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BrainHatIndividualDownloadColor PDF

This document provides instructions for making a paper brain hemisphere hat in 3 sentences or less: The hat is made by printing pattern pages, cutting out brain hemisphere shapes, taping flaps to form a half-round shape for each hemisphere, and taping the hemispheres together slightly overlapped to form the full hat. The hat comes in large and small sizes and takes about 30 minutes to assemble while allowing time for coloring or labeling parts of the brain lobes. Notes provide tips on materials, sizing adjustments, and having sample hats for students to try on.

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Ceci Isaac
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
90 views

BrainHatIndividualDownloadColor PDF

This document provides instructions for making a paper brain hemisphere hat in 3 sentences or less: The hat is made by printing pattern pages, cutting out brain hemisphere shapes, taping flaps to form a half-round shape for each hemisphere, and taping the hemispheres together slightly overlapped to form the full hat. The hat comes in large and small sizes and takes about 30 minutes to assemble while allowing time for coloring or labeling parts of the brain lobes. Notes provide tips on materials, sizing adjustments, and having sample hats for students to try on.

Uploaded by

Ceci Isaac
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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BRAIN HEMISPHERE HAT

Target age group: ages 8-13

Time needed: at least 20 minutes for assembly (allow 30 minutes for younger students) plus any
additional time you want to spend on coloring and/or labeling

What you will need:


• copies of the following pattern pages printed onto heavyweight paper (card stock) if possible (if
card stock is not available, go ahead and use regular paper--the hat just won’t be quite as durable)
• clear tape
• white glue or glue stick if you want to avoid too much tape on the hat

NOTES:
• If you use white glue, I recommend using clothespins or paper clips to hold the joints while they
dry. If you use glue sticks I highly recommend using glue sticks intended for adults, not “school glue.”
Glue labeled as “washable” or “school glue” tends to be wimpy and doesn’t stick nearly as well as regu-
lar glue. But if school glue is all you’ve got, you can probably make it work. It will just take longer for the
joints to dry. (For the seam down the middle, most people choose to use tape.)
• There are both labeled and unlabeled patterns provided so that your students can do their own
labeling, if you wish. With the labeled patterns, you may still want your students to color code the lobes, or
trace over the words with markers or crayons. Do all coloring and labeling before you assemble the hats.
• Though two sizes are provided, the hat is designed to be as “one-size-fits-all” as possible. (It’s
amazing how similar head sizes are in comparison to shoe or shirt sizes.) The size of the hat can be made
a little smaller by overlapping the hemispheres slightly more before taping them together. If necessary,
the folds can also be overlapped, as well. Another way you could shrink the size would be to use the size
reduction button on a copier and copy at about 95%.
• If you are doing this project with a class, you might want to have two or three pre-assembled hats
for the students to try on before assembling their own. Make one standard size, one smaller, and maybe
one even smaller if you have young students. Students who find that the smaller hats fit better will know to
make adjustments during assembly.

How to assemble:
Cut out both hemispheres. Then snip in on the “V” lines. Don’t snip on the dashed lines, just the
solid lines. Then pull the “flaps” you have created over to their dashed lines and secure with glue or tape.
After you have pulled all the flaps over to their dashed lines, it should then take on a half-round shape. To
put these two halves together, simply choose one side to overlap just slightly onto the other (1/8” or less is
enough, but use more if you are trying to shrink the size of the hat). Secure with tape. (If you don’t want
the tape to show, put the tape on the inside of the hat.)

www.ellenjmchenry.com
LEFT
SIZE: LARGE
(older child
or adult)

FT
LE

www.ellenjmchenry.com
RIGHT
SIZE: LARGE
(older child
or adult)

RIG
HT

www.ellenjmchenry.com
LEFT
SIZE: SMALL
(child)

FT
LE

www.ellenjmchenry.com
RIGHT
SIZE: SMALL
(child)

RIG
HT

www.ellenjmchenry.com

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