Storytime: Squeaky Clean

After last week’s Messy storytime, it was time to talk about clean up! Toddlers can be very interested in being helpful, and the vast majority of my kiddos love to help put away any props we use during storytime, and the toys we play with at the end. I pointed that out to caregivers, and reminded them that kids of all ages crave to be a contributing part of the family, if you give them a chance.

For this Clean theme, I thought about tidying up messes we make with objects, as well as cleaning our hands and bodies and the clothes we wear. I couldn’t find many rhymes or songs about tidying, but we did start with a cleaning up flannel activity. (Of course, there’s always the Barney “Clean Up” song, but as someone who heard that nonstop in the 90s, I’m okay never singing it myself.) The rest have to do with bathtime or washing clothes.

See another take on this theme at this Bathtime post.

Early Literacy Tip: Bath time is a wonderful opportunity to encourage play and imagination! You can be pirates or sea turtles, or you can use bubbles to practice fine motor skills and finger dexterity. Practice narrative skills by telling a story together using bath toys. -adapted from Yogibrarian

Welcome Song: Hello, Friends* (TT) (TB) (FT)** †

Hello Friends rhyme sheet. Includes a smiling rainbow and two yellow ducks at the bottom. click the image to download a non-branded PDF

Warm Up Song: Wake Up, Feet* (TT) (TB) (FT)
This is a repeated song that everyone seems to enjoy. I always begin and end with feet and tummies, but find two other body parts to wiggle in the middle. I rotate between elbows, cheeks, hips, noses, arms, chins, thighs, heads, shoulders, ears, knees, and fingers.

Wake Up Feet thumbnail, with a graphic of three pairs of baby-sized shoes. click the image to download a non-branded PDF

Lifting Rhyme: Toast in the Toaster* (TT) (TB) (FT)

Toast in the Toaster thumbnail, with a graphic of a toaster with a piece of bread hovering above it. click the image to download a non-branded PDF

Intro: Last week we made a big mess, and this week we’re talking about cleaning up! This can be picking up our toys, washing our hands, or washing our whole bodies.

Activity: Cleaning Up (TT) (TB) (FT)
What a big mess! Let’s see if we can put all these things back in their proper place.
Inspired by Verona Storytime, I made a paper bag labeled with a refrigerator, a laundry basket, and a toy box, as well as four items that would go in each one, using Canva graphics. After my first session, I realized twelve was too many, so next time I just put out nine and that seemed just right. The kids called out where things went, and corrected me when I tried to put them in the wrong place!

Download the Cleaning Up flannel printable here!

Cleaning up flannel photo, with laminated and printed graphics of various objects scattered on the flannelboard, with three white paper lunch bags labeled with a picture of a laundry hamper, four binned toy cabinet, and refrigerator on them.
Objects haphazardly strewn on the board include a pair of jeans, a toy dump truck, a half gallon jug of milk, a bunch of grapes, a pair of socks, a striped shirt, a ring sorter toy, a wedge of cheese, a ball, a toy dinosaur, carrot sticks in a plastic bag, and a pair of green pajamas.

Uh, oh, my hands got dirty picking up all of those things from the dusty floor. What can I do to clean up?
Try to sing this one SLOWLY so you can show each part.
Action Rhyme: Wash Your Hands (TT) (TB) (FT)
(tune of Row Your Boat)
Wash, wash, wash your hands,
Get them nice and clean
Wash the tops and wash below,
And wash them in between

Scrub, scrub, scrub your hands,
Fingernails and thumbs
Wrists and palms and pinky too,
Wash them every one!
Source: Waukee (IA) Public Library

wash your hands thumbnail, with a graphic of two pairs of hands with soap and bubbles - the left pair is light peach and the right pair is medium brown. click the image to download a non-branded PDF

Transition: If You’re Ready for a Story* (TT) (TB) (FT)

After reading this one at my first session, I think my group would do better with just two sets of animals – they were definitely getting wiggly toward the end.
Read: How Do You Take a Bath? by Kate McMullan & Sydney Hanson (TT)

how do you take a bath book cover

A silly and fun bath story.
Read: Bubble Bath Pirates! by Jarrett J. Krosoczka (TB) (FT)

bubble bath pirates book cover

After we wash, maybe there’s a little time to play in the tub!
I realized I should have also made a bubble to add to this flannel.
Flannel Song: Baby in the Tub (TT) (TB) (FT)
(tune of Wheels on the Bus)
The baby in the tub goes Splash, splash, splash (pat lap)
Splash, splash, splash, Splash, splash, splash
The baby in the tub goes splash, splash, splash
All through the bath!

