Another Great idea from Radmilla Cody’s Facebook Page
From Radmilla Cody Face Book Pages:
Teesto, AZ 20h ·
🎨by: Shannon Jones
HALLOWEEN FUN ACTIVITIES For TEACHERS. PARENTS and KIDS (all Ages)
FROM WEBSITE: WE ARE TEACHERS
“55 Frightfully Fun Halloween Activities, Crafts, and Games for the Classroom”

Some Halloween activities, like this one, work on gross motor skills. Use some painter’s tape to create a spiderweb on the floor, then spread spiders or ghosts all around. Finally, let students try their hand at collecting them without losing their footing.

DOTTED PUMPKINS – Teach your students about the work of artist Yayoi Kusama and let them create beautiful dotted pumpkins of their own.

CLIMBING SPIDER Teach your students how spiders use their sticky webs to catch their food. Then have them make their very own spiders that really climb!

We didn’t come up with this hilarious writing prompt, but we do have 19 more ideas plus free printable writing paper for you to use! Find them all here. Source: Writing Prompts Tumblr

So simple and yet so fun. Go on a nature hunt with your students and have them collect as many flat rocks as they can and then let them bring their jack-o’-lanterns to life with some orange and black paint. Be sure to use non-washable paint if you plan on displaying them outside!

*ROBOT HAND Nothing says Halloween like a skeleton. Teach your students how our joints, muscles, and tendons work together to move our hands using just construction paper, plastic straws, string, and tape.
VISIT THIS FANTASTIC SITE FOR MORE GREAT ACTIVITIES HERE
****************************************************************************************************
$111 Million Hardship Funds still Available in Navajo Nation!
“With $111 million left in the Navajo Nation’s American Rescue Plan Hardship Assistance pot, now may be a good time to apply.” R. Krisst, Navajo Times, Oct 7, 2022Excerpt: $111 million in ARPA Hardship funds still available By Rima Krisst, Navajo Times Oct 7, 2022
“After a bumpy rollout of the ARPA Hardship Assistance program last February, the controller’s office is now in a better position to administer the remaining hardship funds to eligible applicants, according to a report shared with the Budget and Finance Committee last week.
The hardship assistance is intended to provide financial relief to Diné who suffered financial losses because of the COVID-19 pandemic, with payments of $2,000 for adults and $600 for minors…Emerson Horace, ARPA Hardship accounting supervisor for the controller’s office, reported that since February 2022, 72 check runs had been made, with 337,830 checks paid to eligible Navajo enrollees totaling $558 million as of Sept. 20.”
INFORMATION: www.nnooc.org or call (928) 223-3536 or email ARPA.Hardship@nnooc.org