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Target:Development of children's speech skills through theatrical activities.

Tasks:

  • Recall with the children the names and contents of the works of K.I. Chukovsky, whom the children met earlier.
  • To induce in children the joy of meeting their favorite fairy-tale characters, to teach them to understand the humor of his works.
  • Develop thinking, speech, imagination, memory.
  • To promote a sustainable interest in books and a desire to read.

Educational areas: Cognition, Socialization, Artistic and speech development.

Preliminary work:

1. Reading poems and fairy tales by K.I. Chukovsky: “Katausi and Mausi”, “Chicken”, “Miracle Tree”, “Moidodyr”, “Stolen Sun”, “Aibolit”, “Fly Tsokotukha”, “Telephone”, “Cockroach”, “Fedorino’s Grief”, "Confusion".

2. Making masks and selecting costumes.

3. Making attributes in the game "Miracle Tree".

4. Viewing cartoons based on the works of K.I. Chukovsky.

5. Listening to audio recordings of works by K.I. Chukovsky in the author's performance.

Equipment:

1. Portrait of K.I. Chukovsky.

2. Book exhibition.

3. Audio cassette with recordings of children's songs “Chunga-Changa” by Yu. Entin.

4. Costumes: mouse Mausi, cat Katausi, fox, dog, Aibolit, grandmother Fedora, hare.

5. Toys depicting animals.

6. Wood model, table, suitcase for Aibolit.

7. Attributes for the game "miracle tree".

8. Prizes: fruits, sweets.

Leisure progress.

Presenter:Hello dear guys and adults. Today we have a holiday, a meeting with the heroes of our favorite books. Look at this exhibition. How many of you recognize these books? Who will name them?

Children's answers

Presenter:Not far from Moscow, in the village of Peredelkino, in a small house lived for many years a tall, gray-haired man, whom all the children in the country knew. The name of this wonderful man was Korney Chukovsky ( show the portrait and put it on the easel).

Korney Chukovsky is the literary pseudonym of the writer. His real name is Nikolai Vasilyevich Korneychukov.

I invite you to visit grandfather Korney.

Presenter: Books are asking:

And now

You, friends, get to know us.

Think together guys

You need to remember these fairy tales!

1 . The bears were riding a bicycle.

And behind them is a cat backwards.

And behind him are mosquitoes in a balloon.

And behind them are crayfish on a lame dog.

Wolves on a mare. Lions in a car.

Bunnies on a tram.

Toad on a broom...

They drive and laugh, chew gingerbread.

Suddenly a terrible giant appears from the gateway,

Red-haired and mustachioed Ta-ra-kan! ("Cockroach")

2. Suddenly from my mother's bedroom

Bow-legged and lame

The washbasin runs out

And shakes his head. (“Moidodyr”)

3. A fly walked across the field,

The fly found the money.

A fly went to the market

And I bought a samovar. ("Fly Tsokotukha")

4. Suddenly a jackal came from somewhere

He rode on a mare:

Here's a telegram for you

From a hippopotamus!:

"Come doctor

To Africa soon

And save the doctor

Our kids. " ("Dr. Aibolit")

5. The cockroaches came running

All the glasses were drunk,

And the insects are three cups each,

With milk and a pretzel. ("Fly Tsokotukha")

6. And the foxes took the matches,

Let's go to the blue sea,

The blue sea was lit.

The sea is on fire,

A whale ran out of the sea... (“Confusion”)

7. And in the Big River

The crocodile lies

And it’s not fire that burns in his teeth, -

The sun is red

The sun is stolen. ("Stolen Sun")

8. And behind them along the fence

Fedora's grandmother gallops:

"Oh oh oh! Oh oh oh!

Come home!”

But the trough answered:

“I’m angry with Fedora!”

And the poker said:

“I am not Fedora’s servant!” (“Fedorino’s grief”)

9. My phone rang.

Who's speaking?

From a camel. ("Telephone")

10. "Who is told to tweet -

Don't purr!

Who is ordered to purr -

Don't tweet!

The crow should not be like a cow,

Don't let the little frogs fly under the cloud!" ("Confusion")

11. Ten days and nights of Aibolit

Doesn't eat, doesn't drink and doesn't sleep,

Ten days and nights in a row

He heals unfortunate animals. ("Dr. Aibolit")

12. Suddenly some old man

Our Fly in the corner

Dragged -

He wants to kill the poor thing

Destroy the clatter! ("Fly Tsokotukha")

13. The blanket ran away

The sheet flew away

And the pillow is like a frog,

She galloped away from me. (“Moidodyr”)

14. The sun was walking across the sky

And it ran away behind the cloud.

The bunny looked out the window,

It became dark for the bunny. ("Stolen Sun")

15. I kissed you for a long, long time

And she caressed them,

She watered and washed.

She rinsed them.

“I won’t, I won’t

I will offend the dishes.

I will, I will, I will do the dishes

And love and respect!” (“Fedorino’s grief”)

Presenter: Unusual fairy-tale guests came to us; they are embarrassed to name themselves and ask you to guess what their names are.

Fedora's grandmother enters:

- “Oh, you, my poor orphans,

The irons and pans are mine!

Go home, unwashed,

I will wash you with spring water.

I'll clean you with sand

I'll douse you with boiling water,

And you will be again

Shine like the sun.

Presenter: Do you recognize our guest?

Children's answers.

Presenter: That's right, this is Fedor's grandmother. What is the name of the work of art where we met her?

Children's answers.

Presenter: Kind, gray-haired

Heals animals

Who is this? Have you guessed it?

Answer quickly!

Children: Dr. Aibolit!

