My Writing Workshop Chart

I found some cute pointers for half off today at the teacher’s store.
I like to let the kids use pointers for “read and write the room” activity when they are at centers. I have a box with 4 clipboards in it with A to Z lined writing papers clipped on. The kids LOVE to do this writing activity. Maybe because when they are done with all 26 words they can go get a sticker. It seems to be very motivating. 🙂
Another fun motivator is my writing workshop bulletin board. My kids move their own little icon with their name on it (and velcro on the back) up and down the board as they go through the writing process. 
The whole thing is surrounded by a “roadway” for their “animal cars” to move on. I got the roadway and the animal cars just from 2 different borders I cut up and put velcro on the back. The topics are all from 1 original poster $1.99 from the teachers supply store.
They go through brainstorm, prewrite (usually one of those we do on the board together) sloppy copy, teacher editing….the whole works…..
Then after a final copy and illustration, they can sign up to share in the Author’s Chair.
We did some writing about summer….an acrostic poem….
I think it is also motivating to have creative papers for them to print on and then decorate. Here they did summer beach scenes using stickers.
Here is their own versions of The Little Red Hen…..some of them were so funny!
We also do non-fiction writing….here we were learning about famous presidents for Presidents Day.  They liked learning about Lincoln and Washington. And notice the cute paper? I think it helps motivate them to finish the writing so they can color the pictures.
My oldest granddaughter just graduated from an excellent preschool where writing skills begin. She is barely 4 and writes her own name perfectly. She’s got a good teacher who helped her learn her ABCs and she’s actually reading 3 letter words now. Here she is getting cold feet just before going up to get her “graduation certificate”. My daughter had to “talk her down”. 😀



It is rewarding to me to be that good teacher in a child’s life.  And to get to daily celebrate all of their learning. I hope writing is as big a part of your classroom as it is mine. Especially in this age of texting, kids need to learn how to write the “right way”.  We write at least 45 minutes uninterupted every single day. I rate it tops on my list of skills to teach. 



Lollypop Tree

I loved this idea from a fellow  blogger Jill Dubien.



Classroom Lollypop Tree.



If you’d like to make one too just click HERE for Lollypop Tree tutorial.

I got a cute ceramic pot from Hobby Lobby for $2.00! Such a deal!



Then a big bag of Dum-Dum suckers, and a styrofoam ball to fit my pot…



The big bag of suckers was $6.50 but this many (250) treats will last me for quite a while! I poked holes in the ball in rows lined up all along the ball. It was hard to do with the sucker sticks…I had much better luck with a thin, phillips screwdriver.  I poked a bunch of holes while I was watching “The Lincoln Lawyer” with Matthew McConaughey. Oh may gosh that movie is GOOD! And MM is quite hunky as well.





The styrofoam balls are kinda pricey. I didn’t want to spend $4.50. So get a coupon for Hobby Lobby or Joannes before you go to get 40% off. I happen to have one I’ve used in my space and planets unit…so it was nice that I didn’t have to spend more.

Oops! I see a hole in my Lollypop Tree…better go fix that!

Then I added the pops a few rows at a time….then added more holes….more pops…repeat….repeat…. It was kinda boring. So get a nice DVD while you are working and it makes it a lot more bearable! 😀
But look how it turned out!  My kiddos are gonna love “winning” a pop for good behavior. Oh ya!
 

Wise Old OWL DAY!

For the first day back in school I’m going to teach the kids all about barn owls. I think it will make a cute bulletin board with the title “Whooooo is in Our Class This Year?  Then I’m going to get the kids to write about themselves to introduce things they like and do to the class. But we can learn something about OWLS in the process. Maybe make a little OWL fact book!

Owl paper bag puppet….

                      

I found so many cute ideas for art projects too. I have a ton of pine cones in my front yard since I have 2 pine trees. We could do pinecone owls like the ones above from Crafts by Amanda.   Or paper bag owls, but both of these looked kind of easy too.

