Christopher Columbus Activities

Monday was Columbus Day in America. We are working on learning about exploration in our Reading Streets literature books. So we will be doing some Columbus Day activities, art and writing to honor this great explorer.

    

   Books on Christopher Columbus to use as read alouds. I think we read 4 books in all.

From Europe to the Americas
Bananas Barley Cabbages Carnations
Chickens Coffee Cows Crabgrass
Daffodils Daisies Dandelions Horses
Lemons Lettuce Lilacs Olives
Oranges Peaches Pears Pigs
Rice Sheep Sugarcane Tulips
Turnips Wheat

This cool chart was from the Scholastic Website telling what kinds of things the explorers shared between Europe and America from their travels back and forth.

From the Americas to Europe
Avocados Beans (kidney, navy, lima) Bell peppers Black-eyed Susans
Cacao (for chocolate) Chili peppers Corn Cotton
Marigolds Papayas Peanuts Petunias
Pineapples Poinsettias Potatoes Pumpkins
Quinine Rubber Squashes Sunflowers
Sweet potatoes Tobacco Tomatoes Turkeys
Vanilla beans Zinnias
 READING 

First of all we are using our Scholastic News/Weekly Reader on Columbus. It has a fun interactive website which shows an animated basic story of what happened.The link is HERE at Scholastic.  I don’t think you need a code. Another resource I found was a mini book with pictures and questions afterwards. The link for the printable story and worksheet is HERE at Teachervision.  I would also do a few read alouds. I have about 5 books on Columbus.

Scholastic News had a lot of neat resources even after reading . Another good resource for lots of activities on Columbus is HERE from Palm Beach Schools.

ACTIVITIES TO DEVELOP BACKGROUND KNOWLEDGE
After reading the Scholastic News/Weekly Reader and showing them some Pictures of Queen Isabella and King Ferdinand I found online, and pictures of one of the types of boats they used (The Nina, The Pinta and the Santa Maria) we had some good discussions on how hard it would be to have the job of sailor on one of Columbus’ 3 ships. They had to sleep on mats and eat kind of old food.  The kids decide which 5 things they would be able to take with them on the 2 month trip to America. It is hard to narrow it down to just 5 things! And no computers, phones, T.V.s or ipads were invented then!!

A Picture Book of Christopher Columbus (Picture Book Biographies) (Picture Book Biography)
Good read aloud book on Christopher Columbus. 

VOCABULARY & ABC ORDER
I will introduce our 7 VOCABULARY words on Columbus for the week. Then we will do an alphabetical order worksheet. The link is Apples 4 the teacher. A wordsearch I’ll put on the back with vocabulary words Find it HERE or a challenging one HERE.  It works great because we are studying alphabetical order this week! WOO HOO!

WRITING PROJECT
We then wrote little biography reports on Christopher Columbus and how he sailed to the New World and met the Indians there. Everybody had a different bunch of facts they thought were interesting. All of the kids could take facts from any of the books, Weekly Readers and facts they learned from our read alouds or the video. We went through the writing process, I edited their work, and they rewrote on some cute Columbus paper I found in a Scholastic Book.

VIDEO
Here is a cute 6 minute singing video about the Voyage of Christopher Columbus that includes the King and Queen of Spain and some maps of the route. And Columbus sings a cute song too. Perfect for 1st or 2nd graders. WRITING I’m going to let the students retell the story of Columbus in their own words.  If you wanted to you could do a Columbus Acrostic Poem. A link for words to use for the letters of COLUMBUS is HERE at joglab.

Christopher Columbus reports 

 The watercolor ships of Columbus turned out really pretty. They all looked so different!

 We read lots of literature and listed facts about Columbus on the whiteboard. Then we wrote about him.

 After teacher edit we rewrote our sloppy copies on this cute paper. Christopher Columbus rocks!

Then we did a watercolor art project of some of the ships Columbus sailed on.  

 The Nina, the Pinta, and the Santa Maria.

Weekly Reader about Columbus and his travels. 
A Columbus Quiz from the Weekly Reader/Scholastic News. 

