Birthday Gifts for Students

What do you give your students for their birthday? I have loved giving out these giant Pixie Stix Birthday Balloons to my kids.

Birthday Gifts for Students – a Giant Pixie Stix Balloon Treat! 

Here is my Birthday Corner in my classroom. These balloons are made on colorful cardstock. I give students a giant Pixie Stix with a cute Balloon Happy Birthday card attached for their birthdays, along with a sucker and a birthday bookmark and hat.

Happy Birthday Student Gifts 

I get the Pixie Stix from Sams Club every year online. They come in a package of 50 so you can either use them up in 2 years or else split a package with another teacher.

I just staple the balloon Happy Birthday Message for my students to the paper part of the Pixy Stix at the top.

Get your Giant Pixy Stix from HERE at Sams Club.

I have birthday balloons and also birthday cupcakes blown up giant for the top of the Pixie Stix. They look so bright and colorful in the corner of my classroom.  The kids also get to wear a birthday crown (I have a selection of 3 styles for them to choose from).

Birthday Crowns
These cute birthday hats don’t have a place for a name, but they are just an example of similar ones I buy, but with a place for their name and age. These are from ORIENTAL TRADING. I buy a lot of stuff there over each summer. 

Lastly, they get to choose a Happy Birthday bookmark from the little Happy Birthday box.  They are very spoiled on their birthdays.  I got these cute suckers from a candy factory near my home. They have 2nds I buy in a giant bag once a year for $5.00. Some years I find a sucker deal, some years we skip the suckers and they get a hat, bookmark and the giant Pixie Stix, which they all LOVE.

12 Jumbo Swirl Candy Lollipops
Suckers like these make a really delightful gift for a student’s birthday too! 
And everybody loves a Happy Birthday Bookmark!  Some teachers give out a free book choice form their Scholastic stash of freebie books too. I save that for my Christmas gift, along with a new package of Crayola 24 Crayons I buy over the summer at the 25Cent sale at Walmart or somewhere else. 

 
Here is a copy of the Balloon I used. I copied it once. Then cut out the balloon. Then I cut out and added the Happy Birthday to the inside (cutting off the string). I copied a bunch on many different colors of cardstock colored paper. Then I cut them out and stapled them to the Pixy Stix top.  I add a little bit of curly ribbon in rainbow colors to them. It is really colorful and pretty. Link is HERE at Twisty Noodle.
Balloon Coloring Page

Inside the box are the suckers and the Happy Birthday bookmarks. I pick a package up anywhere I find them onsale. I usually give out bookmarks several times a year too; one on Dr. Seuss Day, One before the 1st parent teacher conferences.  I decorated the area with these cute cardboard Happy Birthday Decorations too.

 I found the green, metal vase at Hobby Lobby a few years ago. I put some Happy Birthday stickers on it. I think you can find these also at Michaels Art Mart. It’s a cute teacher gift and it adds a lot to this corner of my classroom! What are YOUR Birthday Gifts for your students?? Leave a comment below!

Leprechauns and St. Patrick’s Day

Leprechauns and Pots of Gold 

 

Hello, 2nd Graders I’m Lucky I am

I was here and gone as fast as you can

I’m little and tough and so hard to find

so don’t try to catch me just never mind!

I left you some treats In your classroom Sooooooo,

Get busy looking for them, Ready, set, GO!

Cute St. Patrick’s Day Leprechaun Books I’ve purchased 

This Night Before St. Patrick’s Day has the same pattern as The Night Before Christmas! 
Our WEEKLY GRAPH next week will be on…..something Irish…..guess what? Of course we’ll graph our favorite kinds of POTATOES!!. What are yours? We chose from:
  1. French Fries
  2. Mashed Potatoes
  3. Baked Potatoes with butter
  4. Hash Brown Potatoes 
  5. Potato Chips
You will have to sait and see which one  was the Winner! This is last year’s graph! 

Writing:  Journals- 1. How would you catch a leprechaun? We shared with the class our great ideas. Then we shared our homework….

Leprechaun Traps!  We were very inventive! We made our leprechaun traps this week and share them during Conference Week. We share them with the whole school by leaving them in the library! Come see them! 

Mrs. Moss came up with the “gold” to
“trap” a leprechaun. We only had to design the various “traps”.  


Here was the “optional project” directions I sent home.

 Leprechaun Traps Letter that went home..

Here are some from past years…..Addie’s trap….leprechaun falls through the hole in the “grass” oops

Emma’s trap….leprechaun climbs up the ladder, slides down the tube! Trapped! 



Allie entices her leprechaun in with a FREE all you can eat buffet! Too cute!

Leprechaun Writing Projects……

They came up with some really good adjectives….which is what I was hoping for! 

Leprechaun Similes……a type of metaphor……
March Book Reports….

Pots of Gold, Book Reports, and Leprechauns….made a cute bulletin board. 
Green as Clover….Yup that’s a Leprechaun! 

I thought “Keen as a Wolf” was very creative writing! Yup! 

My Classroom March Bulletin Board….so CUTE! I love St. Patrick’s Day! 

Cute March Book Reports….the kids gave them a penny, a dime, or a dollar RATING! 

Chapter Book Reports and Leprechaun Art Projects! This Leprechaun has a wicked “I’m up to no good” grin! 

