EYEBALL Art Project from Paper Plates

I wanted to find an easy art project for this week that I could hang on the inside of my classroom. I found a pinterest of an eyeball made from a paper plate. I thought that sounded fun and “eye catching” if ya know what I mean.  On the back the kids can paste some funny Halloween jokes to tell their parents.

From Activity Village,  I found a pretty and colorful sheet of 8 jokes with the answers I liked. There were also some Frankenstein Bookmarks HERE and some Mummy Joke Bookmarks and a Halloween Joke Page HERE. Here are some jokes I’ll type up for the kids to tell their families. Hee hee.
Here are some more Halloween Jokes:

Q. What do you call a mummy eating in bed?
A. A crummy mummy.
Q. Why are ghosts always hungry?
A. Because the food goes right through them!
Q. What do you call a nervous witch?
A. A twitch.
Q. What do monsters order in fast food restaurants?
A. French FRIGHTS!
Q. Who did Dracula bring to the prom?
A. His ghoul friend.
Q. What street does a vampire live on?
A. A dead end!
These jokes are from Squiglys Playhouse.  We’re getting ready for our Halloween Party Friday. What does YOUR costume look like?

Gotta love those little baby chaps Dylan is wearing, now don’t ya? 

 Here I am with my grandkids at the church Halloween Party last night. We had a costume parade, played pumpkin bean bag toss, ate some of the chili from the chili cookoff, and went Trunk or Treating. Here I’m dressed up as Jesse from Toy Story. All of the grandkiddos were dressed up as cowboys too!  Yee Hah! 

Halloween Art 3D Jack o Lanterns

We stuffed a bunch of pumpkins and made a 3D Pumpkin Patch for Art today. 
The students made their own Jack o Lantern faces out of black construction paper. I drew a few ideas on the board. 

 The Halloween Art looks pretty up on the bulletin board. The kindergarteners wrote about what they are going to be for Halloween.

Zombies were popular. I wonder if they know about the Zombie Apocalypse? 

Hey there’s a blue pumpkin! Gotta love an original! 
I might be a witch too! 

 My classroom is all decorated up. I love Halloween. It’s my very favorite holiday.

I haven’t started reading the Halloween books yet. I have a dozen to put out though. We’ll have to read Runaway Pumpkin now that our pumpkin faces are all done. 

These two look kind of sad. It is funny how they almost have expressions!!
There were many girls who want to be Elsa from Frozen of course. She is going to be VERY popular this year! 
Jack o lantern 3D art. 

I think this is Darth Vader. 

The Transformers were popular costume choice too! 
And so were Ninja Turtles. The boys love those Saturday morning cartoons don’t they? (chuckle) 

  Happy Halloween Everybody! Hope you get the costume you always wanted! And if not, at least get the candy!

 But the final question is…..what will YOU be for Halloween?

We Need More Steve Jobs in Education and Less Bill Gates

Last week I read this article in Education Week that stopped me in my tracks; probably because I am a teacher and this is where I live.  It talks about how Bill Gates is so involved in shaping our Common Core educational structure, and that maybe it’s not good for individual kids to have to all be taught the SAME exact things. Maybe there is a better way.

Are we wasting kids’ natural curiosity and giftedness and instead choosing silent classrooms, sameness and lock step teaching  in the name of good test scores? More here…

How many of us fell in love with our current hobby or interest because of a class we took during our school days? I did. Steve Jobs did too. He dropped out of college after 6 months because of a lack of interest in what he was forced to take, and the huge expense it was to his parents. He fell in love with a few classes he sat in on for free that shaped him, and the company he later started. He chose what he was interested in over what he was told he needed to take. And he says it made all the difference.

 I feel that his view is SO RIGHT ON.

Jobs, one of my favorite people of all time. 

Sometimes you stumble into things because of a curiosity you have, even if you know it might not have any practical application. And many times we are forced to learn in a one-size-fits-all approach, as in Common Core. But what of creativity or the arts? What if you miss the drama or speech class that may change your life? My favorite class in high school was drama class. How sad if I’d never tried drama because it wouldn’t fit into my schedule? You may never find out you love learning to watercolor, or sing with a guitar, or make your own videos. These things you are exposed to, early in life, can make a huge impression on you!