ART
The art I like to do is a watercolor of the sky and ocean with a Columbus type boat made with brown construction paper and a piece of tissue and a wooden skewer for a sail and mast.. A cute puppet printable is HERE at Scholastic. 

MUSIC AND FINGER PUPPETS I found a freebie at Teachers Pay Teachers for a cute song and poem to sing about Columbus. I would sing and recite the poem and song together and then let the kids glue them on the back of their art (reduce to half size so both will fit on 1 page).
The finished watercolors look really great. At Teachers Pay Teachers pay Teachers Lil’ Country Kindergarten had some cute Columbus Day Finger Puppets.  This would be a great fast finisher activity for older kids too. Who doesn’t like a finger puppet?  Then the whole class can sing the song while doing puppetry. What a fun week we had!

Henry and Mudge and the Starry Night Activities

Henry and Mudge and the Starry Night 

We just started Reading Streets in our school district. It is the new reading program. In 2nd grade I love the fun stories and songs that all link with our science and social studies.

Reading Streets Literature – Our fun Tents and Camping Storytelling…

So after we read the story of HENRY AND MUDGE AND THE STARRY NIGHT and went through the vocabulary lessons and sang the songs we did a few other fun activities. Check out this website which has loads of fun stuff for kids at Visalia K12 School District.

Henry and Mudge and the Starry Night…..our catalyst for a week of camping activities and Star charts! 
Writing assignment about a Realistic story about a camping experience, fiction or non-fiction.

WRITING ASSIGNMENT: Camping Story in Realistic Fiction Style
we decided to write a REALISTIC STORY about an experience going camping. It could be a true or made up camping trip.  I challenged them  to use several of the AMAZING WORDS vocabulary  and have a problem and a solution. THE SETTING  had to be somewhere out in nature where we might like to camp. I also put out more Henry and Mudge stories for fast finishers to read and enjoy.

The setting of the Camping stories was of course outdoors at some hot camp spot! 
We had a problem and a solution in our camping stories….

Henry and Mudge and the Starry Night stories….You could do a retell with the same idea….

Camping Stories and artwork turned out great! 

We did a giant brainstorm of camping places and things to do. We used THE 5 SENSES as a graphic organizer. I wish I had taken a picture of the board. It was good what kinds of outdoor camping activities the kids came up with to match what we smell, see, feel, and hear and taste (s’mores of course! and other camp foods). It was a good background knowledge activity.

Henry and Mudge and the Starry Night innovation idea….

Then we made a list of possible problems you could have camping. They came up with everything from mosquito bites to getting lost in a cave and bears eating your food. Then we did some writing of “sloppy copies”. I ALWAYS EDIT each week. Then they rewrite on cute paper and have some sort of motivational ART PROJECT attached. I have taught from Title 1 kids to Spanish speakers new to the U.S. and Gifted kids.  Writing is the best way to push up ALL of their language arts abilities from SPELLING to PHONICS to READING to HANDWRITING and COMPREHENSION. It is reciprocal to all the other LA topics. DO MORE WRITING!!!!! It is KEY.

SCIENCE: Stars and the Sun (Solar Power) 

We were finishing our solar systems from Space the previous week so I thought a natural leap is into the stars and the sun. We did some activities learning about stars (star on a stick with a poem on the back) Check it out.

Then we learned about constellations. A great set of videos on the sun and others can be found Here at About.com. There are many others on the Metacafe website.

HERE are directions to paint this cool “SUN” art project. It looks actually like the SUN! they put blogs of orange and yellow and red paint on a circle of white paper, then cover it over with Saran Wrap. Then they mush it up! How fun! Then they place it onto a black piece of construction paper and glue it down. Then they make sun flare-ups using a cotton swab. Fun!  

 I have a solar robot we go out and put out in the sun to watch him walk, and then we huddle over it so we block out the sun and he stops. The kids love it. And they learn about solar cells. I have bead bracelets we make out of solar beads (Get a package at Steve Spangler Science. The $9.00 package lasts me about 3 years.

Steve Spangler Science solar beads for bracelets….a great fun science activity for kids! 
Solar bead bracelets and glow in the dark beads together make a fun extension activity. They turn back colorful in the sun and back to white in the classroom. Very cool. Very cheap science activity too. And kids love them. 