The duck in the tub goes quack… (hand makes a duck bill)
The boat in the tub goes toot… (pull a horn)
The bubbles in the tub go pop… (clap)
Source: Storytime in the Stacks

flannel of "baby in the tub" with a white bathtub on gray clawed feet, a baby with brown hair and dusky skin, a yellow duck, a red, blue, and yellow toy tugboat, and a pink bar of soap.

baby in the tub thumbnail, with a graphic of a yellow duck in a bubble filled pink tub. click the image to download a non-branded PDF

The template for this flannel is from the ever-helpful but now defunct Sunflower Storytime. You can download a copy of it here. I used to tuck each elephant into the bath in a row, but saw another librarian on YouTube stacking them up tall. That’s a lot easier, and it looks a lot funnier to me, too.
Someone else wants to take a bath! Move over, baby!
Counting/Flannel Rhyme: Elephants in the Bathtub (TT) (TB) (FT)
One elephant in the bathtub (hold up one finger)
Going for a swim (swimming motion)
Knock, knock (clap, clap)
Splash, splash (pat lap)
Come on in (motion with hand to come in)

(count up)
Five elephants in the bathtub
Going for a swim
Knock, knock
CRASH, CRASH!
They all fell in! (wiggle arms downward; knock flannel pieces to the floor!)
Source: Sunflower Storytime, see moves on Jbrary

Flannel of elephants in the bathtub, with an old fashioned white claw foot tub with five elephants stacked on top of each other on the top: blue, purple, lime green, yellow, and orange.

elephants in the bathtub thumbnail, with a graphic that mimics the flannel, only the elephants are all side by side in the tub. click the image to download a non-branded PDF

This one took a little explanation before we got started, as I can’t do any motions when I’m playing ukulele. I always say the second “bar of soap!” in a high voice to make it funnier, and I encouraged them to either raise their arms and/or have a grown up lift them up during that echo part. I also thought this song needed MORE, so wrote a couple more verses!
What makes all of these bubbles? Soap!
Ukulele Song: Little Bar of Soap (TT) (TB) (FT)
(tune of If You’re Happy and You Know It)
Oh, I wish I were a little bar of soap (bar of soap!) (lift arms and/or lift child)
Oh, I wish I were a little bar of soap (bar of soap!)
Oh, I’d slippy and I’d slidey over everybody’s hidey
Yes, I wish I were a little bar of soap (bar of soap!)

Oh, I wish I were a squeaky yellow duck (quack quack)… (make a duck bill)
I’d be your friend in the tub while you rub and scrub-a-dub…

Oh, I wish I were a bubble floating there (bloop, bloop)… (pulse fingers)
I’d float until I drop, and then land with a big POP! (clap)
Source: Jbrary, verses 2-3 original

Download a ukulele songsheet for Little Bar of Soap here!

I wish I were a little bar of soap ukulele songsheet thumbnail.

little bar of soap thumbnail, with a graphic of a blue anthropomorphic bar of soap with a smiling face and arms and legs. click the image to download a non-branded PDF

Let’s make sure we get clean all over. Can you use your scarf like a washcloth?
Scarf Song: This Is the Way We Wash (TT) (TB) (FT)
(tune of Here We Go Round the Mulberry Bush)
This is the way we wash our face,
wash our face, wash our face!
This is the way we wash our face
When we take a bath!
(arms, legs, back, tummy, etc.)
Source: Jbrary

this is the way we wash thumbnail, with a graphic of an orange washcloth and blue bar of soap. click the image to download a non-branded PDF