March Book Reports turned out cute. Gotta Love Charlie and the Chocolate Factory! 
Leprechaun Love! 
MATH BINGO
A fun “Lucky” Bingo game I found was at the dltk WEBSITE HERE!   I also found some cute art ideas on another Teachers First website. The link is HERE.  I made up a bunch of these on light green card stock. If we played the math side of the game I would always say, 6 tens and 3 ones for them to figure out the number. Sometimes I would say it backwards 3 ones and 6 tens. Or I would add ten to a number or subtract 10 from  a number and they had to figure it out mentally. The opposite side I did Irish “Vocabulary Word bingo”. The kids can do this one as a fun center on St. Patrick’s Day.

Irish Bingo Game is fun and on the back is a LUCKY math 100s board game. 

Lucky Irish Bingo 

MATH
Another individual and fun math activity is graphing the marshmallow shapes that come in the Lucky Charms cereal. I give each student a little cup of cereal and they graph their shapes on the worksheet. A link to make a copy is HERE. It is from Tooter4kids.  I added some math to the page such as add up the horseshoe and heart shapes. Or subtract the least number of shapes you have from the greatest number of shapes. The kids learn the math vocabulary better the more we use it. Are any of your shapes equal in number?

Graphing with Lucky Charms Marshmallow shapes.

Lucky Charms Math ……always fun

WRITING: Opinion pieces about “A Person I Treasure” will be our writing project for the week.o Tell what makes this person so special to you…..give 3 reasons why they are one of your favorite people you treasure!

SCIENCE
I love to have the kids learn about Roy G. Biv (red, orange, yellow, green, blue, indigo, violet) and the order of the rainbow colors. We look at some glass  prisms on the overhead that show rainbows in a cool way. Then we make a rainbow using 1 inch by 10 inch strips of colored construction paper glued together and then glued onto the back of a black pot. We color a tiny leprechaun and I give them some shamrocks. This year I found some cute green blingy/shiny ones from Hobby Lobby, and they glued those down. Then I top the pot with some fake gold coins. Here’s our finished “Pots of Gold” at the ends of the rainbows.

RAINBOW SCIENCE EXPERIMENT
Another fun science I do is use my beakers and do somecolor change” science. A fun experiment is using a bowl of milk and dropping 2 blobs of food coloring into the bowl in 4 different colors.  Then take a tiny speck of Dawn dish washing liquid on the end of a toothpick and stick it on the edge of the milk. It should show a fizzy chemical change. Then dot another far corner of the milk. Don’t dot right into the food coloring.
Do it a few more times. You should have about 5 minutes of fizz in the experiment. It’s really cool, easy, and cheap.

This is after about about 5 minutes and a few kids had bumped the bowl…

 It will start a chemical reaction that will “fizz” the milk. It’s really a cool rainbow affect. The kids want to go nuts with the toothpick but don’t let them or it ruins the effect. A tiny bit goes a long way and will make the reaction last longer if you stick it in one area of the bowl each minute and then watch and wait.

St. Patrick’s Day Activities

LEPRECHAUN ART
We made some CUTE Leprechauns!  For beards and the hair I have the kids curl the strips of 1/2 inch construction paper around a marker so it will curl up like a Santa beard. The hat is green, then we add a 1 inch strip of black around for the ribbon and a yellow square for a buckle, and add glitter to it after school. Here is our finished bulletin boards.

The black ribbon is 2 x 12, just fold it around the hats. The face is about 10 inch oval in manilla colored paper. The yellow buckle is 2 x 3 and the kids just draw a square in the middle with black marker. We then put glue and gold glitter around it. We add wiggly eyes, pink circle (cut out) nose and eyebrows and mouth with marker.

We curl orange strips for beard and use orange crimped packaging for hair…

Lucky Leprechaun art….some years I’ve used dots are stickers…
March  bulletin board…. Type up some poems or songs to go on the back…

Gotta love a leprechaun with a rainbow pot of gold…..the more glitter the better!

MUSIC
A fun song  we sing  is L U C K Y and it is sung just like the B I N G O Song and tune.  I know a chap with a fuzzy beard and LUCKY is his name-O. (spell) Lucky, Lucky, Lucky and Lucky is his name-O. He hides his gold at the rainbow’s end and Lucky is his name-O. Lucky Lucky, Lucky and Lucky is his name-O.
This would go great typed up on the back of our giant art leprechauns. I like to do art with poetry and sing or read it for shared reading time.  Happy St. Patties Day to you from me!  

My grand daughters in their “Lucky” shirts

Dr. Seuss Day Activities

Dr. Seuss’ birthday is coming up this week. Our school is celebrating it on Wednesday.

Green Eggs and Ham is my favorite Dr. Seuss Story. I still recite it to whomever will listen. Would you, could you in a boat? Would you could you, with a goat? 
Gifts they gave out to the kids at school if they could answer one of the 20 questions….aren’t they cute? 

Thing 1 and 2 coming to our classroom last year to make us dance with them for Dr. Seuss Day. They read us stories too. Aren’t they super cute? 

Another favorite of young children is Hop On Pop! 

Another favorite Dr. Seuss book is Sneetches.  It’s fun to paint a yellow star on your face too! 

HERE at TPT  is a cute Alphabetical Order sheet that would be great for a center. I went looking for other centers and found a bunch!  Lots of really fun literacy sheets like nouns, a book reports, rhymes and odd and even math can be found HERE. 

A cute class graph to pick your favorite Dr. Seuss book ois HERE at TPT.  Thanks guys!

One Fish Two Fish, Red Fish, Blue Fish woven fish we made for art, then we had a 4 minute race to see who could come up with the most short a words. We wrote them on the colorful squares. 
We made handprint cards with Thing 1 and Thing 2 and wrote messages inside them. 