I buy also some “glow in the dark” beads from Michaels or Hobby Lobby too. Then we make a solar bracelet on a chenille stem. We turn out the lights, and it glows in the dark (be sure you set your beads under a lamp that morning) and then we go outside and the solar beads all change colors. It is super cool!!

Sudekum Planetarium  has a great constellation star chart that is printable and it is fantastic looking! Some years we have made sundials too. HERE is an easy one.

Constellation Art picture idea….You could also do it on black paper with pin holes poked in for the stars. or a mix of both ideas.

If there is time, we will do a few constellations by poking pins through black paper making dots, and doing an acrostic poem using S-T-A-R-S as the topic.  I wish I had a copy of the above activity. It looks like a perfect one for little kiddos.

ART EXTENSION (A FAST FINISHER MOTIVATION!)

I knew we were doing a camping story so in the summer I ordered camping stickers on sale from Oriental Trading. I made “TENTS” out of a 12 inch “SQUARE” of green cardstock. I had some army green from a Stampin’ Up freebie given to our Utah teachers a few years back.

I folded the top of the square down on the left and right sides to form a tent. Then we added stickers to the front, and a triangle of white paper inside for the illustration.  We added “camping stickers” I ordered from Oriental Trading. The Link for camp stickers is here. Each student shared the sheet of stickers with a partner.

Camping Stickers from Oriental Trading we used for our “Tents” 

MUSIC EXTENSION:

Well who doesn’t go camping without singing some camping songs? Here is a bunch from Visalia k12 website. Just click on the site and sing along with your class! I Love Oh Suzanna! I would of course add my percussion instruments for the kids to play along. (who doesn’t love to bang a drum?) A cute website with other extension ideas is HERE at Teacher.net. They had “make trailmix” and “sleeping bag races” for P.E. (I would use gunny sacks). What fun ideas! Maybe next year.

Sleeping “bag” races….do them with gunny sacks for P.E. 

Gotta Love some trail mix snacks too! Recipe HERE.

Here is our completed writing stories. They are all really fun reads! After reading how one student fought off a mountain lion, I’m wondering how “realistic” these stories are, but what they lack in realism, they make up for in adventure, that’s for sure!  It makes me ALMOST want to go camping under the stars. (NOT) :O

My Birthday Party

I had a birthday on Monday and my daughter Tiffany hosted a birthday party for me Monday night. I went to lunch with the hubs so it was fun to not worry about anything food for an entire day!

Halloween decorations on the table were so cute….Tiff put a glass inside of this jar and then surrounded it with the candy corn. She didn’t really buy 100 pounds of candy. 
She is a master at these delicious bread bowls. The recipe is at Jamie Cooks it up HERE.

She made these wonderful, homemade bread bowls and some delicious creamy soup. Then she had my all time favorite spinach salad with strawberries and avocados and candied pecans. Can you spell Y-U-M-M-Y?

Gotta love the chairs all decorated like Halloween pumpkins….
Yummy spinach salad is one of my favorites…

My birthday cake was a strawberry cheesecake. It was so pretty and delish! My little granddaughter had cheesecake face. :O

Strawberry cheesecake…..Yes those are 4 CANDLES…..Yeah…I’m only turning 40 now. Woo Hoo! 
Yum, I like that cheesecake stuff grandma! Marisa has cheesecake face….

It was so fun to be spoiled. And my son-in-law likes Halloween like I like Halloween.

He’s going to add lots of spiderwebs and scary dudes hanging from ropes and stuff….

Here is the beginnings of his graveyard….the spooks are even coming out of the window wells to a strobe light. He still has to hang a few ghouls from a noose and a few more tombstones.

Marisa and Meg hung the little ghosties in the tree…so cute! 

 It’s gonna be the neighborhood fun stop for sure.  I better go get all my stuff out too!

Space and Solar System Activities

We are studying space in science and linking it with the Reading Streets 2nd grade Literature selection all about the life of an astronaut. I love teaching kids about Space because they really love it! I’m so glad it is in our 2nd grade core!

