google.com, pub-8985115814551729, DIRECT, f08c47fec0942fa0 Free Printable Lesson Plans

Quick, cheap easy no-sew bedroom play fort craft project for bunk beds or school room library corner


Hello my friends of the Omschool! Omschool is a mix-up of Omi (that's me!) which means grandma in Dutch, and homechool! I was a beta homeschool parent in the early 1990s. And now I'm proud to have Gen 2 homeschool grandkids. I was also a teacher for many years. So blog represents a collection of educational ideas put together over the years. On the second to last day of April Earth Month, I'm hauling some old articles I wrote on DIY activities to recycle, repurpose and reuse. I've been thinking a lot about forts and how important they are to kids. We made a cardboard forts a few days ago and today we're making forts in our bedrooms. And if you know me, you'll know these are going to be super cheap and so easy that kids can make them with a little supervision.  

No Sew DIY Play Fort Pattern

You've seen those cute play forts that come attached to a bunk or loft bed. Bunk or loft beds are available for sale with a tent kind of thing that attaches to the top bunk to form a play fort. A pirate ship or princess castle are usual themes. These attached bed forts are usually very expensive and not real well made. You can easily create a super cool no sew DIY play fort /bedroom canopy for your kids' bunk or loft bed. You'll just need with four free or inexpensive supplies. 

  • two fabric shower curtains (available at Amazon, Walmart, Family Dollar, Walmart and Dollar General for $10 or less)

  • two sets of curtain rings (available from same merchants for a few bucks per package)

  • sharp fabric scissors

  • duct tape in coordinating color with shower curtain (optional to make windows)

    ✨ Omi's Pro Tip:

    If you're using duct tape to reinforce the windows, try a patterned tape (like polka dots or animal prints). It acts like a built-in "window frame" decoration and saves you a step in the decorating process!

Funny Omi memory

I'll get on with how to make it but first a little walk down memory lane, that may resonate. So we all have that friend who is an outrageously talented, crafty gal. We'll call her "Rose" (you know who you are, milady!) She's a sewing diva, a domestic goddess. She whips up a DIY play fort with her handy, dandy sewing machine. You don't even know where your machine is, let alone the fact that last time you used it you impaled the needle through your thumb and had to go to ER. 

The envy of the neighborhood

Well, this friend made a play fort and it's the envy of the friend circle. It's got cute little windows, a door and probably a jacuzzi and full bar hidden somewhere in its realm. Her kids proudly display their cool new play areas. As your kids cast wistful sidelong glances at them and dirty looks at you. You stand by feeling like a pretty sorry mom who not only has no time, but also zero inclination to make a play fort for her kids' beds.

Be THAT mom and save your thumb

But don't worry, you're not a candidate for "lamest mom of the year". You don't have to be a seamstress. You don't even need to own a sewing machine to make this one. Just take those four supplies mentioned and you're in business. Why you can even get a double duty craft project for the kids out of it. And that's music to any homeschool parent's heart. BOGO household task done with kids occupied plus you get to be the cool mommy! 

💡 Omi's Pro Tip:

When choosing your shower curtains, look for weighted hems. The little magnets or weights at the bottom help the "fort walls" stay straight and prevent them from flapping around when the kids are crawling in and out!

Super easy, quick, cheap, DIY 

As for the design, you can probably follow where I'm going with this shower curtain play fort. Hang the shower curtain from the top bunk or loft, using the curtain hooks. Metal bunk bed frames will have bars that the shower curtain hooks should accommodate. If not, get some of the expandable clip kind. We just bought them four for a dollar at Amazon for my husband's new homebrew room. 

So easy the kids can make it

Hang the other shower curtain at the back of the bunk bed or loft. Push the bed up against the wall and voila your child has a private little snug that took minutes to make.  Using shower curtain with hooks makes it easy for children to open and close the fort as they need to. Often the ready made bunk bed forts have zippers and snaps that break with continual use. Another value added feature. Plus, if you get the kind of shower curtains that are designed like window curtains, all the child has to do is step through. 

