We Love Curious George!
I love this picture of my son in his robe, Batman gloves, and Curious George!
Tonight, after the kids had gone to bed, I was cleaning in the kitchen and saw three very ripe bananas. I made a quick loaf of our favorite banana bread, which is called Curious George Banana Bread. I found the recipe a while back when my son was in his CG obsession. It is very easy and the first time I made it, both of my children helped me. Here it is:
Curious George Banana Bread
1 3/4 cup flour
2 tsp. baking powder
1/4 tsp. baking soda
1/2 tsp. salt
1/3 cup butter
2/3 cup sugar
1 tsp. cinnamon (optional)
Mix ingredients well, so there are no lumps.
Put in greased loaf pan.
Bake at 350 degrees for one hour.
Over the past few years, we have read MANY Curious George books. Our collection of these books is in my son's bookshelf, and they are so easy to spot because those bright yellow covers really stick out! If I had to narrow it down to one favorite, it would probably be Curious George Goes to a Chocolate Factory. Something about the way the different chocolates are labeled and how George eats too many is just appealing to my kids.
Another Curious George thing we have is this alphabet puzzle, which I just picked up one time when I was at Office Depot. It just looked like something my son would enjoy, and he does this puzzle at least 2-3 times each week. I love it, because he sets the puzzle out in the middle of his room and works it, then just shifts over to his bookshelf and reads his CG books. What a lucky little guy!
If you haven't checked out the PBS Kids Curious George website, you should. The games are fun and educational, and the printables are cute, too. I learned when I went to the site tonight that the Curious George show on PBS has won an Emmy for Outstanding Children's Animated Program.
We can love Curious George on so many levels - which is why I think these books have endured for so long. I know my children love the silliness of Curious George, and I love the patience the Man in the Yellow Hat has for him (patience I wish I had with my own silly monkeys!). It is also so special to me to remember times when my own parents read me these same stories. What a gift!
The authors, Hans and Margaret Rey, fled Paris shortly before it fell to the Nazis. Eventually they wound up in Brazil, and then settled in New York. By 1941 they had published their first book, and then wrote seven stories together. Although Hans died in 1977, Margaret wrote over 2 dozen more books. The information I just shared with you came from a site called My Favorite Monkey. How cute is that?
I can't tell you exactly how Curious George will "fit" into our official Kindergarten curriculum, but I do know that reading the books over and over has enriched both of my children. I find that most times, the things that stick with my kids weren't in a curriculum and were never planned. As a homeschooler, I am free to respond to my children's interests and go off on tangents like this, to more often than not have the most meaningful learning take place.
Reader Comments (2)
Hey Mary,
My mom is a former first grade teacher and she used to do a Curious George exercise in her classroom. Every week, each student was given George to take home with them for their own adventure. Then the assignment was to write down their adventures with Curious George.
The kids loved it! Some of her former students, who I know through my youth group and who are now in high school and college, still talk about their adventures with George. George the Second, from her classroom, (the First met up with a ceiling fan and had to be replaced) now lives with Kathleen.
We love Curious George at our house! We watch him all the time, and we have a lot of the books. Such a funny little monkey!
Meri