**Congratulations to our Spelling Bee Reps--Angus and Will!! Sierra will serve as our alternate. These students will participate in the Irving School Annual Spelling Bee for K-2 on Wednesday, April 17th at lunchtime. Twelve of our classmates took part in the bee. It was a great show of interest, effort and courage. All of the students are to be commended for their great sportsmanship and support of others.
**Spring Break begins 3/23-3/31. Class resumes on Monday, April 1st. All students traveling near and far have their travel journals. Other students requested journals for home use. I can't wait to read about their adventures!
**Thanks for your response in getting all permission slips and money in for our field trip to Adler Planetarium. I will send confirmation to the volunteers. Currently, I have way more volunteers than I can take this time. On this trip, we are only allowed a certain number. I will have to make some choices. Don't worry--we still have more trips planned for the May. Thanks so much for your enthusiastic response.
**The Opera for the Young was a SMASH!!! Our students were a superb audience and the singers and performers in the production of "CINDERELLA" were spectacular! Check out our photo with Cinderella!
**There was lots of crazy hair and interesting facial hair observed during Spirit Week! Thanks Keyshaun and Ellie and the rest of the Student Council gang for a really fun experience! Don't forget if you are interested in speaking about your career to small groups of students--fill out the online sheet located on the Irving School Website. Parent Career Day is April 10th.
**Everyone smiled brightly for their individual picture on Spring Picture Day. A test pic will be sent home sometime in April with instructions for purchase.
**Sign up for the ACADEMIC FAIR and EGG DROP continues!!! I have a link to the online sign up form. Just click on the "click here for assignments" underneath my name and you will see it on the homework page. The class is getting really excited about potential projects!!!
**You can now begin bringing in your GIANT BOXES, medium and small boxes, paper towel and toilet paper tubes/wrapping paper tubes, cup tops, empty containers and any other COOL things you have been saving for our Space Station projects. YES--bring them in! Our space station prep, design, construction and detailing will be the week of April 15th-19th. We may need some hot glue volunteers during the detailing process. Stay tuned!
**We will have a new schoolyard/playground!! The school board voted unanimously on the project on Tuesday night. We will have a new turf soccer field, playground with totally cool equipment and a new parking lot. Demolition/construction will begin when school is out for the summer. This is a culmination of 8 years of planning, fund raising and raising awareness of safety about our current playground. It is a project that is very dear to my heart and I am so thrilled to see it come to fruition!
**Please have a safe and restful spring break! It is a homework holiday but....you can still read your Busy Reader, work on your project idea/vehicle idea for the Academic Fair/Egg Drop Contest, write and illustrate in your Travel Journal, log onto LEXIA or READING EGGS, play some of your homework games and Word Play, log onto Spelling City to review your word lists, get outside and exercise, try some yoga poses, observe nature and spend some quality time with family and friends.
This week:
It was all about the cold weather and students wondering how it could be spring! We still have our snow hills!! Students continued to wear their snow pants, boots and winter gear but did enjoy playing outside in the sunshine. Lots of COLD shadows observed! Our tubers are beginning to sprout. The students examined a piece of white potato and purple potato under the microscope. They made note of the similarities and differences in each specimen. Our Station Day activities included building pattern block 2-3 dimensional animals and counting the number of blocks used, making our frames for our side silhouettes and revisiting symmetry with our "egg symmetry" project.
Reading/Social Studies: We took a break from our normal Treasures Reading series. We will begin Unit 8 Plants after spring break. The students reviewed all their sight words thus far. They played word scramble, "fixed" wacky sentences, and created sentences containing nouns, verbs and adjectives. Game alert--Game alert!! The students played a variety of games in small groups to reinforce learned skills. "Puppy Phonics," (consonant blends) "Fall Fun Phonics," (blending sounds) "Build a Word," "Deep Sea Dive," (ending sounds) "Sight Word Match," "Pony Phonics," (vowel hunt) "Word Family Mats," "Spot-a-Word," "Very Silly Sentences," (reading and grammar) "Cosmic Critters," (consonant blends/digraphs) "Python Path," (word endings) were some of their favorites! Small student groups worked on 2 stories by the author Arnold Lobel. One group of students worked on the book, "Frog and Toad All Year Long." Their objective was to identify the author's purpose, study synonyms and work on retelling and story elements. Awesome reading aloud and discussion. Great participation! The other group worked on the story, "Mouse Tales." I read the story aloud and students concentrated on listening for key details, orally sequencing events in the story and working on story elements. All student groups then used a combination of drawing, dictating and writing to narrate a single event or link events in order and react to what happened. Very cool!! It was a great way to spend the week. Using decoding skills, discussing a story and thinking about details and question words was awesome. We continued on with our Haggerty blue book exercises concentrating on isolating vowels, blending, segmenting, adding and deleting phonemes in words.
Math: The students continued work on time and money. The also worked in their math process journals. Figuring out what process to use in a story problem is becoming clearer. The students are really listening for key words to help them with illustrating the process and writing the number sentence. Students continue to examine the relationship between 3 numbers--ie-3,4,7. The subject of even and odd numbers came up. The students learned what to look for when seeing if a number if even or odd. Students worked in small groups writing numbers 100-150, playing the "Plus or Minus Game," "Disappearing Train Game," and apps Math Bug Lite and Finding Sums.
Writing: We began talking about what a paragraph is. In its simplest form, a paragraph is a collection of sentences that deals with one topic. The students are going to write a paragraph about shadows when they return from break. We also discussed how their paragraphs could be realistic or fantasy. Formation of lowercase letters letters b,h,f was also reviewed. I am encouraging the students to write their first and last name on their assignments.
Science: The students continued their study of shadows, the sun and space. The students created their shadows as well as observed the shadows of their classmates during our sunny weather at lunch recess. they observed that a bigger shadow will "hide" a smaller one. They reflected in their science journal their ideas on which way a shadow will fall in relation to the light source. Hopefully when we get back from spring break, the students can continue their shadow exploration outside with shadows changing places and shadow clocks experiments. They will also use their shadows as a springboard for paragraph writing. Check out the student display on topic writing using what they know about the sun. Their sun collages are really cool! This week, we began to learn about the inner planets of our solar system. The students used internet as well as book sources. They are learning a song about the order of the planets. These 4 land planets are all very different in their surface, temperature and whether life can be sustained on it. The students questioned why Venus is actually the hottest planet but is farther away from the sun. It's those poison gasses that surround it and hold the heat in. Ask your child what he/she remembers from our discussions and presentation of information. Also check out our Silhouette Project on display in the hallway. Can you guess the shadow that goes with the side portrait?????
Technology: The students continue to use the iPad for small group and individual use. Vocabulary development apps have been the focus this week in reading. The apps Spelling Bug, Tic, Tac, Toe, Rocket Speller, AlphaWriter, Sight Words 100 were used this week. In math, the students continue their work with addition and subtraction processes with the apps, Mathland, Butterfly Math, Find Sums, Top It-Addition and Kids Math. In Science, the students are finding AccuWeather, NASA and Solar System to be very helpful with their questions. Labyrinth continues to challenge students with developing problem solving strategies.
Literature: "Mouse Tales," "Frog and Toad All Year Long," "Mercury," "Venus", "Earth." "Mars," "Hot and Bright," "My Shadow," "Nothing Sticks Like a Shadow," "Little Rockets Special Star," "Bear Shadow," "Chasing Shadows," "Cinderella," "Disney's Cinderella."
Friday, March 22, 2013
Monday, March 18, 2013
UPDATES for 3/11-3/15 2013
**Please review your child's report card that came home on Friday. If you have any questions about the report card or the article on Common Core, please email me. This class has really worked hard!
**The class had an awesome time when Nurse Smith (Will's mom) came to speak to our class on GERMS! Who knew these teeny, tiny, microscopic living things could cause so much trouble in the human body. The students got to see pictures of different types of germs and also where they came from. They got to put the pictures on the presentation board as Nurse Smith talked about the types of germs and what they can do. Nurse Smith had a frank discussion about what we each can do to keep the germ factor down. Washing hands was among the most important !! Each student got a special hospital gown, goggles and gloves. They became GERM FIGHTERS!! They also had so much fun!! Thanks, Nurse Smith and her assistant, Will!!!
**It was a super, SUPER TUBER DAY! Each student brought in their potato. Sierra and Kanohi's potatoes had already seen some bulging "eye" action. More in the "this week" section.
**Route to Reading Rotation 6 will begin Tuesday, March 19th. You will be receiving notification on your child's current skill level.
**Check the Irving Website for digital sign up for the ACADEMIC FAIR and EGG DROP which will be held on Tuesday, April 16th. I will also send home a paper copy on Monday. This is great way for your child to develop a project on something that interests them and see who those budding engineers are! I am also a resource if you need some reinforcement. Just give a shout out! The students have been talking it up. I can't wait to see what the projects will be!!!
**Student Council has decreed--It is SPIRIT WEEK!!! Monday--Smile at Everyone Day! Tuesday--Wacky Hair Day! Wednesday--Facial Hair Day! Thursday--Sports Day! Friday--School Colors Day!! What a week! Thanks Keyshaun and Ellie!! Those Student Council kids are sure busy! They have also are looking for parents to present for their annual Career Day which will be held on April 10th. If you are interested in talking about your job to small groups please fill out the form that was in the Tuesday Packet. I will be sending another paper copy home on Monday.
**Spring Picture Day is Monday, March 18th. We will have our individual picture taken at 10:00 am. Please fill out the form that was in the Tuesday Packet if you are having a picture taken with a sibling.
**Thanks for your support of PACK Week. Lots of great food choices and conversation about healthy eating. Keep up the great work! Take the TASTY DOG Challenge today for dinner. A percentage of each bill will go to Irving School!!
**Opera for the Young's presentation of "Cinderella" is Thursday, March 21st at 9:30 am. in the gym. The students have been learning a group singing part which is really fun. This is an all school event. Parents and siblings are welcome!
**We will have our "Classroom Bee" this week to see who will represent our class in the K-2 Spelling Bee. It will be on Wednesday, March 20th in the afternoon. There are students who have expressed an interest in participating and some who are thinking about participating. No worries!! I will choose the top 2 spellers and 1 alternate to join the K-2 Spelling Bee that will be held Wednesday, April 17th at lunch time.
**I still have number of students who have not turned in their permission slip and money for our field trip to Adler Planetarium. Don't forget to do so this week. Thanks!
**Spring Break begins March 23rd until March 31st. School resumes on Monday, April 1st. I am making quite a few TRAVEL JOURNALS! Let me know if your child needs one.
This week:
It was all about potatoes and shadows! First-the potato. Each student brought in a potato of their choice. They learned that a tuber is the short thick part of the underground stem of the potato plant. You can grow a potato from a potato! The students learned the history of the potato. The plant was first found in South America in the Andes Mountains. We located South America and the Andes Mountains on the map. Students then traced the route of the potato to England and then to Ireland where the Irish soil made it the perfect plant to grow. During the 1800's, the potato became the main food of the Irish people. The students found the "eyes" of the potato. They learned that the potato has calcium and Vitamin C as well as starch and lots of water. The students examined some types of potatoes--purple, russet, yukon, red and the classic idaho potato. They used their own potato for the Super Tuber Activity. They drew or traced it, counted the eyes, measured its length using unifix cubes and recorded how many "bears" it weighed. The longest potato was 7 cubes, the heaviest was 47 bears. We created a graph about how we liked them eaten. French Fried won out! The students enjoyed some stories about Irish folklore--four leaf clovers or shamrocks, pots of gold, rainbows, tiny leprechauns and learned about musical instruments-penny whistle and bagpipes. We chose 2 potatoes to grow. I showed the students how to set up the potato for growing. They can share that with you. It's hydroponics 101! Stay tuned to see what happens. I will save the shadows for the science section. Station Day activities included writing about the sun, creating their frames for their silhouette pictures, making a model of how we get day and night and working on counting frames by 2's and 5's.
Reading/Social Studies: The students completed Unit 7 Weather this week. They read about and discussed how weather affects people and animals. The students related their own personal experiences in different types of weather. The discussion shifted to animals and how they are also affected by the weather. Each day, one of the student was responsible for checking the weather on the iPAD. The students worked on their listening comprehension by listening to the story, "The Bear Snores On." The students revisited the word, "genre" and noted that this story was fantasy and could not really happen. After reading the story, the students took turns using the retelling cards to tell the story in their own words. They noted repetition of certain words, style and pictures. The students reviewed the sight words this, do, what, and. The students enjoyed using the words in a sentence scramble and playing "Hands Up, Hands Down." The students read the decodable story, "Pat and Tip." they used the title and cover to make predictions about story content. Robust Vocabulary for this week included CLEAR, COZY, EXPERIENCE, HIBERNATE, RETREAT. The students used the oral vocabulary cards to talk about Animals in Winter and read the expository/informational text, "Let It Snow." The students used their elkonin boxes to put a block in the square where they heard the target sound. They continued to "Jump Segment" 5-6 phoneme words. They are also working on recognizing consonant blends at the beginning and ending of words, as well as consonant digraphs. Students partnered up to read, "This is What I Can Do." They worked together to fill out a story elements map. Workstations this week included working on leveled readers and completing story maps containing, character, setting, plot, problem/solution, creating a seasonal jobs chart, using Magic Reading 2 to work on segmenting and blending skills, creating a question sentence and answering the sentence, critiquing reading for fluency with a partner using the Reader's Checklist.