All of my kids were exposed to every sport I could get my hands on in the Parks and Recreation system in our Lakewood, California town where they grew up. We lived 5 doors down from a city park and they attended T-Ball, baseball, football, soccer, basketball, and all sorts or classes and camps. Each one of them hated all group sports. Even though one of them was kind of gifted at sports, he didn’t like the negativity and the teasing of the other boys. It was sad for me, their mom, because I loved going to the games. But funny thing is,  how each of them, on their own, found a high school sport they loved doing, that was kind of off the grid.

My kids and my grandkids too have all been exposed to many, many types of learning; sports, music, arts, scouting, dance, and lots of different kinds of cultures  and outdoor experiences. 

One of them was on the rowing team and swim team in high school and started programming at 15, taking his first college class in Java at the city college, with special permission. He was also in the band and played trumpet and french horn and took cartooning classes.  One of them did track and field and was captain of the debate team and sang in the choir and still plays piano beautifully. He’s an eagle scout. One of them did ice hockey and loved woodshop and was the best sketch artist of my entire family. I remember he would have Bevis and Butthead in the margins of all of his writing papers in 3rd grade and his teacher lectured me at conference time. He made beautiful things, but sometimes his teachers did not notice his gifts.

 My daughter loved math, music and reading. And she took dance and tap danced with a troupe of about 50 kids; very exciting to watch on stage! (She hated dance as a child….go figure). But she was a true academic and took all the advanced math and APs her gifted high school program offered. She does accounting for her hub’s business now. She still plays violin and piano and was in the best orchestra in 5 high schools.  Her favorite High School teacher was an english teacher. And she still reads several books a month. Her Kindle account is mighty.

We experienced multi-culturalism in our city schools. Two of my kids’ best friends were from India and Pakistan, because we lived in a multicultural, port city. They regularly hung out with kids of many cultures from Samoan and Tongan, Spanish and African American to Vietnamese and Cambodian. We went to church with a stake made up of all of these cultures. Imagine the pot luck dinners we had! I could tell you they were grand!

How sad if you never get that exposure, that variety of topics, and that talent tested though? What if you never get the teacher who notices what you love and what lights you up because she doesn’t have time to; or because of somebody’s box structure of education, or Common Core, that has been designed for everyone to fit into.

Because I’ve been trained in gifted and talented education, I KNOW how important it is to give kids lots of experiences so they can get a Renzulli type II interest sparked in their young lives. Like Steve Jobs did with Calligraphy and computers.

My granddaughters at age 3 and 4 and acting out what interests them. Magic wands and high heels….and crowns of course! 

Not that Common Core is all bad. It’s not. I’m all for it basically. It’s good to have the same framework in each state. But as a teacher I have felt that its implementation has encroached on the myriad of colorful additions to my classroom school day, that I have always made the time for. Things like science experiments, art projects, musical productions and free writing. Common Core doesn’t translate to everything has to be done the same. But in some cases,  that is what is occurring; because of the lens of the person in charge.

I was told last year that my classroom had too much “calling out” because I have a risk free classroom. Kids can call out questions and I answer them. I have always taken pride in this. Silly me. Previous principals have commented positively on my classroom climate being “risk free.” And, in my defense, I had 30 gifted students in one class; 3 of which were “special needs” kids (autism, aspbergers, aggressive, etc.) that would forget to raise their hands.

So I was surprised when I got marked down very low in classroom management during an official observation by a first year principal. She had only been a classroom teacher for 4 years herself (It was my 19th year). She was very young, maybe 29 or 30, hadn’t raised any kids of her own, and only taught 1 grade. I’ve taught 4 different grades. She misspelled 2 words on my official evaluation. (chuckle).

For my first “coaching session” I was marched into the classroom of a teacher gifted in management who, no matter what time of day, you can always hear a pin drop in her classroom. I have never even thought personally, that this was healthy for young kids aged 6 and 7 to have total silence in their primary grade classroom.  And although I admire her skills, I have had kids that came from her classroom into mine the following year. Parents have told me that their kids were scared to say a word for 3 months in her class, and after one day in mine they came home and said, “It feels just like home in Mrs. Moss’ class.” I felt that was high praise. Parents have always loved my classroom.

My goal is to be more like the unicorn. Unique. Not in the box. But still awesome. 