Doctor Aibolit comes out:

Oh if I drown

If I go down,

What will happen to them and the sick?

My forest animals. ( Sit under a tree)

Educational teacher groups: Please come in, good doctor.

Good Doctor Aibolit!

He is sitting under a tree.

Come to him for treatment

And the cow and the she-wolf,

And the bug and the worm,

And a bear!

He will heal everyone, he will heal everyone

Good Doctor Aibolit!

And the fox came to Aibolit...

Fox enters: Oh, I was bitten by a wasp.

Educational teacher groups: And Barbos came to Aibolit...

Barbos enters: A chicken pecked me on the nose.

Educational teacher groups: And the hare came running

And she screamed...

Hare: Ay, ay!

My bunny got hit by a tram!

My bunny, my boy

Got hit by a tram!

(shows a bunny toy)

He ran along the path

And his legs were cut,

And now he's sick and lame,

My little bunny!”

Educator: And Aibolit said...

Aibolit: No problem!

Give it here!

I'll sew him new legs,

He will run along the path again.

Educator:

And they brought a bunny to him,

(The hare gives the hare's toy, Doctor Aibolit bandages him and treats him)

So sick, lame,

And the doctor sewed his legs.

And the bunny jumps again.

And with him the mother hare

I also went dancing.

(Little hare dancing with a toy, smiling)

And she laughs and shouts:

Hare: Well, thank you, Aibolit.

Educator: Let's all dance together and be happy for the little bunny.

(Everyone is dancing merrily. A recording of Y. Entin's song "Chunga-Changa" is played.)

Educator: From an early age, poems by K.I. Chukovsky bring joy to all of us. Not only you, but also your parents and grandparents cannot imagine their childhood without “Aibolit”, “Telephone”, “Confusion”, “Cockroach”, “Stolen Sun”.

Now let's play again.

The game is called "Who's Who?" Which characters do these fairy-tale names belong to?

Aibolit – (doctor)

Barmaley – (robber)

Fedora – (grandmother)

Karakula – (shark)

Moydodyr – (washbasin)

Totoshka, Kokoshka – (crocodiles)

Barabek – (glutton)

Red-haired, mustachioed giant - (cockroach)

Educator: In one poem by K.I. Chukovsky there are incomprehensible words: Mausi, Kotausi, tailausi, glasausti, zubausi. Do you know what it's called?

Children:"Katausi and Mausi."

The mouse Mausi (a child of the middle group) runs out, and the cat Katausi (a child of the middle group) is chasing after her. The mouse makes a circle around the hall and hides among the guests. The cat lies down, pretending to fall asleep.

Dramatization of the poem.

Reader: Once upon a time there lived a mouse named Mousey

And suddenly I saw Kotausi.

(Mousey the mouse runs out)

Kotaushi has evil eyes

And the evil, despicable Zubausi.

(The cat shows its claws, stands up, sneaking up on the mouse.)

Kotausi ran up to Mausi

And she waved her tail:

Kotausi: Ah, Mausi, Mausi, Mausi,

Come to me, dear Mausi!

I'll sing you a song, Mausi,

A wonderful song, Mausi!

Reader: But smart Mausi answered:

Mausi: You won't fool me, Kotaushi!

I see your evil eyes

And the evil, despicable Zubausi!

Reader: So answered the smart Mausi

And quickly run away from Kotausi.

(The mouse is hiding)

Presenter: Guys, come out quickly, stand in a circle and help the mouse Mausi escape from Katausi.

The game “Help Mousey” is played.

(Children stand in a circle and hold hands. The mouse runs away from the cat, now hiding in a circle, now leaving it. The cat is trying to catch up with the mouse. Children help the mouse by letting it into the circle, raising their hands up, and interfering with the cat by lowering their hands down, crouching).

Presenter: Dear guests! Tell me what needs to be done to make the cat kinder?

Guests: She needs to be caressed and pitied.

(They pet the cat, she purrs, she hugs the mouse. The children applaud them. Everyone takes their seats).

Junior group teacher:

Here at our gate

The tree is growing.

Not a leaf on it

Not a flower on it...

Presenter: Guys, let's turn it into a wonderful tree. I have pictures that depict scenes from fairy tales by K.I. Chukovsky. Now the guys will come out, we will line up in two teams. Look at your picture, name a fairy tale or read poems corresponding to the picture.

After the children hang up all the pictures, the Leader announces:

Here at our gate

Miracle - the tree grows.

Not a leaf on it

Not a flower on it

Funny pictures on it.

What a miracle!

What a miracle!

Wonderful!

Dear guys, guests, our fun holiday is ending, but meeting with the heroes of poems and fairy tales by K.I. Chukovsky is waiting for you ahead.

Read and love the works of grandfather Korney and you will learn about the boy Jack - the giant conqueror, about the adventures of a white mouse, about Crocodile Krokodilovich, as well as other stories.

Treating children and guests with fruits and sweets.

Game journey through the works of K. I. Chukovsky - page No. 1/1

K.I. Chukovsky

(1882-1969)

Game journey through the works of K.I. Chukovsky.

Equipment:

1. Portrait of K.I. Chukovsky, photographs.

2. Book exhibition, epigraph “If you add up all the paths of joy that Chukovsky paved to children’s hearts, you will get a road to the moon” (S. Obraztsov).
Progress of the event.