These cute owl crispie treats are from Jill at Meet the Dubiens.  Love them! We could do the same thing using cookie shapes frosted with chocolate. Much easier. 

http://old.dentonisd.org/pecancreek/lattaya/owls.htm

Tear art Owls

 

I love this art project. I love the moon above although I don’t love the animal stripe prints on the moon.  This would be a good project to do after reading Owl Moon.

This Owl Cupcake is taken from Wilton…I’d use a candy corn for the beak



This owl cookie is from Mrs. Attaya’s First Grade website. I still like the candy corn beak better.


Mrs. Attaya’s website had a good idea for using lima bean “owls” for counters to make individual word problems. They had scenes of a tree and a moon and the kids put the owls on the tree and the moon and then wrote word problems. My students could draw the tree and moon and do the same using maybe some fingerprint owls.  Here is a picture of her darling counters. 


From That Artist Woman



I really loved this owl from That Artist Woman the very best.  I am going to try a variation on this. I bought feathers from Michaels in earth tones and I’ve been collecting twigs since we’ve been having tons of windstorms here in Utah.  I like the idea of 3D.  So I’m going to use the egg carton eyes from the paper bag puppet owl and do some white on the inside, black on the outside and wiggly eyes inside.  I think it will add dimension and depth.

So I’m going to use a compilation of all these great projects I found on the web. For the body parts of the owl I think we will use tear art. It always turns out so unique and individual and I think that first day back it will be a good ice breaker art project to get to know everybody in the class too!

This project is from Deep Space Sparkle. Awesome!

                                            
But then I found this wonderful 2nd grade directed drawing project from Deep Space Sparkle. The link to her owl directed drawing blog is HERE.  Maybe instead we will paint the owl using these earth tones. Then add the feathers, the twig and the pop out egg carton eyes.  I’ll have to make a model.  I like the big white moon and stars.  We could add some glitter glue in silver and gold for the stars. That would look cool. 

Owl Coloring Page 5
Owl Writing Paper

I found a cute link to some Owl writing paper. This could be a cute cover and just use lined newsprint for the inside pages or else draw lines on this page and copy it and then do an unlined copy for the cover and lined copies for the inside front and back. Kids can write OWL facts they find in the books we will be reading.  This one makes a really dark, clear blackline too. I love it!  Kids can make up their own book titles.  This cold also be a great creative writing story using an owl as a main character.

And here is what we came up with! Some cute OWLS I must say!  
They all look so different too! 

So I’m about ready for my first day. I have my twigs and feathers, my blacklines and I’ll purchase some cookie dough in the freezer section for our owl cookies. I think the kids will love our first day of school.
And I wonder WHOOOOOOOO will be in my class?  😀 I hope I get a WISE bunch!

Things I bought for Back to School

I’ve had a steady drop off of brown boxes from Mr. Postman.  I’ve been naughty and have been online shopping WAY TOO MUCH for back to school.  I will show you what fun things I bought.

Pattern Block Stickers are such a fun activity to do. Kids love making designs out of them using the yellow hexagon for the middle on black construction paper 10 inch squares. They turn out so beautiful too! They are $9.99 at most of the online teacher sites. You can find them in the math section. They last for about 4 years and I’ve gotten at least  5 years worth of class sets out of one $9.99 pack. The “stick” runs out before the stickers do!

                         
Then I wanted to add to my health unit on germs and handwashing. I heard from another blogger about this “germ powder” that you can buy that shows “dirty hands” under a black light. I am going to use this to show kids how hard it is to keep hands clean and germ free.

  

The website for a kids lesson plan for the grade of your choice from 1st through 6th grade is at the Glow Germ website HERE. I have some cute literature to go along with it too; Germs Make Me Sick is a great one I purchased a few years ago and the kids love it. 

Another fun resource is a Utube and a Red Cross demonstration by Scrubby Bear. You’ll have to google it to see if the Red Cross does it in your town. And a cute UTUBE link on handwashing I found is above. It is pretty cute too.