But now I was told I didn’t fit the mold, I needed to get in a box.  The “coach” told me “THIS is what your room needs to look like!” as she spread her arms around the silent room.  Can you imagine? I was not only humiliated and confused, but I realized right then and there that I may never reach this level of silence in my room, EVER. It did not only seem unnatural to me, I didn’t have a clue how to reach that kind of perfection.  And the coach had no ideas for how to get there either! The topic was reading. You couldn’t even hear any reading going on. Everybody was seriously whispering! What the heck is that all about? My kids read OUT LOUD in my reading groups.  And that’s a good thing!

Learn to adapt. But ALWAYS Be an innovator. 

The next time I felt that “the box” of education was being drawn around me was when my principal asked me to “present how I did my spelling routine to the school staff” at the next staff meeting. I was on the leadership team and team leader in my grade. I was the former school mentor to new teachers 2 years previous, and the last 3 years was co-chair of  the “Coaching Committee” of the school, assigned by my former, favorite principal. (Ironic I know! Now I needed coaching!)

So when my new admin asked me to present, I was quite flattered and excited. I know what I have learned in 20 years of teaching, and taking all kinds of classes in the best practices in the rules and patterns of spelling. I have a Masters in Edcation, an endorsement in Reading and ESL and in Gifted and Talented Education, and have studied brain research on how the brain remembers spelling patterns. I felt this all gave me a breadth of knowledge in this area that I was excited to share.

He doesn’t look like he likes being put it a box either! 

The week before the meeting I double checked to be sure that she still wanted me on the agenda. The night before the meeting, I had my handouts all stapled together and 3 games the teachers could use to drill spelling lists for the week. They were all pretty awesome too, if I don’t say so myself.

I also had a “vowel teams”visual I had gotten from the Lindamood-Bell Reading Institute.  I attended a training there in San Francisco, early on in my career, that I’ve always used to quickly teach kids the vowel sounds and how they change according to rules of spelling. I had been asked by my California principal to be a specialist at our school’s after-school reading clinic we started that same year.

 We had kids bussed in from all over the Long Beach Unified School District (rated one of the best 20 districts in the world Check it out!) for 6 weeks at a time to attend my class and 5 other teachers’ classes at the school in grades 1-6.  We taught spelling, reading and some writing. The 6 teachers that went to Lindamood Bell learned a lot at that conference that still informs my practice in teaching reading today.

Another awesome Innovation. Ever heard of the new PIZZA CAKE? Yum. Don’t try to tell me you don’t want to try it! 

I walked in 15 minutes before the staff meeting all ready to present, and the things I had set out the night before, and had prepared on my own time, were all being collected up. The principal said “I’m sorry, it turns out we won’t have time for you.” She asked 4 teachers to do the spelling routine outlined in the Reading Streets Teacher’s manual. She had video taped each teacher in several different grades doing almost the EXACT same thing, using the same hand movements, words, and spelling routine. (Bill Gates example.) There was nothing fun or very engaging about these routines either, especially if you did the same thing week after boring week! (NOT Steve Jobs, for sure)

I was not only offended, but kind of shocked. Did this mean that she believed there was only ONE proper way to teach kids to spell? Really? Were we all expected now to teach this way, like a robot or drone? Were we all a part of the Borg now? I was worried if I stayed at that school I might be assimilated into the Borg of that district’s philosophies. Think Star Trek….The BORG.

It  reminded me of  a one-size-fits-all analogy. I saw it again and again as “routines” became a “do it this way exactly” practice. And you better be holding the book in your hand and reading the script while you are at it. Follow the “daily schedule” required up on the board for every half hour or else. And that concept board better look the same in each classroom in each grade level, because people will be checking!
This is SO BILL GATES.  And it is so NOT STEVE JOBS.

If you have admired a unique teacher who does things  differently,  creatively, changes it up, has lots of innovation and engagement, but gets great results anyway; you are looking at a Steve Jobs teacher. If you notice that all the teachers on the first grade team do everything alike, very little deviation, and not a lot of uniqueness, but above average results, you are looking at a BILL GATES team of teachers. That is the difference. But let’s be clear. There is no room for much creativity and choice, or veering off into current events, or the arts in a BILL GATES classroom. Although there is always time for testing!

