Blog home
The Blog

Fresh Ideas and Inspiration for education

How to make a dinosaur-themed immersive environment

Follow these easy steps and transform your classroom into an exciting prehistoric land, enabling your children to step into the forest and walk with the dinosaurs! These spaces are ideal for learning locations - why not have a dinosaur themed reading area or use it to stimulate story telling and writing. Let the children's imaginations soar with this inspirational area. But watch out…. with their beady eyes, monstrous jaws and crushing teeth they might have you in their sights if they are feeling a little ‘peckish’!

Posted on Wednesday 26th October 2016

Dinosaur immersive environment

What you need:

Creating the scene:

Step 1

Start by hanging up the Rainforest back drop – an instant transformation of a wall already. You can almost hear the flowing stream and rustling undergrowth!

Dinosaur Immersive Environment Step 1

Step 2

Create a canopy, making your space even more enclosed and immersive, using the camouflage netting (great for hanging things from too! )We’ve used the brilliant ceiling magnets which attach to the metal bars of suspended ceilings and allow you to keep moving the canopy around until you are happy with the position. Also hang the giant leaves and vines using the ceiling magnets.

Ceiling magnets

Step 3

Add texture to the walls around the backdrop using lengths of green fabric and more camouflage netting. Add brown craft roll to the floor, for protection but also to give a nice base.

Dinosaur Immersive Environment

Step 4

Create large boulders for the floor using the heavy duty brown craft roll. Cut off a length of the roll, making a ‘parcel’ (or hollow ‘balloon’) in the centre and stapling the 4 corners together. Paint with acrylic paint to give a stone effect.

Step 5

Make papier mache dinosaur eggs using blown up balloons covered with 2-3 layers of tissue paper or strips of newspaper pasted with watered down PVA. When dry, paint with acrylic paint. Place in a ‘nest’ of sand and twigs. View our How to make a papier mache Dragon/Dinosaur Egg blog post here for more detailed instruction on this.

Making Dinosaur eggs

Step 6

Make bones using cardboard. Cut cardboard into the shape of bones and paint them white using acrylic or ready mixed paint. Add shadows using black/grey paint to give them a 3D effect.

Making Dinosaur bones

Step 7

Create a truly sensory appeal to the scene by adding play sand on the floor (create a ‘dig’ area) – you never know what will be discovered! We’ve also added bark from a garden centre – a great addition for extra smell and texture. Add fossils and bones to be discovered.

Dinosaur immersive environment

Step 8

Add greenery (real, fake or handmade) such as plastic ferns and plants, ivy, moss and Mopani wood, leaves and our tree stump and log cushions to make a truly exciting reading/discovery area.

The Volcano

how to make a volcano

Our volcano was made using 3 cardboard boxes – a large one on the bottom, medium in the middle and small on top, stuck together to make the structure of the volcano. Wrap/cover this structure with crushed (to add texture which will show up when its painted) brown craft roll, leaving it open at the top for the mouth of the volcano. Paint the brown paper lightly with dark brown paint – don’t use too much paint here. Create the red hot lava down the front using lengths of red and orange tissue paper topped with red and orange/yellow cellophane with fairy lights sandwiched in between to create the flowing motion and light up/glowing effect. At the mouth of the volcano add lots of crumpled up red/yellow/orange tissue paper as if erupting and start the fairy lights flowing from within the mouth of the volcano to it’s base. 

Watch how to build and paint the T-Rex here:

Why not add a Stegosaurus to your scene?

Stegosaurus

This scene can easily be converted into a rainforest location by adding a stream using blue voile fabric to suggest water, with fairy lights underneath. Line the stream with boulders and hang green ropes and vines made from tissue paper from the canopy.

Rainforest backdrop immersive environment

Rainforest backdrop immersive environment

Shop the range of Immersive Environment resources here

With Thanks to Nicky Mountcastle and her team for creating this amazingly inspiring how to. Watch out for our next themed learning locations coming soon.

Have you seen our other Immersive Learning Location scenes? Click the links to see them: Narnia-themed Winter, Icy Antarctic Penguins and Igloo.