Another thing I bought was Giant PIXIE STIX from Costco for $13.00 a package.  I use these for birthday gifts. I just attach a giant cardstock round balloon to the top that says Happy Birthday on it.  They look really colorful in a giant green vase on top of my filing cabinets. Kids can’t wait to get theirs.

I put the “balloons” in a large vase like this.
Pixy Stix  Giant Variety  50 ct
The Pixie Stix are about 2 1/2 feet long so it’s a NICE Student Birthday Gift!

Balloon Coloring PageThe link to the Costco Giant Pixie Stix is HERE.

  They look kind of like these balloons here on top. The “string” to the balloon is the giant Pixie Stix.  I found a blackline master for a balloon at  Twisty Noodle HERE.  Just blow it up to 81/2 x 11 and add text ” Happy Birthday” to the inside and then copy 25 or so on many different colors of cardstock. Then cut them out, staple them to a Pixie Stix, and add some colorful curling ribbon to the “balloon lip”. They turn out soooooo colorful and cute!

4th of July Cupcakes and pool party!

Today Grandpa opens his pool. We all go up for a BBQ and we celebrate 4th of July too!  I think I’ll bring some cool fireworks so Tyler our resident pyro can have some fun.  AND some fun 4th of July cupcakes to share with all the relatives!
                                        

My son and his wife and 1 year old boatin’ in the pool…
My granddaughters swinging in the hammock…so sweet!

 I looked online and found lots of cute decorated cupcakes with the patriotic red, white and blue theme going.  I really wanted to find some I could use with blueberries and strawberries because I bought a HUGE package at Costco and I need to use them up! I don’t know why I bought tons of this stuff!
                                      

So on Diana’s Desserts website I found a simple 4th of July cupcake decorated with marshmallow whip and real cream that sounded great, and it uses the 2 fruits.  It looked very cute too so I decided to copy. Thanks Diana! Her website link is HERE.

They turned out really yummy.  I used cream cheese and marshmallow whip and cool whip because I thought the real whip cream would melt in the heat.  They were marvelicious!  Mmmmm…..I’m munchin’ on one of those babies right now! 
                              

This is my front entry table…I put out my 4th of July decs!

Another cute decorating idea was from Cupcake Heaven’s ideas at Hoosier Homemade. Her link is HERE.
I liked the red licorice striped cupcakes with the little candy blue balls.  I have some peel apart red licorice so I will try that one too. And the red, white and blue candy sprinkles? You can never have too many sprinkles!  And maybe I’ve got some flags too….so here’s what mine look like! 



My finished chocolate cupcakes! Yummo!

 So to my chocolate boxed cake mix… I always add about a 1/2 cup of sour cream and a small chocolate pudding mix.  It makes the batter a lot thicker looking….but the cake is then a lot richer TASTING!!

We had to stop and get a famous Raspberry SHAKE! Yummy! And look, I’m wearing red white and blue!
Such a patriotic lady, right?

Here we are riding quads at Bear Lake on the 3 day weekend…

The water is so blue there….it is really a beautiful place!

My icing I made with Marshmallow Creme (fluff stuff) about a cup or so, and cream cheese (about a half of a large block) and about a cup of Cool Whip. I just mess with it till it looks and tastes the consistency I want. And I gave it a little 4 drops of lime juice for a kick.  It is sooooo delicious!  You can also use it as a fruit dip. It’s to die for. 

I found some little flags and stuck them on toothpicks



These 3 ingredients make THE BEST ICING EVER!  (or fruit dip)



So…….Happy 4th of July everybody!  And God Bless the U.S.A.

Bear Tracks – a fun unit to start the year!