Cute Cootie Catcher  I found at The Country Chic Cottage will be a lot of fun to cut out and play with on Dr. Seuss Day…..And here we made handprint Thing 1 and Thing 2 art cards. 

Read Across America oath on the back of our Cat in the Hat Hats! 
All the kids in America are reciting this oath at the same time on the same day! 

Our school always does something fun to celebrate Dr. Seuss! 

We have cake, and some funny characters come to visit classrooms dressed up! 

I had to snap this cute picture. What great make up, not to mention costumes! 

I remember reading this one to my kids many years ago! 
I wear my Cat in the hat hat and some suspenders for the day. Maybe I’ll put some whiskers on my face too! 

We do a classroom graphing of our favorite Dr. Seuss Books! 

Green Eggs and Ham is usually one of the favorites!  Then we go eat Green Eggs and Ham in the Cafeteria for lunch! 

When I taught first grade we would do a rhyme using “AT” words. 

This year, as we celebrate Dr. Seuss and his birthday and all his wonderful books, I think we’ll do a funny Mad Lib. Try this Dr. Seuss Fun MAD LIB is HERE!  

Thanks to this early character, Dr. Seuss became so successful, he has sold more than 44 books and illustrated most all of them. Thanks for all the good fun that is funny Theodor Geisel ! Happy Read Across America Day! 

Dental Health Activities or Teeth Week

February is Dental Health Month and I usually do a small  unit on keeping our teeth healthy. I had so many cavities as a kid that it is my personal mission to help other kids by teaching them how important it is to brush morning and night, and to not eat too much candy and soda pop. 

These hippos turn out cute…notice the 20 baby teeth and the “tusks”

So we have a class discussion about things that are healthy for teeth, and things you can have as a special treat once in awhile.  We start off like usual, reading a few books on the subject. Here are a few of my favorites. We also get the Weekly Reader or Scholastic News and it usually has a February Dental Health issue to read.  We put up some vocabulary words like primary teeth, molars, dental floss, cavity, 32 Adult teeth, and put the definitions in the pocket chart to learn for the week. 

BOOKS TO READ:
Arthur’s Loose Tooth 
The Tooth FairyTells All
Make Way for Tooth Decay
The Tusk Fairy
The Lost Tooth Club
Tooth Trouble

This little tooth fairy box I made using the tutorial on Martha Stewart’s website LINK HERE
For the tooth fairy box in the picture above I just made the Martha Stewart design a lot smaller. It is easy to do. Kids can even make it, although it takes too much time. It’s a good parent project though. And the kids would love to take their teeth home in it when they fall out at school. 🙂

Class bulletin board…The kids listed facts they learned on the “tooth”

ART/CRAFTS
This gray Hippo  has a big mouth full of 20 baby teeth. His 4 tusks are made of marshmallows. His ears and eyes are shaped using a yellow pattern block hexagon. Kids chose their colors. I used Walmart dot stickers for the nose holes and eyeball insides. The paper color is gray.


We put a Shel Silverstein poem on “How to Make a Hippo Sandwich” on the back as well as hippopotamus jokes. That’s always fun reading jokes to each other…. I always combine art with shared reading. Shared reading can be songs or poems or jokes, that type of thing….just to practice READING together as a class!The ears on the hippo are hexagon shaped (use a yellow pattern block and trace it) and the face is pear shaped.

Check out Pinterest HERE for teeth picture 

I used an oval shape for the “snout” and they fold down a bit and attach it with glue over the top. Inside is a pink oval about 1/2 inch smaller than snout oval. Then we glue on the marshmallows inside and a picture of teeth. Check out Pinterest HERE for many pictures of primary teeth and what age they erupt in the mouth and when kids lose them. You could also glue that part of the chart (after using teeth pic) onto the back so kids know when to expect teeth falling out.

he haw the kids laughed at most of these…some they didn’t get I think !?
We glued this poem on the back of our Hippo Art…

Another of my favorite arts is watercoloring on a Tooth Fairy blackline.  We add glitter to her wand and wings,  then cut her out when she has dried. We back her with pastel butcher paper in yellow, pink, light blue and lavender. Then we write her letters asking questions.  It’s always a hit.

Tooth Fairy Watercolor art project 

We added glitter to our tooth fairy watercolor art 

These Tooth Fairies will go in our portfolios….

WRITING:

Brainstorm as a class what you’d like to ask the Tooth Fairy. My students have usually lost at least one tooth so they know what it’s all about. We then write letters to the fairy and go through the whole writing process, editing and rewriting on “Tooth Fairy” paper. We are going to see if she writes us back…do YOU think she will? We are leaving the letters on top of our desks for the whole weekend….we will see….

Letters to the Tooth Fairy…very nosy indeed!  hehe

Tooth Fairy Letters 
When we came in on Monday…We got fairy letters back! 

Well, after we wrote letters asking the tooth fairy questions we left them out on our desks all weekend. And guess what? She came and visited over the weekend sometime.
I think this was Em’s  fairy…very cute!
Allie did such a great job! I loved her painting!
And she left little letters in tiny envelopes to the kids. She was so sweet to answer all their questions! It was totally cute seeing the kids all excited to have a tooth fairy letter!
We graphed how many teeth we had lost, and then flossed our own teeth

Some had lost 8 teeth and some had lost NONE!

Dental Health Week 
FLOSSING

That red thing is a big set of wind up clacking teeth, floss and a giant toothbrush.

