Who'd have thought that getting children to weed would also be educational? Well, it worked and it was fun! We are currently studying the parts of a plant and the job of each of those parts. This past week, students went out into the field by our playground and searched out "flowers," which we grown-ups call pesky weeds! Students brought them, taped them down and carefully labeled each part of the plant. We then had more discussions about the value of each of those parts.
Now they have a real-life example to support thier learning and Chets has a few less weeds cluttering the field. Now that's a win-win if you ask me!
Parts to know: flower (makes the seeds and the fruit), leaves (collect sunlight and make food), stem (carry the water from the roots to the leaves and hold the plant upright), roots (collect water and nutrients from the soil and hold the plant firmly in the soil)
Learning with Miss Young
Friday, October 28, 2011
Pumpkins, Siamese Cats and Chihuahuas??
Yep, that combination really does go together! Recently we created a display of literary pumpkins for one of our favorite book characters, Skippyjon Jones. The display turned out really cute.
Check out: http://skippyjonjones.com/ to see his books!
This is also a cute picture of our class dressed up for our literary parade!!
Check out: http://skippyjonjones.com/ to see his books!
This is also a cute picture of our class dressed up for our literary parade!!
Wednesday, August 31, 2011
Getting into the Groove
I thought that I would take a few minutes to show you some snapshots into our routines that hopefully you are already hearing about from your child!
1. Success Tickets!!! Success tickets are a fun incentive with a bit of luck involved too! If you are caught doing something awesome, you get a ticket! Be sure to put your name on it an toss into our jar, because on Wednesdays and Fridays Miss Young will draw tickets to pick cool stuff from the treasure box! You get one prize for EVERY tickets she pulls with your name on it!! Some friends have already gotten called up three or four times! Some other ways to earn tickets are reading quietly in the hallway in the morning and you get two tickets if you log in your book all week ALL BY YOURSELF! (It's like getting paid!) But watch out... if you flip your card even once on Wednesday or Friday, you don't get to use your tickets. Be careful!
2. C.H.A.M.P.s: C.H.A.M.P. stands for: C-conversation, H-help, A-activity, M-movement, and P-participation. Miss Young reminds the class of the C.H.A.M.P. expectations for each part of our day. This tells us what exactly we need to do to be "on-the-ball" and ready to learn as much as we can! (It also helps us know what she might look for to give out success tickets and how NOT to get our card flipped.) Mom and Dad, you can remind your child to be a CHAMP at school and follow all the expectations!
3. Superhero Class Promise: Every morning after our Good Morning Boogie Woogie song we proudly recite our class promise together! This is our promise to have good character all day long! We stand tall and proud and give a superhero punch to the air with every promise! I've placed a copy of this class promise in the back of each child's red folder. This is a great place to start discussing expectations for the day or finding our how the day went for your child! For example: "Were you responsible today? Did you do what you needed to do and have what you needed to have? How so?"
4. Poem of the Week: This week we began the routine of learning a poem of the week. This week's poem is called New Friend. I chose this poem for the beginning of the school year, because I hope your child is making 17 great new friends and teammates this school year! We have read it every day together and I hope you are practicing it at home as well! (A copy is in your child's homework folder.) We have talked about words that repeat, we've talked about the rhyming words, and we've talked about our favorite lines and what they mean to us. I can't wait to see how intelligent they sound discussing poetry by the end of the year! What a bunch of smarty-pants! Oh yeah, and my favorite part- each child randomly got the name of a new friend in the class and had to draw him/her. The result is seen all around the poem. We have some very creative artists in this class as well!
5. Sight Words: Everyday we review our sightwords by singing them to an addictive little tune (Three-Little-Indians). Once we all know them quite well, we will transfer them to our word wall for reference. Sight words are words that a child should learn by sight and be able to read in a "snap!" I will post for you the first nine-weeks' words for your reference. You will probably find it quite helpful to make flash cards for these words (one-nine weeks at a time or even half a nine-weeks). One fun way to spice it up is to add a few cards randomly in the stack that say BOOM! As your child zips through the words in the stack, they run across a BOOM! and get to yell it out! It really keeps them on thier toes.
First Nine-Weeks Words: (Some are a review from kindergarten.)
I | and | said | on |
see | go | the | jump |
my | is | play | four |
like | here | she | not |
a | for | are | too |
to | have | he | we |
five | upon | cold | what |
you | find | fall | flower |
away | two | one | do |
does | in | once | me |
he | three | liveh | who |
pull | they | where | |
Sunday, August 21, 2011
A SUPER Year Awaits!!
Tomorrow begins a new school year and with a superhero theme, this year is sure to be SUPER with amazing feats of learning and powerful relationships built. After meeting so many of my first grade heroes at orientation, I'm excited to spend time this year getting to know each of them! One thing I loved about teaching first grade last year was the exponential growth that all my students made. First grade is all about growth and it is so fun to encourage and watch!
Looking forward to an awesome year with you and your own little hero!