Fancy it up if you wish

  • To create windows in your fort, cut four square openings like a window frame. Reinforce the window edges with duct tape to prevent fraying. 
  • Have kids cut felt flowers and use glue dots to decorate the bottom. 
  • Make a tulle net canopy by putting a hook in the ceiling and hanging it. Or use the Command strip idea to avoid marking the ceiling. 
  • Label it with paint pens. 
  • Or use a plain shower curtain and let kids decorate with their paint pens. This will keep them busy for hours! 

Make it stick

If you want to attach the curtain fort to the sides of the bed, simply stick small pieces of duct tape front and back, along the sides at even intervals. Cut slits through the tape layers to make no-sew buttonholes. Make about six or eight no-sew buttonholes. Using shoelaces, yarn braids, ribbon or any other material you wish, tie the curtain to the bunk bed or loft bed sides. Or even easier, use glue dots to add magnets along the edge. Personally, I just didn't and no one ever missed it. 

🛠️ Omi's Pro Tip:

For a "temporary" fort that doesn't leave marks, use extra-strength Command strips or adhesive Velcro dots to attach the curtain edges to the bed frame. Hang your canopy from one, as well. It’s a great hack for renters or for making the fort easy to take down on laundry day.


With this easy, inexpensive no-sew shower curtain bed fort or canopy, you just may be back in the running for cool mom of the year!

Free printable Cinco de Mayo coloring pages, lesson plans and activities

 


Cinco de Mayo, or Fifth of May, celebrates the victory of the smaller Mexican army over the mighty French juggernaut, in the Battle of Puebla, 1862. Cinco de Mayo is not the Mexican Independence Day, but many Latino Americans celebrate it. Here are free printable Cinco de Mayo coloring pages and Mexican crafts

Whimsey Coloring offers free printable Cinco de Mayo coloring activities and coloring pages. 

Enchanted Learning has free printable Cinco de Mayo lesson plans, games, crafts, puzzles and lesson plans to explore Mexican geography, culture and history.

Kiddy House provides free Cinco de Mayo coloring printables linked on from the Cinco de Mayo homepage. Color Mexican children in traditional costumes, maps and flag of Mexico, plus fiesta coloring pages.

Surf Net Kids has free printable Cinco de Mayo coloring pages, including some whimsical chili peppers in sombreros as well as a Mexican couple in ceremonial and traditional dress.

DL-TK is your one-stop source for free printable Cinco de Mayo crafts, coloring pages, games, Mexican history and social studies lessons, booklets and more. Create a complete classroom or homeschool unit to explore Cinco de Mayo and Mexican history and traditions. Here's the page on Mexico coloring pages, lesson plans and activities. Color some for Cinco de Mayo greeting cards and party decorations.

Monday Mandala lists a gajillion free Cinco de Mayo printables including Mexican games, crafts, puzzles, greeting cards and more.

Cinco de Mayo means the fifth of May. But it isn't Mexican Independence Day nor the equivalent of the U.S. Fourth of July. Cinco de Mayo is the day Mexicans remember El Día de la Batalla de Puebla (Battle of Puebla). Cinco de Mayo is mostly an Americanized Latino holiday. But also a great day to explore Mexican culture. Here are free printable Cinco de Mayo lesson plans, worksheets and games.

Mr Donn has free printable Cinco de Mayo activities, games, coloring pages, Powerpoint presentations, social studies worksheets, history lesson plans and culture study activities. Lesson Plans offers links to Cinco de Mayo printables.

A-Z Teacher Stuff has free printable Cinco de Mayo unit and lesson planner kit with materials, worksheets, games, crafts, recipes, movies and activities.

Enchanted Learning has free printable Cinco de Mayo worksheets, mini-booklets, history and social studies lesson plans. Print a map of Mexico, Mexican flag, info on the Battle of Puebla, Mexican leaders, posters, history, images and recipes. Print a nice poster featuring Cesar Chavez and other Mexican labor activists, political figures, scientists, artists, musicians and more.

The Teachers Corner has free printable Cinco de Mayo crafts, counting lessons, words in Spanish, cultural heritage activities and more. Lesson Planet has free printable lesson plans on Cinco de Mayo to sample.

For preschool and younger kids, visit DL-TK for free Cinco de Mayo coloring pages, crafts, games, puzzles and recipes. Kids Soup offers free Cinco de Mayo printables to sample.