I think Svetha’s is one of the prettiest art projects. She put a lot
of time (and a lot of sequins) into her art. 
Reading Streets 2nd Grade An Astronaut in Space writing project….

 The assignment I gave them after reading the selection, was to start writing a piece of realistic fiction on them traveling as an astronaut through our solar system.  If they used some of the AMAZING WORDS vocabulary, they got a sticker or a gummy bear!

Space Stories and Art made a cute bulletin board! 
After reading the Reading Streets story, we wrote our own astronauts in space stories….

I see “launched” and “asteroid” on this great story from Jack. He gets a sticker! Woo Hoo! 
Gotta love the rings around Saturn! 

I have lots of books and activities on phases of the moon….

Here is a sampling of some GREAT SPACE BOOKS:

 Me and My Place in Space  by Joan Sweeney

What the Moon is Like, Franklin M. Branley

The Moon Seems to Change, Franklin M. Branley

Find the Constellations by H. A. Rey

The Moon Book, Gail Gibbons

If You Decide to go to the Moon by Faith McNulty

Let’s Explore the Moon (Space Launch), Helen and David Orme

Postcards From the Planets


A great book to read before starting your writings….it is all realistic fiction in the post card writing form. Very creative, I must say! 
 We read the big book Postcards From the Planets as well as about 8 other books as read alouds on space and planet facts. We did a little mini book of space and planet facts. We also did phases of the moon wheels and read a minibook and several Scholastic News’ selections I’d saved over the years.

 We sang songs from the Reading Streets Songbook as well as a few I had in my space files. A good National Geographic online resource for facts and pictures to go with your readings is HERE. It’s got lots of good solar system info and great images.

Creative space stories….I loved them all! 
Very bright and colorful space art using oil pastels.  
The foam peel and stick shapes were from Oriental Trading the Link is here. They cost about $8.00 for a big package that lasts me 3 years for 3 classes. 

 I got a selection of non fiction books on each of the planets from scholastic one year. They are higher level and kids love looking at the great photographs of shots of space and planets.

 I’ve collected Weekly Readers and Scholastic News for many years on all kinds of science topics.

Cute planet art projects turned out nice…

I challenged the kids to use some of our Space vocabulary words in their stories….
Space art….this planet looks kinda like a PIZZA! 
Lots of fun space adventures! 
Space Stories….

I have about 5 on space topics from Phases of the Moon to the Solar System to Astronauts and the Mars Rover.

 We did a REALISTIC FICTION WRITING ASSIGNMENT after all our reading. We brainstormed different problems and solutions that could happen to an astronaut traveling through the solar system. I gave them “sloppy copy” paper and had them write using Space as the setting. The only objective was writing a realistic story about an adventure through space from Earth and back using some describing words and some vocabulary words from our Literature series.

We sang a song, made an astronaut and a space “door knocker” as a few fast finisher projects for my fast writers. 

 After editing their work, I had them rewrite the stories on the “SPACE STORY” paper and then called up small groups to do illustrations with Crayola oil chalks on black paper.

These are the “space shapes” from Oriental Trading’s peel and stick foam space shapes.

 We then added some space foam stickers and then glued on some round and moon and star shaped giant sequins. They were very pretty.

The girls are just starting their space art projects using the oil pastels….

Our own space stories used the genre of “REALISTIC FICTION” and we were the astronaut characters  traveling through space encountering a realistic problem with a realistic solution. No alien stories were allowed.

Finished Space art and space writing…..
space bulletin board stories with space art projects…
Space art with oil pastels and peel and stick foam space shapes….
Each story had to have a problem and a solution….

 The stories turned out really good. I had about 5 kids a day share their finished stories up at the author’s chair. Then we stapled all the stories and art out on the bulletin board in the hallway.

Space Stories
I love how Cambria labeled all of her planets and the Sun. 😀  As you can see she has landed on the moon. 
Websites for more great space information and videos:
Solar Systems made with Crayola air dry clay. 

We read Weekly Readers on the Solar System, wrote about a planet, then made it out of clay and placed it on our solar system (dark blue 2 inch strip of foam core from Walmart). I cut them all out on the paper cutter. You can get a class set from 2 pieces of foam core (about $3.50 each). 