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Monday, February 7, 2011
100 Days of School!
I just thought I'd share some of the fun activities we did on this landmark day!
Reading for 100 Minutes
(Well, really 5 groups reading for 20 minutes each! :) )
We Made 100 Day Hats to Celebrate the Landmark!
We Counted By 100 All the Way to 2,000!
We Moved on Up in Our Place Value Chart!!
I Can Spell 100 Words
Our Fun 100th Day Snack!!
10 groups of 10 = 100
Searching for the 100 Missing Hershey Kisses
(We are still on the look-out for 2 of them!)
Race to 100 on the 100 Chart!
Answering Equations about 100
(This is tough, but not too tough thanks to the 100 chart and our practice counting by 10 up and down different columns!)
What Would You Buy for $100.00?
My 100 yr old Portrait!
"Pop! Pop!" Who Knew Making "Popcorn" Was So Much Fun...
"Hey, did you know that harpee eagles prey on sloths or that the sloth is the slowest moving creature on Earth?"
"Wow!! I just learned that an eel's jaw can crush bones! Some even have poisonous flesh!"
"I didn't know that winter lasts six months in the Arctic!"
"I can't believe that EACH of T-Rex's teeth were the size of a steak knife! Can you imagine 1,000 of those chomping down on you?"
Today we had tons of fun reading and learning! We have been learning about nonfiction in reading and now we are beginning the report writing process in writer's workshop. So, today we took some pre-steps to researching- recognizing when we learn something new when we read! We learned so many new things today as we partner read and got to share some really cool "popcorn" we made! No, we didn't really make popcorn, but our brains did. See, when we read AND think our brain kind of wakes up. It might start out slow as it is warming up, but soon as I think and think and think and read and read and read the "popcorn" just takes over! Pop.......... pop.........pop......pop...pop..pop.pop.pop.pop.pop.poppopopopopop!!! All this "popcorn" is really all the new ideas I'm having and connections that I'm making!
Reading to learn is a lot of fun!
To encourage your child to read even more nonfiction (and expose them to massive amount of vocabulary!) try taking them to the library to answer questions that they've always wondered about, get a subscription to a child's nonfiction magazine like Sports Illustrated for Kids or Ranger Rick. Highlights Magazine also has nonfiction and fiction articles. You can also read excerpts of magazines, the newspaper, and the Internet to them on topics that interests you both or to learn more about a topic that might have come up in conversation! Exposure to more and more nonfiction is a powerful tool to learning in so many ways!
Check out some of our strategy work as we used mini sticky-notes with an exclamation mark to show where we learned something new!
"Wow!! I just learned that an eel's jaw can crush bones! Some even have poisonous flesh!"
"I didn't know that winter lasts six months in the Arctic!"
"I can't believe that EACH of T-Rex's teeth were the size of a steak knife! Can you imagine 1,000 of those chomping down on you?"
Today we had tons of fun reading and learning! We have been learning about nonfiction in reading and now we are beginning the report writing process in writer's workshop. So, today we took some pre-steps to researching- recognizing when we learn something new when we read! We learned so many new things today as we partner read and got to share some really cool "popcorn" we made! No, we didn't really make popcorn, but our brains did. See, when we read AND think our brain kind of wakes up. It might start out slow as it is warming up, but soon as I think and think and think and read and read and read the "popcorn" just takes over! Pop.......... pop.........pop......pop...pop..pop.pop.pop.pop.pop.poppopopopopop!!! All this "popcorn" is really all the new ideas I'm having and connections that I'm making!
Reading to learn is a lot of fun!
To encourage your child to read even more nonfiction (and expose them to massive amount of vocabulary!) try taking them to the library to answer questions that they've always wondered about, get a subscription to a child's nonfiction magazine like Sports Illustrated for Kids or Ranger Rick. Highlights Magazine also has nonfiction and fiction articles. You can also read excerpts of magazines, the newspaper, and the Internet to them on topics that interests you both or to learn more about a topic that might have come up in conversation! Exposure to more and more nonfiction is a powerful tool to learning in so many ways!
Check out some of our strategy work as we used mini sticky-notes with an exclamation mark to show where we learned something new!
Sunday, February 6, 2011
These are the Third Nine-Weeks sight words. Remember that your child is expected to know these words "on sight" by the end of the nine-weeks. Please help by reviewing these words or using websites like those listed here to help reinforce them: hangman or Spelling City. You must enter the words in on spelling city for them.
morning | again | about |
found | both | because |
shout | gone | draw |
climb | or | happy |
cow | want | teacher |
table | turn | part |
now | hard | tiny |
door | afraid | always |
there | any | eight |
through | bear | arms |
horse | follow | seven |
wall | most | warm |
been | tall | ready |
fat | water | body |
forest | idea | carry |
goes | old | kind |
hungry | piece | put |
soon | shoe | saw |
evening | start | butter |
near | under | were |
| very | work |
| wear | person |
| build | |
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