I so love both this song and the Walrus song, I tried to do both at the first session. It went fine because we don’t do a craft for that one, but I had to choose one or the other for the other two sessions, where I have a little less time. Using our scarves was so much fun. I always start with my scarf way up high and hold out the “Waaaaay,” then swoosh my scarf down low when I get to “down in the valley.”
When we take a bath, we take off our clothes. But what if our clothes are dirty, too? Should they come in the bath with us? No! They go in the laundry.
Scarf Song: Wishy Washy Washer Woman (TT) (TB)
Waaay down in the valley where nobody goes
There’s a wishy washy washer woman washing her clothes
She goes wishy washy up, she goes wishy washy down
She goes wishy washy up, she goes wishy washy down
That’s how the wishy washy washer woman washes her clothes!

…drying her clothes, she goes whoo-eee! (shake in a circle)
…folding her clothes, she goes side, side (clap to one side, then the other)
Source: traditional

wishy washy washerwoman thumbnail, with a graphic of two teal wash buckets filled with bubbles and an old-fashioned washboard in each. click the image to download a non-branded PDF

Here’s a silly song about a walrus who needs to wash his coat.
Scarf Song: The Walrus Washes (TT) (FT)
The walrus washes his winter coat down by the wavy ocean
He adds some water and he adds some soap
and he waits… and he waits… and he waits

Then the laundry shakes, shakes, shakes
The laundry shakes and shakes and shakes
The laundry shakes, shakes, shakes until it’s clean (repeat)

The laundry spins… (twirl scarf in a circle)
The laundry tumbles… (throw scarf in the air and catch)
Source: Brytani Fraser via Jbrary

the walrus washes thumbnail, with a graphic of a walrus and some soap bubbles. click the image to download a non-branded PDF

Can you catch the bubbles with your scarf?
Yes, there were three songs with the Happy and You Know It tune this storytime, which I generally try to avoid, but it was fine.
Bubble Song: Bubbles in the Air (TT) (TB) (FT)
(tune of Happy and You Know It)
There are bubbles in the air (In the air)
There are bubbles in the air (In the air)
There are bubbles in the air,
There are bubbles in my hair
There are bubbles in the air (In the air!)

There are bubbles way up high… in the sky
Way down low… on my toe
Source: Jbrary

bubbles in the air thumbnail, with a graphic of bubbles behind the lyrics of the song. click the image to download a non-branded PDF

Action Song: Zoom, Zoom, Zoom!* (TT) (TB) (FT)

zoom zoom zoom thumbnail, with a graphic of a rocket ship. click the image to download a non-branded PDF

Craft: Bubble Wrap Bath Scene (TB) (FT)
This is a craft I’ve have done before, but it’s been a while! This is a not-too-messy painting craft, with the novelty of using bubble wrap to make the bubbles. I also set out crayons and a rubber duck print to glue on. I prep my bubble wrap by cutting it into 2-3 inch wide strips, maybe 5 inches long, then creating a tube by taping the two short ends together, bubble side out. That way the kids can put their hands in the ring and dip it in the paint without having to grip it on a “clean side” – the inside should stay clean for them (ideally!) The original bathtub and duck printables were from Sunflower Storytime (no longer available.) Download my copies here:

Sunflower Storytime’s bathtub printable (print on cardstock or construction paper)

Rubber duck printable (print on yellow copy paper)

Play Time
The toddlers have two laundry baskets of baby toys – rattles and cars, sorters and stackers, toy phones and spinners. For the older kids, I have foam blocks, soft food toys, puzzles, and a few other items that are a little more sophisticated than the baby toys. For Family Time, I gauge the overall age of the group and put out what seems right for them. We play for 5-10 minutes at the most, then I ring the bell and ask the kids to help me clean up. I think the clean up bit is good practice for them!