Math: The students continue their study of coin and coin values, We reviewed the penny, nickel, dime and quarter. Ms. Dennis brought in her state quarter collection and state park quarter collection. The students used their magnifiers to see what was on the back of each state's quarter. The students also reviewed all plane shapes, pattern block shapes and geometric solids. We continue to work in our math process journals illustrating a story problem and writing its number sentence. The students are beginning to see a relationship between certain numbers. (ie: 5+2=7, 2+5=7, 7-2=5, 7-5=2)
Writing: The students continue to use the prompts from our Treasures Reading series in their sentence writing. They continue to work on lowercase letter formation. This week the emphasis was on lowercase letters y, p, r, n, m.
Science: The students reviewed the 3 things necessary to make a shadow--a source of light, an object to block the light, a surface to see the shadow. The students previously had made their face silhouettes and made their frame for them. The students reflected in their science journals the shadow recipe and a sketch of the design. In experiment 3, the students took turns creating shadows using a variety of different objects--book, small box, plastic wrap, waxed paper, water in a clear cup. They each created a graph answering yes or no to seeing a shadow produced. The students discovered they can produce light shadows and dark shadows or no shadow at all. They also found out that it depends how much light allowed to pass through the object. I provided them with some very scientific words!! Shadows can be opaque--they do not allow light to pass through, so they produce a dark shadow or translucent--some light does pass through but produces a light shadow. The students enjoyed trying out other objects in their choice time. They reflected their thoughts in their science journal. Hopefully next week, we will have a sunny day when we can be outside and strike a shadow pose! We will use this pose as the source of our paragraph project.
Technology: In reading small groups, students used the Magic Reading 2 to focus in on segmenting and blending phonemes and recording their words. The app Rocket Speller and Sight Words were used to enhance spelling and for the students to hear their words. In math this week, students used the app Number Find for work on number patterns, 2 digit numbers and sequencing. The app Doodle Buddy was used by students small groups to illustrate addition and subtraction processes after listening to story problems. The apps Math Bug, Mathland, Butterfly Math and Labyrinth rounded out the week.
Literature: "Day and Night," "I Have a Friend," "I Love My Shadow," "Super Storms," "Zoom, Zoom, Zoom," "First Discovery--The Universe," "The Solar System," "The Sun," "Sun and Moon," "St. Patrick's Day," "The Leprechaun Who Lost His Rainbow," "My Big Busy Space Book," "Discovering the Universe."
**The class had an awesome time when Nurse Smith (Will's mom) came to speak to our class on GERMS! Who knew these teeny, tiny, microscopic living things could cause so much trouble in the human body. The students got to see pictures of different types of germs and also where they came from. They got to put the pictures on the presentation board as Nurse Smith talked about the types of germs and what they can do. Nurse Smith had a frank discussion about what we each can do to keep the germ factor down. Washing hands was among the most important !! Each student got a special hospital gown, goggles and gloves. They became GERM FIGHTERS!! They also had so much fun!! Thanks, Nurse Smith and her assistant, Will!!!
**It was a super, SUPER TUBER DAY! Each student brought in their potato. Sierra and Kanohi's potatoes had already seen some bulging "eye" action. More in the "this week" section.
**Route to Reading Rotation 6 will begin Tuesday, March 19th. You will be receiving notification on your child's current skill level.
**Check the Irving Website for digital sign up for the ACADEMIC FAIR and EGG DROP which will be held on Tuesday, April 16th. I will also send home a paper copy on Monday. This is great way for your child to develop a project on something that interests them and see who those budding engineers are! I am also a resource if you need some reinforcement. Just give a shout out! The students have been talking it up. I can't wait to see what the projects will be!!!
**Student Council has decreed--It is SPIRIT WEEK!!! Monday--Smile at Everyone Day! Tuesday--Wacky Hair Day! Wednesday--Facial Hair Day! Thursday--Sports Day! Friday--School Colors Day!! What a week! Thanks Keyshaun and Ellie!! Those Student Council kids are sure busy! They have also are looking for parents to present for their annual Career Day which will be held on April 10th. If you are interested in talking about your job to small groups please fill out the form that was in the Tuesday Packet. I will be sending another paper copy home on Monday.
**Spring Picture Day is Monday, March 18th. We will have our individual picture taken at 10:00 am. Please fill out the form that was in the Tuesday Packet if you are having a picture taken with a sibling.
**Thanks for your support of PACK Week. Lots of great food choices and conversation about healthy eating. Keep up the great work! Take the TASTY DOG Challenge today for dinner. A percentage of each bill will go to Irving School!!
**Opera for the Young's presentation of "Cinderella" is Thursday, March 21st at 9:30 am. in the gym. The students have been learning a group singing part which is really fun. This is an all school event. Parents and siblings are welcome!
**We will have our "Classroom Bee" this week to see who will represent our class in the K-2 Spelling Bee. It will be on Wednesday, March 20th in the afternoon. There are students who have expressed an interest in participating and some who are thinking about participating. No worries!! I will choose the top 2 spellers and 1 alternate to join the K-2 Spelling Bee that will be held Wednesday, April 17th at lunch time.
**I still have number of students who have not turned in their permission slip and money for our field trip to Adler Planetarium. Don't forget to do so this week. Thanks!
**Spring Break begins March 23rd until March 31st. School resumes on Monday, April 1st. I am making quite a few TRAVEL JOURNALS! Let me know if your child needs one.
This week:
It was all about potatoes and shadows! First-the potato. Each student brought in a potato of their choice. They learned that a tuber is the short thick part of the underground stem of the potato plant. You can grow a potato from a potato! The students learned the history of the potato. The plant was first found in South America in the Andes Mountains. We located South America and the Andes Mountains on the map. Students then traced the route of the potato to England and then to Ireland where the Irish soil made it the perfect plant to grow. During the 1800's, the potato became the main food of the Irish people. The students found the "eyes" of the potato. They learned that the potato has calcium and Vitamin C as well as starch and lots of water. The students examined some types of potatoes--purple, russet, yukon, red and the classic idaho potato. They used their own potato for the Super Tuber Activity. They drew or traced it, counted the eyes, measured its length using unifix cubes and recorded how many "bears" it weighed. The longest potato was 7 cubes, the heaviest was 47 bears. We created a graph about how we liked them eaten. French Fried won out! The students enjoyed some stories about Irish folklore--four leaf clovers or shamrocks, pots of gold, rainbows, tiny leprechauns and learned about musical instruments-penny whistle and bagpipes. We chose 2 potatoes to grow. I showed the students how to set up the potato for growing. They can share that with you. It's hydroponics 101! Stay tuned to see what happens. I will save the shadows for the science section. Station Day activities included writing about the sun, creating their frames for their silhouette pictures, making a model of how we get day and night and working on counting frames by 2's and 5's.
Reading/Social Studies: The students completed Unit 7 Weather this week. They read about and discussed how weather affects people and animals. The students related their own personal experiences in different types of weather. The discussion shifted to animals and how they are also affected by the weather. Each day, one of the student was responsible for checking the weather on the iPAD. The students worked on their listening comprehension by listening to the story, "The Bear Snores On." The students revisited the word, "genre" and noted that this story was fantasy and could not really happen. After reading the story, the students took turns using the retelling cards to tell the story in their own words. They noted repetition of certain words, style and pictures. The students reviewed the sight words this, do, what, and. The students enjoyed using the words in a sentence scramble and playing "Hands Up, Hands Down." The students read the decodable story, "Pat and Tip." they used the title and cover to make predictions about story content. Robust Vocabulary for this week included CLEAR, COZY, EXPERIENCE, HIBERNATE, RETREAT. The students used the oral vocabulary cards to talk about Animals in Winter and read the expository/informational text, "Let It Snow." The students used their elkonin boxes to put a block in the square where they heard the target sound. They continued to "Jump Segment" 5-6 phoneme words. They are also working on recognizing consonant blends at the beginning and ending of words, as well as consonant digraphs. Students partnered up to read, "This is What I Can Do." They worked together to fill out a story elements map. Workstations this week included working on leveled readers and completing story maps containing, character, setting, plot, problem/solution, creating a seasonal jobs chart, using Magic Reading 2 to work on segmenting and blending skills, creating a question sentence and answering the sentence, critiquing reading for fluency with a partner using the Reader's Checklist.
Math: The students continue their study of coin and coin values, We reviewed the penny, nickel, dime and quarter. Ms. Dennis brought in her state quarter collection and state park quarter collection. The students used their magnifiers to see what was on the back of each state's quarter. The students also reviewed all plane shapes, pattern block shapes and geometric solids. We continue to work in our math process journals illustrating a story problem and writing its number sentence. The students are beginning to see a relationship between certain numbers. (ie: 5+2=7, 2+5=7, 7-2=5, 7-5=2)
Writing: The students continue to use the prompts from our Treasures Reading series in their sentence writing. They continue to work on lowercase letter formation. This week the emphasis was on lowercase letters y, p, r, n, m.
Science: The students reviewed the 3 things necessary to make a shadow--a source of light, an object to block the light, a surface to see the shadow. The students previously had made their face silhouettes and made their frame for them. The students reflected in their science journals the shadow recipe and a sketch of the design. In experiment 3, the students took turns creating shadows using a variety of different objects--book, small box, plastic wrap, waxed paper, water in a clear cup. They each created a graph answering yes or no to seeing a shadow produced. The students discovered they can produce light shadows and dark shadows or no shadow at all. They also found out that it depends how much light allowed to pass through the object. I provided them with some very scientific words!! Shadows can be opaque--they do not allow light to pass through, so they produce a dark shadow or translucent--some light does pass through but produces a light shadow. The students enjoyed trying out other objects in their choice time. They reflected their thoughts in their science journal. Hopefully next week, we will have a sunny day when we can be outside and strike a shadow pose! We will use this pose as the source of our paragraph project.
Technology: In reading small groups, students used the Magic Reading 2 to focus in on segmenting and blending phonemes and recording their words. The app Rocket Speller and Sight Words were used to enhance spelling and for the students to hear their words. In math this week, students used the app Number Find for work on number patterns, 2 digit numbers and sequencing. The app Doodle Buddy was used by students small groups to illustrate addition and subtraction processes after listening to story problems. The apps Math Bug, Mathland, Butterfly Math and Labyrinth rounded out the week.
Literature: "Day and Night," "I Have a Friend," "I Love My Shadow," "Super Storms," "Zoom, Zoom, Zoom," "First Discovery--The Universe," "The Solar System," "The Sun," "Sun and Moon," "St. Patrick's Day," "The Leprechaun Who Lost His Rainbow," "My Big Busy Space Book," "Discovering the Universe."
Sunday, March 10, 2013
UPDATES for 3/5-3/8 2013
**Please send a potato of your choice to school on Friday, March 15th for our Super Tuber Activity.
Yes--a potato! Do not cook it!! We will learn its history, examine it closely, perform some graphing exercises, measure it, look for its "eyes," take a look at different varieties and learn more about its connection to Ireland. We will also choose one to grow! I could use 2-3 volunteers to help with this activity. We will do it on Friday morning at 9:30 am. The activity will last about 45-50 minutes. Email me if you can help.
**In our bingo mania on Friday, the student clown clocks and decodable paper story didn't make it into your child's homework folder. Those items will be there on Monday.
**Keep sending in permission slips and money for our field trip to ADLER PLANETARIUM. I would like all money in before spring break to secure our spot. The trip is Thursday, April 11th from 9-1:30 pm. Students and teachers will be riding the bus. Volunteers will carpool. Directions will be provided.
**Report Cards will go home on Friday, March 15th. The report card envelope will also contain some information on Common Core Standard activities we have been doing in the classroom and more information on the new standards that will take effect in 2015-2016.
**This coming week is PACK WEEK! Wear and pack the color of the day in your lunch or snack! Think fruits and vegetables!! We are encouraging students to "Eat the Rainbow." The school lunch program will also be participating. MONDAY--pack and wear GREEN. TUESDAY--pack and wear WHITE. WEDNESDAY--pack and wear YELLOW/ORANGE. THURSDAY--pack and wear PURPLE. FRIDAY--pack and wear RED!
**Will's mom, Nurse Smith, is coming Friday, March 15th at 1:00 pm to do a program on GERMS! Cool!
**Opera for the Young presentation is Thursday, March 21st in the gym at 9:30 am. This year's presentation is "CINDERELLA." It is pretty cool. The students are learning a group part during their music time.
**Spring Pictures will be taken on Monday, March 18th. More info will follow.
**Our PBIS All School BINGO game was so much fun! We played along side our Book Buddies which doubled the fun! Looking for the letters and 1 or 2 digit numbers was great for our hand eye, visual spatial and visual motor coordination. We even had 2 of our own kindergarten winners--Sophie and Amare! Our next Book Buddy get together will be in April.
**Everyone looked that they were enjoying themselves at the Taste of Irving on Friday. I heard the food was great! I made it to see the band which sounded awesome!! Did I see some very smooth Room 110 dancers and parents??? Go Isabella , Angus and Vivian!
**Future Events---The Academic Fair/Egg Drop Contest has been moved to Tuesday, April 16th. The K-2 Spelling Bee is Wednesday, April 17th. More info will follow soon. Great opportunity to participate!