There is no time if you are going to cover everything on the next page in the core curriculum on a lock-step schedule. But in the STEVE JOBS classroom you may skip an element of the core you think your kids already have grasped, compact some things, and instead teach something entirely new. Possibly something from another culture, something you saw another teacher in Georgia teach from reading her blog, or something that is just interesting to you like the Iditarod or the Northern lights for 30 minutes. Or create your own game using the theme of Columbus’ Voyage to America, or do an interesting writing workshop. Which classroom would you rather have your kids attend? Hmmm?

One size Fits All doesn’t mean better education. It just means the same for all. 

I remember taking a sewing class in the summer between elementary school and Jr. High. I fell so in love with that creative outlet that I ended up taking it all 4 years of high school, AND summer schools AND even 2 years of it in college! I can tailor a jacket, and I designed and made my own wedding dress from a piece of newspaper I made into a pattern. I still sew all kinds of things from curtains and quilts and table runners to fabric cornices over my kitchen and french door windows. I’ve made window seat cushions in my bedroom, as well as baby quilts and Christmas tree skirts. I made snow overalls for my boys.

I remember chafing a few years back when district leadership said they needed to update and get rid of classes such as Home Economics and sewing to make room for more tech classes. NO! We need all sorts of classes! Diversify! I wish I had been able to give more time to electives that interested me, but instead had to take many classes that did NOT interest me.

This kid of mine was exposed to writing workshop in a 3rd grade gifted class and grew to love it. He won the Reflections Contest in poetry at the regional level in California. He wrote on his college newspaper. He almost became a newpaper reporter  because of one superb teacher who recognized his talent and recommended him for an interview with a T.V. station.  You just never know how one class or teacher could change your life. He still writes. And he is good. 

I remember one such class called English Composition 201 where I had to diagram sentences for an entire semester. What a dumb waste of time that was for me, a lover of writing! Another required class was a Logic class where I had to do backward syllogisms for a whole semester. I hate logical stuff to this day! Ugh! I had to get a tutor to try and understand all of the nonsense, and what was outside the triple Venn Diagram. And even though I got a B in the class it was a complete waste of time; and a painful one at that.

 I don’t give a rat’s behind if I ever see or hear of syllogisms or sentence diagrams as long as I live. Or the fact that I can do them backwards to reach a proof.  Stupid. And even learning how to pound a nail into a piece of wood in kindergarten, when all I wanted to do was go to the fingerpaint center? Well it still kind of chaps my hide! Do I pound nails nowadays, or do I paint? Take a guess? I’m sure there were some who preferred to pound nails. But we should have had some choice.

My sons’ preschool classes (an excellent mommy-and-me preschool attached to a college) had 12 centers they could choose from EACH DAY after fulfilling some daily required tasks. And that is how I always ran my centers. Devin ALWAYS chose play dough. My other son, Danny, ALWAYS chose the outside physical activities, and Jeff ALWAYS chose computers. Those were excellent preschools, in my opinion. They had to do a few required activities, and then they chose the rest. It was the Montessori way of teaching. Very Divergent and student directed.

“Knowledge isn’t a commodity that’s delivered from teacher to student but something that emerges from the students’ own curiosity-fueled exploration”. Joshua Davis Wire Magazine. 

The last straw for me last year, was after I heard “Book Clubs are a thing of the past, we are dismantling the guided reading library”. I wasn’t sure I had understood correctly, so I asked in a leadership meeting for some clarification. “We have found reading a snippet of a book is just as good to teach a concept”. I went out looking for a new job that very day. But heard the same thing from the first principal who interviewed me. She also mentioned something I’d heard before. “There is no time for long productions like Shakespeare at my school. No musical productions”. That was it for me in my district.

Ever been to a book club where nobody actually finished the book? 

YOU DON’T BELIEVE IN READING WHOLE BOOKS NOW?!?  That is just laughable. There is no way a snippet of a book is better than learning to love reading a WHOLE BOOK and having a discussion about said book. Period. The End. No wonder we have kids that never crack a novel after high school. And what student do you know who doesn’t count their end-of-year musical production as one of their best memories of the year? Even if your part was “head tree”. lol.

The first day in my current district I was told TWICE in meetings at a district and at the school level; “YOU are the Professional. YOU pick and choose from the curriculum we give you according to the needs of your students.” Awwww (sounds of sighing) I’m HOME! And I can do a musical production OR a Book Club. (breath in…breath out). I’m a happy camper again.  And Steve Jobs lives here!