Past years I have found individual flossers at the dollar store with like 30 in a package for a buck. Then I use 2 white pillowcases and have 2 kids put them over their heads. Then I use a rope to go between them as they stand very close together representing 2 teeth. It is funny for the kids, they all want to take a turn being a tooth. Or you can do the same thing with white styrofoam egg cartons. Using the bumpy backs as teeth the students use white yarn to go between the egg holders to”floss”.  Then I pass out individual floss to practice.  After lunch they can see what kinds of “materials” they floss from their teeth. Mmmm.  

We read the Dental Health Weekly Readers and Scholastic News all week
BRUSHING
Some years we have a dentist in our class and they come in or send someone to teach brushing. Sometimes I just have to use my clackety clacking teeth model and a giant toothbrush. Some years Crest has sent me fun sticker charts and individual stickers and sometimes individual toothbrushes and tiny tubes of toothpaste. They haven’t done it the last 2 years. Maybe it got too expensive. So sometimes I look at the dollar store for toothbrushes to go home with a chart I make up and some stickers to go home encouraging  weeks of perfect brushing for a fun certificate.

If kids want they can add to my Lost Tooth stories when they lose a tooth in class.
MATH AND SCIENCE   CAROUSEL
A carousel is a strategy where each student visits a learning activity for a short visit (8 to 10 minutes) doing the activity on a “Theme Day”. Ring a bell after 10 minutes and kids move to the next station in a round robin fashion. Kids love it. Then a few of them can be left out all week for centers.

  1.  Roll a Tooth -Take turns rolling a die and fill up the 32 teeth in the mouth with mini marshmallows. , 
  2.  Tick Tack Toe with teeth counters. Play with a partner.
  3. Graphing. Talk about your graph with the teacher using ONLY math words (greater than, equal, least etc.).Then Graph your favorite toothpaste or teeth lost. 
  4. Flossing -practice flossing on the egg cartons with yarn. Then floss your own. Brush the model teeth.
  5. Check out the 3 types of stains on the hard boiled eggs… coke, grape juice, brush off with toothpaste 
  6. Math – Add up 3 numbers on the 3 cards. Write an equation.   Use the giant smile as a counter vehicle if you need it to do the adding. We used paper folded 4 times into 16 square

A math game, make equations using 3 number cards…use the teeth for counters
Adding up 2 to 3 addends from cards chosen and put the equation on a 16 slot grid. 
Use the giant smile for counting up the teeth in your equation. 
Above is the math game….put the counters on the teeth as you go…then count it up…

I made the counters from 1 piece of 99 cent foam…it was easy!

Another game…See how many of each number you roll…by graphing it!

For Center 3 You can use little erasers from Oriental Trading to graph.   They are only 3.99 for 24 and that would last for years for game counters or graphing counters. See them HERE.This year I ran out of money so I just went to Michaels and got some white foam for 99 cents and simply drew teeth shapes one night while watching TV. I might also try dry lima beans with little faces on them next time. 🙂 The fun part was when they had a pretty good sized graph I’d wander over to that center and ask… “Now tell me about your graph using math words like, equal, greater than, less than, least, most, how many more, how many less.” They are getting pretty good at describing the class graph. We try to change it every week.

I think my one sheet of foam made like 60 little teeth counters/graphers…

Here is a finished graph by Trace and J. and they descibed it to me perfectly.

CLASS GRAPH – HOW MANY TEETH HAVE YOU LOST?
 I always have my GRAPHING pocket chart up so it would be a fun to graph their favorite toothpaste flavor and see which one is the class pick. In the past I have cut out the front of boxes of toothpaste with their colorful labels to put in the pocket chart. But this year we have graphed how many teeth we each have lost. 
  

A “Just for Fun” center…Tooth Tic Tac Toe

The girls really got into the game….

Center 2 – The fun Tick Tack Toe game  can be found HERE at About.com.  It was made by Beverly Hernandez. It’s very cute. I changed the counters to some cute tooth stickers I had in 4 colors that I liked better. I backed them with cardstock and had the game and counters laminated.

Tooth Tic Tac Toe  HERE 

Center 1 – It’s a math game where you roll a dice and count out the marshmallows to place on 32 round circles in a mouth.  I found it at A to Z Teacher Stuff in a fun unit called “Let’s Talk Teeth”.  The link is HERE and Susan Payne is the author. There are lots of fun poems and chants also on this cute unit website. There is a cute poem entitled “The Tooth Fairy Came Last Night” I am attaching to the backs of our tooth fairy art projects. It will be fun for the kids to read and fill in the blanks with coin money.

These eggs pretty yucky when you pull them out of the coke & juice!

Center 5 –  Looking at the experimental hard boiled eggs we put into Coke, Grape Juice and one in plain water. If you do this a day in advance like we did,  it is a fun center for kids to see how food “stains” our teeth and for them  to try to “brush” away the stains.  You could also use some permanent marker on white bathroom tiles. I also have my red, plastic, clacking teeth they can practice brushing with my giant toothbrush. That is always fun.  

The kids are trying to brush the stains off with toothpaste…it was hard…they said.

Scrub a dub that stained egg and pretend it’s your teeth! 

Each Center has several books on teeth for fast finishers to read while they wait for me to ring the bell. This is always a fun week in school.   

We skip listening post this week and just have teeth books there instead…

  I sent them each home a monthly brushing calendar, some toothpaste, and one of those little pink pills you chew up to see where you forgot to brush. And hopefully they will all earn their certificate for filling out their month-long brushing chart!  Parents, you’ll have to get right on that.  🙂 Love,  Mrs. Moss

Dental Health Activity Pages we do….Song is to the tune of Twinkle Twinkle Little Star…..