**School is closed for spring break--March 23-31. Classes resume on Monday, April 1st.
**Mr. Packer continues to work with small student groups on follow directions and being a detective and looking for clues and details.
**It is almost time to bring all the GIANT boxes and COOL stuff you have been saving for our space station projects. You can start bringing it in after spring break!!!
This week:
It was all about Shadows and the beginning of our Space cross curricular theme. We will save the shadows part for science down below. We are slowly transforming our classroom into a space workshop. The students are exploring the different items on our Space Table and are encouraged to bring in items of their own. Students have begun bringing in books with great information. The students began with an inquiry discussion about what they know about space. What is in it? How did we the Earth and other planets? What is a universe? Wow--lots of thinking going on! Station Day activities this week included Mr. Clown Clock, tracing our face silhouette and creating a mixed media sun.
Reading/Social Studies: The students continued to work on Unit 7 Weather in our Treasures Reading series. This week, the students built background knowledge around the idea of seasons or certain times of the year and different activities and ways people and animals relate to them. The students listened to the Big Book story, "In the Yard." They made predictions about story content by reading the title and looking at the book cover picture. The students identified the setting and also the BIG idea or MAIN idea of the story. They made connections in the story about their own activities they do in their back yards with their families. The sight words and and what were reviewed. We looked for them in our rhyme and chime and circled them. The students continued to work with target sounds Bb and Ll. The students did an activity where they listened for the targeted sound and told if it was at the beginning or ending of the word. The students worked on reviewing what an adjective does to a word. (it further describes it) They took turns using an adjective to further describe some picture cards. (big bike, juicy watermelon) The students also reviewed the function of verbs. (show action) They came up with a list of verbs to describe what we can do in each season. The students took turns retelling the story. We took a break from our elkonin boxes this week and "jumped" segmented 5-6-7 phoneme words. Lots of movement! The student continue work in the Haggerty Blue Book--this week's focus was on adding, deleting and substituting sounds to create words.
This week, the students worked on a specific Commom Core Standard and produced an assessment sample. Our school district is exploring ways to assess these standards and each grade level has discussed a particular way. Our Kindergarten team is using Dr. Seuss books to assess Standard W.7--Participate in shared research and writing projects. Our assessment prompt was--explore a number of books by a favorite author and express an opinion about them. The students selected 5 books. I read each one aloud. The class created a story board where they collectively told the story elements of each story. The key story elements were reviewed--Title, Setting, Characters, Plot, Details, Main Idea. I recorded their information of each story on the story boards. We defined the word-opinion. (What is your favorite story? Why is it your favorite?) This activity was done over a 4 day period with their assessment on Friday. These assessments will be shared at our district level kindergarten meeting in April. There will be 3 standards and assessments total this year. All students expressed much orally. It was interesting to read their written comments.
Workstations this week included small group literature discussions and read alouds with leveled readers focusing on story elements and question words, using the Reader's Checklist for fluency, word sort with short e word families and cvc sort with short e, activities with consonant blends and digraphs, comparing and contrasting your house in summer and in winter using illustration and writing, use of partner and small group board games and iPad activities with focus on vocabulary development, phonemic awareness and phonics skills and working with finding details in a given story.
Math: The students revisited the color and shapes in their pattern blocks. They also reviewed recognition of geometric solid shapes. They created puzzles at various levels. The students continued the study of coins and their values. They worked on various activities with coins including Penny Grab, Coin Exchange and Mushroom Money to strengthen recognition skills. We continue to work on time by the hour with analog and digital clocks. The idea of counting by increments of 5 on an analog clock is beginning to make more sense. The students continue to work hard in their math process journals. They are listening for key words in the story problem in order to illustrate their work and write the number sentence.
Writing: The students continue to work on refining their uppercase letters and reviewing the lowercase letters we have learned so far. More students are beginning to use adjectives in their sentences. All students continue to refine sentence structure. Did I begin with a capital letter? Did I name and tell? Did I capitalize a proper name? Do I have an ending mark? Did I space between words in a sentence? Did I place my letters properly on a given line? Lots to remember!!
Science: The students began their science unit, "Sunshine, Shadows and the Moon." We used the projector to create various shadows of people and objects. I posted the question--How are these shadows made? Do we need certain elements before we can have a shadow occur? I recorded the ideas the students had on the subject. All students agreed that we needed some kind of light source. One student commented that a body or some kind of object blocked the light. Some students noticed that we needed some kind on area in order to see the shadow. The recipe for a shadow became light source, object to block the light and surface in order to see the shadow. Wow--A shadow is really blocked light! Some students noticed that some shadows were were totally black, while others were gray or a light color. Why is that? Can light pass through an object? Stay tuned for more!!!
Technology: The students continue to use all the apps in reading and math that have been mentioned so far in small, individual and whole group settings. Stay tuned for some new apps related to science next week.
Literature: Dr. Seuss Books--"Cat in the Hat," "Cat in the Hat Comes Back," "One Fish, Two Fish, Red Fish, Blue Fish," "Ten Apples Up on Top," "Fox in Socks,""Telling Time," "The Universe," "Children's Atlas of the Universe," "The Sun," "Shadows."
Yes--a potato! Do not cook it!! We will learn its history, examine it closely, perform some graphing exercises, measure it, look for its "eyes," take a look at different varieties and learn more about its connection to Ireland. We will also choose one to grow! I could use 2-3 volunteers to help with this activity. We will do it on Friday morning at 9:30 am. The activity will last about 45-50 minutes. Email me if you can help.
**In our bingo mania on Friday, the student clown clocks and decodable paper story didn't make it into your child's homework folder. Those items will be there on Monday.
**Keep sending in permission slips and money for our field trip to ADLER PLANETARIUM. I would like all money in before spring break to secure our spot. The trip is Thursday, April 11th from 9-1:30 pm. Students and teachers will be riding the bus. Volunteers will carpool. Directions will be provided.
**Report Cards will go home on Friday, March 15th. The report card envelope will also contain some information on Common Core Standard activities we have been doing in the classroom and more information on the new standards that will take effect in 2015-2016.
**This coming week is PACK WEEK! Wear and pack the color of the day in your lunch or snack! Think fruits and vegetables!! We are encouraging students to "Eat the Rainbow." The school lunch program will also be participating. MONDAY--pack and wear GREEN. TUESDAY--pack and wear WHITE. WEDNESDAY--pack and wear YELLOW/ORANGE. THURSDAY--pack and wear PURPLE. FRIDAY--pack and wear RED!
**Will's mom, Nurse Smith, is coming Friday, March 15th at 1:00 pm to do a program on GERMS! Cool!
**Opera for the Young presentation is Thursday, March 21st in the gym at 9:30 am. This year's presentation is "CINDERELLA." It is pretty cool. The students are learning a group part during their music time.
**Spring Pictures will be taken on Monday, March 18th. More info will follow.
**Our PBIS All School BINGO game was so much fun! We played along side our Book Buddies which doubled the fun! Looking for the letters and 1 or 2 digit numbers was great for our hand eye, visual spatial and visual motor coordination. We even had 2 of our own kindergarten winners--Sophie and Amare! Our next Book Buddy get together will be in April.
**Everyone looked that they were enjoying themselves at the Taste of Irving on Friday. I heard the food was great! I made it to see the band which sounded awesome!! Did I see some very smooth Room 110 dancers and parents??? Go Isabella , Angus and Vivian!
**Future Events---The Academic Fair/Egg Drop Contest has been moved to Tuesday, April 16th. The K-2 Spelling Bee is Wednesday, April 17th. More info will follow soon. Great opportunity to participate!
**School is closed for spring break--March 23-31. Classes resume on Monday, April 1st.
**Mr. Packer continues to work with small student groups on follow directions and being a detective and looking for clues and details.
**It is almost time to bring all the GIANT boxes and COOL stuff you have been saving for our space station projects. You can start bringing it in after spring break!!!
This week:
It was all about Shadows and the beginning of our Space cross curricular theme. We will save the shadows part for science down below. We are slowly transforming our classroom into a space workshop. The students are exploring the different items on our Space Table and are encouraged to bring in items of their own. Students have begun bringing in books with great information. The students began with an inquiry discussion about what they know about space. What is in it? How did we the Earth and other planets? What is a universe? Wow--lots of thinking going on! Station Day activities this week included Mr. Clown Clock, tracing our face silhouette and creating a mixed media sun.
Reading/Social Studies: The students continued to work on Unit 7 Weather in our Treasures Reading series. This week, the students built background knowledge around the idea of seasons or certain times of the year and different activities and ways people and animals relate to them. The students listened to the Big Book story, "In the Yard." They made predictions about story content by reading the title and looking at the book cover picture. The students identified the setting and also the BIG idea or MAIN idea of the story. They made connections in the story about their own activities they do in their back yards with their families. The sight words and and what were reviewed. We looked for them in our rhyme and chime and circled them. The students continued to work with target sounds Bb and Ll. The students did an activity where they listened for the targeted sound and told if it was at the beginning or ending of the word. The students worked on reviewing what an adjective does to a word. (it further describes it) They took turns using an adjective to further describe some picture cards. (big bike, juicy watermelon) The students also reviewed the function of verbs. (show action) They came up with a list of verbs to describe what we can do in each season. The students took turns retelling the story. We took a break from our elkonin boxes this week and "jumped" segmented 5-6-7 phoneme words. Lots of movement! The student continue work in the Haggerty Blue Book--this week's focus was on adding, deleting and substituting sounds to create words.
This week, the students worked on a specific Commom Core Standard and produced an assessment sample. Our school district is exploring ways to assess these standards and each grade level has discussed a particular way. Our Kindergarten team is using Dr. Seuss books to assess Standard W.7--Participate in shared research and writing projects. Our assessment prompt was--explore a number of books by a favorite author and express an opinion about them. The students selected 5 books. I read each one aloud. The class created a story board where they collectively told the story elements of each story. The key story elements were reviewed--Title, Setting, Characters, Plot, Details, Main Idea. I recorded their information of each story on the story boards. We defined the word-opinion. (What is your favorite story? Why is it your favorite?) This activity was done over a 4 day period with their assessment on Friday. These assessments will be shared at our district level kindergarten meeting in April. There will be 3 standards and assessments total this year. All students expressed much orally. It was interesting to read their written comments.
Workstations this week included small group literature discussions and read alouds with leveled readers focusing on story elements and question words, using the Reader's Checklist for fluency, word sort with short e word families and cvc sort with short e, activities with consonant blends and digraphs, comparing and contrasting your house in summer and in winter using illustration and writing, use of partner and small group board games and iPad activities with focus on vocabulary development, phonemic awareness and phonics skills and working with finding details in a given story.
Math: The students revisited the color and shapes in their pattern blocks. They also reviewed recognition of geometric solid shapes. They created puzzles at various levels. The students continued the study of coins and their values. They worked on various activities with coins including Penny Grab, Coin Exchange and Mushroom Money to strengthen recognition skills. We continue to work on time by the hour with analog and digital clocks. The idea of counting by increments of 5 on an analog clock is beginning to make more sense. The students continue to work hard in their math process journals. They are listening for key words in the story problem in order to illustrate their work and write the number sentence.
Writing: The students continue to work on refining their uppercase letters and reviewing the lowercase letters we have learned so far. More students are beginning to use adjectives in their sentences. All students continue to refine sentence structure. Did I begin with a capital letter? Did I name and tell? Did I capitalize a proper name? Do I have an ending mark? Did I space between words in a sentence? Did I place my letters properly on a given line? Lots to remember!!
Science: The students began their science unit, "Sunshine, Shadows and the Moon." We used the projector to create various shadows of people and objects. I posted the question--How are these shadows made? Do we need certain elements before we can have a shadow occur? I recorded the ideas the students had on the subject. All students agreed that we needed some kind of light source. One student commented that a body or some kind of object blocked the light. Some students noticed that we needed some kind on area in order to see the shadow. The recipe for a shadow became light source, object to block the light and surface in order to see the shadow. Wow--A shadow is really blocked light! Some students noticed that some shadows were were totally black, while others were gray or a light color. Why is that? Can light pass through an object? Stay tuned for more!!!
Technology: The students continue to use all the apps in reading and math that have been mentioned so far in small, individual and whole group settings. Stay tuned for some new apps related to science next week.
Literature: Dr. Seuss Books--"Cat in the Hat," "Cat in the Hat Comes Back," "One Fish, Two Fish, Red Fish, Blue Fish," "Ten Apples Up on Top," "Fox in Socks,""Telling Time," "The Universe," "Children's Atlas of the Universe," "The Sun," "Shadows."
Saturday, March 2, 2013
UPDATES for 2/25-3/1 2013
**It was a wild and wacky week full of experiments, team building and teeth!! The students enjoyed the measurable snowfall and celebrated by working together to build a really cool snowman. Kanohi chose the spot out on the blacktop and Isabella brought the details (hat, scarf, nose, buttons.) Students AND teachers worked to create a masterpiece!! Check out our group photo with our snowy friend. The students also enjoyed taking him apart piece by icy piece! What fun and exercise!