Montessori schools pioneered giving kids choices in their daily activities.

Google founders Larry Page and Sergey Brin claim that their Montessori schooling imbued them with a spirit of independence and creativity. Wired Magazine Oct.2013


Okay my rant is over. But as you can tell, I feel rather strongly about this topic. I think schools are going to disinterest themselves out of a clientele before too many more years, because doing the same exact thing every day is boring. Especially in middle school which is a disaster for some kids. It’s where we have the checking-out going on most. I talked to an assistant principal once when I had switched one of my sons to a new middle school because of dissatisfaction with the old one. He said “Middle Schools are broken, and nobody knows how to fix them.”!! That was startling then, and still is now.

If I was a parent of today, especially of a middle or high schooler, I might look into Kahn Academy, and online K-12 public schools, where you can pick and choose from the curriculum. Especially if you can’t find a creative school of the arts, or a STEM (Science, Technology and Math) magnet school, or whatever your child is most interested in. Remember, one great teacher is all you need to make a great year. Charter schools are just public schools with a creative twist.

I remember ALMOST sending my smartest (highest IQ) gifted kid to a public high school within a college campus. He met all the requirements and would have flourished there. I chickened out, thinking he’d miss out on social events like football games and prom. He never went to prom anyway.  I made a mistake there because he was so bored in high school he sort of checked out. But hindsight is always 20/20. Don’t let that happen to your kids if their school is not meeting their needs. There are things you can do.

Our whole family enjoyed  a musical at Tuacahn a few summers ago together, grands and all. I love that place! 

I always found time to take my kids to museums, musicals, ice shows, camps, scouts and lessons of all sorts. Some they liked (golf camp). Some they hated. (scouting). But I always made them complete the class or semester. One of my kids took 3 different musical instruments 3 years in a row till he found the one he liked. 😀 (one of those instruments he conveniently lost at a bus stop) lol.

But as the academic leader in my family, I had the responsibility to expose them to all sorts of things. They can get what is lacking in their school day that way. I think it makes for a happy camper, and a more fulfilling life, to have lots of activities that interest you. And hopefully their teachers can diversify and differentiate the curriculum for them, going higher if your child needs it. If your kids are always saying, “I’m bored”,  you need to get them taking a class in something. Get out the Parks and Recreation catalog and pick something, anything to start.

A family bike ride we went on for my hub’s birthday. He loves cycling. So we all did it with him. All the kids and all their spouses and all the grands. 

NEVER stop learning new things.  We never stop growing, or having new experiences. We ALL read a lot.  I hope that is what I’ve taught my kids and every student I’ve ever had. And isn’t that what Steve Jobs would say? (“Stay hungry, stay foolish…”) Remember, after he got kicked out of his own company he went on to start a brand new adventure; making Pixar movies.  And he was HUGELY successful in that creative, animated field.  I’m not so sure about Bill Gates. He may be more of a one trick pony. What do YOU think?

Last year’s end of the year Musical “The Ugly Duckling”. 

Halloween Pumpkins and Bat Art

I was thinking of some fun art projects I have done in the past. Here are a few of them.

Cute little Striped Jack o Lantern Art Project. Just glue orange stripes onto black paper. Cut it in half. Use one half to cut out a pumpkin turned the other way. Some will be horizaontally striped, others vertically striped. It makes a pretty cool bulletin board. 

Here’s our weekly graph chart…we graphed our favorite Halloween candy!

We always do a Weekly Graph on Which Is Your Favorite Candy? Since everybody is heavy into the excitement of getting FREE HALLOWEEN CANDY! That used to be my favorite part of Halloween! 

This was a really striking Halloween bulletin board…we got lots of compliments on it!

This cute bat is made from 2 handprints. The kids can trace and cut them out, then I just cut out the head and fangs and they glue them down with a pom pom nose and wiggly eyes. It is an easy project. It is fun to add a BAT acrostic poem. 

Mrs. Moss trying to be Cher…..or just a hippie!
This is a fun skeletons project to do in pairs….boy that’s a lot of bones!
Here are some Halloween MAD LIBS on cute Pumpkin paper, but you could also do a Pumpkin Acrostic. For Art here are some cool graphic pumpkins!
This was a Martha Stewart white spider web, and pumpkins made of swirled circles of orange. I had the kids add a picket fence the pumpkins were sitting on and a black pom pom spider. It was a lot of work. I wouldn’t do it again, but it was cute. 