I LOVE bears. I think it would be fun to do a little research project on Bears to kick off the year. Kids love learning about animals and I think Grizzly, Brown, Panda, and Polar Bears are all very interesting topics for kids to research. And there are so many neat books out there to start us off. I have so many bear books that I filled a magazine box up with them; everything from brown bears, grizzly bears to polar bears and just fun bear stories. We will start by doing a little list of facts on the bear of our choice. Then we will find out where he lives and what he eats. Little mini reports are always interesting for kids to write.

SCIENCE
I have a fun activity I purchased last year. It is a pawprint paper mache set of molds of many furry animals of the forest. Bear paw is one of the prints we will make. The kids will love it. Above is also an animal tracks picture matching to cards game. It looks like a lot of fun.

I found a fun interactive website the students can go to and see lots of different animal tracks. The link for the Bear Tracker website is HERE.  The author shows many different diagrams of animal tracks from forests, desserts, you name it! Just have kids click on the animal of their choice for some interesting facts.

                                  ART
A cute art project for the grizzly bear can be found at Art Projects for Kids. It is a tutorial on how to draw a grizzly bear. It looks pretty easy too. This website is THE BEST so go check it out!  I know my students will do a great job on it.  Here’s a picture from her cool website!

 Everyday Teaching has this hinged bear 
 
Link to the Bear art is HERE.

MATH

 This Panda Math book I bought has subtraction word problems written into the text on the reading page.  It is a fun “braniac” activity for the kids in my gifted class to try to figure out the story problems. 

You could also use the counting colored bear counters to do addition and subtraction problems in the classroom to go along with the bears you are studying.

The students could also make up their own subtraction word problems using  bear rubber stamps I have. They could call the bears grizzly, panda or polar bear or just the color of bear they want to use. I’ve also got strips of clip art bears they could color, cut out and past onto paper to make their word problems.

A link to a set I bought for less that $8.00 is HERE on Ebay.

Have fun with YOUR bear unit!

Graphing

I really like my 5 Favorites Weekly Graph. I think it has helped the kids learn the ins and outs of reading a graph or a table really well.

 We use all of the graphing vocabulary (greater than, less than, equal, 3 more than, 2 less than, greatest, least, same etc.) The manipulating of the words to describe the graph has made ALL THE DIFFERENCE in their ability to talk about graphs, in my opinion. That is the piece that is missing when we study graphs and tables and looking at data.  They don’t know what table, survey, pie chart, bar graph, and tally marks mean, UNTIL you do lots of activities with them and TALK about them.

One thing that helped me was putting up a graphing pocket chart in my room with the Weekly Graph listed on top and a bulletin board decorated nearby that listed the question of the week.  I then put together a binder of about 20 cute scrapbook paper ideas typed out on the different papers; what is your favorite ______. I knew I wouldn’t have time during the year so I worked on it in the summer.

  I looked up a great website called Little Giraffes. She is a Kindergarten teacher who I think has retired since, but she had done a graph a day. I think that is insane because I personally could never keep that up. But she inspired me. So I took on graph a week and I must confess that we never got to it every single week. But maybe 3 times out of the month (or like in December only one time) but we did revisit graphing enough to get it down.

I found recently a great blog where the teacher listed graphs ideas for all year and lots of integration of subjects. It would be a great place to start to form your own graph of the week binder.  Mind consists of page protectors and inside I place the page of scrapbook paper with, for example, Halloween paper with “What is your favorite Halloween Candy?” Typed on it.  A list of tons of stuff to graph can be found at this Link to Forsythe County Schools website.  Another link I found that has graph a day topics is HERE at Kinderpond.

Then inside the page protector I also have the 5 choices. This year I cut off wrappers of Halloween candy like a Skittles wrapper, a Snickers bar wrapper, etc. Then I place those 5 things (or 5 things listed on red apple cut outs) which I will use for the graphing pocket chart.

Here are some pictures of my Weekly Graph.  And here is a fantastic blog that gives a gazillion graphing ideas over the course of a year of planning  HERE.  Another thing that helps kids is actually collecting data from a survey. It is really and truly easy and the kids love going around collecting tally marks on kid’s favorites in the class. A post I did a while back on how I did class surveys and bar graphs is Surveys and Graphs blogpost HERE. I hope you can do a weekly graph too! It is fun.