Goodbye Song: See You Later Alligator* (TT) (TB) (FT)

See you later thumbnail, with a graphic of a green alligator, brown crocodile, ladybug, and jellyfish. click the image to download a non-branded PDF

Other books I had available for families to browse (and may work for you on this theme)
Car Wash – Sandra & Susan Steen & G. Brian Karas
Mrs. McNosh Hangs Up Her Wash
– Sarah Weeks & Nadine Bernard Westcott
Lion Needs a Haircut
– Hyewon Yum
Tidy
– Emily Gravett
Love-a-Duck
– Alan James Brown & Francesca Chessa
Have You Seen My Invisible Dinosaur?
– Helen Yoon
Off to See the Sea
– Nikki Grimes & Elizabeth Zunon
Scaredy Bath
– Zoë Foster Blake & Daniel Gray-Barnett
How to Give Your Cat a Bath in Five Easy Steps
– Nicola Winstanley & John Martz
Bath! Bath! Bath!
– Douglas Florian & Christiane Engel

This storytime was presented in-person on 9/23, 9/24, 9/25, & 9/26/24.

Storytime Handout:

*Lyrics to these songs can be found on the Repeated Songs & Rhymes page.

**These symbols indicate the program sessions I used the activities for:
(TT) Toddler Time, ages 1-2
(TB) Teddy Bears, ages 2-3.5
(FT) Family Time, ages 0-3.5

† Click the image of rhyme/song sheets to download a non-branded PDF

Storytime: Messy

Making messes and being messy are just part of life for a baby or toddler! This week we celebrated the mess and the ability to be creative while being messy, while still reiterating that after making a mess we clean up. (Though we’re going more in depth for getting clean next week.)

We don’t get our parachute out for indoor storytime often, but I thought of a few ways to tie it in. It’s always a treat, especially when we add some objects to the ‘chute to bounce around. I also went all in for our messy craft, and everyone enjoyed playing with shaving cream (and the whole room smelled like a barbershop!)

Early Literacy Tip: Messes are a fact of life for little ones. Give your child opportunities to be “messy” and play creatively, then reinforce the idea that all messes eventually get cleaned up.

Welcome Song: Hello, Friends* (TT) (TB) (FT)** †

Hello Friends rhyme sheet. Includes a smiling rainbow and two yellow ducks at the bottom. click the image to download a non-branded PDF

Warm Up Song: Wake Up, Feet* (TT) (TB) (FT)
This is a repeated song that everyone seems to enjoy. I always begin and end with feet and tummies, but find two other body parts to wiggle in the middle. I rotate between elbows, cheeks, hips, noses, arms, chins, thighs, heads, shoulders, ears, knees, and fingers.

Wake Up Feet thumbnail, with a graphic of three pairs of baby-sized shoes. click the image to download a non-branded PDF

Lifting Rhyme: Toast in the Toaster* (TT) (TB) (FT)

Toast in the Toaster thumbnail, with a graphic of a toaster with a piece of bread hovering above it. click the image to download a non-branded PDF

Intro: Today we are making a mess! Do you ever make a mess? Maybe when you’re eating? Or when you go outside and play? Sometimes making messes can be fun, but it’s always good to clean up after we make a mess.

Let’s pretend to make a big mess outside – let’s make Mud Pies!
This doesn’t actually rhyme, and I struggled a bit when planning how exactly to present it. I finally settled on slowing the middle part down and making exaggerated motions, and it worked! Everyone seemed to be into it. I also changed from “mud cake” in the original to “mud pie,” which is what I always called them. Maybe a regional difference?
Action Chant: Make a Mud Pie (TT) (TB) (FT)
Make a mud pie in the mud, mud, mud (pat lap)
Digging… (digging motion downward)
Scooping… (scoop hands upward)
Patting (pat hands in air)
It’s so much fun! (hands out, emphasizing)

[Where else should we make a mud pie? How about our head!? Scoop together some mud…]
Make a mud pie on your head, head, head… (pat head)
Digging… Scooping… Patting…
It’s so much fun!
(repeat: toes, tum)
Source: Tacoma Public Library

Make a mud pie thumbnail, with a graphic of a pile of mud in a gray tin, with rocks and worms coming out, and topped with a dandelion. click the image to download a non-branded PDF

Transition: If You’re Ready for a Story* (TT) (TB) (FT)

This is such a fun book. We tickled and mimed all the different body parts as they were mentioned, which kept everyone engaged.
Read: Applesauce Is Fun to Wear by Nancy Raines Day & Jane Massy (TT) (FT)

applesauce is fun to wear book cover

We added spots to Dog’s coat on the flannelboard as we read the story.
Read: Dog’s Colorful Day by Emma Dodd (TB)

dog's colorful day book cover

flannel pieces showing dog with one black spot on his ear, and 9 additional spots off to the side - red, brown, blue, pink, gray, yellow, purple, orange, and green.