Well, Here is something else really cute!
Minnie Mouse and Dorothy from Wizard of OZ.

They have grown up a bit since this picture, but they are still cute as bugs….(or mice). 

Classroom Decorating

Here is my Classroom this year. I’m in a new grade too. This is a Kinder classroom. We have “Star Students” as the theme and lots of lime green, pink, purple and sky blue as the color scheme.

Here is the rug area. I use the board behind the bookcase to teach from at the rug. I do a minimal calendar time and I use the little apple pocket chart to teach sight words and word families from. I have a set of whiteboards and green chalkboards we take turn using at the rug so kids WRITE the sounds/letters daily using word families. 
Here is some of my center games. I have a large classroom library too. At the top are monthly listening post boxes with books and tapes that go with each season. In the bookcase are monthly sets of books that I will read aloud for that month.  On the far right is the monthly word bank. This helps the kids with copying words correctly in writing. Each month I change it out for a new icon with words for the month.  To the right of that is my computer/ipad center and listening post. 
This is my reading area at the left. The vocabulary for the month that goes with the Journeys series is in the blue pocket chart along with math vocabulary for the week/month. I just add to it. I bought the cute little chalkboard owl and some mini black whiteboards and NEON whiteboard markers I use every day at the reading group. We will do word families and rhyming CVC words for now. Writing is a great vehicle for reteaching sounds, letters, spelling AND writing. DON’T EVER wait to teach writing. It is reciprocal to every other subject. 

Here is my Show Off board in the back of the room. I will put something up we did every 2 weeks all year. The little crayons have the kids’ names on them in alpha order. You can see some of my puff balls hanging from the ceiling. The orange one with the orange star hanging from it hangs over the orange table 6. I have one in blue, purple, lime green, pink too. Math manipulatives and center games are in the back too. Birthday Pixie Stix with big, Happy Birthday balloons are in the green vase in the back. Magnet center is the 2 black filing cabinets pushed together. I have about 8 magnetic games. 

My desk area. I bought this cute, fabric banner at Quilted Bear in Draper. I had my daughter put the Pink lettering on with her Cricut. I love how it turned out.  The blue little 3 drawer has “warm fuzzies” in it that each table can earn in competition. I get good teamwork using these fuzzies for motivation. When the table earns 20 they can spin for a big reward. 
A few of the center tables. This is the stamping center. They stamp words and then rewrite them or trace them. The pocket chart center is to the right. It includes a small, tabletop pocket chart full of different games and 2 wall pocket charts.

The decor on this green wall changes every month. I put up pumpkins and witches in October and Shamrocks and Leprechauns in March. And I usually add a new poem or song.

 Birthday Pixie Stix and a Box of Bookmarks for the birthday boy or girl.

 I get the Pixie Stix from Sam’s Club in the summer and add all the balloons to the top. Then I add some curly ribbon.

 Some of the reading area. I got some little camp chairs on clearance from Walmart one year. The tubs are from Hobby Lobby

 The rug is from Target. I recovered an old chair in Arthur schoolhouse material. It needs a new cover now I think. 😀

Take home backpacks. I have 21 of them in all sort
s of themes from Curious George to Skeletons to Rainforest to Football.

I have 8 center areas. This is the math center. It changes out every week. I also have listening post, reading rug/read the room, computers/ipads, pocket chart, magnets, stamping center, and art center Sometimes I leave out the art center and put math manipulatives or play dough there with some kind of learning game. HERE is ONE I downloaded free off TPT.  It’s a work in progress always isn’t it? 

Johnny Appleseed Art, Math and Writing Fun

We made some cute Johnny Appleseed Art last week. We used wiggly eyes and buttons and patches out of scrapbook paper. The “pot” on his head is funny to the kids. 😀 
The students made their own “favorite color of apple” and glued it on the overalls too. Then we made a class graph of our favorite apple color to eat. And we read some stories about Johnny Appleseed. 

