Dental health and teeth is a theme I was never too excited to try in my classroom until now! Teachers everywhere LOVE this theme, so I sat down and brainstormed. Now, I’m pumped and excited because I came up with a ton of fun, engaging, and hands-on dental health activities! I mean, look at that photo above. ….SO MUCH FUN, right? Make sure you grab the Tooth Graph and Tooth Art FREEBIES later in this post. Need My Body-themed activities? Check out THIS POST.
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Dental Health Activities for Sensory & Art
What better way to learn letters than to find them in toothpaste? I made “toothpaste” by covering the bottom of a tray with shaving cream, dripping liquid watercolor over the top, and swirling the liquid watercolor with a toothpick until it looked like toothpaste. Then, I sprinkled letter beads over the top. Students used a toothbrush and tweezers to discover the letters. For more fine motor fun, add a cup of liquid watercolor and a dropper for students to squirt the letters with on the tray.
You can find toothbrushes and other fun dental health goodies at the Dollar Tree!
To continue with the dental health theme, use a toothbrush instead of a paintbrush and brush the tooth. Mix white glue and shaving cream together to create a puffy paint-type mixture. Students brush the tooth, then sprinkle some glitter on the top to make it sparkly clean. The Dollar Tree has multi-packs of toothbrushes if you need some.
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Dental Health Activities for Literacy
How much fun are these smile sight words?! Pick a word card, build the word, and brush it off with the toothbrush. Word work CAN be FUN!
For extra fun, place the tooth letters in a sensory tub with rice. A plastic shoe box-size tub would work. If your students are not ready for sight words, have them build smile names! Name activities are always a hit in my classroom because my students LOVE anything that has to do with their own names and their friends’ names.
Teeth Letter Match! A simple letter match game with a dental health theme. You can also do a simple letter match too! Print two sets of uppercase letters and match uppercase letters or match uppercase with lowercase letters.
Build vocabulary words with letter tiles. The letter tiles look a bit like teeth, so it’s the perfect letter manipulative to use for this theme.
Dental health books are a bit tricky to find (good ones anyway). I was able to find about 20 that I liked, and you can find the clickable book list HERE.
Dental Health Activities for Math
Tooth graph FREEBIE! Make a simple graph using teeth (aka mini marshmallows). Students identify the number and count out the corresponding number of marshmallows. Afterward, students can eat the marshmallows!
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Number mats are my jam! I love them because it teaches students that numbers can be represented in so many different ways (numeral, ten frames, random dots). You can use teeth mini erasers, mini marshmallows, or make small balls with white play dough.
For a fun counting game, play Cavity Number Cover. Students roll a die and cover the number by drawing a “cavity” on it with a dry erase marker. Then when the tooth is full of cavities (all the numbers are covered), students can brush the tooth clean using a toothbrush.
For fine motor work, trace lines with tooth mini erasers or mini marshmallows and “cavities” (aka pom poms). The manipulatives are small, so it’s a great exercise for those little fingers. This activity is simple to set up, too! Grab a piece of butcher paper or poster board and draw lines on it with a marker or paint stick.
If you want to take the activity to the next level, have students make patterns with these manipulatives!
For a fun twist on shaving cream writing, drop a few drops of liquid watercolor in shaving cream and swirl it to make it look like toothpaste! Students use their fingers to draw shapes, numbers, or letters. Then brush it clean with a toothbrush!
Dental Health Activities for Fine Motor
Dental health play dough mats are a must for this theme! Use a few colors (you don’t have to match the cards if you don’t want to), and students roll play dough snakes to create teeth. Yep, another way to build those fine motor muscles!
Teeth play dough tray! For every theme (yes, every theme), I create a play dough tray, and it gets played with almost every single day in my classroom. Grab some teeth (tooth savers), cavities (yellow beads), caps (silver beads), floss (green plastic string), red or pink play dough, and white play dough.
Next time you are at the dentist, ask if they would donate some items to your classroom. Our dentist donated a dental health goodie bag for each of my kiddos!
Our Teeth sensory bin was so much fun to make and play in. My little guy played in it for AN ENTIRE HOUR when I was setting it up. Save a mouthwash bottle or just buy a few from the dollar store and dump out the mouthwash. Students can fill up the mouthwash (aka green, teal, and blue rice) using a funnel and tiny cups (plastic shot glasses). If you are brave, sprinkle some fine glitter in the bin along with some teeth. The glitter sticks to the teeth, and students can brush them clean with toothbrushes. Keep reading for more dental health activities.
Dental Health Activities for Science, BLocks, & STEM
Check out the Dental health Science table! It’s packed with hands-on activities and posters from my My Body and Teeth Science unit. Using an egg carton for teeth, Students can place “cavities” (yellow play dough) and draw plaque with a dry-erase marker. Then, use a toothbrush and plastic string for floss to clean the teeth. Grab some food from the dramatic play center for students to sort by healthy and not healthy food.
Dentist Light Table! Talk about dental hygiene and the mouth on the light table. Your students can look at a mouth x-ray, take care of a toy mouth, and more. The little teeth and pieces of yarn are great to practice flossing and building with.
Don’t forget about the block center! Place empty cereal boxes or empty food containers in the center for students to build. Add veggie counter or fruit counters, too! I unfold the boxes and keep them for the next year. You can also ask families to send in cereal boxes so the students have the cereal they eat in the block center! Post photos of places in the community that promote healthy living for students to build.
Dental Health ACtivities for Dramatic Play
Teach students about healthy eating and nutrition by transforming the Dramatic play center! Students can practice making healthy food choices through PLAY! Click HERE to read all my tips and tricks to make your center into a Grocery Store.
I hope you are just as excited as I am to implement some of these dental health activities into your next teeth or my body theme. Your students are going to have so much fun learning and playing while exploring dental health.
I know some of us like to combine a My Body and Teeth theme together, so I came up with ideas for that theme as well. For ideas on a My Body theme, check out the post below!
Want all the My Body printable centers? Grab the My Body & Teeth Math and Literacy Centers on TPT HERE.
Grab the My Body Science Unit HERE
Want to see the dental health activities in action? Check out the video here.
LOVE these dental health activities? Pin this image!
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I’m Jackie, your go-to girl for early childhood inspiration and research-based curriculum.