Showing posts with label seasons. Show all posts
Showing posts with label seasons. Show all posts

Saturday, March 22, 2014

Ringing in Spring

Back in early fall when I began this blog, I envisioned great things. The hope was to update each week or at least each month about the progress in my classroom. I started off on a good foot, but then winter happened...DUN, DUN, DUNNNN. Okay, really life hasn't been all that dramatic. The problem is my kiddos and I missed quite a bit of school this winter, so I really did not have too many new things to share. Some weeks my classes (I have 2 on alternating days) would only get one day of school a week. Therefore I reused many things until they got the concept being taught.
 Enough gloom and doom for now. Spring is here, and brand new things are in bloom! Here is a look at some spring time events going on in March. As of now they have a St. Patrick's Day focus. One fun tradition at our school is hunting for the leprechaun.  The week before the 17th, my director will play tricks on the kids while they are at recess. (i.e. steal our gold, mess the room up, leave foot prints, etc). The kids love it! They enjoyed hiding our gold and searching for it if it went missing. They walk through the hallways so quietly trying to find the sneaky little guy. What fun!

St. Paddy's Day also provides many learning opportunities. Lucky Charms has been a big deal of late. In fact we made Lucky Charm treats the other day to practice our measuring skills. They were a tasty treat! The kids also love playing with the cereal in the sand & water table. I always tell my kids that the food in our learning centers is full of yucky germs, so they do a great job of not eating the food set aside for play.

I used St. Patrick's Day as an opportunity to teach about the rainbow. As a literacy activity, I used Fruit Loops and a rainbow letter map to have the children match up the correct color on the correct spot. The print outs I used came from KidsSoup.


I left a felt board on the science table and did my best to cut out rainbow shapes of each color. Based on the material I had left, it didn't turn out great. However, the kids enjoyed using it, so it served its purpose. You can also see where that tricky leprechaun visited us.


While looking around for ideas on Pinterest one day, I came across a Pot'O Gold activity.I didn't have the materials on hand to put together the learning center, so I improvised. I also made mine a math center instead of the letter O idea it had been intended. Instead of giving each pot of gold (a black paper cup from the dollar store) it's own individual rainbow, I constructed a rainbow from party streamers and tape. I used pink in place of orange since that is what I had. I searched and searched and searched for candy or play gold coins, but I finally settled on gold Dove chocolates and Butterfinger chocolate egg candies as my gold. I took clothespins numbered 1-20 that the children could clip onto the cup and place that much gold under the rainbow. The rainbow really helped attract the kids to the table. This was also the pot of gold we would hide each day.


We reinforced our skills of rainbow colors with a craft for each class. Some projects did get out of order a little bit depending on how much space the children allowed as we worked, but they did know where it should go. ;-) Here is a leprechaun hat streamer rainbow and a paper plate collage.

Some other learning activities included graphing Lucky Charm marshmallows. You can find plenty of graphs online. I never did get a chance to let them color their findings, but the sorting and counting gave them plenty of practice. The classes also got a chance to practice writing their letters in leprechaun goo (hair gel and green food coloring in a plastic baggie). Be sure to tape your baggie on ALL 4 SIDES. I should have known better, but you live and learn. Thankfully it is fairly easy clean up if the worst should happen.



We also had some shamrock fun. I placed dots on the shamrocks and the children had to match a rainbow stick with the corresponding number to the correct shamrock. I also wrote the lowercase letters on one side and they matched it to the uppercase letter on our circle time carpet.


That's about it for now. Hopefully the snow is about gone, and I will have lots of new spring activities to share. We are also ready to get outdoors some more and have some fun!

Monday, February 3, 2014

Snow Much Fun!