**It was all about our teeth!! The students spent an informative 40 minutes with Dr. Natalie Layne (Amare's mom ) and her assistant, Jessica. Dr. Layne read the class a book on why we brush our teeth. She chose a group of students to be human teeth and one student to "brush" them with a giant tooth brush. She also took a piece of rope and a student got to "floss" the human teeth! The students and teachers were mesmerized by Dr. Layne's experiment on tooth decay. The students learned that too much sugar can cause tooth decay and that acid can damage your teeth by making a hole in the enamel (cavity.) Dr. Layne took some foam cups (teeth) and Amare poured chocolate syrup (sugar) on the teeth and Amare then put some nail polish remover (the acid) on the teeth and ........Wow, where did the teeth go????!!! They were eaten away by the acid much like our real teeth would be. Dr Layne gave each student their own teeth cleaning kit. It was a great presentation. The students wrote thank you notes to express their appreciation.
**The FUN FAIR was spectacular! There were great games, prizes and fun. Many students danced for a dessert or two! Our FUN DAY class basket was awesome. There were lots of great silent auction items. At the closing of the Fun Fair was "Irving's Got Talent" show. Wow--some talented teachers! The PIE TERMINATORS were the winners of the Pie in the Face contest! Lots of whipped cream flying around!!
**Thanks to all who attended Dr. Seuss Family Reading Night. I was only able to help set up, but there were many fun stories and activities for all to enjoy.
**NO SCHOOL MONDAY, MARCH 4th in observance of Casimir Pulaski Day.
**Our Book Buddies helped us celebrate the birthday of Dr. Seuss on Friday. The students chose a Dr. Seuss book to read with their book buddy. They completed a variety of activities--word searches, mazes. coloring, written reflections and played Dr. Seuss Trivia. What was Dr. Seuss' real name? Did art or story come first for Dr. Seuss? Of course the celebration would not be complete without popcorn and veggie straws our favorite snacks!
**Keep sending the permission slips and money for our Field Trip to ADLER PLANETARIUM. I would like to have all money and slips in before spring break. Thanks!
**SUPER TUBER ACTIVITY--Please send a potato (any kind, not cooked) with your child on Friday, March 15th. We will learn its history, examine, perform some graphing exercises, measure, look for its "eyes," take a look a different varieties and learn about its connection to Ireland. We will do this from 9:30-10:30 am. I will need 4 volunteers to help out. Email me if you are interested.
**TASTE of IRVING is Friday, March 8th from 6:30-8:30 pm. Come share the love of food and community with our Irving family.
**REPORT CARDS out on Friday, March 15th. Trimester 2 has concluded. Trimester 3 has begun!!!
**Route to Reading Rotation 5 will conclude on March 6th. At that time you receive notification of skill acquisition.
**OPERA for the YOUNG presentation is Thursday, March 21st at 9:30 am. This will be the very first performance of "Cinderella."
**Spring Break begins March 23rd-31st. Classes resume on Monday, April 1st.
**All school PBIS Bingo Game on Friday, March 8th-2:00 pm. We will have an shorter station day.
**Future Events--I have begun talking to the students about some cool opportunities that they can participate in----more information will follow soon----Wednesday, April 10th-ACADEMIC FAIR and EGG DROP CONTEST--Do you have something that you are really interested in? Can you make a project out of it? Can you construct a vehicle that will keep and egg from breaking when dropped out of a third floor window? Think about it.......... also ........All School Spelling Bee--Wednesday, April 17th.
**Spring Pictures will be taken on Monday, March 18th. More info to follow.
**We are getting closer to collection of giant boxes and cool things for our space station projects. Keep saving them! You can bring them in after spring break.
This week:
It was all about the weather! We began tracking weather via the site, Weatherunderground each day as it relates to our Treasures Unit 7. We do have a previous fascination with weather in Room 110! Students are observing "fronts" moving in and the direction that weather patterns move. The students love watching the color changes on the animated radar. They are becoming experts at locating areas of rain, snow, wind speeds and ice. We now know where to locate the moon phases as we begin our study of the moon. The students have also become interested in the chance or percentage of a storm occurring. The students looked at types of storms including tornadoes, thunder/lightening and snow in our area. Perhaps we have some budding meteorologists in our midst! In observance of Casimir Pulaski's birthday, the students googled information about his childhood in Poland to his eventual travel to the United States to assist George Washington during the Revolutionary War.
Reading/Social Studies: The students began Unit 7 Weather in our Treasures Reading series. We began pondering the simple question, "What is the weather like today?" They accessed prior knowledge about what they understood about weather, not only in their own area but also in other parts of the United States. The students listened to the expository text, "The Rainy Day." They thought about what the main idea could be. They made connections about rain in their own daily lives. The sight words this and do were introduced. The target sound for this week is short Ee. The students used pictures as well as words to to create a Short Ee web. The students continue to work on recognizing adjectives in their daily sentence work and using them in their writing. Together the students created a word web of words that describe a rainy day. Working with adjectives, they came up with word lists to describe themselves, pets, home and the weather. We reread the story a second time and the students created a picture in their mind (visualized) of what it would look like after the rain. The students then reviewed the water cycle (go science!) and facts about rain. They examined 2 parts of a book--the glossary and the index and what they are used for. The students used their elkonin boxes to segment and blend 4-5 phoneme words. The students read aloud from their decodable story, ":Ed Can, Ted Can." They answered comprehension questions about the story and practiced reading aloud with a partner for fluency. Our Robust Vocabulary this week included, BLUSTERY, DRIZZLE, CHILLY, CLOUD and WEATHER. The students listened to the Choctow tale, "How Thunder and Lightening Came To Be." They also had a chance to hear and reflect on 4 poems about weather. The students also listened to another Native American tale from the Pueblo Nation called "The Frog and the Locust." We discussed rain dances and sung in order to bring rain to a very dry area. We located on the map where the Pueblo Native Americans lived and looked at a surface map to see how the land looked. What did the frog so to get rain? (sang) Why didn't his plan work? (It wasn't loud enough) What happened at the end of the story? (The frog and the locust worked together to sing a loud song.) What do you think the story tellers message was? See if your child can recall. The students did some comparing of information across weather related texts. Our workstations this week included leveled reader discussion, read aloud and story element recording, working with word families, adding and deleting phonemes in words,comparing and contrasting 2 seasons via sentences and illustrations and writing and illustrating a weather event.
Math: The students continued to work on coin recognition and values. They worked on money exchange and played "Penny Grab." Students reviewed their tricky teen numbers playing the game, "Purr-fectly Perfect teen Numbers." How fast can you read them? The students worked on a variety of addition and subtraction games. Students worked with partners on the ipad with the math activities introduced thus far. The students also practiced writing 2 and now 3 digit numbers on their dry erase boards. The students continue to work on counting on from a random number and skip counting by 2's, 5's and 10's.
Writing: The students continue to work on lowercase letter formation. We have reviewed letters a, c, e, g, i, j, k, l, o, p, s, t, u, v and w. Students have been encouraged to use adjectives to describe their nouns in sentences they write in their journal. Students continue to refine their sentence structure and reread their sentences (proofing) before coming to journal conference. Next week, we will use our snowman creating adventure in a writing project.
Science: The students had a great time observing the tooth decay experiment done by Dr. Layne. They wanted more!!! The class gathered more information on teeth. We came across another experiment on tooth decay using a raw egg and vineager. The students knew that too much sugar/acid causes teeth to decay. The egg was our tooth and the vineager was the acid. The students thought about what might happen if we placed the egg in a cup of vineager. What do you think? The students felt the shell around the egg. Students commented that it was cold and hard. We placed it in the vineager. Students made predictions about what might happen. It might explode! It might turn black! It will crack! As we put the egg in the vineager, the students noticed many bubbles forming around the egg. We left it over night until the next afternoon. As the students looked at it. they observed that it appeared bigger. The shell was a little yellow There were still bubbles around it. Putting on a glove, I picked it out of the vineager and put it on a tray. One by one the students, donning a plastic bag, touched the egg. Revelation---It felt like a rubber ball, squishy and soft!!! Cool! Students began to discuss what happened. Much like our teeth, too much acid broke down the shell of the egg, like sugar would make a hole in our enamel. The students got the connection!! The next day, they wanted to see what would happen when I cut open the egg. Would it be hard inside or soft? Could we see the yolk or white? As I cut a piece off---the egg burst and out came the the intact yolk and gooey white. It was the highlight of the afternoon!! Try it at home! Next week: What is a shadow? What is the universe?
Technology: The students continue to use all the apps currently introduced in small group, partner and individual sessions during their reading, math, writing, science and choice times.
Literature: "Great Black Heroes--Notable Inventors," "Why Do We Brush Our Teeth?" "Lola Loves Books," "Open Wide," "The Secret Olivia Told Me," "The Missing Tooth Mystery," "Little Rabbits Loose Tooth," "Honey, I Love You," "How's the Weather?" and 22 Dr. Seuss Books with our Book Buddies!!
**It was all about our teeth!! The students spent an informative 40 minutes with Dr. Natalie Layne (Amare's mom ) and her assistant, Jessica. Dr. Layne read the class a book on why we brush our teeth. She chose a group of students to be human teeth and one student to "brush" them with a giant tooth brush. She also took a piece of rope and a student got to "floss" the human teeth! The students and teachers were mesmerized by Dr. Layne's experiment on tooth decay. The students learned that too much sugar can cause tooth decay and that acid can damage your teeth by making a hole in the enamel (cavity.) Dr. Layne took some foam cups (teeth) and Amare poured chocolate syrup (sugar) on the teeth and Amare then put some nail polish remover (the acid) on the teeth and ........Wow, where did the teeth go????!!! They were eaten away by the acid much like our real teeth would be. Dr Layne gave each student their own teeth cleaning kit. It was a great presentation. The students wrote thank you notes to express their appreciation.
**The FUN FAIR was spectacular! There were great games, prizes and fun. Many students danced for a dessert or two! Our FUN DAY class basket was awesome. There were lots of great silent auction items. At the closing of the Fun Fair was "Irving's Got Talent" show. Wow--some talented teachers! The PIE TERMINATORS were the winners of the Pie in the Face contest! Lots of whipped cream flying around!!
**Thanks to all who attended Dr. Seuss Family Reading Night. I was only able to help set up, but there were many fun stories and activities for all to enjoy.
**NO SCHOOL MONDAY, MARCH 4th in observance of Casimir Pulaski Day.
**Our Book Buddies helped us celebrate the birthday of Dr. Seuss on Friday. The students chose a Dr. Seuss book to read with their book buddy. They completed a variety of activities--word searches, mazes. coloring, written reflections and played Dr. Seuss Trivia. What was Dr. Seuss' real name? Did art or story come first for Dr. Seuss? Of course the celebration would not be complete without popcorn and veggie straws our favorite snacks!
**Keep sending the permission slips and money for our Field Trip to ADLER PLANETARIUM. I would like to have all money and slips in before spring break. Thanks!
**SUPER TUBER ACTIVITY--Please send a potato (any kind, not cooked) with your child on Friday, March 15th. We will learn its history, examine, perform some graphing exercises, measure, look for its "eyes," take a look a different varieties and learn about its connection to Ireland. We will do this from 9:30-10:30 am. I will need 4 volunteers to help out. Email me if you are interested.
**TASTE of IRVING is Friday, March 8th from 6:30-8:30 pm. Come share the love of food and community with our Irving family.
**REPORT CARDS out on Friday, March 15th. Trimester 2 has concluded. Trimester 3 has begun!!!
**Route to Reading Rotation 5 will conclude on March 6th. At that time you receive notification of skill acquisition.
**OPERA for the YOUNG presentation is Thursday, March 21st at 9:30 am. This will be the very first performance of "Cinderella."
**Spring Break begins March 23rd-31st. Classes resume on Monday, April 1st.
**All school PBIS Bingo Game on Friday, March 8th-2:00 pm. We will have an shorter station day.
**Future Events--I have begun talking to the students about some cool opportunities that they can participate in----more information will follow soon----Wednesday, April 10th-ACADEMIC FAIR and EGG DROP CONTEST--Do you have something that you are really interested in? Can you make a project out of it? Can you construct a vehicle that will keep and egg from breaking when dropped out of a third floor window? Think about it.......... also ........All School Spelling Bee--Wednesday, April 17th.
**Spring Pictures will be taken on Monday, March 18th. More info to follow.
**We are getting closer to collection of giant boxes and cool things for our space station projects. Keep saving them! You can bring them in after spring break.
This week:
It was all about the weather! We began tracking weather via the site, Weatherunderground each day as it relates to our Treasures Unit 7. We do have a previous fascination with weather in Room 110! Students are observing "fronts" moving in and the direction that weather patterns move. The students love watching the color changes on the animated radar. They are becoming experts at locating areas of rain, snow, wind speeds and ice. We now know where to locate the moon phases as we begin our study of the moon. The students have also become interested in the chance or percentage of a storm occurring. The students looked at types of storms including tornadoes, thunder/lightening and snow in our area. Perhaps we have some budding meteorologists in our midst! In observance of Casimir Pulaski's birthday, the students googled information about his childhood in Poland to his eventual travel to the United States to assist George Washington during the Revolutionary War.