Chinese New Year Dragon Art and Parade!

We made some Beautiful Chinese Dragons for a Dragon Parade around the school for Chinese New Year! 

We wrote about Chinese New Year too. Here is our cool bulletin board.
Chinese New Year “Lucky Money” Thanks to Ivan’s Mom, a teacher at who does Chinese Immersion. 

We were given beautiful “Lucky Money” envelopes by Mrs. Chen. They were filled with chocolate coins in gold foil. 
Chinese Zodiak Calendar and some visual aids I had hanging up in the room. 
Ivan’s mom came dressed up and shared some visual aids of Chinese New Year with our class. 

Then she passed out some “lucky Money” to everyone in the little red envelopes. Thank YOU! 

 We read some books and Scholastic News on Chinese New Year and had a guest speaker come in. Then we made and decorated chinese dragons and watched a YOUTUBE on a dragon parade.

Some years we have made Chinese Lanterns for art instead. They are cute too and we do chinese numbers on them instead! 
I read them this fun book with Chinese Characters called Two of Everything. I know the author because she is a Utah resident! 

Scholastic News Weekly Reader about Chinese New Year! 
We also read The 7 Chinese Brothers as a Choral Reading and we act out the parts. Then I read them another book and we do a compare/contrast Venn Diagram. It is called The 7 Chinese Sisters!
Our class starting the Chinese New Year Parade around school. We visit the Kinder through 3rd grade classrooms banging cymbals and drums and singing and chanting Gung Hay Fat Choy (Happy Chinese New Year in Mandarin). 

One of my neighbors has a 2nd grader and she shot some pictures of us. 

Our class parading for Chinese New Year! 

The kids wrote about all they had learned from their reading about the culture. 
This was the last story I read the students. It is about a Chinese boy who gives all his lucky money away to a homeless man during the Dragon Parade so that he can have some warm socks in winter. It is a very sweet story and depicts the culture very well. 

We put our dragons all around the edges of the bulletin board for Chinese New Year. 

Mrs. Chen also gave the students the red Fish that show SYMMETRY, which we have been studying in math! Serendipity! 

Here I am banging the 2 cymbals together. My class is following behind me. 

Here is our whole class showing off their Chinese dragons. They are fierce looking! But I hope they bring good luck! 

 Too bad these shots turned out so blurry. I had my tiny handheld camera that day. OI

Close up of the faces.  

All the students tried their hands at some Chinese alphabet characters! They did a great job! 

And they all loved the leisees or Lucky Money! (Chocolate gold coins inside!) Yum! 

Happy BELATED Chinese New Year everyone!  

Rock Cycle Activities


THIS IS A FUN VIDEO/SONG DESCRIBING THE ROCK CYCLE “WE WILL ROCK YOU!”By Cassidy and the Band Queen.

What is the rock cycle?  The Rock Cycle is  a continuous process by which rocks are created, changed from one form to another,

 destroyed,and then formed again into a different type of rock. The rock cycle occurs in the different layers of the Earth. The 3 types of rocks are: SEDIMENTARY, Metamorphic and IGNEOUS.  Here are our ROCK FLAP BOOKS we made and illustrated to show the 3 kinds of rocks. 


Igneous rocks flap book pages.  We drew a Cool volcano and shiny, black, volcanic mica rocks. 

For igneous rocks we drew volcanoes of course….and Andrew and his mom came in
and showed us a fun model volcano using the baking soda and vinegar experiment…..it was enjoyed by all! 

Sedimentary flap pages…. we learned that sedimentary rocks include fossils of dead animals and plants and pebbles and shells, because they are found in sediments leftover from water areas of the earth. 
For Sedimentary Rock we drew a canyon  or an arch near a lake where you might find fossils,  and sedimentary types of rocks..

I have a collection of some rocks with fossils and some plaster of paris “fossils”  with what you find in sedimentary rocks.
Metamorphic rocks….we drew models showing the inside of the earth cut open and a type of
rock that would have some crystals inside of it from all that underground heat and pressure.
Metamorphic rocks used to be either igneous or sedimentary. 

Rock Flap Books – Metamorphic Rocks page….

A cool lesson plan and free worksheet on  layers of the earth can be found HERE at Volcanoes Alive.
Another one I liked is at aktsunami.com. It had a downloadable fill in the blank diagram that looked fun and both of these will go along with my clay lesson plan. Another great resource for Rocks is HERE at mjksc teaching ideas. 

Making ROCK CYCLE FLAP BOOKS 

We drew pictures of volcanoes for Igneous rocks, lakes and water areas for sedimentary rock and crystals and gems for metamorphic rocks. 

Rock Cycle Flap Books made with 1/2 sheet construction paper in gray.

This book went nicely with our 3 layers of the earth out of clay and a tiny BB. 
This activity is fun too making the 3 layers of the earth with the inner core being a BB representing the solid metal.  
We made the 3 layers of the earth with modeling clay and the inner core with a BB. We called them earth on a stick! 

We did this worksheet and answered some questions about ROCKS on the backside. 

We learned about the Rock Cycle – mostly from this THINKQUEST and a few books and posters on Rocks, Volcanos, Crystals. I have posters like these in my classroom, plus we watched the Magic School Bus video on Volcanoes.  Thanks to one of my mom helpers and Andrew, her son, we had a cool demonsotration of a Volcano erupting using baking soda and vinegar and a model volcano. At Teaching Ideas there is a fun matching activity that kids might like to do at a science center.