Apples 4 the Teacher offers free printable Cinco de Mayo lessons, maps, history projects, puzzles, games, music, crafts, recipes and more. There are ideas for several ages groups. ELCivics has printable Cinco de Mayo lessons for older students

DIY Recycled Cardboard Fort, Play Store and Theater crafts for kids



Hello Omschooligans and welcome to another day of recycled cardboard craft projects with teacher Omi! Here at the Omschool, we're celebrating Earth Month by making crafts for kids using recycled cardboard. Today we're making a transformable recycled cardboard puppet theater, playhouse, play store and and cardboard forts. Use these Earth Day cardboard crafts for kids in preschool learning centers to teach science, dramatic play and art. 

What you'll need:

These crafts for kids require recycled cardboard but you'll want to make sure that there are many kinds of recycled items: 

  • glass jars
  • plastic containers
  • Styrofoam pieces
  • metal cans
  • grocery items 
You'll also need: 

  • a recycle bin (teacher Omi's best friend for hands-on lesson plans!)
  • scissors
  • stapler
  • glue
  • markers
  • tape 
Now just add some children and voila--an Earth Month of crafts for kids! 

Recycled cardboard fort walls

Show children how to open cardboard boxes and attach them together to form large sheets for roof and walls of cardboard forts. Reinforce cardboard forts with taped on sticks, yard sticks, rulers, recycled plastic straws, etc. Hold recycled cardboard walls upright and tape one stick on both sides, at angles, from wall to floor. These temporary props keep walls from toppling. 

Cardboard fort windows

Cut windows in recycled cardboard play fort walls. Staple old towels or scrap fabric to windows for curtains. Paint cardboard fort exterior or drape with large blankets, sheets, tablecloths or curtains. Create a village of forts where children can visit back and forth. Let them fill forts with pillows, stuffed animals, books and snacks. 

Recycled cardboard play store

Repurpose cardboard forts into a play store. 

  • Tape recycled cardboard shelves to inside by making hinges (tape one piece under the shelf and one on top, by making an L shape and attaching both to wall and shelf). 
  • Collect food packages, cans, bottles, boxes and containers from the recycle bin. Assemble them on play store shelves. 
  • Students should design a sign to entice customers. 
  • They can make fake checks, credit cards and play money. 
  • Bag play store groceries in recycled grocery bags. 
  • Create a scanner "gun" from a plastic water pistol. Remind kids to say "beep" when checking out groceries for their customers. 

Recycled cardboard crafts: play theater


Instruction Card: The Transformable Puppet Theater


Project: Recycled Play TheaterPrep Time: 15 minsDifficulty: Medium
Materials:Tools:Yield:
1 Large Appliance BoxUtility Knife/Scissors1 Tabletop or Floor Theater
Old Curtains or FabricDuct Tape
Tension Rod or StringMarkers/Paint

Instructions

  1. Prepare the Base: Select a large cardboard box. If using a refrigerator box, keep it upright. If using a smaller shipping box, open the top and bottom flaps to create a "tunnel."

  2. Cut the Stage Window: On the front side of the box, draw a large rectangle about midway up (eye level for the "puppeteers"). Carefully cut this out to create your stage opening.

  3. The Proscenium Arch: Decorate the area around the window with paint or markers. You can glue on cardboard "scrollwork" or a marquee sign at the top.

  4. Install the Curtains: * Option A: Poke two holes on either side of the window inside the box and thread a piece of clothesline through.

    • Option B: Use a small tension rod wedged inside the box frame.

    • Hang your scrap fabric or old towels to act as the stage curtain.

  5. Backstage Access: Ensure the back of the box remains open so the "actors" can crawl in and out easily.

  6. Stabilize: If the theater feels wobbly, use the "Plus-Sign" method from your fort-building section: tape a yardstick or heavy cardboard strip diagonally across the interior corners.


The Show Must Go On! 

  • Have students write a play to put on in their theater.
  • Write a script and cast characters. 
  • Make costumes, props and scenery from the recycle bin.
  •  Haul out the instruments and make the play into a musical or opera. 
  • Choreograph a dance number.

