children to listen to the sounds, locate the picture and tell how they know it illustrates that sound.

14. Bring in a variety of brushes for the children to examine, including hair, tooth, lint, fingernail, dog and paint brushes. As it is introduced, explain its name and its purpose. Encourage the children to use the correct names when passing the brushes around or when using them in their play.

15. String beads or macaroni on dental floss.

16. Make a Dentist's Office prop box. Include mirrors, lights, bibs, cups, X-ray of a tooth, plastic gloves, Popsicle sticks for tools, dolls, etc. Caution the children to avoid actually putting fingers or instruments in each other's mouths.

CIRCLE TIME / GROUP ACTIVITIES

1. Discuss healthy habits: We brush our teeth at least two times a day (morning and night). We floss our teeth every day.

2. Discuss the dentist's office and the kinds of tools he uses to keep our teeth healthy.

3. Discuss good and bad foods for our teeth. By avoiding sticky, gooey foods and choosing self-cleaning foods, we help our teeth fight decay. Show and compare tooth attackers and tooth cleaners. Let the children compare and classify the following food items into tooth attackers and tooth cleaners:

gum drops raisins cookies candy gum carrots bread popcorn apples tomatoes melons pickles peanut butter macaroni cauliflower

4. Discuss that when we don't brush our teeth regularly, they begin to feel dirty. It feels like something is covering them -- and it's called plaque. By using a toothbrush regularly, we can get rid of plaque before it starts to hurt our teeth.

5. Have a taste-testing day for toothpastes. Select a variety of toothpaste brands for children to sample. Place a small drop of one kind on the end of a Popsicle stick. Have the child taste the toothpaste. Ask each child to choose a favorite. Graph the results.

ART & MESSY MEDIA ACTIVITIES

1. Make toothbrushes and teeth.

2. Cut pictures out of magazines of foods that are good for our teeth and foods that are not.

3. Practice brushing the alligator's teeth. Turn an egg carton over (the egg cups are the teeth). Using the white paint and toothbrush, have the children "brush" the teeth. You can mix a small amount of toothpaste into the paint for a more realistic smell if you like. Put black paint out and see if anybody gets the idea to use it to make cavities.

4. Make smiling faces. Give each child a 6" by 4" pair of smiling lips cut out of red construction paper and an 8" by 1/2" strip of white paper. Have the children snip off little pieces of their white paper to make "teeth." Then let then glue on their paper teeth on their paper lips to make big toothy smiles.

5. Paint with unwaxed dental floss. Dip into paint and then drag across paper to make a mark. Experiment with the floss. Fold paper over a paint-covered strand(s). What do you see?

6. Draw smiling faces.

SPECIAL ACTIVITIES

1. Visit the dentist's office. Observe the furnishings and equipment.

2. Invite a dental hygienist to visit the classroom to discuss tooth care and demonstrate proper brushing techniques. 3. Prepare a healthy snack of fruits and vegetables.

4. Provide each child with a disclosing tablet to check their brushing habits. Disclosure tablets, when chewed, temporarily color teeth to show which ones still have plaque on them. Their function is to help children become aware of how to brush their teeth more thoroughly. Notify parents in advance if you are going to use disclosure tablets so that ...

Actually I was thinking I very much enjoyed Mariann's curriculum too. It's simple, straightforward and adaptable even for the young ones. I'd buy the C.D. rom or if you put it up on a seperate web site (one on it's own) and offer it for free....I'd like that too. :)








 
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