Greetings Museum of Health Care Friends! In light of ongoing efforts to limit the transmission of COVID-19, this activity has been modified from the original version for offsite, home use. (Normally, this activity is completed as part of the “Funny Bones” education program offered at the Museum of Healthcare at Kingston.)
For Educators
Learning Outcomes:
Students will apply their knowledge of the structure (bone type) and function of four major bone structures (skull, ribs, hands, femur) in this activity. Encourage students to recreate the four major bone structures in their skeletons at a Grade level appropriate amount of detail.
For Parents
Them bones, them bones! This fun activity helps children understand the different types of bones (flat, long, short) and their function by building a skeleton and labeling it.
Pre-Activity: Can You Find Your Funny Bones?
Let’s do a test!
Press your hand down on your knee. This is the middle of your leg that bends when you sit down or stand up.
Next, take your same hand and press anywhere else on your leg.
Did your knee feel a lot harder than the rest of your leg too? That’s because you just felt one of your bones! All of those bones are like building blocks for your body, and we need their help to move and do all kinds of things.
Your body is made of lots of bones that feel just like your knee! You have bones in your…
Head: The bones in your head protect your brain, which helps you think.
Hand: These bones help you move your hands and hold onto things.
Ribs: These bones protect all the organs around your stomach
Legs: These bones are the strongest ones in your body. We need our leg bones to be strong because they hold our body up when we stand.
Activity: Construct a Skeleton!
Can you find your funny bones? Draw a “self-portrait” of your skeleton, or follow these steps to make your own! Use the supplies below to glue materials that you have at home or outside onto a sheet of paper in the shape of a skeleton.
Supplies Your Will Need
• 1 skeleton worksheet (see below) or 1 sheet of black/colored paper
• 1 printed and cut-out skull (see below)
• 1 pencil/crayon (use white or another bright color if you use black paper)
• 1 pair of scissors (make sure an adult is close by to help)
• 1 glue stick/tape
• Pick your funny bones! Use Q-Tips to make this skeleton, or follow the same steps with long and short pasta, straws, twigs from outside, or anything else that you have instead. Put on your creativity cap!
Instructions
Have black or color paper at home? Follow the same instructions below on your skeleton activity sheet or black/colored paper to make your skeleton!
1. Get 5 full Q-Tips + 8 half Q-Tips (9 Q-Tips in total + 1 extra).
2. Use scissors to cut 4 full Q-Tips in the middle to make your 8 half Q-Tips (ask an adult for help!).
3. Glue 1 full Q-Tip to the middle of your black sheet of paper or your printed activity sheet.
4. Glue your cut-out skeleton head on top of that Q-Tip, or draw your skeleton’s head.
5. Glue 4 short Q-Tips on each side of the long Q-Tip (8 short Q-Tips all together).
6. Glue 2 long Q-Tips at the top of the middle Q-Tip pointing out in opposite directions to make the arms.
7. Then, glue 2 more long Q-Tips at the bottom of the middle Q-Tip pointing out in opposite directions to make the legs.
So What’s Next?
Can you find your funny bones? Use the four colors on your activity sheet to find your skeleton’s head, hands, legs and ribs. Write down the names of the funny bones on the line with the same color next to their place in your skeleton.
Spelling Tip: remember to sound out your words, or use the bone names on the worksheet to help!
Need Help? Here’s our example!
Explore similar education activities, discover highlights of museum artefacts, and sign up for an onsite education program by clicking the link here!
About the Authour
Meaghan McDougald
(Public Programs Assistant, Summer 2020)

Meaghan recently completed an undergraduate degree in history at Queen’s University, with plans to return to Queen’s in the fall to begin her Bachelor’s of Education! Her main areas of interest include the history of the United Kingdom of Great Britain, and the history of psychiatric medicine. Meaghan’s experience of quarantine during the COVID19 pandemic has allowed her to expand her cooking skills, and discover the many hiking locations that Kingston and the surrounding region has to offer.