Reading/Social Studies: The students began Unit 7 Weather in our Treasures Reading series. We began pondering the simple question, "What is the weather like today?" They accessed prior knowledge about what they understood about weather, not only in their own area but also in other parts of the United States. The students listened to the expository text, "The Rainy Day." They thought about what the main idea could be. They made connections about rain in their own daily lives. The sight words this and do were introduced. The target sound for this week is short Ee. The students used pictures as well as words to to create a Short Ee web. The students continue to work on recognizing adjectives in their daily sentence work and using them in their writing. Together the students created a word web of words that describe a rainy day. Working with adjectives, they came up with word lists to describe themselves, pets, home and the weather. We reread the story a second time and the students created a picture in their mind (visualized) of what it would look like after the rain. The students then reviewed the water cycle (go science!) and facts about rain. They examined 2 parts of a book--the glossary and the index and what they are used for. The students used their elkonin boxes to segment and blend 4-5 phoneme words. The students read aloud from their decodable story, ":Ed Can, Ted Can." They answered comprehension questions about the story and practiced reading aloud with a partner for fluency. Our Robust Vocabulary this week included, BLUSTERY, DRIZZLE, CHILLY, CLOUD and WEATHER. The students listened to the Choctow tale, "How Thunder and Lightening Came To Be." They also had a chance to hear and reflect on 4 poems about weather. The students also listened to another Native American tale from the Pueblo Nation called "The Frog and the Locust." We discussed rain dances and sung in order to bring rain to a very dry area. We located on the map where the Pueblo Native Americans lived and looked at a surface map to see how the land looked. What did the frog so to get rain? (sang) Why didn't his plan work? (It wasn't loud enough) What happened at the end of the story? (The frog and the locust worked together to sing a loud song.) What do you think the story tellers message was? See if your child can recall. The students did some comparing of information across weather related texts. Our workstations this week included leveled reader discussion, read aloud and story element recording, working with word families, adding and deleting phonemes in words,comparing and contrasting 2 seasons via sentences and illustrations and writing and illustrating a weather event.
Math: The students continued to work on coin recognition and values. They worked on money exchange and played "Penny Grab." Students reviewed their tricky teen numbers playing the game, "Purr-fectly Perfect teen Numbers." How fast can you read them? The students worked on a variety of addition and subtraction games. Students worked with partners on the ipad with the math activities introduced thus far. The students also practiced writing 2 and now 3 digit numbers on their dry erase boards. The students continue to work on counting on from a random number and skip counting by 2's, 5's and 10's.
Writing: The students continue to work on lowercase letter formation. We have reviewed letters a, c, e, g, i, j, k, l, o, p, s, t, u, v and w. Students have been encouraged to use adjectives to describe their nouns in sentences they write in their journal. Students continue to refine their sentence structure and reread their sentences (proofing) before coming to journal conference. Next week, we will use our snowman creating adventure in a writing project.
Science: The students had a great time observing the tooth decay experiment done by Dr. Layne. They wanted more!!! The class gathered more information on teeth. We came across another experiment on tooth decay using a raw egg and vineager. The students knew that too much sugar/acid causes teeth to decay. The egg was our tooth and the vineager was the acid. The students thought about what might happen if we placed the egg in a cup of vineager. What do you think? The students felt the shell around the egg. Students commented that it was cold and hard. We placed it in the vineager. Students made predictions about what might happen. It might explode! It might turn black! It will crack! As we put the egg in the vineager, the students noticed many bubbles forming around the egg. We left it over night until the next afternoon. As the students looked at it. they observed that it appeared bigger. The shell was a little yellow There were still bubbles around it. Putting on a glove, I picked it out of the vineager and put it on a tray. One by one the students, donning a plastic bag, touched the egg. Revelation---It felt like a rubber ball, squishy and soft!!! Cool! Students began to discuss what happened. Much like our teeth, too much acid broke down the shell of the egg, like sugar would make a hole in our enamel. The students got the connection!! The next day, they wanted to see what would happen when I cut open the egg. Would it be hard inside or soft? Could we see the yolk or white? As I cut a piece off---the egg burst and out came the the intact yolk and gooey white. It was the highlight of the afternoon!! Try it at home! Next week: What is a shadow? What is the universe?
Technology: The students continue to use all the apps currently introduced in small group, partner and individual sessions during their reading, math, writing, science and choice times.
Literature: "Great Black Heroes--Notable Inventors," "Why Do We Brush Our Teeth?" "Lola Loves Books," "Open Wide," "The Secret Olivia Told Me," "The Missing Tooth Mystery," "Little Rabbits Loose Tooth," "Honey, I Love You," "How's the Weather?" and 22 Dr. Seuss Books with our Book Buddies!!
Friday, February 22, 2013
UPDATES for 2/11-2/15 and 2/19-2/22 2013
**Let me update you on the past 2 weeks of learning fun for my students as well as myself. I was fortunate to attend the International Learning Disabilities Conference last week. I was able to meet and listen to many professionals speak on the subjects of math, reading, science, technology and behavior. It was very enlightening and motivating. I returned with some great ideas.
**Our Valentine Sharing Party was wonderful! Many samples of "heart felt" feelings of love and friendship were shared among the students. They passed out and read their Valentines, played "Heart to Heart," and ate some treats. Thanks to the great show of parents, siblings and grandparents at our celebration. We were so glad you came!
**Route to Reading Rotation 5 began February 19th. You should have received a letter of notification concerning your child's skill level. Route to Reading Rotation 5 will conclude on March 6th.
**The FUN FAIR is almost here!!!! Come on out and play a game with me on Saturday, February 23rd from 11-3 pm. There will be games, prizes, food, dancing for desserts and a silent auction (a bed time story read by me---lunch with your bf's at the Junction Diner-bid-bid!!! Tickets will be sold after school and on the day of the fair. Special Attraction--What TEAM will get the PIE in the FACE??????!!! Toward the end of the Fun Fair, join Mr. Packer as he serves as MC for Irving's version of "America Has Talent." You may see some familiar faces!! Bring your money to put in the containers of your favorite team. The team with the most money gets the pie the face! It's the battle of the Cutie Pies, Pie Terminators, Who Me's and the 2 Sak P's!!!
**Asher's mom has put the finishing touches on our classroom FUN DAY BASKET. Thanks to all who have donated money or items.
** Kindergarten students participated in a Hearing Screening this past Friday at 9:00 am.
**Congratulations to our new Student Council Reps--Ellie and Keyshaun! Their first meeting is Tuesday, February 26th during the lunch hour.
**Dr. Seuss Family Reading Night is Thursday, February 28th from 6:30-7:30 pm. There is still time to sign up! Let's celebrate the love of reading!
**February is National Dental Month! Amare's mom is coming to give a little program about good dental care of Tuesday, February 26th at 10:00 am.
**It's our first meeting of the new year with our Book Buddies from Ms. Balicki's room. They will join us on Friday, March 1st at 1:30 pm.
**In Friendship Club, Ms. Bell Bey shared with the students ways to be caring and considerate to others. The students discussed the people, animals and things they most care about. We turned our Christmas Tree into the "I Care" Tree.
**Mr. Packer continues to work with small groups of students on his organizing details lesson.
** The new UPDATED list of Station Day Volunteers for the rest of the school is posted. I will also send a hard copy.
**I would like your feedback about our Busy Reader Program. Please take a few minutes to fill out the feedback sheet and return it to me. Thanks!
**The students have completed their Science Unit on Investigating Water. They really enjoyed it! Our next Science Unit is "Sunshine, Shadows and the Moon." Our next cross curricular theme is SPACE!
**Keep saving those giant boxes and other cool things for our Space Station Projects. You can send them in after spring break.
**Future Field Trip--ADLER PLANETARIUM--Thursday, April 11th from 9-1:l30 pm. The permission slip and info is in your child's homework folder. We would like all the money and permission slips in before spring break to secure our spot at the planetarium.
These past two weeks:
It has been all about sharing and caring, kindness,Valentine's Day and Abraham, George and teeth. The students paid special attention these past two weeks to their attitudes and actions toward their classmates and teachers. Saying a kind word to someone not having a good day, offering words of encouragement to a friend, praising someone for a job well done and thanking an adult for a particular lesson were just some of the ways students celebrated. The students also read about the accomplishments of Abraham Lincoln and George Washington. They studied about what makes a good leader of a country. The students learned that presidents come from all walks of life. The students also studied the accomplishments of Ruby Bridges. They were proud to know that even a child of their age can affect change in our country. The students also read about Harriet Tubman and the Underground Railroad. The students were fascinated by the fact that it was not really a railroad but a series of safe homes, places and areas that were used to help slaves escape to the north to freedom. Hooray for teeth! The students learned that many living things have teeth and the care that goes into keeping them healthy. Station Day activities included making a tri-corner hat, working with a word wheel and writing the sentences, graphing and analyzing data on the Valentine board, ending sound fun and pattern block design building. Other Station Day activities included Penguin "Dial-a-Sum," more word wheel and writing sentences and more pattern block design building side by side. (great visual motor and visual integration/figure ground brain work!)
Reading/Social Studies: The students worked to continue and complete Unit 6 Neighborhoods in our Treasures series. They accessed prior knowledge about places in and around their neighborhood and who you can find there. The students talked about what the words community and workers meant. They listened to the Big Book story, "Bus Stops." The students made predictions about what the story could be about and were asked to listen for what happens at the beginning, middle and end of the story. They made connections about places in the story and how they relate to their own community. Who got off the bus? The students reviewed our target words, for, are, you and target sounds Dd, Hh and Rr. The students worked in small groups to create sentences using words and pictures. The students reread the story and worked on retelling as well as story elements. They worked on sound blending skills using their elkonin boxes. It is really cool to see them blending and segmenting 4-5 phoneme word! In the decodable story, "Rod Can See It," the students worked on main idea. Robust Vocabulary for the past two weeks included ADMIRE, DELIVER, SCHEDULE, COMMUNITY, WORKER, ALERT, JOB, CELEBRATION, PRECISE, REPAIR. The students listened to the vocabulary story, "Acrefoot, the Barefoot Man." They made predictions about story content. They responded to the poem, "The Park." The students retold parts of the poem. The students read their paper story, "For You." They each read aloud to practice their fluency. The students added to our neighborhood word web and created a Venn diagram about similarities and differences between hospitals and schools. The students reread the story, "Rod can See It" with a partner and quizzed each other on story elements. Workstations that week included map it out--drawing and labeling a neighborhood map with their group, Word Wizard app-cvc short u words create and record, tool sort--classifying tools and drawing a picture of someone who might use one of those tools, leveled readers read aloud, fluency check and story elements discussion and group sort --short a, long a words and word search. In the final week of Unit 6, the students discussed jobs that people in their neighborhood do. They accessed prior knowledge about workers they see in their neighborhood. The students listened to the trade book, "Alicia's Happy Day." As she walks down the street, what does Alicia hear and see? Why did Alicia feel happy? The students summarized and retold the story in their own words. The students worked in small groups to create words using the word families an, at, en, et, it, op, up. The students used consonant blends, single consonants and consonant digraphs. The students read their paper story, "Are You?" They each read a sentence aloud practicing their fluency. They also reread their story to a partner and each discussed how they sounded. The students listened to the expository text, "Is This Job For You?" and made future predictions on what job they would have and why. Workstations for the week included leveled readers with comprehension/discussion checks, creating a neighborhood worker puzzle, sentence building using the app Magnetic Letters and sight words, writing a friendly message to a friend and posting it on our friendship board and putting the finishing details on group neighborhood maps.
Math: The students worked on following a simple map for in school destinations. They worked in small groups from a given starting point to a certain destination. They discussed the sequence of events in their daily lives and created a timeline of drawings and words to reflect what they do in the morning, noon and at night. The students continue to explore building with pattern block templates that use internal lines, without internal lines and templates that have small pictures the students cannot build directly onto but next to. It's all about visual perception! We continue working on place value in the 100's place, writing numbers and telling how many hundreds, tens, ones each number has. The students worked on introduction of the quarter, dime and nickel. They learned some fun facts about the men on these coins and coin values. Much fun was had playing addition and subtraction games "Broken Heart Math," "Take Away," and "Dial a Sum." The students experimented with lots of new math apps and the problem solving, mind blowing app, "Labyrinth."
Writing: The students continue to work on lowercase forms l, k, y, and j. Most students are writing their first and last names. We continue to use the writing prompts in our Treasures series to create lists, write sentence using target vocabulary, write 3-4 sentence about one topic and work on sentence structure-- beginning with a capital letter, spacing between words in a sentence and putting a ending mark on the end.
Most students are using nouns and verbs, naming and telling and some have begun to expand their sentence length using adjectives and prepositions.
Science: The students revisited all their experiments as we concluded our Investigating Water unit. They viewed the DVD "Peeps Big Wide World Explores Water" as a culminating activity. Students made their final comments in their science journals about the experiment they enjoyed most, which one had surprising outcomes and which experiment they would like to do again. All the students commented that they would like to see bubbles come out of the bubble machine! We will wait for the weather to be a little warmer! Next week, we will begin prep for our new unit--"Sunshine, Shadows and the Moon."
Technology: It was truly all about the math apps these past two weeks! As their knowledge of addition and subtraction processes grows, the students were introduced to the apps Math Bug (addition/subtraction,) Find Sums base 10, Kids Math Fun (vertical sums,) Kids Math Free (addition/subtraction,) Ace Mathland (solving addition/subtraction problems and solve a puzzle,) and Butterfly Math Addition (making butterflies for correct sum.) The brainful problem solving app Labyrinth has got all students working on their own strategies to get the little ball thru the mazes!