Those babies got food all over them! [Dog got so messy!] A food that is especially messy for me is spaghetti! Let’s do a rhyme about spaghetti.
I mentioned that we could say “daddy” or “auntie” or “grammy” or any other appropriate word in place of “mommy.”
Action Rhyme: Spaghetti (TT) (TB) (FT)
Spaghetti on my tummy
Spaghetti on my nose
Spaghetti on my elbows
Spaghetti on my toes

Wipe it off my elbows
Wipe it off my toes
Oops, here comes mommy
I forgot to wipe my nose!
Source: Tacoma Public Library

spaghetti thumbnail, with a graphic of a bowl of spaghetti and meatballs with noodles messily draped over the edge. click the image to download a non-branded PDF

Can you think of an animal who loves to make a mess?
For these groups I did only three pigs, which was the perfect length. This flannel is from the now-defunct (and sorely missed) Sunflower Storytime. You can download my copy of their printable below.
Counting Song: Five Pigs So Squeaky Clean (TT) (TB) (FT)
(tune of Five Green and Speckled Frogs)
Five pigs so squeaky clean,
Cleanest you’ve ever seen
Wanted to go outside and play, Oink! Oink! (clap, clap)
One jumped into the mud
Landed with a great big thud
Then there were four clean squeaky pigs (count down)
Source: Sunflower Storytime (no longer online)

Download Sunflower Storytime’s flannelboard template here.

flannelboard pieces for Five Pigs So Squeaky Clean - five printed and laminated ovals containing a cartoon pig in each. The first two have brown splotches on them, the last three are clean pink. The dirty pigs face right and the clean pigs face left.
five pigs so squeaky clean thumbnail, with a graphic of five pigs: three clean and two dirty.  click the image to download a non-branded PDF

What else is pink and can make a big mess if you’re not careful?
Song: Sticky Bubble Gum (TT) (TB) (FT)
(Spoken intro)
Did you bring your bubble gum?
What about pretend bubble gum?
Can you find some pretend bubble gum in your pocket? Reach in and get it out.
Unwrap it, and stick the wrapper back in your pocket – we don’t want to litter!
Is your gum pink like mine is?
Let’s pop it in and start chewing
Is it soft and squishy? Is it yummy?
Let’s blow an imaginary bubble – show me with your hands as you blow it
Bigger, bigger – oh, no it popped!
There’s sticky bubble gum everywhere. Pull it off your forehead, nose, chin…
Now squish it all together in a big sticky ball of bubble gum.
And SMASH IT!
Oh, no, it’s so sticky that my hands are stuck together.
The only way I know to get them unstuck is to sing the sticky bubble gum song.
(Singing)
Sticky sticky sticky sticky bubble gum
Bubble gum, Bubble gum
Sticky sticky sticky sticky bubble gum
Sticking your hands to your knees! and UN-STICK!
Source: Carole Peterson (see her perform this, including the guided intro, at https://vimeo.com/95412823)

Sticky bubblegum thumbnail, with a graphic of a pair of lips blowing a pink bubble.  click the image to download a non-branded PDF

Let’s get out our parachute! Can we practice a little bit with this song?
My sheet has shaker eggs on it, I just didn’t feel like making a new one. It works.
Parachute Song: Shake and Shake and STOP (TT) (TB) (FT)
We shake and we shake and we STOP
We shake and we shake and we STOP
We shake and we shake and we shake and we shake
and we shake and we shake and we STOP!
(try other motions – wave, wiggle, reach, etc)
Source: Jbrary

we shake and STOP thumbnail, with a graphic of two shaker eggs (blue and purple) with motion lines around them. click the image to download a non-branded PDF