The Crayola air dry clay is called Model Magic. It comes in packs of 4 colors or white. I usually buy a bag of each and give kids part white and part another color in a 1/4 inch ball. They add color with Crayola markers just little dots of color. 

If you want green swirls, use a few dots of green Crayola marker on the Model Magic clay. Then roll around for a minute in your palms and magic! It looks like a planet! 

This is the Crayola Model Magic clay we use. And here are our finished solar systems. 

The kids are always very proud of themselves each year I do the solar systems. It is one of the most fun science projects of the year in first grade! 

At Squish Ideas for Preschool’s blog there are many ideas and this cute downloadable if you want to make a cut and color solar system too. She also has a recipe for moonsand. (which I purchased and it is pretty pricey!) 
I can’t wait to show the kids my video of the space shuttle taking off one of the last times. My hubs recorded it onto a VHS. It is sad that we are not supporting the space program so much anymore.
But it’s cool that we still get to study space! The Crayola model magic solar systems are fun to do!

Solar systems made from Crayola Model Magic air dry clay on blue presentation boards. They are awesome addition to our study of Space.  

Rules of the School (School Bus Project)

School Bus Art project made from a painted egg carton top.

 A great way to start kids thinking and learning about the SCHOOL RULES is making a School Bus out of yellow, painted, tops of egg cartons.

It took a while to collect enough egg cartons from everybody’s house to make the school bus art…but we had enough after a week. 
 

  I copied these cute School Bus Bookmarks with jokes on them too. The link is at Activity Village.

I had them add the doo dads to make the School Bus Art look cute too…”The wheels on the bus go round and round”…. 
 

Then I had the kids do an acrostic poem after we brainstormed ways to write some of the school rules within sentences starting with S-C-H-O-O-L.  They did a pretty good job.

It made a cute bulletin board too….

 We added our kid pictures that I took with Photobooth as the kids sat in a chair facing forward with a yellow paper background, with faces turned toward me. (like they were riding on a bus)
They each chose 3 friends, and their own picture and glued them to a strip of black construction paper.

Some of the cuter ones were…”Humming is an outside sound….lol…

Then the kids added round black wheels with white stickers and a brad, and made their own hexagon stop signs with red paper. We talked about all the school rules and why we have them. And they tried to incorporate phrases  of our SOAR SCHOOL RULES into some of the letters of the acrostic SCHOOL poem.

I found some funny jokes online and we added them to some cute bus papers…..

 

At ABC Teach  is another cute bus blackline you might like. 

Our SOAR SCHOOL RULES ARE; 1. Safe inside and out 2. On Time and On Task 3. Accept Responsibility 4. Respect Self, Others and Property. Learn Create Love had a really cute printable for making a yellow school bus. So I cut yellow paper out in a bus shape and after we painted the tops of the egg cartons we added the yellow bus shape to make it 3D.

We have a Principal’s award at our school called “Something
to Celebrate” which is a little certificate they all try to win every week. It means they
get to go play a game of tag with him on Friday. 

Then I found this cute School Stationery with a school bus and lots of kids on it.  So I had the kids rewrite their sloppy copies of their acrostic  S C H O O L poems after I edited them.

School Bus art with SCHOOL ACROSTIC POEMS

They turned out really cute. What do you think?

Football Season Art and Writing

Well, we have the good old BYU Cougars versus the University of UTAH Utes rivalry happening this weekend.

Are YOU going to ROOT for my team? 
This little girl does….Go BYU! GO, FIGHT, WIN! 

 Over the loudspeaker this morning at school our principal played the BYU fight song instead of the school song. It was so funny because it took me a few minutes to realize what song was happening. I thought at first it must be a mistake…..


I usually try to do something fun in the classroom, to take a vote on who the kids think will win the game this weekend. It’s a BIG DEAL around these parts.  I think, secretly that Utes will take it, but I still will root for BYU. I was a student there many years ago and 2 of my kids went there too. So we bleed blue at my house.