Literature: "Splat the Cat-Funny Valentine," "There Was an Old Lady Who Swallowed a Rose," "Howard Wigglebottom Has a Heart," "Will You Be My Valentine?" "Bears Loose Tooth," "The Story of Ruby Bridges," "Arthur's Valentine," "George Washington," "Abraham Lincoln," "A Picture of George Washington," "Love Splat!" "Magic School Bus Has a Heart," "Young Abraham Lincoln," "My Tooth is About to Fall Out," ""Hooray for Teeth," "Open Wide," "Tar Beach," "You Think it is Easy Being a Tooth Fairy?" "Harriet Tubman," "Zoomer," (thanks, Noah!) "Bunnies." (thanks, Amare!)
**Our Valentine Sharing Party was wonderful! Many samples of "heart felt" feelings of love and friendship were shared among the students. They passed out and read their Valentines, played "Heart to Heart," and ate some treats. Thanks to the great show of parents, siblings and grandparents at our celebration. We were so glad you came!
**Route to Reading Rotation 5 began February 19th. You should have received a letter of notification concerning your child's skill level. Route to Reading Rotation 5 will conclude on March 6th.
**The FUN FAIR is almost here!!!! Come on out and play a game with me on Saturday, February 23rd from 11-3 pm. There will be games, prizes, food, dancing for desserts and a silent auction (a bed time story read by me---lunch with your bf's at the Junction Diner-bid-bid!!! Tickets will be sold after school and on the day of the fair. Special Attraction--What TEAM will get the PIE in the FACE??????!!! Toward the end of the Fun Fair, join Mr. Packer as he serves as MC for Irving's version of "America Has Talent." You may see some familiar faces!! Bring your money to put in the containers of your favorite team. The team with the most money gets the pie the face! It's the battle of the Cutie Pies, Pie Terminators, Who Me's and the 2 Sak P's!!!
**Asher's mom has put the finishing touches on our classroom FUN DAY BASKET. Thanks to all who have donated money or items.
** Kindergarten students participated in a Hearing Screening this past Friday at 9:00 am.
**Congratulations to our new Student Council Reps--Ellie and Keyshaun! Their first meeting is Tuesday, February 26th during the lunch hour.
**Dr. Seuss Family Reading Night is Thursday, February 28th from 6:30-7:30 pm. There is still time to sign up! Let's celebrate the love of reading!
**February is National Dental Month! Amare's mom is coming to give a little program about good dental care of Tuesday, February 26th at 10:00 am.
**It's our first meeting of the new year with our Book Buddies from Ms. Balicki's room. They will join us on Friday, March 1st at 1:30 pm.
**In Friendship Club, Ms. Bell Bey shared with the students ways to be caring and considerate to others. The students discussed the people, animals and things they most care about. We turned our Christmas Tree into the "I Care" Tree.
**Mr. Packer continues to work with small groups of students on his organizing details lesson.
** The new UPDATED list of Station Day Volunteers for the rest of the school is posted. I will also send a hard copy.
**I would like your feedback about our Busy Reader Program. Please take a few minutes to fill out the feedback sheet and return it to me. Thanks!
**The students have completed their Science Unit on Investigating Water. They really enjoyed it! Our next Science Unit is "Sunshine, Shadows and the Moon." Our next cross curricular theme is SPACE!
**Keep saving those giant boxes and other cool things for our Space Station Projects. You can send them in after spring break.
**Future Field Trip--ADLER PLANETARIUM--Thursday, April 11th from 9-1:l30 pm. The permission slip and info is in your child's homework folder. We would like all the money and permission slips in before spring break to secure our spot at the planetarium.
These past two weeks:
It has been all about sharing and caring, kindness,Valentine's Day and Abraham, George and teeth. The students paid special attention these past two weeks to their attitudes and actions toward their classmates and teachers. Saying a kind word to someone not having a good day, offering words of encouragement to a friend, praising someone for a job well done and thanking an adult for a particular lesson were just some of the ways students celebrated. The students also read about the accomplishments of Abraham Lincoln and George Washington. They studied about what makes a good leader of a country. The students learned that presidents come from all walks of life. The students also studied the accomplishments of Ruby Bridges. They were proud to know that even a child of their age can affect change in our country. The students also read about Harriet Tubman and the Underground Railroad. The students were fascinated by the fact that it was not really a railroad but a series of safe homes, places and areas that were used to help slaves escape to the north to freedom. Hooray for teeth! The students learned that many living things have teeth and the care that goes into keeping them healthy. Station Day activities included making a tri-corner hat, working with a word wheel and writing the sentences, graphing and analyzing data on the Valentine board, ending sound fun and pattern block design building. Other Station Day activities included Penguin "Dial-a-Sum," more word wheel and writing sentences and more pattern block design building side by side. (great visual motor and visual integration/figure ground brain work!)
Reading/Social Studies: The students worked to continue and complete Unit 6 Neighborhoods in our Treasures series. They accessed prior knowledge about places in and around their neighborhood and who you can find there. The students talked about what the words community and workers meant. They listened to the Big Book story, "Bus Stops." The students made predictions about what the story could be about and were asked to listen for what happens at the beginning, middle and end of the story. They made connections about places in the story and how they relate to their own community. Who got off the bus? The students reviewed our target words, for, are, you and target sounds Dd, Hh and Rr. The students worked in small groups to create sentences using words and pictures. The students reread the story and worked on retelling as well as story elements. They worked on sound blending skills using their elkonin boxes. It is really cool to see them blending and segmenting 4-5 phoneme word! In the decodable story, "Rod Can See It," the students worked on main idea. Robust Vocabulary for the past two weeks included ADMIRE, DELIVER, SCHEDULE, COMMUNITY, WORKER, ALERT, JOB, CELEBRATION, PRECISE, REPAIR. The students listened to the vocabulary story, "Acrefoot, the Barefoot Man." They made predictions about story content. They responded to the poem, "The Park." The students retold parts of the poem. The students read their paper story, "For You." They each read aloud to practice their fluency. The students added to our neighborhood word web and created a Venn diagram about similarities and differences between hospitals and schools. The students reread the story, "Rod can See It" with a partner and quizzed each other on story elements. Workstations that week included map it out--drawing and labeling a neighborhood map with their group, Word Wizard app-cvc short u words create and record, tool sort--classifying tools and drawing a picture of someone who might use one of those tools, leveled readers read aloud, fluency check and story elements discussion and group sort --short a, long a words and word search. In the final week of Unit 6, the students discussed jobs that people in their neighborhood do. They accessed prior knowledge about workers they see in their neighborhood. The students listened to the trade book, "Alicia's Happy Day." As she walks down the street, what does Alicia hear and see? Why did Alicia feel happy? The students summarized and retold the story in their own words. The students worked in small groups to create words using the word families an, at, en, et, it, op, up. The students used consonant blends, single consonants and consonant digraphs. The students read their paper story, "Are You?" They each read a sentence aloud practicing their fluency. They also reread their story to a partner and each discussed how they sounded. The students listened to the expository text, "Is This Job For You?" and made future predictions on what job they would have and why. Workstations for the week included leveled readers with comprehension/discussion checks, creating a neighborhood worker puzzle, sentence building using the app Magnetic Letters and sight words, writing a friendly message to a friend and posting it on our friendship board and putting the finishing details on group neighborhood maps.
Math: The students worked on following a simple map for in school destinations. They worked in small groups from a given starting point to a certain destination. They discussed the sequence of events in their daily lives and created a timeline of drawings and words to reflect what they do in the morning, noon and at night. The students continue to explore building with pattern block templates that use internal lines, without internal lines and templates that have small pictures the students cannot build directly onto but next to. It's all about visual perception! We continue working on place value in the 100's place, writing numbers and telling how many hundreds, tens, ones each number has. The students worked on introduction of the quarter, dime and nickel. They learned some fun facts about the men on these coins and coin values. Much fun was had playing addition and subtraction games "Broken Heart Math," "Take Away," and "Dial a Sum." The students experimented with lots of new math apps and the problem solving, mind blowing app, "Labyrinth."
Writing: The students continue to work on lowercase forms l, k, y, and j. Most students are writing their first and last names. We continue to use the writing prompts in our Treasures series to create lists, write sentence using target vocabulary, write 3-4 sentence about one topic and work on sentence structure-- beginning with a capital letter, spacing between words in a sentence and putting a ending mark on the end.
Most students are using nouns and verbs, naming and telling and some have begun to expand their sentence length using adjectives and prepositions.
Science: The students revisited all their experiments as we concluded our Investigating Water unit. They viewed the DVD "Peeps Big Wide World Explores Water" as a culminating activity. Students made their final comments in their science journals about the experiment they enjoyed most, which one had surprising outcomes and which experiment they would like to do again. All the students commented that they would like to see bubbles come out of the bubble machine! We will wait for the weather to be a little warmer! Next week, we will begin prep for our new unit--"Sunshine, Shadows and the Moon."
Technology: It was truly all about the math apps these past two weeks! As their knowledge of addition and subtraction processes grows, the students were introduced to the apps Math Bug (addition/subtraction,) Find Sums base 10, Kids Math Fun (vertical sums,) Kids Math Free (addition/subtraction,) Ace Mathland (solving addition/subtraction problems and solve a puzzle,) and Butterfly Math Addition (making butterflies for correct sum.) The brainful problem solving app Labyrinth has got all students working on their own strategies to get the little ball thru the mazes!
Literature: "Splat the Cat-Funny Valentine," "There Was an Old Lady Who Swallowed a Rose," "Howard Wigglebottom Has a Heart," "Will You Be My Valentine?" "Bears Loose Tooth," "The Story of Ruby Bridges," "Arthur's Valentine," "George Washington," "Abraham Lincoln," "A Picture of George Washington," "Love Splat!" "Magic School Bus Has a Heart," "Young Abraham Lincoln," "My Tooth is About to Fall Out," ""Hooray for Teeth," "Open Wide," "Tar Beach," "You Think it is Easy Being a Tooth Fairy?" "Harriet Tubman," "Zoomer," (thanks, Noah!) "Bunnies." (thanks, Amare!)
Friday, February 8, 2013
UPDATES for 2/4-2/8 2013
**The students are enjoying our mini snow hills at Irving. Thanks for your attention to their dress for our lunch time recess. They are having fun and staying warm. Don't forget gym shoes on our gym days.
**I am in the process of updating our Station Day volunteer list to reflect dates until the end of the year. Let me know if there are any new names to add. If you have a specific Friday you would like to come, please email with that date. I have volunteers until February 22nd. The new list will begin March 1st until May 17th.
**Please read the info on our Valentine Party and the Valentine container project. Our Valentine Sharing Party will be Wednesday, February 13th from 1:00-1:55 pm. Students will share valentines, have treats and work on some activities. Family members are welcome to come enjoy the festivities.
**NO SCHOOL on Monday, February 18th in observance of President's Day.
**There will be a Hearing Screening on Friday, February 22nd for Kindergarten students.
**The FUN FAIR is coming! The FUN FAIR is coming! Come play a game with me on Saturday, February 23rd from 11-3 pm. I will also have some experiences to bid on at the silent auction!! There will be games, prizes, food, dancing for desserts, silent auction and a special activity----Who will get the pie in the face????? Stay tuned to see how you can become part of it. Our Room Parents are working on a FUN DAY CLASS BASKET for the silent auction. There is still time to contribute. Items and donations will be accepted until the end of this week. Let's make our basket the best!!!
**Dr. Seuss Family Reading Night is Thursday, February 28th from 6:30-7:30. The sign up form is in your child's homework folder. Let's celebrate the love of reading!
**February is National Dental Month! Amare's mom is coming to give a little program about good dental care on Tuesday, February 26th at 10:00 am.
**Save the Date---FIELD TRIP to Adler Planetarium on Thursday, April 11th from 9:00-1:30 pm. Our next cross curricular theme is SPACE!
**Keep reading the BUSY READERS and recording your books on the reading log. The first 10 minutes of our morning is spent sharing our book with others or reading independently. Oh, the sound of readers!!!
**Keep saving those boxes and cool things for our space stations. We are getting closer!
This week:
It was all about snow hills, Chinese New Year and Tangrams. The students welcomed the YEAR of the SNAKE representing the Chinese New Year. What animal sign were you born under? We read about how the Chinese prepare for the arrival of the new year, cleaning, special colors and foods, lanterns and dragon parade. In a nod to the Chinese New Year and geometry, the students studied tangrams. (ancient Chinese puzzles) More about this in the math section! Our station day activities this week included graphing and analyzing animals in the winter, heart sequence--cutting out and ranking hearts from largest to smallest, teen number review where the students count how many snowballs will fit on the shovel and building 3 dimensional structures using unifix cubes. It was so fascinating to watch young brain power at work viewing a model and then working to solve how to build it. Great problem solving and perseverance to complete the task!
Social Studies/ Reading: The students began Unit 6 Neighborhoods in our Treasures Reading series. They accessed prior knowledge about what a neighbor is and what a neighborhood is. The students made a group list of places and things a neighborhood might have. They listened to the Big Book story, "Russ and the Firehouse." We reviewed the word expository (information) text. The students were reminded to think about story elements as I read the story. Who is Russ? What is he doing at the firehouse? Why is he there?
