I have an image in my head - the local soccer field covered in red paper poppies - made and planted by students in our community.
I approached my son's school, and the paper poppies were quickly accepted
I made a poppy, then a template, and finally an instruction sheet for the teachers:
Materials:
- Two red construction paper squares about 10cm x 10cm with petal pattern
- One black construction paper square 2.5cm x 2.5cm
- scissors
- glue
- tape
- skewer
Step 1: Cut out the petal pattern. One stays in a full
piece, one is cut into four petals
Step 3: Fold each petal with three accordion folds
Step 4: Glue individual petals to the solid petal,
staggering them (not lined up)
Step 7: Tape wooden skewer to back of poppy.
If you decide to forgo the accordion fold, you will still
have a nice flower:
Bonus: Have students write a fallen Canadian soldier's name on the back of the poppy. Canada At War records the names of 63,322 Canadian soldiers who died in World War I, alone. In order to plant enough poppies to honor every soldier, in a school with 300 students, each child would need to make 211 poppies.
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