So in honor of the rivalry game today, I made my husband some football pancakes for breakfast to go along with his sausage and eggs.  Cute right? 

http://www.makingfriends.com/friends/f_football.htmFootball Player Printout.

So today one of the teachers has a UTES Football Knome, and she had one of her 6th graders run it down to the principal’s office during the “fight song” to counter his BYU enthusiasm. He thought that was kinda funny too.

  Here are some of the football player art we did this year.

 The paper legs were just out of newsprint. The kids pictures are inside the helmets. And of course, they did their favorite team’s jerseys and cheer outfits.

What is YOUR favorite football team? Cougars? Utes? 

 Lots of BYU BLUE represented for sure!  Rise and Shout the Cougars are OUT!

The girls had a “pom pom” added to their outfits…..
The boys had a football added to their outfits…… I know, I’m not very PC am I? 
Ya just gotta love those “cleats” now dontcha? 

 A free printable of the FOOTBALL subway art is below. It’s cute at the house for a football party, and it is cute on a bulletin board too!

I hope the Utes don’t blow us away! I’m keeping my fingers crossed. 

f_foot.gif (11231 bytes)
Cute Football Player color and cut-out activity great for little kiddos….

One more thing I found that I thought would be a fun thing to do for my grandkids to keep them busy during the games coming up. They love to color and cut out things like paper dolls. So how about a paper football player? Maybe in team colors! Making Friends.com has the download.

Football Subway Art 

HERE is a Football Printable  We’ll have fun doing some football writing this year too. More pics to come soon! Football helmet printables football helmet printables HERE. I hope you are enjoying football season as much as we are! Go Fight WIN!

Paper Bag Scarecrows for Fall

Happy Fall, Ya’ll! How many have their Thanksgiving Turkeys all up? I made my “What We are Thanksful For” turkeys last week. This week I’m going to make some Scarecrows.

I’m using brown paper bags, wiggly eyes, 6 colors (RED, GREEN, ORANGE, YELLOW, PINK, BROWN) of construction or butcher roll paper, a stir stick from Home Depot and some crumpled or shredded newspaper. Optional is plaid scrapbook paper and some sunflower seeds for the little flower on the hat.  
 
I also like to use some plaid scrapbook paper to make a patch or two on the hat and outfit in coordinating colors.  If you let the kids choose their fall colors for the hat it looks cute with a plaid patch on it. I would add a little sign under the neck that says, “HAPPY FALL, Y’ALL!” 

     Fall Scarecrow Art 
Add a little sunflower made from yellow triangles and a brown circle to the hat  and cut and glue the face of the scarecrow onto the flat part of a brown bag and add the wiggly eyes. Draw the eyebrows and a smile on with black marker. Make strips of yellow butcher paper for the hair. Stuff the scarecrow with newspaper strips or shreds. Put glue on the stick and stuff it inside the shreds.
I love the little black crow on the hat too. It’s cute. So kids will be able to choose a sunflower or a crow. 
    Then close up the bag and put a rubber band around it. Add ribbon or torn fabric around the rubber band. Make up signs and copy them on tan or yellow cardstock and cut out then attach to the neck with a pin or glue. Add hair strips to top of head. 
    ABC Teach  has some cute writing paper to use for a scarecrow story. I’m using it to have the kids write “WHAT I LIKE ABOUT FALL”. 
    Then make a sailor hat out of fall colored butcher paper. Glue on top of head. Add a plaid patch to the hat.  Have kids write acrostic poems about “F-A-L-L” or “AUTUMN” to go with the scarecrow art. A compound word activity is also 
    HERE at ABC Teach.
Some cute paper with a scarecrow on top can be found here at Activity Village. There is lined and dotted lined paper to write Fall and Autumn Acrostic Poems. 
I love this one from Oriental Trading. What a cute scarecrow!  
Scarecrow (Tune: I’m a Little Teapot) I wrote this little ditty! 
I’m a little scarecrow short and fat
Stuffed together with a big straw hat!
When the crows come ’round
to gobble my corn
I shake and I shout
In the Early Morn!

So Clap and Stomp
and snap and HOP
till (clap) those scarecrows (stomp)  all fly(snap)  OFF! (hop) fly off!