(Music “Doctor Aibolit and the Monkeys” sounds)

Leading. Today we have gathered in this hall to celebrate the birthday of one cheerful and cheerful person who loved children and dedicated many poems and fairy tales to them. He was even born

April 1, which is considered a day of jokes, fun and laughter. This was in 1882. So, if the writer were alive, he would now be 120 years old. Today we will talk about Korney Ivanovich

Chukovsky! Chukovsky lived almost his entire life in St. Petersburg. He was a literary critic by profession, he loved his profession very much, and if he had been told that he would be famous as

A children's writer, he would probably be very surprised. Chukovsky became a children's poet and storyteller quite by accident. Here's how it happened.

His little son fell ill in Helsenki, and Korney Ivanovich took him home on the night train.

The boy was capricious, moaning, crying. To somehow entertain him, his father began to tell him a fairy tale. The boy stopped being capricious, listened without opening his mouth, and then calmly fell asleep. The next morning, barely

Waking up, he immediately demanded that his father tell him yesterday’s tale again.

Perhaps this incident would not have had any consequences. But soon something similar happened to Korney Ivanovich again. He was sitting at his desk and working on an article that a scientific journal had ordered for him. Suddenly he heard a loud cry. It was his youngest daughter crying. She roared in three streams, violently expressing her reluctance to wash herself. Chukovsky left the office, took the girl in his arms and, unexpectedly for himself, quietly said to her: We must, we must wash ourselves.

In the mornings and evenings,

And not to pure chimney sweeps -

Shame and disgrace! Shame and disgrace!

Many years have passed since then, and the works of K.I. Chukovsky are known not only in Russia, but also in other countries.

Tall stature, long arms with large hands, large facial features, a large curious nose, a brush of a mustache, an unruly strand of hair hanging over his forehead, laughing light eyes - this is the appearance of Korney Ivanovich Chukovsky. By the way, K.I. Chukovsky is a literary pseudonym. Do any of you know the real name of the writer? (Nikolai Vasilievich Kornechuykov).

“A-a-a-a, Chukovsky! – some of you said at the beginning of our meeting. “Everyone has known about him since childhood.” Today we will check if everything is real. I invite you on a journey.

Station 1. Vokzalnaya

There is a ticket office at each station. The one who can name Chukovsky’s work will participate in our journey. For each correct answer, a ticket (token) is given. And so, let's hit the road!

Station 2. Zagadkino.

Korney Ivanovich Chukovsky was a very hardworking person. “Always,” he wrote, “no matter where I was: on the tram, in line, I composed riddles for children.”


1 .There was a white house, 2. Locomotive

Wonderful house, No wheels!

And something knocked inside him. What a miracle locomotive!

And he crashed, and from there, didn’t he go crazy -

A living miracle ran out, - It went straight across the sea! (Steamboat).

So warm, so

Fluffy and golden. (Egg and chicken).

3. Ah, don't touch me

I will burn without fire! (Nettle)


4. Red doors in my cave,

White animals sit at the door.

And meat, and bread - all the spoils -

I gladly give it to white animals. (Lips and teeth).

5. I had a cart

But there was no horse.

And suddenly she neighed

She neighed and ran.

Look, a cart is running without a horse! (Truck).

6. I have two horses, two horses.

They carry me along the water.

And the water is hard, like stone. (Skates and ice).

7. The sage saw the sage in him,

Stupid - stupid

Ram - ram,

The sheep saw him as a sheep,

And a monkey - a monkey,

But then they brought Fedya Baratov to him,

And Fedya saw the shaggy slob. (Mirror).

8. I'm lying under your feet,

You trample me with your boots,

And tomorrow you will take me to the yard

And hit me, hit me,

So that the children can lie on me,

Flounder and somersault on me. (Carpet).

9. Little houses are running along the street,

Boys and girls are being taken to their houses. (Automobile).

10. She grows upside down

It grows not in summer, but in winter.

But the sun will burn -

She will cry and die. (Icicle).

11. I'm not wandering through forests,

And by the mustache, by the hair.

And my teeth are longer,

Than wolves and bears (Comb).

12. They flew into a raspberry

They wanted to peck her

But they saw a freak -

And get out of the garden quickly!

And the freak is sitting on a stick,

With a beard made from a washcloth. (Birds and scarecrow).

13. If only pine trees ate

They knew how to run and jump,

They would rush away from me without looking back,

And they would never meet me again,

Because – I’ll tell you without bragging –

I am steely, and angry, and very toothy. (Saw).

14. I'm a one-eared old woman

I'm jumping on the canvas

And a long thread from the ear,

Like a web I pull. (Needle).

15.Here needles and pins

They crawl out from under the bench.

They look at me

They want milk. (Hedgehog).


Station 3. Rhyme(finish the word)

1 .In the vegetable garden

Grow...(chocolates; “Miracle Tree”)

2. There's polish on your neck,

Under your nose... (blot; “Moidodyr”)

3 .The fly went to the market

And she bought... (samovar; “Fly – Tsokotukha”)

4. Robin Bobin Barabek

Ate forty...(person; “Barabek”)

5. The bears were driving

On...(bicycle; “Cockroach”)

6. And they stood at the gate

Twisted Christmas trees,

We walked there without worries

Crooked...(wolves; “Once upon a time there lived a man”)

7. And again the bear: -Oh, save the walrus!

Yesterday he swallowed a sea...(urchin; “telephone”)

8. Look into the tub -

And you will see there... (a frog; “Fedorino’s grief”)

9. The little frogs came running,

Watered from... (tub; “Confusion”)

10. Dear girl Lyalechka!

She was walking with a doll

And on Tavricheskaya street

Suddenly I saw... (an elephant)

Station 4. Heroic

There are a huge number of heroes in the fairy tales of K.I. Chukovsky. Let's remember some of them.