 The link for this fun freebie is from Anna Sanchez. We also have a weekly graph in our classroom we use tiny pics of ourselves to graph things in the graphing pocket chart. I also punched out green, yellow and red apples for kids to choose as they came into the classroom on apple graphing day.  Red apples won the vote. I forgot to take a picture of the graphing pocket chart though. My bad. 😀

I Am an Apple by Jean MarzolloJohnny Appleseed by Steven KelloggJohnny Appleseed by Madeline Olsen
We sang this song with my auto harp and some instruments for fun. 
Do You Know the Apple Man?Sung to tune of  “The Muffin Man”

Oh, do you know the Apple Man,
The Apple Man, The Apple Man?
Oh, do you know the Apple Man
He planted apple seeds.

He wore a pot upon his head,
Upon his head, upon his head.
He wore a pot upon his head.
His name was Johnny Appleseed.

John Chapman was his real name,
His real name, his real name.
John Chapman was his real name;
But, we call him Johnny Appleseed.


We played this game for math. Then I put it out at the math center. I printed all 32 and then put them in page protectors and have 4 for each season. It is “roll the dice and add 1”. 
The link for this game is  HERE at Oceans of First Grade Fun. Just click on the apple game. There were 32 games!! Woot! 
Yolanda at First Grade Fun also had a doubles roll the dice game that is great for more advanced kids too. Thanks so much Yolanda! 
These guys did a GREAT JOB for their first writing project. I am proud of them. All of them did the Capital I correctly without any do overs. My gifted first graders used to forget and do lower case i. I think I have taught these guys well. 😀 

 I started this activity by showing an 8 minute youtube video on Johnny Appleseed. Then I read a short book to the kids asking them questions. One of my favorites is the Steven Kellogg book on Johnny Appleseed, but I also have a little Scholastic one I have used too. Here are some of the questions I ask…..Was he a homeless guy? How did he cook.?What did he do with all those apple seeds? Was he a friend to animals? How long ago did Johnny live? Was he a pioneer?

Fernando has really nice handwriting, yes he does. 😀

These Johnny Appleseed projects turned out so cute. I love dem…..

The challenge in kinder is to get them to write ON THE LINES. They did a pretty good job!

Johnny Appleseed bulletin board for fall. Love it!

These Johnny Appleseed faces are too funny. One of them has shark teeth! (snicker)

 The writing paper we used was really great because it had a word bank embedded in it. This ALWAYS makes for better writing for beginners because it scaffolds them. They can pick and choose a word to copy and it is right there.

  This one is from Hello Literacy. I thought it was OH so cute! The kids loved coloring after writing their favorite color of fresh apple. Some also copied “Johnny Appleseed”. So it can also help in differentiation. Higher kids will write more. Emergent writers can copy “I like red apples” even in kinder. 😀

Love the barely there hair, don’t you? lol 

 I found a few very cute, free writing papers for Johnny Appleseed. One is from Dawn M. Key. It would be great for first or second graders who can write a few sentences or a paragraph already. A cute word family game I found as a freebie from Ivy Taul too. It was really cute for beginning readers.

 I really liked a few freebies I found on Teachers Pay Teachers too. This one from Teaching with a Twist had some great graphic organizers for developing comprehension of the story.

 Another freebie by Lisbeth Radcliff had a cute apple math addition worksheet and a mini story about Johnny Appleseed that were great. I liked this Centers Activities set from Abby Buettner too.

There is a list of Doltch Sight Words with cute apples on them from Amy Lattin I downloaded and put on red cardstock and laminated. It will make a great center  to put in the pocket chart or to work with at the reading table too.  

Speaking of apples, Check out my Dried Apple Head Witch Dolls we are getting ready to do for Halloween! Here’s a link.   It is a fun thing to do in October. Have a  Happy Fall Ya’ll!

Minion Art Projects for Kids

 I thought Kindergarten could make some cute little minions from the movie Despicable Me. I’ve seen them so often on cupcakes, so I thought about doing them in blue and yellow construction paper!

The Minions turned out great….they chose how many eyes theirs would have and how many teeth! 

Cute little Minions art project turned out fun and funny! 

I had an idea for a cute banner too…..”Mrs. Moss’ class has a Minion reasons to love Kindergarten!”

Classroom Bulletin Board for August. I am late in getting it on my blog but we also added the personality plants to the bottom.

I LOVED these minions made into a bulletin board. But look at these CUPCAKES! I have GOT. TO. HAVE!