ROCK FAMILY SONG Check out this song about the different types of rocks HERE.

A fun wordsearch and a little quiz on layers of the earth to go with it can be downloaded Share PDF.net. It is a little tricky to figure out how to download it, just follow the directions (type in the code) on the upper left hand side of the page. If you go anywhere else it is all advertising tricks. Another one she had was giving each student a mini snickers bar unwrapped in a baggie. They press and sit and stand on the snickers bar and it becomes “changed” like a metamorphic rock, with heat and pressure. What a great idea!

Charcoal crystals we did last year with bluing and salt and ammonia. 
Growing Crystals 

HERE  is a cute printable SONG about the 3 types of ROCKS!

Check out ROCKY’s Rock Cycle. Also HERE  at Have Fun Teaching is a Rocks ABC Order Worksheet we also did. It has many of the vocabulary words we studied this week.This KIDS GEO.COM website is SUPER GREAT  because it has  cute songs to go along with  WONDERFUL pictures of rocks.

I ordered a book from Amazon along with another one called “The Rock Factory” by Jacqui Bailey. Both were great for introducing rocks to kids. Another cute activity I wanted to do this year too is to have the kids paint a Pet Rock. I collected smooth river rocks from Bear Lake this past summer for that very purpose, since I knew I’d be teaching rocks and minerals.

A bunch of fun worksheets I found HERE at School Express. There are word scrambles and word searches with ROCKS as the theme. A cute song I found at  at Beakers and Bumblebees  as well as some fun, edible experiments we could do. I think I’ll try the one with red, chocolate disks, melted like hot magma or lava, and then reformed when cooled into “igneous” rocks.  We could add some chipped candy canes to the hot magma like gems and crystals which are sometimes found in igneous rocks. We looked at photos of Mt. St. Helens the volcano that erupted in Washington, and we looked at Calderas in Yellowtone National Park.

ROCK RIDDLES

  1. Do you know what a rock wants to be when it  grows up??   
  2. What do you call a dog who collects rocks? 
  3. What do you do to a baby rock? 
  4. What is a rock’s favorite kind of music? 
  5. Where do rocks sleep? 
  6. How do rocks wash their clothes? 
  7. What is a rock’s favorite transportation? 
  8. What is a rock’s favorite cereal? 
  9. Where is a rock’s favorite golf course? 
  10. What is a rock’s favorite television show?

Answers



  1. A Rock Star
  2. A Rockhound 
  3. Rock it 
  4. Rock ‘N Roll 
  5. Bedrock 
  6. On the rock cycle 
  7. A rocket 
  8. Cocoa Pebbles 
  9. Pebble Beach 
  10. “Third Rock from the Sun”

We also did “Layers of the Earth” with models in crayon and clay (with a BB for the solid core). Check them out HERE.

VOCABULARY WORDS 
Some of the Science vocabulary we had up for our Rock Cycle Unit.
1. Igneous rock- rock formed from cooled magma or lava.
2. Sedimentary rock- rock that formed when sediments were pressed and cemented together.
3. Metamorphic rock- rock that formed when another kind of rock was squeezed and heated deep inside Earth’s crust.
4. Rock cycle- the process of rocks changing into other kinds of rock.
5. Fossils- the remains or traces of an organism that lived long ago.
6. Volcano- a mountain built up from hardened lava, rocks, and ash that erupted out of Earth.
7. Lava-melted rock that flows out of the ground onto Earth’s surface.
8. Magma- melted rock below Earths surface

9. erosion – when bits of rock and sand are taken away by wind or water and packed as sediment somewhere else. 
10. crystals – a mineral having a clear structure with cut faces. (like quartz) 
We are almost done with our unit. It’s really been fun to teach earth science to my students. 

Water Jelly Crystal from Steve Spangler Science

We have been learning about the rock cycle, and the crystals that are found in metamorphic rocks. So last week we made jelly crystals gardens in science as a crafty representation of crystals and how they are found in nature as types of gems in rocks. We are studying all the properties and types of rocks and the rock cycle, so minerals and crystals were a must!

I bought some water jelly crystals from Steve Spangler Science and we followed the directions in the video above. The students started by doing the experiment in a fat test tube. Nobody knew what would happen when they added water and their choice of  food coloring  to the crystals!

Then after an hour the crystals had sucked up all the water and had turned into jell crystals. Then we added food coloring and waited. They filled up the entire test tube from 1/4 teaspoon of crystals!  We had blue, pink, orange, green and purple. Very cool!

 After the test tubes were almost overflowing with crystals we dumped them into a zip lock bags.

You could add seeds to them and watch your “Crystal Gardens” sprout seeds if you wanted. But we had already done our plant unit this year and made terrariums out of a 2 liter bottle, so we didn’t add seeds this time to make a garden.  See our terrariums HERE.

It was a very exciting and “colorful” experiment.  Most of the kids predicted correctly what would happen to the crystals. 

Water Jelly Crystals experiment…..
Crystal Experiments were a fun enrichment activity in science. 
Then we looked at the crystals through our magnifying viewers. 

Here are the 3 colors that were the most popular. The purple ones were cool too.

Here is a Pinterest page that had lots of cool minerals and crystals too, right  HERE.

Next we will be doing some salt crystals using charcoal briquettes and bluing and ammonia. It always grows some pretty spectacular crystal gardens.