5 Crows All Shiny Black (Tune: 5 Little Speckled Frogs)
5 Crows all shiny black
Sat on a scarecrow’s back
Eating the most delicious corn (caw, caw)
Scarecrow winked and shouted “BOO!”
Scared those crows and away they flew!
Now there’s only 4 black shiny crows (caw caw)

repeat with 3, then 2, then 1, then none.

I will show the kids all these designs for faces with the pink cheeks, triangle noses and the sunflowers and hopefully, theirs will all look a little different and unique.  We’ll see. A cute coloring page that I’m going to add some math problems to the back is Here at Fun Pages for Kids. And the head is HERE.
I’ll post pictures when we are done this week. In the meantime, Happy Fall, Y’all!

Ipads…How Do You Use it in the Classroom?

Hey! I got an Ipad from my principal this week. I am just now getting familiar with it. What I’d like to know is what kinds of math games would be good to use with 2nd and 3rd grade kids’ math skills? What are your favorite things to do with your Ipads in your classroom?

I’ve learned about Pick a Stick.  And the app where kids can write using their finger. But give me more!

 But other than that, nobody had any games to share. So I’m using my blog to find teachers who will share ideas on how they use Ipads in their classrooms. I would especially like math or spelling games 2 kids could play together. How do YOU use your Ipads?

12 MATH Addition Games for Centers and Differentiation

Math Workshop Adventures made this poster for kids to go to the 4 centers for math I used as my inspiration. Thanks guys!! I do a free choice for centers and just have a game at each of 5 areas of the room that I use for reading centers, so no need for a poster. But it’s a great way to get started! 

I believe in math centers AND in finding time to make some differentiation.  And I compact 2 worksheets into one day in their regular math work so that I can give a totally different, challenging worksheet one day a week, in the same strand of math we are studying. That leaves Friday to do some activities, games,  or writing projects in math.

So while the regular kids may do 5 pages of independent math work in a week, my kids do 6 in class, 2 at home for homework, and the higher level kids do an extra  sheet with higher level math weekly.  And they ALL DO GAMES as fast finishers or on Fridays. So it is a challenging classroom. You can have fun AND give challenge and differentiate in your classroom too!

 I still have kids who struggle all year, just like any teacher does. So I work with them during independent while my high and medium kids get done and play some of these games. And once a week while kids are playing center games I work with just my high kids for a half hour. That makes it doable for me. I usually work with high kids on Mondays after independent work has started.

F is for First Grade made this rotation schedule for her math groups. It would help you begin. After awhile I would think it would become automatic. 

MATH CENTER GAMES WHEN FINISHED WITH REGULAR MATH WORK:
 I am always adding to my math games and centers  and I spend time on blogs and on the internet finding games on every math strand. I probably make a new one at least once every few months. So it is not overwhelming, but I built up my centers over the years of working on making them. I leave 1 language arts center and 1 math center at each of my 5 tables/center areas. (rug, round table, long table, word work table, magnet filing cabinets center). So I never have to worry too much and I only change centers every 2 weeks. It is all free choice too. Morning fast finishers go to language arts games, afternoons during math they go do the math games at the same table.

 ADDITION MATH
HERE are a few of my favorites in Addition,  good for 1st or 2nd graders.

1. Dot Dice Addends from Investigations. If you don’t have the Investigations book here is another free downloadable from Kindergarten Crayons. I made little dice out of foam cut into inch pieces. I made from 1 dot to 6 dots on each square using a fat, black, Sharpie marker. They are in baggies by color so they don’t get mixed up. Kids use 2 or 3 of the dot dice to make the colorful sum on the left end. The white part is for laying the 2 or 3 dot dice out. Or you can just buy dot dice. It’s fun and they love it.

I made up a baggy of green, a baggie of red, yellow, orange etc. It’s easy to make them just watching T.V. one night with 3 or 6 different colors of 40 cent foam from Hobby Lobby. Use a round Sharpie marker for the dots on 1 inch pieces. Cheap! 

  
2. Bump Addition (Can make different ones for Holidays) Link HERE for game and Sunny Days in Second for more great game ideas. Lots are free and downloadable.