1. A good doctor who treated animals and birds. (Aibolit).

2. A nice dog from the fairy tale “Doctor Aibolit.” (Abba).

3. A thick-skinned animal that fell into a swamp. (Hippopotamus)

4. Evil sister of Aibolit. (Varvara)

5. The daredevil who swallowed the villain in the fairy tale “The Cockroach.”

6. The monkey who scared the children with the Karakula shark in the poem “Barmaley” (Gorilla).

7. The daredevil who defeated the Spider in the poem “Fly - Tsokotukha” (Mosquito).

8. Doctor Aibolit's duck (Kika).

9. A terrible giant who was swallowed by the daring Sparrow (Cockroach).

10. The grandmother from whom the dishes ran away (Fedora).

Station 5. Confusion

One of the students was copying the titles of poems in the library, but made mistakes. Name the poem correctly.

  1. "Arbolit" (Aibolit)

  2. "Disgusting" (Joy)

  3. "Karmaley" (Barmaley)

  4. "The Painted Sun" (The Stolen Sun)

  5. "Nophelet" (Telephone)

  6. “A man drank in the world” (A man lived in the world)

  7. "Puganitsa" (Confusion)

  8. “The snakes are laughing” (The hedgehogs are laughing)

  9. “Khudo-tree” (Miracle-tree)

Station 6. Crossword

Final words from the presenter.

Our journey has now ended. Many more times you will encounter works

K.I. Chukovsky, and now we will summarize.

Thank you all for your attention,

For enthusiasm and ringing laughter,

For the excitement of competition,

Guaranteed success.

Now the moment of farewell has come,

Our speech will be short.

We say: “Goodbye,

See you happy next time!”


References:

  1. “Library at school” No. 01 (85) - 2003.

A holiday of health and cleanliness.

(theatrical play program).
Characters: presenter, Cleanliness, Dirt, Hedgehog, Wolf, Bear, Hare.
IN:

  1. Teacher's opening speech.
  2. Itour- “Remember the fairy tale.”
  3. IItour - « Who is who".
  4. IIItour."Competition of experts."
  5. Questions for fans.
  6. IVtour."Basket of lost things."
  7. Vtour."Guess a riddle"
  8. VItour.“Decipher the names of fairy-tale characters.”
  9. Playing with the audience.
  10. Theatricalization of fairy tales.
  11. Summing up and awarding the winners.

Not far from Moscow, in the village of Peredelkino, in a small house lived for many years a tall, gray-haired man, whom all the children in the country knew. It was he who came up with many fairy-tale heroes: Mukha-Tsokotukha, Barmaleya, Moidodyra. The name of this wonderful man was Korney Chukovsky. April 1, 2007, if he were alive, he would be 125 years old.

Korney Chukovsky is the literary pseudonym of the writer. His real name is Nikolai Vasilievich Korneychukov.

He got up very early, as soon as the sun rose, and immediately got to work. In spring and summer I dug in the garden or in the flower garden in front of the house, in winter I cleared the paths from the snow that had fallen overnight. After working for several hours, he went for a walk. He walked surprisingly easily and quickly, sometimes he even started racing with the kids he met while walking. It was to these kids that he dedicated his book “From Two to Five.”

Scientist, writer, translator, literary critic, K. Chukovsky wrote many poems and fairy tales for children.

From an early age, his poems bring joy to all of us. Not only you, but also your parents and grandparents could not imagine their childhood without the fairy tales of Korney Chukovsky!

Today we will take you on an unusual journey, we will meet the heroes of Korney Chukovsky’s fairy tales.

I round "Remember the fairy tale."

Remember what words the line ends with and name the fairy tale .

Treats small children
Heals birds and animals
He looks through his glasses
Good doctor... ( Aibolit)
"Aibolit"

Suddenly from the gateway -
Scary giant
Red-haired and mustachioed... ( cockroach)
"Cockroach"

I am the Great Laver
Famous... ( Moidodyr)
Umyvalnikov chief
And the commander of the washcloths.
"Moidodyr"

The pigs meowed - meow - meow,
Kitties... ( grunted, oink-oink)
"Confusion"

There's a robber in Africa
There's a villain in Africa
In Africa it’s terrible... ( Barmaley)
"Barmaley"

People are having fun -
The fly is getting married
For the dashing, daring
Young... ( mosquito)
"Fly Tsokotukha"

The sun was walking across the sky
And it ran behind a cloud.
The bunny looked out the window,
It’s become a little bunny... ( dark).
"Stolen Sun"

No no! Nightingale
Doesn't sing for pigs
Better call... ( crow)
"Telephone"

And the dishes come and go
It walks through fields and swamps.
And the kettle said to the iron
- I have more to go... ( I can not).
"Fedorino grief"

Only suddenly, from behind a bush
Because of the blue forest,
From distant fields
Arrives... ( sparrow)
"Cockroach"

And behind him are the people
And he sings and shouts:
- What a freak, what a freak!
What a nose, what a mouth!
And where does this come from... ( monster).
"Crocodile"

And I don't need
No marmalade, no chocolate
But only the little ones
Well, very small... ( children)
"Barmaley"

2nd round "Who is who".

Which characters do these fairy-tale names belong to?

Aibolit - ( doctor)
Barmaley - ( robber)
Fedora - ( grandmother)
Karakula - ( shark)
Moidodyr - ( wash basin)
Totoshka, Kokoshka - ( crocodiles)
Tsokotuha - ( fly)
Barabek - ( glutton)
Red-haired, mustachioed giant - ( cockroach)

III round. "Competition of experts."

Solve the crossword puzzle based on the works of K. Chukovsky and find out the name of the writer’s first fairy tale.