We had some new vocabulary words to learn as we have covered the rock cycle and the 3 types of rocks. This is how I taught them metamorphic rocks and what happens with heat and pressure. 

Some of the books I had out at the science center along with some rock and crystal samples. 

At the Natural History Museum field trip looking at some of the crystal displays….

This exhibit was so beautiful. There were gems and crystals from floor to ceiling behind a glass wall!

Then we looked on the internet and found a few websites where they had pictures of different types of crystal minerals. They were very beautiful. Here is a cool Pinterest Page HERE.
minerals
Here is the link for the Water Jelly Crystals at Steve Spangler Science. I bought a pound for $16 and I’ll have lots left over for next year. It’s a very cool experiment for kids to experience. It’s a fun enrichment to go with learning about metamorphic or “changed” rocks and gems.

President’s Day Art and Washington and Lincoln Biographies

I got a great idea from another bloggy teacher HERE on TPT.  If you click on PREVIEW there is a Biography stationery freebie.

I wanted the students to learn what biographies of famous people were so we read a few short ones on the life of Washington and Lincoln, since President’s Day holiday was last week.

Then we wrote our own opinion pieces about what we thought was great about each president of long ago. They learned lots of facts about each, and a few myths. Did you know Lincoln’s teeth were made from elephant tusk? Wow! Also, that Washington never did chop down a cherry tree….myths.

We made this Lincoln and added a black 4 x 8 piece of construction paper for his belly and wrote our spelling words in white crayon for a spelling activity. The kids made Lincoln’s face. It looks like this one is a Lincoln vampire face with a wandering eye. 😀 

Weekly Readers/Scholastic News I have saved over the years and we read together to get background knowledge. 
Here are our Lincoln art and our President’s Day opinion pieces. 

Here is a the  Washington art project we did using cotton balls for hair, wiggly eyes, white doilies for the ruffles at the neck and wrist, and we attached little flags to their hands. They turned out pretty cool.

Check out these written opinion pieces too. Great job 2nd graders!

 And the students learned a lot about how our country came to be.  We sure appreciate these American heroes.

Winter Olympics Activities and Olympic Torch Art

I wanted to teach the kids a few things about the Olympics in Sochi, Russia happening this week. I always love watching the opening ceremonies and the pride I feel in our country represented by hundreds of cool athletes from all around the U.S.A.

 We made Olympic Torches for art this past week, and I had them write about the Olympics.

Our classroom bulletin board of the Sochi, Russia Winter Olympic Games turned out pretty.

Tacky and the Winter Games is a book I sent away for on Amazon to read the kids too. HERE is a link.  Tacky is one of my all-time-favorite book characters. He is so funny and odd but always saves the day

I looked on Pinterest and around the internet and found a few fun ideas for things we could do. I have always loved watching the figure skaters in the Olympics. Who doesn’t remember Tanya Harding and Nancy Kerrigan and the hoopla of THAT winter olympics?

Sochi Winter Olympics 2014 Pictograms
Here is the Sochi set of Winter Olympic Pictograms. I used these to put kids’ face pictures on the “heads” as they choose their favorite Olympic Winter Sports. Check out HERE at this Flicker site for more pictures.

Sochi Winter Olympics depicted on our bulletin board. 

I can’t believe the  Salt Lake City Winter Games were  back in 2002!  The students chose their favorite of the 15 events and I put their pictures on top as a headshot. Super fun!

Snowboarding was a favorite Olympic event of the boys and girls in my class. 
We also did a class graph of favorite Winter Olympic Events and I think figure skating and snowboarding were winners. 
pictogram answers

 I used the Salt Lake City Pictograms from the UEN Website for my headshots HERE.  I just liked the black background better and also because it listed the name of the sport. 
I made up some SOCHI 2014 banners with the Olympic Rings for our Class bulletin board.
I used  little “class picture” faces copied on the copy machine in black and white. Then I had a mom helper glue their face to their favorite or most admired winter sport. 

So I had the kids also do a graph choosing their favorite of the Winter Olympic Sports. Boy did we have a lot of ski and snowboard lovers in our class! (I don’t think anybody even KNOWS what a bobsled is! :D) HERE are some cute graphics I used to create our Class Olympics Graph. It was free on TPT. Some backround information and stationery is HERE from TPT. I forgot to take a picture.

Olympic Torches out of paper cones covered in tinfoil. The flames are orange, red and yellow tissue paper squares. 

Then we chose our sport and wrote why we’d love to be in the Olympics. We brainstormed how exciting it would be to wear the Red, White and Blue, go to the opening ceremonies wearing the U.S. Team Uniform and hat, (although this year’s hat is kinda weird looking in my view) and live amongst the top athletes in all of the world, even if only for a few weeks or days. I hope they will all be safe in Sochi 2014. That’s always a concern these days, sadly, isn’t it?

The best bunch of activities that I found for FREE was HERE at First Grade WOW. Thanks so MUCH! There was everything from Math to Nouns and Verbs and Wordsearches. She matched some activities to the cute Tacky the Penguin Book (My favorite Children’s Book of all Time).

Their”Olympic” essays were a lot of fun to read. Some cute word wall vocabulary cards can be found HERE at TPT.  My favorite stationery I found was HERE at TPT.  It was soooo cute! 
Winter Olympics Writing and  Olympic Torch Art…..

I found a cute Olympic Bingo game that was super colorful but I wanted Winter sports only. It is HERE at learning treasures. I’m going to keep looking.  A cute wordsearch I found HERE at Sports Girls Play. And a very cute Olympic Torch outline is quality-kids-crafts. I did a variation on it in my class so check them out below. Another cute BINGO game with WINTER sports only is HERE at Classroom Jr.