Chore Charts for Kids

                                                

Sutton Grace: chore chart: I found  a link to this chore chart for kids. I liked the idea of chore charts for my own kids. They had charts for everything from how to clean a toilet to folding laudry and setting the table.  And summer is a GREAT time to get kids into a routine to help get the house cleaned through and through.  And hey…you’ve got a little bit of built in slave labor! 😀  The Free Printables website has a lot more HERE.

                                            

My daughter had a house cleaning business when she was at BYU. People would ask her how she learned to clean so well. She told everybody (and I’m just relaying the story) that her mom taught her with little charts taped to the insides of cabinets in the bathroom. (How to clean the bathroom. Step 1…) So there your are. My success at chore charts is right there for all to see and admire 😀 I think chore charts make working a lot more fun for kids….and they teach responsibility and pride in a job well done too! It’s a win-win situation with a chore chart! mmmmhmmm….

                                                       

Finding Ways to Differentiate in Math

 I’ve found that a cool way to differentiate in all subjects is to give open ended assignments or ones where they do a project. Those who are at a higher level will most often want to do a little more, add creative embellishments to it, or else go deeper into a subject.  Those with less ability will write less, do smaller projects, and go into a little less depth. These are natural diffentiating assignments. I will give examples of what I mean.

You can buy this math menu at Teachersparadise.com a great center for money adding that is naturally very differentiated…high kids will choose challenging amounts….low kids will add up easy combinations…

 I give lots of choices  in my classroom. They get their choice of from several  options depending on if it is spelling menu of 21 options to do at night, 6 reading centers to choose from all week, writing prompts, book reports, or math games.  So they always have some sort of choice, and there is always a harder and an easier option. That is the key to differentiate without having to make 3 separate lessons for everything you do.  Game choice is easy. If you teach a new game a week in math that is a good start. By the end of a unit they have learned 2 or 3 games on that topic. And they can choose which one to play. I keep the adding and subtracting games out all year and just add to the pile using gallon baggies layered easy (in front) to hard (in back).

And don’t forget about your classroom computers as differentiation tools. They are a cool center for kids to use. There are many online and cd games kids can play in math.

You can get this book of Math projects and games at Scholastic

These handpanited lima bean counters idea is from Little Giraffes.com a fabulous website for ideas!!!

Now a few years back when I was getting my gifted and talented endorsement to be able to teach gifted kids, I met up with a few teachers who all wanted to learn how to better differentiate math. I think we came up with a really good and easy way to do it.  We take a strand of math such as measurement. We do a short, quick and dirty 12 question assessment sheet and score them and then place them in 3 groups; high medium and low ability. Then for that particular unit they are taught differently, but these groups are never set in stone and are always fluid.

Then we teach the regular lesson to everyone. Those who were in The high group do the regular seatwork assignment and I meet with them first, in a small group, to give them either a more challenging optional assignment or some challenge games to do with partners or in groups. I meet with this group once a week after the regular math directed lesson. And hopefully the math challenge assignments and games will last the week in interest level. Very occasionally I gave them a higher grade level “packet”.  This was not the norm though, but sometimes I stooped to a packet.

The medium group does the regular math seatwork after lessons and then goes to math centers. All the math centers can have differentiation in them built right in. Some medium kids will learn the games from the high kids and play their games too. An example of centers in measurement might be rulers and a tote tray full of measure worms, and some paper with 1 to 12 listed for answers. Kids could measure in centimeters and inches or choose one or the other.  Another center could be using tape measures to measure each others elbows to fingers, head circumference, feet and body length. The cut outs could be gingerbread men they write the answers on the body part they measured.

The  low group I meet with daily right after the regular lesson and kids have started independent seatwork. They meet at a table with me in groups of 3. As soon as we see they are doing it well on their own they go back to do work independently. Then we have a little time to call a few of the medium kids a day to work and reteach if necessary to be sure each is “getting it”. 