Let’s take a trip down the road. It’s a dirt road, so hopefully we don’t get messy!
But of course, we did!
Parachute or Bounce: A Smooth Road (TT) (TB) (FT)
A smooth road! (repeat x4) (slowly, and wave gently)
A bumpy road! (x4) (a little faster, shaking gently up and down)
A rough road! (x4) (even faster and rougher)
Oh, no! A hole! (lift parachute up and then down)
Source: Jbrary

a smooth road thumbnail, with lyrics only. click the image to download a non-branded PDF

I put in these “indoor snowballs” that we had in storage, and they LOVED seeing them bounce and pop up.
I’m hungry! Let’s make some popcorn! I’m going to put some popcorn kernels in the parachute!
Parachute or Scarf Song: Popcorn Kernels (TT) (TB) (FT)
(tune of Frère Jacques, sing each line 2x)
Popcorn kernels (wave chute)
In the pot (add pompoms)
Shake them, shake them, shake them (shake)
’til they POP! (pop pompoms up into the air)
Source: Jbrary

popcorn kernels thumbnail, with a photograph of two popped popcorn kernels. click the image to download a non-branded PDF

This is a great way to put the parachute away. I left the “popcorn” in so it would go everywhere when the parachute flew, and asked everyone to help clean up the mess when we were done.
Parachute Song: Parachute Fly 
(TT) (TB) (FT)
(tune of Skip to my Lou)
(kids go under the parachute and adults raise and lower)

Up, up, up it goes,
Down, down, down so low
Raise our parachute to the sky
Count to 3 and watch it fly
Spoken:
Up on one…
Down on two…
Up on three…
and FLY! (adults let go and leader pulls ‘chute in to themselves)
Source: Gymboree

Parachute fly thumbnail, with a graphic of an overhead view of children holding on to a colorful parachute with balls bouncing on top.  click the image to download a non-branded PDF

Action Song: Zoom, Zoom, Zoom!* (TT) (TB) (FT)

zoom zoom zoom thumbnail, with a graphic of a rocket ship. click the image to download a non-branded PDF

Craft: Marbled Paper with Shaving Cream (TB) (FT)
We made marbled paper, but the product was really not the point. It was a messy craft! Each kid got a tray, a smock, a half sheet of cardstock, and a craft stick. Their grownup put shaving cream in their tray and dripped a couple of drops of liquid watercolor paint in it, which they could then swirl around. I reminded them to swirl, not mix, since you want the colors to stay separate and not blend. Then they put their cardstock on top and tapped it down to make contact with the paint and cream, lifted it up and scraped off the excess cream using old empty gift cards. Then they could play in the cream! I had a couple buckets of water around the room and each table had a moistened towel to help with clean up. They put their dirty smocks in a bin and I took care of the rest. It took a lot of time to clean up after, but it was worth it! Putting plastic tablecloths on that I could just ball up and throw away helped a lot.

The finished product and the setup:

The aftermath (or “craftermath”)

Play Time
We didn’t have time for toys today after the craft!

Goodbye Song: See You Later Alligator* (TT) (TB) (FT)

See you later thumbnail, with a graphic of a green alligator, brown crocodile, ladybug, and jellyfish. click the image to download a non-branded PDF

Other books I had available for families to browse (and may work for you on this theme)
Splat! – Jon Burgerman
Tyrannosaurus Wrecks! – Sudipta Bardhan-Quallen & Zachariah OHora
Off-Limits – Helen Yoon
A Perfectly Messed-Up Story – Patrick McDonnell
Uh-Oh! – Rachel Isadora
Hogwash! – Karma Wilson & Jim McMullan
I’m Dirty!- Kate & Jim McMullan
Roy Digs Dirt – David Shannon
What the Dinosaurs Did Last Night – Refe & Susan Tuma
Trashy Town – Andrea Zimmerman, David Clemesha, & Dan Yaccarino

This storytime was presented in-person on 9/16, 9/17, & 9/18/24.

Storytime Handout:

*Lyrics to these songs can be found on the Repeated Songs & Rhymes page.

**These symbols indicate the program sessions I used the activities for:
(TT) Toddler Time, ages 1-2
(TB) Teddy Bears, ages 2-3.5
(FT) Family Time, ages 0-3.5

† Click the image of rhyme/song sheets to download a non-branded PDF