Our new sight word is are. The students added it to their growing list of words. Our target sound this week was Hh. The students reviewed all our sound toy boxes so far. They work in small groups using words and pictures to create sentences. In the second reading of our story, the students told what they thought the main idea of the story was and recalled details about the work that Russ did at the firehouse. The students summarized events in the story using the retelling cards. They used their elkonin boxes to segment 4-5 phoneme words. They read the decodable story, "Are Caps Hats?" They made predictions about story content. Each student had the opportunity to read a sentence aloud. Some questions to ponder--Could the group hear you? Did you stop at each ending mark? Did you pause at the comma? Where you able to sound blend phonemes to say a word? Did your reading sound choppy or smooth? The students chose a partner to reread the story to. The partners discussed and critiqued each others work using the Readers Checklist. Workstations this week included leveled readers and discussion, word family fun--where you choose from the word family cards-an, at, in, ot, in, it and add a single consonant,consonant blend or digraph to create a word and record it on paper--create ten words and use 2 in a sentence, Montessori Crossword skill groups working on sound blending words with short i, short e and ch and writing about neighborhood places using the sentence starter...I go to the... and drawing a picture to go with it.
Writing: The students reviewed how to write a sentence. A sentence names and tells. They wrote sentences in their journal about the Treasures story, "Russ and the Firehouse." They also began to work on simple prepositions--for, on, at and in and included them in their journal entries. The students had great fun revisiting the use of speech bubbles in writing dialogue. Formal handwriting practice included a review of lowercase letters c, o,a,d,g,s,v,w,t.
Math: The students practiced counting to 100 and counting by 10's. As a group, they are working on counting by 2's and 5's. As an introduction to tangrams, I read the story, "Grandfather Tang's Story." The grandfather and granddaughter share a story under the tree. On each page, a tangram becomes part of the story. I introduced the shapes called tans that are used in the tangrams. There are 7 tans. From those 7 tans, many different pictures can be created. The students experimented with their own set of tans and used a set of model pictures to see if they could create the picture from the model. The next day, students were introduced to the app TanZen Lite and chose a puzzle to complete. Lots of great brain work going on! The students had to manipulate the tans into the puzzle space with a light touch. They could also flip the tan over by tapping it twice. Not as easy as it looks! Very challenging!! I observed amazing concentration and determination to keep trying! The look on their faces when they have all the pieces in place--priceless!! A follow up project is part of their homework.The students continue to work in their math process journals.
Science: The students talked about the experiments they have done so far. They noted also that the water bottles that once held ice and then water were now low in water. Students used the word evaporation. The students know water as a liquid and a solid. Another property of water is as a gas. We discussed freezing (32 degrees) and boiling (212 degrees) points and created steam. The students observed the "smoke" or steam coming out of the glass container of boiling water. We marked the water line with a marker. The students also took note of a piece of plastic wrap I put over the glass container of boiling water. Question: What did you observe? Students reported seeing water drops forming on the inside of the plastic wrap and on the side of the glass. Condensation!! The students also viewed evaporation in action when they "painted" with water and paint brush on the blackboard. After a few minutes--where did the water go??? The students reflected both in written and drawing form about their thoughts on the experiments. They will continue to keep watch on the glass container and the water line. Let's see if there are any changes when they come back on Monday!!
Technology: The students main app this week in math was TanZen Lite. While the students were working on their puzzle, the app also played Chinese music that was very soothing to a mind at work. Students continue to use the apps Math Bug, Number Find, Top It-Addition and Underwater Memory in their math studies. In reading, the apps Montessori Crossword, Sight Words, Reading Magic 3 were used in student small groups and with partners. The students continue to work with the app Story Kit to record read alouds and discussions.
Literature: "Grandfather Tang's Story," "Ruby's Wish," "Chinese New Year," "Curious George-A Winter's Nap," "The 100th Day," "Rosa Parks," "One Hundred Shoes," "One Hundred Hungry Ants," "Snow," "Bringing in the New Year," "Water's Journey," "A Drop of Water-Chapter 4-Steam," "Evaporation/Condensation."
**I am in the process of updating our Station Day volunteer list to reflect dates until the end of the year. Let me know if there are any new names to add. If you have a specific Friday you would like to come, please email with that date. I have volunteers until February 22nd. The new list will begin March 1st until May 17th.
**Please read the info on our Valentine Party and the Valentine container project. Our Valentine Sharing Party will be Wednesday, February 13th from 1:00-1:55 pm. Students will share valentines, have treats and work on some activities. Family members are welcome to come enjoy the festivities.
**NO SCHOOL on Monday, February 18th in observance of President's Day.
**There will be a Hearing Screening on Friday, February 22nd for Kindergarten students.
**The FUN FAIR is coming! The FUN FAIR is coming! Come play a game with me on Saturday, February 23rd from 11-3 pm. I will also have some experiences to bid on at the silent auction!! There will be games, prizes, food, dancing for desserts, silent auction and a special activity----Who will get the pie in the face????? Stay tuned to see how you can become part of it. Our Room Parents are working on a FUN DAY CLASS BASKET for the silent auction. There is still time to contribute. Items and donations will be accepted until the end of this week. Let's make our basket the best!!!
**Dr. Seuss Family Reading Night is Thursday, February 28th from 6:30-7:30. The sign up form is in your child's homework folder. Let's celebrate the love of reading!
**February is National Dental Month! Amare's mom is coming to give a little program about good dental care on Tuesday, February 26th at 10:00 am.
**Save the Date---FIELD TRIP to Adler Planetarium on Thursday, April 11th from 9:00-1:30 pm. Our next cross curricular theme is SPACE!
**Keep reading the BUSY READERS and recording your books on the reading log. The first 10 minutes of our morning is spent sharing our book with others or reading independently. Oh, the sound of readers!!!
**Keep saving those boxes and cool things for our space stations. We are getting closer!
This week:
It was all about snow hills, Chinese New Year and Tangrams. The students welcomed the YEAR of the SNAKE representing the Chinese New Year. What animal sign were you born under? We read about how the Chinese prepare for the arrival of the new year, cleaning, special colors and foods, lanterns and dragon parade. In a nod to the Chinese New Year and geometry, the students studied tangrams. (ancient Chinese puzzles) More about this in the math section! Our station day activities this week included graphing and analyzing animals in the winter, heart sequence--cutting out and ranking hearts from largest to smallest, teen number review where the students count how many snowballs will fit on the shovel and building 3 dimensional structures using unifix cubes. It was so fascinating to watch young brain power at work viewing a model and then working to solve how to build it. Great problem solving and perseverance to complete the task!
Social Studies/ Reading: The students began Unit 6 Neighborhoods in our Treasures Reading series. They accessed prior knowledge about what a neighbor is and what a neighborhood is. The students made a group list of places and things a neighborhood might have. They listened to the Big Book story, "Russ and the Firehouse." We reviewed the word expository (information) text. The students were reminded to think about story elements as I read the story. Who is Russ? What is he doing at the firehouse? Why is he there?
Our new sight word is are. The students added it to their growing list of words. Our target sound this week was Hh. The students reviewed all our sound toy boxes so far. They work in small groups using words and pictures to create sentences. In the second reading of our story, the students told what they thought the main idea of the story was and recalled details about the work that Russ did at the firehouse. The students summarized events in the story using the retelling cards. They used their elkonin boxes to segment 4-5 phoneme words. They read the decodable story, "Are Caps Hats?" They made predictions about story content. Each student had the opportunity to read a sentence aloud. Some questions to ponder--Could the group hear you? Did you stop at each ending mark? Did you pause at the comma? Where you able to sound blend phonemes to say a word? Did your reading sound choppy or smooth? The students chose a partner to reread the story to. The partners discussed and critiqued each others work using the Readers Checklist. Workstations this week included leveled readers and discussion, word family fun--where you choose from the word family cards-an, at, in, ot, in, it and add a single consonant,consonant blend or digraph to create a word and record it on paper--create ten words and use 2 in a sentence, Montessori Crossword skill groups working on sound blending words with short i, short e and ch and writing about neighborhood places using the sentence starter...I go to the... and drawing a picture to go with it.
Writing: The students reviewed how to write a sentence. A sentence names and tells. They wrote sentences in their journal about the Treasures story, "Russ and the Firehouse." They also began to work on simple prepositions--for, on, at and in and included them in their journal entries. The students had great fun revisiting the use of speech bubbles in writing dialogue. Formal handwriting practice included a review of lowercase letters c, o,a,d,g,s,v,w,t.
Math: The students practiced counting to 100 and counting by 10's. As a group, they are working on counting by 2's and 5's. As an introduction to tangrams, I read the story, "Grandfather Tang's Story." The grandfather and granddaughter share a story under the tree. On each page, a tangram becomes part of the story. I introduced the shapes called tans that are used in the tangrams. There are 7 tans. From those 7 tans, many different pictures can be created. The students experimented with their own set of tans and used a set of model pictures to see if they could create the picture from the model. The next day, students were introduced to the app TanZen Lite and chose a puzzle to complete. Lots of great brain work going on! The students had to manipulate the tans into the puzzle space with a light touch. They could also flip the tan over by tapping it twice. Not as easy as it looks! Very challenging!! I observed amazing concentration and determination to keep trying! The look on their faces when they have all the pieces in place--priceless!! A follow up project is part of their homework.The students continue to work in their math process journals.
Science: The students talked about the experiments they have done so far. They noted also that the water bottles that once held ice and then water were now low in water. Students used the word evaporation. The students know water as a liquid and a solid. Another property of water is as a gas. We discussed freezing (32 degrees) and boiling (212 degrees) points and created steam. The students observed the "smoke" or steam coming out of the glass container of boiling water. We marked the water line with a marker. The students also took note of a piece of plastic wrap I put over the glass container of boiling water. Question: What did you observe? Students reported seeing water drops forming on the inside of the plastic wrap and on the side of the glass. Condensation!! The students also viewed evaporation in action when they "painted" with water and paint brush on the blackboard. After a few minutes--where did the water go??? The students reflected both in written and drawing form about their thoughts on the experiments. They will continue to keep watch on the glass container and the water line. Let's see if there are any changes when they come back on Monday!!
Technology: The students main app this week in math was TanZen Lite. While the students were working on their puzzle, the app also played Chinese music that was very soothing to a mind at work. Students continue to use the apps Math Bug, Number Find, Top It-Addition and Underwater Memory in their math studies. In reading, the apps Montessori Crossword, Sight Words, Reading Magic 3 were used in student small groups and with partners. The students continue to work with the app Story Kit to record read alouds and discussions.
Literature: "Grandfather Tang's Story," "Ruby's Wish," "Chinese New Year," "Curious George-A Winter's Nap," "The 100th Day," "Rosa Parks," "One Hundred Shoes," "One Hundred Hungry Ants," "Snow," "Bringing in the New Year," "Water's Journey," "A Drop of Water-Chapter 4-Steam," "Evaporation/Condensation."
Friday, February 1, 2013
UPDATES for 1/22-1/25 and 1/28-2/1 2013
**Greetings! I will catch you up on all that has happened in the past 2 weeks. Thanks so much for your patience! It has been an incredibly busy 2 weeks for me and my energetic class! Thanks for your participation at Parent/Teacher Conferences. It was great to chat with all of you and share your child's progress. It is hard to believe that it is February.
**Our 100th Day Celebration was fabulous! The students were engaged in a number of activities surrounding the number 100. The students really enjoyed all the activities. Our day was double the fun with the celebration of Will's birthday. A HUGE thank you to all our parent volunteers! What a spectacular turnout! Check your child's backpack for homework fun over the weekend. Remember, you can always click on the "click here for assignments" link below my name.
**The FUN FAIR is coming!! The FUN FAIR is coming!! Play a game with me on Saturday, February, 23rd from 11-3 pm at Irving School. There will be games, prizes, dancing for desserts, a silent auction and food. It's a great way to spend the day! Don't forget to contribute to our class gift basket. Our theme is INDOOR FUN! Donations and items can be dropped off in our classroom. Thanks to our great room parents for organizing it.
**We will be having a Valentine's Day Party. I will send you the details soon.
**Route to Reading Rotation 5 is in full swing. You should have received notification of your child's skill level. Email me if you did not.
**Young Scientist Conference is Saturday, February 23rd at Mann School.
**Family Reading Night Celebrating Dr. Seuss will be held on Thursday, February 28th from 6:30-7:30 pm in various classrooms around the school. See sign up sheet on line.
**No School February 18th in observance of President's Day.
**Continue saving those giant boxes and other cool stuff for our April space station project.
The past 2 weeks:
Where do I begin......It was about so many things.......Water, Sink and Float, Bubbles, Ice, 100, counting by 10's, prep for 100's Day and Punxsutawney Phil. Will he see his shadow??? The students created a sign in chart and it is pretty evenly split. Listen to the news on Saturday to find out the result. We used Weatherground on our computer to check weather around the states. The students commented that while it may be cloudy in Pennsylvania, it may be sunny here in Oak Park. Let's wait and see! We tracked the rain storm and learned about the colors that denote super heavy rain. The students observed frozen bubbles and a bubble machine that would not spin (frozen!) Station day activities included word wheel and sentence writing, word search and word writing activity, color the code snowflake and the Snowman adding game.