This way you are covering your low kids on a math topic every day, your medium as you can manage meets, and your high you are challenging even if it is only once a week in a meet and with the extra games, problem solvings, or more challenging seatwork. You’ve met with all 3 groups independently over the course of a week or two.  The challenge is being prepared for those high kids with an extra activity once a week. That takes more organization on the teacher’s part. But it is highly doable. Sometimes it would be a problem solving from a brain teaser book. Sometimes things like Sodoku, magic squares, a game from the math series I quickly teach that is too high for the mainstream class or a few word problem ideas for them to write and share with the class. Sometimes it would be a file folder game brand new to the class, or I used cards, dominos and dice a lot.

I have several of these fraction circles I’ve purchased for centers.  They are fun and easy!

Sometimes I would just peruse the monthly teacher IDEA books like the one to the left. They would have art projects and cute writing paper and I’d come up with a math prompt or word problem and cute art and writing to go with it.  That helped me to really flesh out my strands of math too. And the kids love to mesh art and math. And it would take multiple days to finish. This June book has frogs, turtles, whales and goldfish pages. The kids could do a “Whale of a Word Problem” or a “Goldfish cracker subtraction set of 4 problems” they write themselves, maybe even double digit. I always had the kids put a yellow sticky paper over the answers and we would pick a few a week to read the problems to each other aloud and do them on our individual white boards. The first 3 kids with the correct answers got a gummy bear. And you can have some “authentic assessment” in seeing who can’t do word problems, am I right?

Graphing mats to use with all kinds of manipulatives is a great cooperative learning center

Every other Friday I give tests and then  finishers have math games and centers when they are done, so even some of your low kids will get to go have free choice if they didn’t have it during the week.  That is the goal anyway.  Then a few weeks later when you change math topics….BE SURE…to give a new pretest to see who is high medium and low on this strand or topic. (Don’t lock kids into the same 3 groups all year) And it begins again.

A great website for math is called FUNBRAIN. The link is http://www.funbrain.com/numbers.html.
I struggle with preparation most weeks. So in a pinch I’ll have my high kids work together on computer games in pairs on my classroom computers.  Some weeks I’m more prepared with cool games and activities and writing prompts for math or math journal problem solvings and it’s all smooth sailing. Some weeks I feel like I’m dragging the whole class along, you know how it is.  I’ll post more tomorrow on some of my games.

Are you Ready to implement the Common Core?

Jenn at Finally in First posed this question and it made me think. So I am adding it to my blog too. Are you ready to implement the common core in your state? We went through our new Envisions Math this year and alligned it to the core and saw how many changes it made. It seems to me that it kind of watered down first grade.  They took out money and it is one of the most challenging things for kids to learn. They are not going to get it in just one year. I told my whole team that I would recommend they still introduce money and the value of all the coins. It will be tough for those 2nd grade teachers to get those kids to memorize the coins and count money with enough skill to do word problems. EEK! I think that part should have been left in 1st.

Will a national common core help us to be more competitive in the world of the future?

                                                                

The Common Core mathematics standards succeed in being both mathematically coherent and grade level appropriate. Overall, they are the best standards that I have seen in the past twenty years. If we can design a professional development program of the same caliber to go with these standards, then our nation will be making a substantial first step towards educational excellence in mathematics.
– Dr. Hung-Hsi Wu, Professor of Mathematics, University of California at Berkeley

I liked this quote.  I think there are many websites out there that will help us implement the core. I have found so many resources in teacher blogs and stuff on youtube. I think it is actually the professional development of the future. A cool website that spells the core out nicely I found HERE at Common core maps.

National common core…

                                         

How will we implement the common core?

What do you think about the new common core spreading across the U.S.? Are you happy with it in your state, does it allign with what you’ve always done or is it a drastic change? Is your district adopting it and how many of you are getting district help implementing it?