Teaching kindergartners a song about the body is a good way to help them learn; setting a lesson to music will help the students retain the information. Teaching songs like "Head, Shoulders, Knees and Toes" that incorporate a dance, in this case touching the named body parts, will allow students to get up and move around. This is beneficial because it will get the children's attention.
Making hand and footprints in class can teach children about their uniqueness. Use nontoxic finger paint and spread it on the students' palms or bottoms of their feet using a brush and have them make the prints on construction paper. Pointing out how different in size and shape people's hands are will help show students that being different is not a negative thing. Making fingerprints can have the same positive effect in the classroom.
Similar to hand and footprints, body tracing can show that people come in all shapes and sizes. Tear off large sheets of white paper from a roll and tape them to the classroom wall, then have students help trace outlines of one another. You can let them color on the sheets or draw on them, allowing the children to express themselves.
Coloring worksheets can also be used to help teach students about the body. Finding worksheets that focus on various body parts, like eyes, ears, noses, mouths and hands, will teach students as well as entertain them. Connect-the-dots activities can also be instructive. Coloring and drawing can supplement lesson plans about the body as well as help develop student's motor skills and muscles.