I was determined to post much more over the month of January, but it is winter after all. I still feel like I am on Christmas break with the on and off snow days. I must say that despite the interruption to daily schedule, the snow has provided much fun. I began the month by introducing Arctic animals to the children such as penguins and polar bears. We practiced tracing, cutting, gluing and painting skills with some fun crafts found at KidsSoup.com. I love that site!
Potato Print Craft
The kids absorbed the information, but the most fun has come from our hands on snow experiences. Here is a look at the winter fun we experienced through out the past month!
        Back in December I discovered these adorable snowman cardboard buckets from the Dollar Bin at Target. I placed one at each seat at my math table along with different clippers and tweezers. I took my dice (available at the dollar store) and placed it in the middle with a bowl full of cotton balls. The children practiced one-to-one correspondence by feeding the corresponding amount of "snowballs" to the snowmen depending on what number they rolled on the dice. I will also add that I adapted the activity for my mom's kindergarten class. Instead of using the dice, I wrote the number words on homemade flashcards. Her kids were learning how the spell the numbers, so this fun activity provided fun practice for them.

 Another fun motor skills activity involving snowballs included some vocab practice. I came across this idea during a Pinterest search. I did not have white poms poms, but I did have different sizes in color. All you do is take 3 different sized containers with large, medium and small written on them. The kids use the tweezers to sort the correct sizes. My class loves these types of activities, and it aided in their vocab and sequencing abilities!

I also have begun working on the 10s family with kids. To introduce 11-20, I found this fun activity involving hot chocolate, and let me tell you that hot chocolate is being consumed in high quantities around here! Brrr, it's been chilly! Anyway, I cut out some mug cutout and glued them to white paper. I slipped them into page protectors and used dry erase markers to change the numbers. The kids found in challenging to pick up the marshmallows with the tweezers, but it was great pre-writing practice! We also practiced our graphing skills with a fun taste test you can find here.
I also updated our SWAT game to fit the season as well as our new alphabet letters we learned this month. My artistic ability is not the greatest, but hopefully you can tell what everything is. The teams for the month were the polar bears vs the penguins.
I also had a class practice tracing and cutting with mittens. My mother had given me a mitten for my bulletin board with this fun poem. Each child colored one mitten with the colors they chose, and the other we lined with cotton to keep our hands warm. It is a longer poem, but by the end of the month the kids knew it. All of them could do the hand motions we came up with as well.
Stripes or dots or sparkling white (jazz hands)
Mittens in winter fit just right (mime putting mittens on)
Wool or cotton, may leather (shrug shoulders)
Mittens warm us in cold weather (hug yourself)
In rainbow colors or darkest black (shield eyes)
Mittens fit in your pocket on in your pack (mime placing mittens in pocket & pack)
Thumbs alone, fingers together (shake each)
Mittens warm us in cold, cold weather (hug and warm yourself up!)
The rest of our snow fun included actually playing with snow from the comfort of our classroom. The first day I placed some snow in a bin on our new science table. The children built a snowman and snow castles. They had a lot of fun exploring with their hands. They liked using the spoons and other tools to keep their hands from freezing.

Even with a mat under the table, the activity was still a bit messy. The next day I put the snow right in our sand and water table. Originally I was using white rice and thinking about switching to Epsom salts, but the kids had so much fun with the real thing (and we have plenty of it!) that I decided to keep it there. They made lots of cool things with our buckets, measuring tools, water wheel and cups.
I've been finding that my class gets bored quickly with the same old same old. I ended up finding neat ideas to keep the snow exciting for the kids. We began with spray bottles full of water and food coloring, and I added water colors and paint brushes to color the snow. My director also found bottled water colors that I watered down and put in cups and watering cans. The kids used paint brushes in the cups and poured the watering cans into the snow. They loved seeing the rainbow colors in the snow. It also provided a nice introduction to mixing primary colors to make secondary colors.
We also had fun experimenting with melting snow. I placed some snow in a muffin tin and sprinkled hot water, cold water, sugar, salt, Creole spice and left one plain to see what melted the quickest. The kids also helped make snowballs that we placed on a magazine, plastic bag, plastic lid, metal pan, felt and a cardboard lid to see what melted the quickest. We also peeked outside to check out the foot prints in the yard. It looks as if the Easter Bunny has been scoping things out to get ready for our Easter Egg Hunt in the spring! Snow may keep us from school some days, but it sure does provide several fun teachable moments!