Dr. Seuss themed classroom decorations are a popular sight in schools, especially during Dr. Seuss week/month celebrating Read Across America Day.
Here are some cute ideas I found from Ms. Cobleigh’s preschool class. She shared her photos on Instagram (follow her @PreschoolPlace) and offered to share them with us online.
She had her kids create the craft art, then used them to decorate the walls. The Thing One Thing 2 handprint art is adorable. She used paper plates, yarn and construction paper to make the hot air balloons. Kids can stamp their feet in paint, then on paper, or just trace feet on paper and cut out to create the foot wall.
These simplistic doors make a huge statement. The fish curtains were made using a plastic table cloth and she said it looks beautiful when the light shines in. Truffula trees always help set the tone of a whimsical Dr. Seuss themed room and the children in the window look perfect on the wall.
There are so many Dr. Seuss classroom decorating and activity ideas online. I have an entire Pinterest board to gather the ideas. Click here to see more.
Follow Victoria Saley @obSEUSSed's board Dr. Seuss Activities and Classroom on Pinterest.
To follow all my Dr. Seuss Boards click here.
I also wanted to share her darling Preschool 50’s Sock Hop. She did this to celebrate the 50th day of school.
They wore poodle skirts. The Drive-In sign really lights up using battery operated tea-lights from the dollar store. The checkered floor was made from cardstock paper and taped over and lasted through the party.
I need that sign in my kitchen diner. See my 50’s Sock Hop Party and home diner here.
Remember to follow along on Instagram for current Dr. Seuss or classroom ideas from @PreschoolPlace and @victoria_obSEUSSed.
Showing posts with label 50's. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 50's. Show all posts
Dr. Seuss Classroom Decorations
Sunday, March 2, 2014
Labels:
50's,
activities,
bulletin board,
crafts,
decorations,
Dr. Seuss Classroom,
party
Home Diner: Reading Spot
Thursday, May 26, 2011
Literacy in our Home Diner:
Our kitchen is decorated as a diner. We call it our ‘Soda Shop.’ Having a diner in the home has been so fun for our family. We try to teach our kids good restaurant manners and it offers a variety of literacy opportunities.
The kids read our custom snack menu and use a waiter notebook to take orders.
Our snack menu has 15 items I always have on hand (chicken nuggets, quesadillas, grilled cheese, tomato soup, chips and salsa, french toast, green eggs and ham and more). I found pics on Google of each item then put it in Microsoft Word and labeled each. I printed it and put it inside a plastic sheet protector. The younger kids love the visual menu. The older kids love to write down the order. We also just got a dinner bell they can ring and say “Order Up!”
They can write on the menu chalk board which also becomes a message board for special days.
We do homework together sitting at the booth every day after school. Notice the menu hanging on the chalk board.
When friends visit they sign our Graffiti Wall. The kids love to write on the wall and leave their mark.
Then there are all the fun signs to read. I collect vintage signs and have found some reproduced vintage looking metal signs.
We have two booths and a bar that can seat a total of 16 people. I found both booths in our local classifieds. We eat dinner at the black one. The kids do crafts and have snacks at the smaller red booth and we eat breakfast at the bar.
The kids love to watch PBSKids on TV during breakfast.
Chrome lined bar, Bread Box and Bar Stools. Napkin Holder and Straw dispenser. We put crayons in the little red striped bucket. We are planning to add a chrome plate (diamond plate) to the wall below the bar so when the kids kick the wall it will be easier to clean.
I love the Juke Box CD player I found in the local classifieds for $20. I found the neon clock at Checkers Auto store.
We just recently put an IKEA Expedit book case under the window to hold all the kids crafts and some toys to keep them busy while I’m baking. See the Mr. Potato Heads on the floor? Also notice the new indoor awning I sewed last month. It makes such a difference.
It’s all in the details. Click here to see smaller items we’ve added to decorate the diner.