3. Make 15 free printable HERE. Thanks to Fun Games 4 Learning. She has lots of games too.
Fifteen Math Board Game
4. Parking Lot Games (see the link to Happy Brown House’s Blog. She has lots of cute ideas HERE. Or another link I used is at Mathwire.  or HERE for a Domino Parking Lot Game.Roll the dice and add up the dots. Drive your car into the parking lot with that answer. First person to fill up their Parking Lot is the winner!
     
5. Addition Games from Blogs and  Pinterest (go crazy here!) Or lots of great games Kids Count 1234.

6. Addition Bingo- You can make a class set or a center set of 5 boards. Check out these links at Donna Young.org to make them as hard or as easy as you want. Or purchase a set at a Teacher’s Supply.

7. Head Full of Numbers- roll 3 dice. Third dice is a plus or minus or multiply sign so just play with the plus sign first of the year. Set the sand timer and have the score pad ready to record the number of unique equations each player makes using the numbers rolled.
 
8. Doubles Plus 1HERE or Fish Plus 1 or Fish Plus 2. This is a good game to get kids to be able to add 1 and 2 in their heads. Instead of making a pair of the SAME number, they make a pair by 2 numbers that are only 1 apart (7 and 8, 2 and 3 etc.) or if going for Fish Plus 2  it would be 8 and 10, 2 and 4 etc. Use number cards up to 12 or 20, or decks without the face cards.
    Double Plus One
9. Sum Swamp. This is THE MOST POPULAR game in my classroom, bar none. Kids love it. I actually have purchased 2 of them it is always played all year. It is $20 bucks on Amazon. Money well spent.
Sum Swamp Addition and Subtraction Game
10. Flash Card Partners- Kids love doing this as partners. I flash you a card and you add it up. Then you flash me a card and I add it up. Easy. Just start easier cards at the first of the year, harder cards or subtraction later in the year. Multiplication for high kids.

11. Math Fact Concentration or Flip 10 above. Put number cards out like a concentration game. Decide if you are adding math facts of 10s or 9s or whatever. Then take turns picking 2 cards that will make 10. Then it’s the next guy’s turn. 2-4 can play this game. Find tiny sets of number cards and copy on pastel card stock. I have about 10 of these games made up in baggies. Or use UNO cards sets from Target.

12. Addition Facts Jenga.  I have a Jenga game in a baggie the kids use for this. The directions and print outs are free and here at Teachers Pay Teachers.

13. Give me 5 or Give me 6. Oceans of First Grade Fun has a game you could vary to get kids to memorize their 5s and 6s math facts. You could change a few numbers and make it work for learning 7s, 8s and 9s too.
Give Me Five~ Math Printable Game

The other thing I always do is A.D.D. Math (Arithmetic Developed Daily) in the next grade up.   When I taught regular ed I would do the current year and then halfway through the next grade up year’s book. It has a word problem a day and we would do 2 days worth in about 12 minutes. This takes up the first 10 minutes of my morning. Check it out HERE. Then they silent read so I have a chance to reteach some of the kids judging from corrected previous work, and help others who are stuck on something, 1 on 1. I really love ADD Math.

I remember when my own son was struggling with 5th grade math. His teacher laughed when I asked her if she ever remediates his lack of understanding. She said “Oh no, I am doing a pre-algebra group for my high kids, I don’t have time to remediate”.  I understood that my son would never get help from her and hired a twice a week, $30.00 per hour tutor for him that afternoon.  He struggled in math for years after that and had to always have summer school.

I think that teacher did not understand best practices and just simple good teaching.  You should NEVER leave your low ability kids hung out to dry just to address your high kids OR VICE VERSA.  So doing math centers is at the very least engaging your higher level kids while you have time to work with the low kids.  But I think I have found a good balance that doesn’t make me want to pull my hair out, either. I will share subtraction in September so check back.

What are YOUR Birthday Gift Ideas for Students?

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.

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 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).

product image
Get your Happy Birthday crowns HERE at Amazon.

Lastly, they get to choose a sucker and 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.
12 Jumbo Swirl Candy Lollipops   
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 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!