Horizontally:

  1. The name of the shark in Chukovsky's fairy tales.
  2. A monster from a fairy tale that devours baby animals.
  3. The name of the fly is the birthday girl.
  4. The name of one of the crocodiles who met the dirty one.
  5. The head of the wash basins and the commander of the washcloths.
  6. Who returned the stolen sun?
  7. What word did Aibolit repeat on his way to Africa?
  8. The title of a poem in which animals dragged a hippopotamus from a swamp.

Vertically:

  1. Chukovsky's first fairy tale.

Questions for fans. (while the teams are filling out the crossword puzzle).

Auction.

  1. In what work did the dishes re-educate their owner? ( "Fedorino grief")
  2. Name a fairy tale in which a terrible crime occurs - an attempted murder? ( "Fly Tsokotukha").
  3. Which hero was a terrible villain and then reformed? ( "Barmaley")
  4. What was the name of the boy who defeated the Crocodile? ( Vanya Vasilchikov)
  5. In which fairy tale is the sparrow glorified? ( "Cockroach")
  6. Name a fairy tale whose main idea can be expressed in the words: “Cleanliness is the key to health!” ( "Moidodyr", "Fedorino's grief")
  7. What did the animals ask for in the poem - fairy tale “Telephone”: ( Elephant - chocolate, Gazelles - carousels, Monkeys - books, Crocodile - galoshes)
  8. On whom did Aibolit and his friends travel to Africa? ( Wolves, whale, eagles)
  9. What “horned beast” were the tailors afraid of in the poem “The Brave Men”? ( snail)
  10. In which fairy tales is the crocodile the hero? ( “Confusion”, “Cockroach”, “Moidodyr”, “Telephone”, “Barmaley”, “Stolen Sun”, “Crocodile”)

Crossword check.

IV round. "Basket of lost things."

I have different things in my basket (bag). Someone lost them. Help find their owner, remember the fairy tale and the lines that talk about this item.

  • Telephone ( My phone rang)
  • Balloon ( Bears rode a bicycle...followed by mosquitoes in a balloon)
  • Soap ( So the soap jumped)
  • Saucer ( And behind them are saucers)
  • Galosh ( Send me a dozen new galoshes)
  • Thermometer ( And sets them a thermometer)
  • Sieve ( The sieve jumps across the fields)
  • Gloves ( And then the bunnies called: “Can you send some gloves?”)
  • Coin ( A fly walked across the field, the fly found some money)
  • Chocolate ( And he gives everyone a chocolate bar in order.)
  • Collar ( The crocodile looked back and swallowed Barbosa, swallowed him along with the collar)
  • Washcloth ( And the washcloth was like a jackdaw, like it swallowed a jackdaw)

V round "Guess a riddle"

(Appeal to the portrait)
- Tall, long arms with large hands, large facial features, a large curious nose, a brush of a mustache, an unruly strand of hair hanging on the forehead, laughing eyes and an amazing easy gait. This is the appearance of Korney Ivanovich Chukovsky.

He was distinguished by great hard work. " “Always,” he wrote, “no matter where I was: on the tram, in the line for bread, in the dentist’s waiting room, I wrote riddles for children so as not to waste time.”

Guess the riddles of K. Chukovsky. ( children make a wish)

Wonderful house.
There was a white house
Wonderful house
And something knocked inside him.
And he crashed, and from there
A living miracle ran out -
So warm, so fluffy and golden.
(Egg and chicken)

Wonderful cave.
Red doors in my cave,
White animals sit at the door.
Both meat and bread - all my spoils -
I gladly give it to white animals!
(Mouth and teeth)

Beware!
Oh, don't touch me:
I'll burn you without fire!
They carry me along the water.
(Nettle)

A wonderful locomotive.
A steam locomotive without wheels!
What a miracle - a steam locomotive!
Has he gone crazy?
He went straight across the sea!
(Steamboat)

Why?
The sage saw a sage in him,
Fool - fool, ram - ram,
The sheep saw him as a sheep,
And a monkey - a monkey.
But they brought him to him
Fedya Baratova,
And Fedya saw the shaggy slob.
(Mirror)

Wonderful horses.
I have two horses, two horses,
And the water is hard
Like stone!
(Skates and ice)

Toothy mystery.
I'm not wandering through forests,
And by the mustache, by the hair ,
And my teeth are longer,
Than wolves and bears.
(Comb)

Round VI: “Decipher the names of fairy-tale characters.”

Insert vowels into the encrypted words to get the names of fairy-tale characters.

BRMLY

TsKTH

MYDDR

YBLT

TRKNSCH

KRKL

KRKDL

BRBC

GPPPTM

(Barmaley, Moidodyr, Aibolit, Karakula, Barabek, Tsokotukha, Fedora, Cockroach, Crocodile, Hippopotamus)

Playing with spectators(while the teams are working)

Connect the hero of the fairy tale with the action he committed.

K. Chukovsky became a children's poet and storyteller by accident. And it turned out like this. His little son fell ill. K. Chukovsky took him on the train. The boy was capricious, moaning, crying. In order to somehow entertain him, his father began to compose him a fairy tale:

Once upon a time there was a crocodile,
He walked the streets.

The boy suddenly became quiet and began to listen.

K. Chukovsky's fairy tales help all children navigate the world around them and make them feel like a fearless participant in imaginary battles for justice, for goodness and freedom. The poems of K. Chukovsky cultivate the ability to empathize, sympathize, and rejoice. Let us all rejoice together and watch the dramatization of excerpts from K. Chukovsky’s fairy tales.

Dramatization of fairy tales.