Our ice cream glasses were found at a vintage consignment store in Salt Lake City. I like to stick apples in them for display.
Our beta fish and dwarf frogs like to hang out on our vintage pie closet. This holds all our cook books, including Diners Drive-ins and Dives on top.
These are pics I took at Ruby’s Diner in Newport Beach, CA and at the Road Island Diner in Utah. I printed them on canvas and hung them in our diner.
I grew up eating Grits (ground up corn boiled and soaked). I remember my mom quoting the waitress Alice from the TV show ‘Mel’s Diner’. She would always say “Kiss My Grits.” So I found this board with hooks and the checkerboard tile and stuck her picture in the middle. It makes a great hot pad holder next to our old fashioned phone from Pottery Barn I found at a DownEast Outlet for $5.00.
Here are a few more pics of the room including making the indoor awning curtain valance.
Listed this project at:
Tatertots and Jello's Weekend Wrap-Up Party.
Home Stories A to Z, Tutorials & Tips

BOOKS FOR KIDS: Linking Literacy to Life
Try this book: What Happens to a Hamburger? What happens to food after you eat it?
Amazon Review:
This book is about a diner cook who loves to eat healthy food and we find out what happens to that food in this well written and illustrated book by Paul Showers and Edward Miller. There are little experiments and up close photos of digestive organs which can delightfully gross out your child while one reads and learns about this important system of the body. My 4 year old daughter wants to be a doctor when she grows up so I am always on the look out for books about the body. I love all of the "Let's-Read-And-Find-Out Science" books and they have several very good books available regarding how the body works. – by Moon Dancer, Reviewer
What Happens to a Hamburger? (Let's-Read-and-Find-Out Science 2)
Children's Diet & Nutrition Books)
Diner Picture Books
Diner Recipe Books
Our kitchen is decorated as a diner. We call it our ‘Soda Shop.’ Having a diner in the home has been so fun for our family. We try to teach our kids good restaurant manners and it offers a variety of literacy opportunities.
The kids read our custom snack menu and use a waiter notebook to take orders.
Our snack menu has 15 items I always have on hand (chicken nuggets, quesadillas, grilled cheese, tomato soup, chips and salsa, french toast, green eggs and ham and more). I found pics on Google of each item then put it in Microsoft Word and labeled each. I printed it and put it inside a plastic sheet protector. The younger kids love the visual menu. The older kids love to write down the order. We also just got a dinner bell they can ring and say “Order Up!”
They can write on the menu chalk board which also becomes a message board for special days.
We do homework together sitting at the booth every day after school. Notice the menu hanging on the chalk board.
When friends visit they sign our Graffiti Wall. The kids love to write on the wall and leave their mark.
Then there are all the fun signs to read. I collect vintage signs and have found some reproduced vintage looking metal signs.
We have two booths and a bar that can seat a total of 16 people. I found both booths in our local classifieds. We eat dinner at the black one. The kids do crafts and have snacks at the smaller red booth and we eat breakfast at the bar.
The kids love to watch PBSKids on TV during breakfast.
I love the Juke Box CD player I found in the local classifieds for $20. I found the neon clock at Checkers Auto store.
We just recently put an IKEA Expedit book case under the window to hold all the kids crafts and some toys to keep them busy while I’m baking. See the Mr. Potato Heads on the floor? Also notice the new indoor awning I sewed last month. It makes such a difference.
It’s all in the details. Click here to see smaller items we’ve added to decorate the diner.
Our ice cream glasses were found at a vintage consignment store in Salt Lake City. I like to stick apples in them for display.
Here are a few more pics of the room including making the indoor awning curtain valance.
See more 50's ideas at our Sock Hop Party.
Listed this project at:
Tatertots and Jello's Weekend Wrap-Up Party.
Home Stories A to Z, Tutorials & Tips

BOOKS FOR KIDS: Linking Literacy to Life
Try this book: What Happens to a Hamburger? What happens to food after you eat it?
Amazon Review:
This book is about a diner cook who loves to eat healthy food and we find out what happens to that food in this well written and illustrated book by Paul Showers and Edward Miller. There are little experiments and up close photos of digestive organs which can delightfully gross out your child while one reads and learns about this important system of the body. My 4 year old daughter wants to be a doctor when she grows up so I am always on the look out for books about the body. I love all of the "Let's-Read-And-Find-Out Science" books and they have several very good books available regarding how the body works. – by Moon Dancer, Reviewer
What Happens to a Hamburger? (Let's-Read-and-Find-Out Science 2)
Diner Picture Books
Diner Recipe Books
Labels:
50's,
bar stools,
Booth,
decorate,
dining room,
Home Diner,
Kitchen,
reading spot,
restaurant
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