Create a classroom snowman with the children. Cut out circles large enough for children to decorate with markers, crayons and other materials. After the children have decorated the snowman, laminate each piece of paper and build the snowman on the wall. Use the class snowman to play games such as "Pin the Nose on the Snowman," in which children use fake carrot noses and blindly try to place the nose in the correct spot.
Read a snowman story, such as "Snowmen at Night" by Caralyn Buehner, with the children and then tell them they are going to be snowmen. Provide the children with winter clothing for this game. Ask children to imagine they are snowmen and for what type of clothing they might wear. Allow children to dress up and take pictures to create a snowman imitation display for the classroom.
Create card-sized snowmen. Write matching concepts on the snowmen, such as numbers to match the number of buttons on a snowman, colors and color words or lower- and uppercase letters. Laminate each snowman. Instruct children to lay the snowmen face down, then flip over two snowmen to find a match. For example, one snowman will have the numeral 5. A matching snowman will have five buttons on his chest. The object of the game is to learn to recognize numbers, letters and other concepts. Children may play alone or with partners.
Use real snow or three muffins for this game. Build a snowman outside or stack the muffins to represent a snowman. Create two sets of cards, one with body parts and one with snowman pieces. For example, the first set will include the head, arms and feet; the second set will include a hat, sticks and carrot. Gather all the parts which belong on the snowman and the cards. Allow the child to choose a card from each category. A child may draw "head" from the first category and "carrot" from the second category. The child will then put the carrot on the head of the pre-made snowman.