Minion Cupcakes via Gallamore West
Minion cupcakes are too Cute! ( by Gallamore West) Yumm. 

Kindergarteners are pretty good artists! 
And we sure had fun making them! 

Days of the Week Songs and Months of the Year Songs

DAYS OF THE WEEK SONG  – Fun to sing with your class!

This is the Days of the Week Song with the Adams Family Tune 


 12 Months of the Year Song – We’ll sing this a couple of times a week!

 
 ABC Songs – These are cute and different from the traditional ABC Song which most kids already know. I LOVE how there are sounds with the  letters too.

Kite Art and Diamonte Poetry

Pretty Colorful KITES bulletin board using up lots of recycled paper! 

Kite Art and Diamonte  or Cinquain Poems 

A few weeks ago we wrote our Cinquain Poetry (Diamond Shape Poems) for our tissue paper kites we had made the week before in art. These are the poems that start out with 1 word, then 2 describing words, then 3 “ing” words, then 2 more describing words,  then 1 synonym to match the 1st word.  They are fun to do. A website for a Cinquain Poetry Lesson Plan HERE.

Here is a sample from a previous year. The Butterflies come to life with these describing words….

 The kids did everything from  Flowers to Soccer and Insects.I had a Cinquain rough draft forms they wrote their sloppy copies on. Then I edited for spelling, then they rewrote them. Here are a few from previous years.

Then I typed these Cinquain Poems up…..

Some were about flowers, some about Summer, some about sports, pets, whatever…..

Then we cut out in diamond shapes and glue them on a  kite form. Then we glued them to the back of our tissue paper kites.

Blooming flowers…

We did tissue paper art last week using the ” half glue, half water” painting on tissue paper method. Then we let them dry and placed a heavy literature book on them over the weekend to make the kites lay flat. Here they are hanging up.

Purple, yellow, orange, pink, blue, green…..Hanging from the ceiling…don’t they look cute?

For the kite’s tail, we had also written our spelling words 3 times each on little leftover strips of paper from a previous project we recycled.We made them into spelling chains and stapled them to the bottom of our kites for tails.

  I do these paper chains for spelling words at least once a month all year to use up and recycle leftover colored paper. Such pretty colors!

These kids are really SOARING HIGH! It has been so fun to see such progress!

After we attached some rainbow colored paper chains, we colored the sun and the flowers too.

This year I made the kids write out their poems. Previous years when I had a smaller class than 30 I would type them up so the diamond shape really showed!

Flowers reaching…

The flowers were made from cupcake papers and triangles of tissue paper. Then add a cirlce in the middle of yellow and add seeds of any kind. It’s a great end of year art project to take home and hang in their bedroom somewhere. Kites are great.

Cupcake Paper Art 

Cereal Box Book Reports

We had fun sharing our Cereal Box Book Reports for the last 3 days of school. Here are a few cute pictures of the kids and their boxes.

CEREAL BOX BOOK REPORTS 

 The kids had to make up a cereal name, and design how it looked, give a summary on one side of the box, tell the characters and setting on the side of the box, give it 1 to 5 stars and pages numbers on the top and make up a game for the back.

Here are a few of the handmade creations…..future cereal executives in the Marketing Division! 

 The games included mazes, word searches, matching games, word jumbles and Candyland type games. They were all fun to Play!

I thought this MAZE was very creative……

Some more creative names for CEREAL BOX BOOK REPORTS…..

 Then the kids had to include a prize in their box. These creative kids’ prizes included 1. Bottle Caps candy, 2. A Magic 8 Ball, and 3. A Stuffed Kitty. The prizes were then piled high on a table, everybody was given a number from one to 30 and they went up and picked from the mountain of prizes. COOL!

Cute and colorful cereals from these inventors! 

Creative CEREALS and CEREAL NAMES from these 3 girls…..

And they had some really cute games on the back as you can see…..

Some of the kids gave 5 “bones” or “lightening bolts” instead of 5 stars. I thought that was really clever!!! 

CEREAL BOX BOOK REPORTS had some fun GAMES ON THE BACKS! 

CEREAL BOX BOOK REPORTS were very cute…..

And the games were fun too! 

These two are marketing geniuses! Take note #Kelloggs and #Post Cereal Companies!!!