We will encounter the works of K.I. Chukovsky many more times. In high school you will meet Chukovsky the translator. He translated from English “The Adventures of Baron Munchausen”, “The Adventures of Robinson Crusoe”, “The Adventures of Tom Sawyer”, “The Prince and the Pauper”, “Rikki – Tikki – Tavi” and other books.

Irakli Andronikov wrote that “ Chukovsky has inexhaustible talent, smart, brilliant, cheerful, festive. Never part with such a writer for the rest of your life.”

Grandfather Korney wrote good books,
He raised adults and children.
There will be our grandchildren and children
These fairy tales are fun to read.

Tales of Grandfather Korney

Korney Ivanovich Chukovsky
(March 31, 1882 – October 28, 1969)

We feel sorry for grandfather Korney:
Compared to us, he lagged behind:
Because in childhood "Barmaleya"
And I haven’t read “Crocodile”
Didn't admire "Telephone"
And I didn’t delve into “Cockroach.”
How did he grow up to be such a scientist?
Without knowing the most important books?
V.D. Berestov

BIOGRAPHY PAGE

Korney Ivanovich Chukovsky was born in St. Petersburg in 1882. Soon his family moved to Odessa. In this city he went to study at the gymnasium, but the boy was expelled from the fifth grade due to his “low origin.” Those were difficult times.
Chukovsky tried many professions and, finally, in 1901 he began working at Odessa News. Two years later, the newspaper sent a young correspondent to London. There he taught himself English and spent all his free time in libraries. Returning to his homeland, Chukovsky began publishing a satirical magazine, translated from English, and collaborated in various reputable magazines.
Chukovsky was a serious literary critic and had no intention of becoming a children's poet. He composed his first works for children completely by accident. How did this happen? One day Chukovsky’s little son fell ill. Korney Ivanovich was taking him home on the evening train and, wanting to at least a little alleviate the baby’s suffering, he began to compose and tell him a fairy tale about Crocodile Krokodilovich as he went. And the famous “Moidodyr” appeared because the writer’s little daughter suddenly became stubborn and did not want to wash herself.
In the books of Korney Ivanovich Chukovsky, extraordinary miracles happen. Even kids who can’t read yet are familiar with the Tsokotukha Fly, the good doctor Aibolit, the Crocodile who swallowed the sun, the sloppy Fedora from whom all the dishes ran away, and the daredevil Bibigon.
But Korney Ivanovich wrote not only poetry and fairy tales. Chukovsky retold for children ancient Greek legends about the hero Perseus, Pallas Athena, Gorgon Medusa, and the beautiful Andromeda, and gave translations of Kipling’s fairy tales, “Tom Sawyer,” “The Adventures of Baron Munchausen,” and “Robinson Crusoe.”

They were afraid of the mustachioed
That's it, kill me!
But I dealt with it
Daring sparrow!

Escaped from the dirty
Cups, spoons and pans.
She is looking for them, calling them,
And on the way tears are shed.

I took a walk across the field
And I bought a samovar,
And then he married me
Brave little mosquito.

3. The phone rang,
An elephant called the apartment.
And he spoke after him
And a toothy crocodile

Lives in hot Africa
It will either pull or push.
Aibolit once
He saved me from robbers.

Who seems to be a jackdaw,
Swallowed a washcloth?

Who washes clean
Even a chimney sweep?

I bought a samovar
And the mosquito saved her.

And the hare and the she-wolf -
Everyone runs to him for treatment

1. In this book there are name days,
There were many guests there.
And on these name days
Suddenly a villain appeared.
He wanted to kill the owner
Almost killed her.
But to the insidious villain
Someone cut off the head.

4. Oh! Oh! Oh oh oh!
There's such a commotion here!
Everyone is running, rushing, jumping,
They are shouted at; "Where where?"
Well, someone is crying bitterly
Out of frustration and shame.
But everything ends well.
Everything returns to its place.
Everyone forgives the guilty -
It's hard to live without a housewife.
And she promises them
Do not get them dirty or hit.

The following materials were used to create this page:

Russian children's encyclopedia of riddles. - St. Petersburg: Neva; M.: OLMA-PRESS, 2002.
Books, sheet music and toys. - 2004. - No. 11. - p. 24-25
Fun lessons. - 2000. - No. 3
Why and why. - 2003. - No. 1;
Why and why. - 2005. - No. 2.

Chukovsky's fairy tales all come from childhood...

We're lucky that now
Aibolit is visiting us.
He wanted to play
And ask you questions!

PUZZLES. GAMES. PUZZLES

1. RIDDLES

Read the riddles and find the answers in the pictures

2. PICTURE - QUESTION

Carefully examine the picture, enlarge the image if necessary (click on the picture), determine which fragments of fairy tales are depicted on it

4. IN WHAT TALES AND POEMS OF K.I. CHUKOVSKY
ARE THESE ITEMS COVERED?

3. READ THE NAME OF THE CHILDREN'S POET

Select answers from the list below
(some items are found immediately
in several works)

1. Pillow - "Moidodyr"
2. Balloons - "Cockroach"
3. Samovar - “Fly-Tsokotukha”, “Moidodyr”,
"Fedorino grief"
4. Shoes - "Miracle Tree"
5. Telephone - "Phone"
6. Toy saber - “Crocodile”
7. Matches - "Confusion"
8. Thermometer - "Aibolit"
9. Iron - “Fedorino grief”, “Moidodyr.”

1. Aibolit. 2.Crocodile. 3.Moidodyr. 4. The clattering fly. 5. Confusion. 6. Cockroach. 7.Phone. 8. Fedorino grief. 9.Miracle tree

COMPUTER GAMES: QUIZES, MOSAICS, TESTS, CROSSWORDS

1. "Doctor Aibolit in Africa": Download archive - 965 kb.