Here is another bulletin board we did just outside our doors. Underneath are the 15 events I had copied many years ago during the Salt Lake City Winter Olympics in 2002. I just pulled out my file again. Good memories! I got to go SEE that opening ceremony. It was magnificent! 

I wanted the students to experience Russian Culture a little bit too. So we will make some Russian Nesting Dolls out of paper next week and write poems about the Russian Olympics. I brought in the dolls I bought in Armenia many years ago when I traveled to Russia.

HERE at activity village are the printable and free download of the Russian Nesting Dolls blackline. They turn out really cute! I’ve done them in the past when we had a rotation for Christmas Around the World and I presented Russia.

"Semenov" Babushka Doll
Russian Nesting Dolls I have at home from my trip to Russia a few years back.
 I also showed them some travel brochure picture posters I made up of Russia with some of their cultural icons like the Onion Domed buildings, Their government leaders (Putin) and who their Santa Claus is! (Father Frost). And I will read them some of the stories of “Babushka” by Patricia Polacco because she depicts the Russian culture in her stories. Here are a few of her famous books.

I hope we bring home lots of gold this week at the Winter Olympics! Go Team U.S.A.


Babushka's Doll443633

Reading Streets Froggy Fables and Frog Life Cycles and Activities

 In our Reading Streets curriculum the story for the week a week ago was Froggy Fables. So after reading fables and non-fiction books, we decided to do some frog facts writing.

Frog Facts we did during Writing Workshop……
Artistic Frogs 
Life Cycle of the Frog Wheels 

More froggy facts…..

Here we are with our Frog Life Cycles and our Artsy Frogs on a Stick! Notice the cute curly tongues? 

The students loved learning about Amphibians. 

I love to also so some Frog life cyles in science during this week. I have lots of fun frog activities and books to read too. And I always save my Scholastic News if it has a good science

Just some of the books I read to the students over the course of the week. Most of them were non-fiction. 

Fabulous Frogs Floor Puzzle at Littleowl

The above puzzle can be used as a motivating  fast finisher activity. The kids love enrichment like this. Here’s the first book I read the kids during FROG WEEK! 

This is a WONDERFUL non-fiction book with beautiful illustrations called FABULOUS FROGS. 

Books in our unit…..I  always like to mix fiction with non fiction in text sets. 
Frog and Toad are Friends by Arnold Lobel
Frog on a Log by Phil Roxbee Cox
Froggy Learns to Swim by Jonathan London
Flashy, Fantastic, Rain Forest Frogs by Dorothy Hinshaw
Fantastic Frogs by Fay Robinson
Fabulous Frogs by Sue Unstead
That Toad is Mine
 by Barbara Shook Hazen A link for a reader’s theatre of the book is HERE

We do a big brainstorm after reading about 3 Frog books and 2 Scholastic News on Frogs (I save the science ones every year and add them to my units) and we use these facts we’ve collected in our Frog Facts writing.
Here’s another song we sing to the tune of Jimmy Crack Corn  A copy of this is on the back of the frog life cycle wheel. 

 Some of the books, weekly readers and word cards I have on the subject of Amphibians

Word cards of different types of frogs and a fun poster book with giant pictures…

More froggy facts…..

More life cycles of the frog….

 We also during the week had a couple of docents come from the Living Planet Aquarium to our classroom. They showed us a white tree frog that I didn’t get a good picture of. But they also brought 7 other animals or insects.

 We had a hissing cockroach, a few snakes and a gecko and lots of weird insects.

Giant cockroach was kind of gross but interesting. 

Yuck….hissing cockroach from Madagascar….

Giant Millipede was a little scary to some of the kiddos….

We learned about the 7 continents and sang some songs and marched around the “world” rug. 

This guy could have been a game show host. The kids LOVEd him! 

Here’s one of the 2 snakes they brought from the Living Planet Aquarium….a new one is opening up this summer…..

The snake was very pretty but some of the kids would NOT touch it! (and I was one of them….lol) 

More frog facts…..

We brainstormed a long list of facts before we did our own little reports….

Here were the frogs before we added the long, red, curling tongues to them……

Frog Art Projects……

Some great Graphic Organizers and Stationery for starting a Frog writing report is Here at Petersons-pad.

FROGS ON A STICK! LOL….

We do this CUTE frog on a stick using CRAYOLA oil pastels on the “dots”. That makes the frog really pop! Then we add a 8 x 1/2 inch red tongue curled around a pencil and attached to the mouth. Super cute! 

I made these 3 layered frogs out of felt and added wiggly eyes. They make cute frog fingerpuppets!  The song 5 LITTLE SPECKLED FROGS we attach to the back of the puppet and sing together when we are done. It goes along with our kle, ple, zle, dle, ble, tle and gle phonics chunk we are studying for the week too! Woot!


Want to tell some FROGGY JOKES? Here are some cute ones!

Q: What happens if a frog parks in a bus stop?
A:  He gets toad away!

Q:  Why are frogs always happy?
A:  Because they eat whatever bugs them.

Q:  What happens when two frogs catch the same fly?
A:  They get tongue-tied!

Q:  What do you get when you cross a pig with a frog?
A:  A ham-phibian! 

Q:  What kind of frog lives in a tree house?
A:  A tree frog!


I also had the microscope out for the week and we looked at the frog life cycles underslides….It was a very cool week at school!!!