Reading/Social Studies: The students worked to complete Unit 5 Animals in our Treasures Reading series. The students talked and read about animal habitats. They accessed prior knowledge about animal homes they knew of. The students listened to the story, "The Mole and the Baby Bird." They looked at the cover picture and made predictions about story content. The students recognized the characters and the plot of the story. They made connections in their own lives of having and wanting a pet and the care involved. The students reviewed the sight words is and play. We played sight word bingo and students partnered up to create sentences using their sight words and pictures. The students "walked" all the words that have been presented thus far. The students reviewed the target sounds Ff and Oo. We also reviewed all the target sounds presented. Our Robust Vocabulary included HABITAT, RESPONSIBILITY, BENEATH, RAISE, ENTER. The story was re read and the students were asked to think about the story elements. The students took turns using the retelling cards to retell the story. The students used their elkonin boxes to segment the sounds in 3-4 and 5 phoneme words. The students read the decodable story, "Tap, Tap, Tap! They used a graphic organizer in the form of a butterfly to discuss setting (where), time (when), characters (who) and plot (what happened). Students came up to the board to record the various parts in writing. I read a selection on the oral vocabulary cards called "Hidden Homes." The students discussed what kind of animals might live in habitats we might not see? Are some of their homes beneath the ground? The students also listened to the expository text, "At Home in the Rain Forest." They made predictions about story content and responded with their thoughts. We had a lively discussion on Wild vs.Domestic animals and how some animals could be both depending upon their situation. The students also listened to the Mexican folktale, "The Turtle and the Coyote." We located Mexico on the map. The students responded to the story and discussed what the big idea was. They worked on sound spelling CVC words. They worked to complete their activity books. Workstation activities included reading about animal homes--drawing a picture of an animal home they read about and writing a sentence about the habitat and sharing their picture and sentence with a partner, reading a leveled reader story as a group--finger pointing each word and then discussing story elements, rhyme it--where you work with a partner to make rhyming pairs of words and then write a pair of sentences that rhyme, word picture web--using the sentence We play and cutting out pictures that describe the sentence and Reader's Checklist where students read to each other--teacher records their reading and the group listens to the play back to critique.
Math: The students worked with partners to count out ten groups of ten items of their choice for 100 items total. We took photographs of their projects and they are posted in the classroom. The students continue to work on counting to 100. They worked on their 100 number grid writing. In our number journals, the students are really beginning to get the idea of my daily number story and are becoming more independent in
listening for vocabulary that will tell if you add or take away, how to illustrate their problem and how to write a number sentence (solution) using a plus/minus and equal sign. The students continue to explore weights and measurement with scales, building 3 dimensional structures and using ramps and inclines to construct a path for a marble.
Writing: The students continue to work on "Magic C" lowercase letters c,o,a,d,s. They practiced using their mini boards,chalk and sponges. They also practiced in their orange books. They continue to work on journal prompts and independent reflections. We have recently begun talking about expanding sentence length and the use of adjectives in their sentences.
Science: The students made some great discoveries the past 2 weeks. In their Sink or Float experiment, the students first made their guess and then took turns dropping the particular items in the water. They then recorded what actually happened. I used some big words--displacement (pushing away) and density (measure of mass.) Some tables had different pencils--eraser or no eraser...Why did one sink and one float? Why did the cork keep floating even after students pushed it down? Why did the washer go straight to the bottom? Lots of discussion. Their science reflection journals had lots of sketches and thoughts. In Sink or Float part two, the students, under the direction on Ms. Dennis, were given a piece of aluminum foil and were told to make a boat. The question posed to them was--"How many marbles will it take to sink your boat?" The students made their boats and recorded their guess of how many marbles it would take. The boats were all shapes and sizes. One student even tried to make seats in theirs! Each student took their turn and placed their boat in the water and began to put marbles in it. It was fascinating to watch the strategies---putting them all in the front of the boat---spreading them all out---putting them all in the middle--or no strategy at all!!! Each student recorded their result and compared it with their guess. Some students came close--one student was exact--some were very far apart in their guess and actual. Sophie had the record of 39 marbles before her boat sunk! It was great fun. This past week, the students explored BUBBLES. What makes a bubble? The students learned that a bubble is a thin layer of liquid (soapy water) that surrounds a gas (air) The outside layer is like a skin. The students examined various bubble wands. Some were circular, heart shaped, triangular and oval. The question posed to them was "Will the bubbles come the same shape as the wand/" The students braved the frigid temperatures and with bubble wands and soapy water ventured outside. The bubbles created were very slow to pop and some "froze" on the wand! The students observed the watery outer layer. It was pretty cool! The students commented that all the bubbles created were round no matter what the shape of the wand was. For what I thought would be a real treat, I turned on my bubble machine----guess what----the machine could not turn---a frothy mess came out of the machine--no bubbles. The students were laughing. It was too cold for my bubble machine. I guess we will save it for warmer weather. Back in the warmth of our classroom, the students sketched and wrote about their adventure. The students are also watching bottles of water and their slow disappearing water. (evaporation) We also discussed evaporation in relation to how a bubble pops. The liquid surrounding the gas begins to evaporate and......pop!
Technology: In reading, student small groups were aided by the apps Story Kit, Rocket Speller, Sight Word Record and Montessori Crossword-segmenting and blending. In math the apps Number Find, 100's Board, Math Bug and Underwater Memory Match have been useful tools for small groups and independent study. In science Weatherunderground and Google Earth have enhanced our studies.
Literature: "A Drop of Water-Bubbles," "100 Days of School," "I'll Teach My Dog 100 Words," "Counting Your Way to the 100th Day"-poetry, "Have You Filled Your Bucket Today?" "Go to Sleep, Groundhog," "Gretchen Groundhog Saves the Day," "The 100th Day of School," "The Biggest Snowball Fight," "Winter Days in the Big Woods," "Curious George, the Snowy Day," "The Special Snowflake," "One Snowy Day," "Weather," "100 Shoes," "Why Does It Float?" "Sink or Float-All About Water," "Some Things Float."
**Our 100th Day Celebration was fabulous! The students were engaged in a number of activities surrounding the number 100. The students really enjoyed all the activities. Our day was double the fun with the celebration of Will's birthday. A HUGE thank you to all our parent volunteers! What a spectacular turnout! Check your child's backpack for homework fun over the weekend. Remember, you can always click on the "click here for assignments" link below my name.
**The FUN FAIR is coming!! The FUN FAIR is coming!! Play a game with me on Saturday, February, 23rd from 11-3 pm at Irving School. There will be games, prizes, dancing for desserts, a silent auction and food. It's a great way to spend the day! Don't forget to contribute to our class gift basket. Our theme is INDOOR FUN! Donations and items can be dropped off in our classroom. Thanks to our great room parents for organizing it.
**We will be having a Valentine's Day Party. I will send you the details soon.
**Route to Reading Rotation 5 is in full swing. You should have received notification of your child's skill level. Email me if you did not.
**Young Scientist Conference is Saturday, February 23rd at Mann School.
**Family Reading Night Celebrating Dr. Seuss will be held on Thursday, February 28th from 6:30-7:30 pm in various classrooms around the school. See sign up sheet on line.
**No School February 18th in observance of President's Day.
**Continue saving those giant boxes and other cool stuff for our April space station project.
The past 2 weeks:
Where do I begin......It was about so many things.......Water, Sink and Float, Bubbles, Ice, 100, counting by 10's, prep for 100's Day and Punxsutawney Phil. Will he see his shadow??? The students created a sign in chart and it is pretty evenly split. Listen to the news on Saturday to find out the result. We used Weatherground on our computer to check weather around the states. The students commented that while it may be cloudy in Pennsylvania, it may be sunny here in Oak Park. Let's wait and see! We tracked the rain storm and learned about the colors that denote super heavy rain. The students observed frozen bubbles and a bubble machine that would not spin (frozen!) Station day activities included word wheel and sentence writing, word search and word writing activity, color the code snowflake and the Snowman adding game.
Reading/Social Studies: The students worked to complete Unit 5 Animals in our Treasures Reading series. The students talked and read about animal habitats. They accessed prior knowledge about animal homes they knew of. The students listened to the story, "The Mole and the Baby Bird." They looked at the cover picture and made predictions about story content. The students recognized the characters and the plot of the story. They made connections in their own lives of having and wanting a pet and the care involved. The students reviewed the sight words is and play. We played sight word bingo and students partnered up to create sentences using their sight words and pictures. The students "walked" all the words that have been presented thus far. The students reviewed the target sounds Ff and Oo. We also reviewed all the target sounds presented. Our Robust Vocabulary included HABITAT, RESPONSIBILITY, BENEATH, RAISE, ENTER. The story was re read and the students were asked to think about the story elements. The students took turns using the retelling cards to retell the story. The students used their elkonin boxes to segment the sounds in 3-4 and 5 phoneme words. The students read the decodable story, "Tap, Tap, Tap! They used a graphic organizer in the form of a butterfly to discuss setting (where), time (when), characters (who) and plot (what happened). Students came up to the board to record the various parts in writing. I read a selection on the oral vocabulary cards called "Hidden Homes." The students discussed what kind of animals might live in habitats we might not see? Are some of their homes beneath the ground? The students also listened to the expository text, "At Home in the Rain Forest." They made predictions about story content and responded with their thoughts. We had a lively discussion on Wild vs.Domestic animals and how some animals could be both depending upon their situation. The students also listened to the Mexican folktale, "The Turtle and the Coyote." We located Mexico on the map. The students responded to the story and discussed what the big idea was. They worked on sound spelling CVC words. They worked to complete their activity books. Workstation activities included reading about animal homes--drawing a picture of an animal home they read about and writing a sentence about the habitat and sharing their picture and sentence with a partner, reading a leveled reader story as a group--finger pointing each word and then discussing story elements, rhyme it--where you work with a partner to make rhyming pairs of words and then write a pair of sentences that rhyme, word picture web--using the sentence We play and cutting out pictures that describe the sentence and Reader's Checklist where students read to each other--teacher records their reading and the group listens to the play back to critique.
Math: The students worked with partners to count out ten groups of ten items of their choice for 100 items total. We took photographs of their projects and they are posted in the classroom. The students continue to work on counting to 100. They worked on their 100 number grid writing. In our number journals, the students are really beginning to get the idea of my daily number story and are becoming more independent in
listening for vocabulary that will tell if you add or take away, how to illustrate their problem and how to write a number sentence (solution) using a plus/minus and equal sign. The students continue to explore weights and measurement with scales, building 3 dimensional structures and using ramps and inclines to construct a path for a marble.
Writing: The students continue to work on "Magic C" lowercase letters c,o,a,d,s. They practiced using their mini boards,chalk and sponges. They also practiced in their orange books. They continue to work on journal prompts and independent reflections. We have recently begun talking about expanding sentence length and the use of adjectives in their sentences.
Science: The students made some great discoveries the past 2 weeks. In their Sink or Float experiment, the students first made their guess and then took turns dropping the particular items in the water. They then recorded what actually happened. I used some big words--displacement (pushing away) and density (measure of mass.) Some tables had different pencils--eraser or no eraser...Why did one sink and one float? Why did the cork keep floating even after students pushed it down? Why did the washer go straight to the bottom? Lots of discussion. Their science reflection journals had lots of sketches and thoughts. In Sink or Float part two, the students, under the direction on Ms. Dennis, were given a piece of aluminum foil and were told to make a boat. The question posed to them was--"How many marbles will it take to sink your boat?" The students made their boats and recorded their guess of how many marbles it would take. The boats were all shapes and sizes. One student even tried to make seats in theirs! Each student took their turn and placed their boat in the water and began to put marbles in it. It was fascinating to watch the strategies---putting them all in the front of the boat---spreading them all out---putting them all in the middle--or no strategy at all!!! Each student recorded their result and compared it with their guess. Some students came close--one student was exact--some were very far apart in their guess and actual. Sophie had the record of 39 marbles before her boat sunk! It was great fun. This past week, the students explored BUBBLES. What makes a bubble? The students learned that a bubble is a thin layer of liquid (soapy water) that surrounds a gas (air) The outside layer is like a skin. The students examined various bubble wands. Some were circular, heart shaped, triangular and oval. The question posed to them was "Will the bubbles come the same shape as the wand/" The students braved the frigid temperatures and with bubble wands and soapy water ventured outside. The bubbles created were very slow to pop and some "froze" on the wand! The students observed the watery outer layer. It was pretty cool! The students commented that all the bubbles created were round no matter what the shape of the wand was. For what I thought would be a real treat, I turned on my bubble machine----guess what----the machine could not turn---a frothy mess came out of the machine--no bubbles. The students were laughing. It was too cold for my bubble machine. I guess we will save it for warmer weather. Back in the warmth of our classroom, the students sketched and wrote about their adventure. The students are also watching bottles of water and their slow disappearing water. (evaporation) We also discussed evaporation in relation to how a bubble pops. The liquid surrounding the gas begins to evaporate and......pop!
Technology: In reading, student small groups were aided by the apps Story Kit, Rocket Speller, Sight Word Record and Montessori Crossword-segmenting and blending. In math the apps Number Find, 100's Board, Math Bug and Underwater Memory Match have been useful tools for small groups and independent study. In science Weatherunderground and Google Earth have enhanced our studies.
Literature: "A Drop of Water-Bubbles," "100 Days of School," "I'll Teach My Dog 100 Words," "Counting Your Way to the 100th Day"-poetry, "Have You Filled Your Bucket Today?" "Go to Sleep, Groundhog," "Gretchen Groundhog Saves the Day," "The 100th Day of School," "The Biggest Snowball Fight," "Winter Days in the Big Woods," "Curious George, the Snowy Day," "The Special Snowflake," "One Snowy Day," "Weather," "100 Shoes," "Why Does It Float?" "Sink or Float-All About Water," "Some Things Float."
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