2. “Doctor Aibolit and his animals”: ​​Download archive - 768 kb.

3. “Crocodile with Kokosha and Totosha”: Download archive - 247 kb

6. “Journey to Africa by ship”: Download archive - 763 kb.

7. “My phone rang...”: Download archive - 777 kb.

MOSAICS

QUIZES

1. "Tales of K.I. Chukovsky": colorful quiz (PowerPoint -2003) based on several works. Archive size 7.6 MB. Down-load a game

2. "Aibolit Quiz": flash quiz based on the fairy tale "Doctor Aibolit" (PROSE). The program itself counts the correct answers, shows the number of points scored and the time spent on the game. Archive size 2.3 MB. Down-load a game

3. "Aibolit": flash quiz based on the fairy tale "Aibolit" (POEMS). The program itself counts the correct answers, shows the number of points scored and the time spent on the game. Archive size 2.2 MB. Down-load a game

MATERIALS TO HELP THE LIBRARY

download these games to your computer and play with friends

CROSSWORDS

1."Tales of K.I. Chukovsky": 20 word flash crossword puzzle. To play you need a flash player of at least version 9. Game size - 112 kb. Download crossword.

from the experience of the City Children's Hospital of Bolshoi Kamen

1. "Riddles of Grandfather Korney": booklet to organize a correspondence quiz in the library on the fairy tales of K.I. Chukovsky among younger schoolchildren. The booklet is made in A4 size gif graphic format on two sheets. Archive size 344 kb. Download brochure

2. Children's party script"Tales of Grandfather Korney" for primary schoolchildren. Word. Document size - 612 kb. Download the script

(click on the picture to enlarge the image)

CHECK YOUR ANSWERS

TASK 4.

TASK 2.

1. Aibolit
2. Barmaley
3. Stolen sun
4. Moidodyr
5. Cluttering fly
6. Cockroach
7. Telephone
8. Fedorino grief
9. Miracle Tree

TASK 3.

Chukovsky

5. GUESS THE WORK

2. He is kinder than everyone in the world.
He heals sick animals.
And one day a hippopotamus
He rescued him from the swamp

TASK 5.

1). Fly Tsokotukha. 2). Aibolit. 3) Telephone.
4). Fedorino's grief.

About the Cockroach and the Crocodile,
About Aibolit and Moidodyr,
About Barmaley in the fabulous sea,
About Telephone and Fedorino's grief.

Moms and dads told us
That they had known these heroes for a long time.
Grandmothers read fairy tales to them when they were children.
They learned these heroes from them.

We pestered grandmothers for a long time -
Where did they learn these fairy tales?

About the Cockroach and the Crocodile,
About Aibolit and Moidodyr,
About Barmaleya in the fabulous sea,
About Telephone and Fedorino's grief.

This is what the grandmothers told us -
They read these fairy tales in books.
These books were written by Korney’s grandfather -
Storyteller, critic, poet, sorcerer.


PLAY (wait for the game to load on the service)

IN OUR LIBRARY

To mark the anniversary of Korney Ivanovich Chukovsky, the City Children's Library hosted a fascinating “Journey to Chukokkala” through the book country of a wonderful children's storyteller and connoisseur of children's souls. The children, together with the librarian, recalled the writer’s works and put them on display. Schoolchildren enthusiastically answered the questions of the computer quiz “Riddles from Grandfather Korney” and solved the crossword puzzle “Complete the word and guess the key word.” And then the postman Pechkin came to visit and brought a parcel with mixed up things, and the guys told the postman which items belonged to whom.
Fairy tales and poems by K.I. Chukovsky will never leave the circle of children's reading, because they contain everything that children need - kindness, humor, play and lightness, and the fun event once again confirmed this. *********************************************************************************************************************************************************************************************************

Chukovsky's works, known to a wide range of readers, are, first of all, poems and rhymed fairy tales for children. Not everyone knows that in addition to these creations, the writer has global works about his famous colleagues and other works. After reading them, you can understand which works of Chukovsky will become your favorite.

Origin

It is interesting that Korney Ivanovich Chukovsky is a literary pseudonym. The real literary figure's name was Nikolai Vasilyevich Korneychukov. He was born in St. Petersburg on March 19, 1882. His mother Ekaterina Osipovna, a peasant from the Poltava province, worked as a maid in the city of St. Petersburg. She was the illegitimate wife of Emmanuel Solomonovich Levinson. The couple first had a daughter, Maria, and three years later, a son, Nikolai, was born. But at that time they were not welcome, so in the end Levinson married a wealthy woman, and Ekaterina Osipovna and her children moved to Odessa.

Nikolai went to kindergarten, then to high school. But he couldn't finish it due to low

Prose for adults

The writer's literary activity began in 1901, when his articles were published in Odessa News. Chukovsky studied English, so the editors of this publication sent him to London. Returning to Odessa, he took whatever part he could in the 1905 revolution.

In 1907, Chukovsky translated the works of Walt Whitman. He translated books by Twain, Kipling, and Wilde into Russian. These works by Chukovsky were very popular.

He wrote books about Akhmatova, Mayakovsky, Blok. Since 1917, Chukovsky has been working on a monograph about Nekrasov. This is a long-term work that was published only in 1952.

Poems by a children's poet

It will help you find out what works by Chukovsky are for children, a list. These are short poems that kids learn in the first years of their lives and in elementary school:

  • "Glutton";
  • "Piglet";
  • "The elephant is reading";
  • "Hedgehogs laugh";
  • "Zakalyaka";
  • "Sandwich";
  • "Fedotka";
  • "Pigs";
  • "Garden";
  • "Turtle";
  • "Song about poor boots";
  • "Tadpoles";
  • "Bebeka";
  • "Camel"
  • "Joy";
  • "Great-great-great-grandchildren";
  • "Christmas tree";
  • "Fly in the Bath";
  • "Chicken".