✂️🖍️✂️🖍️✂️🖍️✂️🖍️✂️🖍️✂️ Omi’s Pro Tip: Use the leftover cardboard scraps from your Stage Window to make handheld props like magic wands, swords, or flowers for the actors to hold! 🖍️✂️🖍️✂️🖍️✂️🖍️✂️🖍️✂️🖍️



Project: Recycled Stage SceneryPrep Time: 10 minsDifficulty: Easy
Materials:Tools:Yield:
Flat Cardboard SheetsMarkers or Tempera Paint2-3 Background Flats
Cardboard Tubes (Paper Towel)Tape or Hot Glue
Sponges (for texture)Utility Knife

Instructions

  1. Select Your Setting: Decide if your play takes place in a "Magic Forest," "Outer Space," or a "City Street."

  2. The "Flat" Method: Take a large, flat piece of cardboard. Draw the outline of your main feature (like a giant tree or a skyscraper). Cut it out carefully.

  3. Make it Stand Up: * The Tube Stand: Cut a slit into the top of two paper towel tubes and slide the bottom of your cardboard scenery into the slits.

    • The Easel Back: Tape a triangular scrap of cardboard to the back of your scenery to act as a kickstand.

  4. Add Texture: Instead of just coloring, use old sponges to dab paint onto trees for leaves, or glue on crumpled bits of green tissue paper for a 3D effect.

  5. Reversible Sets: Paint a "Day" scene on one side of your cardboard and a "Night" scene on the other. You can flip it over during "intermission"!




Omi’s Pro Tip: Remind the children to design "Tickets", "Programs" and a "Showtimes" sign to post on the outside of the theater to encourage more dramatic play!

Homemade Recycled Cardboard Puppet Theater with free printable cardboard puppet patterns

 


Hello my Omschooligans! In our last visit to the Omschool, we made recycled cardboard castle. Today in the Omschool, we're making recycled cardboard puppet craft projects plus our own recycled cardboard puppet theater to perform in! 

Step‑by‑Step Outline: Recycled Cardboard Crafts for Kids

1. Context & Purpose

2. Materials Needed for Homemade Puppets

  • Fasteners: 4–6 brads (paper fasteners) per child

  • Tools: Stapler

  • Cardboard pieces:

    • Variety of shapes and sizes (2–8 inches)

    • Mix of geometric and irregular shapes

    • Long thin strips set aside for handles

  • Optional decorations:

    • Wallpaper samples

    • Gift wrap scraps, tissue paper, construction paper

    • Paper tubes, ribbon, crepe paper, yarn

    • Faux feathers, gems, glitter/glitter glue

    • Markers, paint, silk flowers, pipe cleaners

3. Puppet‑Making Procedure

A. Prepare the Pieces

  • Children select found cardboard pieces (no cutting or reshaping).

  • Puppets may represent:

B. Plan the Puppet

  • Lay out pieces before assembling.

  • Puppets should have 2–5 body parts.

C. Decorate the Pieces

  • Decorate each piece before assembly.

  • Options:

    • Trace and glue paper onto pieces

    • Paint or color

    • Add embellishments after assembly

D. Assemble the Puppet

  • Moving parts (arms, legs, tail, head):

    • Punch holes

    • Attach with brads

  • Stationary parts:

    • Attach with tape or stapler

  • Embellishments:

    • Attach with glue, tape, or stapler

  • Handles:

    • Attach two cardboard strips, sticks, or rulers to operate the puppet

E. Story Creation

  • Children collaborate to create a story featuring all their puppets.


4. Making the Cardboard Puppet Theater

A. Large Theater (Refrigerator Box)

  • Cut a flap window that can open and close.

  • Children climb inside and perform through the window.

  • Puppets can be stored inside afterward.

B. Smaller Tabletop Theater

  • Cut open a cardboard box.

  • Stand it on a table.

  • Children stand on chairs behind it to perform.

🎨 Omschool Resource Corner

If you'd like to make puppets from free printable patterns, here are links to related cardboard craft ideas and puppet patterns, Download & Print:



Pro Tip: The Perfect "Talking" Puppet


The "Mouth" Template: The Ziptales PDF Guide is particularly useful because it provides the exact dimensions for the cardboard inserts used to make puppets "talk."