The list presented above will help you recognize Chukovsky’s short poetic works for children. If the reader wants to get acquainted with the title, years of writing and a summary of the tales of the literary figure, then a list of them is below.

Works by Chukovsky for children - “Crocodile”, “Cockroach”, “Moidodyr”

In 1916, Korney Ivanovich wrote the fairy tale “Crocodile”; this poem was met with ambiguity. Thus, V. Lenin’s wife N. Krupskaya spoke critically of this work. Literary critic and writer Yuri Tynyanov, on the contrary, said that children's poetry has finally opened up. N. Btsky, writing a note in a Siberian pedagogical magazine, noted in it that children enthusiastically accept “Crocodile”. They constantly applaud these lines and listen with great delight. You can see how sorry they are to part with this book and its characters.

Chukovsky's works for children include, of course, The Cockroach. The fairy tale was written by the author in 1921. At the same time, Korney Ivanovich came up with “Moidodyr”. As he himself said, he composed these tales in literally 2-3 days, but he had nowhere to print them. Then he proposed to found a periodical children's publication and call it “Rainbow”. These two famous works of Chukovsky were published there.

"Miracle Tree"

In 1924, Korney Ivanovich wrote “The Miracle Tree”. At that time, many lived poorly, the desire to dress beautifully was only a dream. Chukovsky embodied them in his work. The miracle tree does not grow leaves or flowers, but shoes, boots, slippers, and stockings. In those days, children did not yet have tights, so they wore cotton stockings, which were attached to special pendants.

In this poem, as in some others, the writer talks about Murochka. This was his beloved daughter, she died at the age of 11, contracting tuberculosis. In this poem, he writes that small blue knitted shoes with pom-poms were picked for Murochka, and describes what exactly their parents took from the tree for the children.

Now there really is such a tree. But they don’t tear objects off him, they hang him. It was decorated through the efforts of fans of the beloved writer and is located near his house-museum. In memory of the fairy tale of the famous writer, the tree is decorated with various items of clothing, shoes, and ribbons.

“The Tsokotuha Fly” is a fairy tale that the writer created, rejoicing and dancing

The year 1924 was marked by the creation of the “Tsokotukha Fly”. In his memoirs, the author shares interesting moments that happened while writing this masterpiece. On a clear, hot day on August 29, 1923, Chukovsky was overcome with immense joy; he felt with all his heart how beautiful the world was and how good it was to live in it. The lines began to appear on their own. He took a pencil and a piece of paper and quickly began scribbling lines.

Describing the wedding of a fly, the author felt like a groom at this event. Once before he tried to describe this fragment, but he could not write more than two lines. On this day inspiration came. When he couldn't find any more paper, he simply tore off a piece of wallpaper in the hallway and quickly wrote on it. When the author began to talk in poetry about the wedding dance of a fly, he began to write and dance at the same time. Korney Ivanovich says that if anyone had seen a 42-year-old man running around in a shamanic dance, shouting out words, and immediately writing them down on a dusty strip of wallpaper, he would have suspected something was wrong. With the same ease, he completed the work. As soon as it was finished, the poet turned into a tired and hungry man who had recently arrived in the city from his dacha.

Other works of the poet for young audiences

Chukovsky says that when creating for children, it is necessary, at least for a while, to turn into these little people to whom the lines are addressed. Then a passionate elation and inspiration comes.

Other works by Korney Chukovsky were created in the same way - “Confusion” (1926) and “Barmaley” (1926). At these moments, the poet experienced a “heartbeat of childish joy” and happily wrote down the rhymed lines that quickly appeared in his head on paper.

Other works did not come so easily to Chukovsky. As he himself admitted, they arose precisely at the moments when his subconscious returned to childhood, but they were created as a result of hard and long work.

Thus he wrote “Fedorino’s Mountain” (1926), “Telephone” (1926). The first fairy tale teaches children to be neat and shows what laziness and unwillingness to keep your home clean lead to. Excerpts from “Telephone” are easy to remember. Even a three-year-old child can easily repeat them after their parents. These are the useful and interesting works of Chukovsky, the list can be continued with fairy tales “The Stolen Sun”, “Aibolit” and other works of the author.

“Stolen Sun”, stories about Aibolit and other heroes

“The Stolen Sun” Korney Ivanovich wrote in 1927. The plot tells that the crocodile swallowed the sun and therefore everything around was plunged into darkness. Because of this, various incidents began to occur. The animals were afraid of the crocodile and did not know how to take the sun from him. For this, a bear was called, who showed miracles of fearlessness and, together with other animals, was able to return the luminary to its place.

“Aibolit”, created by Korney Ivanovich in 1929, also talks about a brave hero - a doctor who was not afraid to go to Africa to help animals. Less known are other children's works by Chukovsky, which were written in subsequent years - these are “English Folk Songs”, “Aibolit and the Sparrow”, “Toptygin and the Fox”.

In 1942, Korney Ivanovich composed the fairy tale “Let’s Defeat Barmaley!” With this work the author ends his stories about the robber. In 1945-46, the author created “The Adventure of Bibigon”. The writer again glorifies the brave hero, who is not afraid to fight evil characters who are several times larger than him.

The works of Korney Ivanovich Chukovsky teach children kindness, fearlessness, and accuracy. They glorify the friendship and kind heart of the heroes.



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