Wednesday, April 23, 2014

Shameless Plug of the Week!

Here is my shameless plug of the week....Alicia T! (click her name to go directly to her TpT store.)

I have worked with Alicia for the past few years and she is full of amazingly creative ideas. She is actually the one who convinced me to start a Teachers Pay Teachers store. Although all of her products are great and very professional, her Mega Packs are amazing.

One of my favorites is her First Grade Math Mega Pack. It is incredible thorough....click here to view it. It includes an activity or two for every first grade Common Core math standard.

And for my shameless plug of myself- I just added two new items for common core language standard L 2.2. My goal is to have a packet for every ELA and writing standard in the common core. It is hard enough switching standards- I want to make it an easier transition.  I have many items completed but like to use them with my students before I post them. Kid tested I guess you could say :) Check to the right of your screen for a link to my TpT store.

Reading Week 2014!

I love reading week...maybe because it is the week before vacation....maybe because I love books.....

This year we continued our tradition of a Miss Alaineus parade.  If you haven't read the book by Debra Frasier, put it on your list! Check out her website here. It is a great book about a student who mistakes the word "miscellaneous" and it leads to a classroom catastrophe! It is a great book for vocabulary studies.  For the parade, all of the students pick a word and represent it in some way. This is one of a few things we do at school where the kindergarten is as excited as the fifth grade! Unfortunately, I can't put up their pictures but you can check out other parades on Debra Frasier's website. This year our staff decided to pick characters from The Wizard of Oz and then choose a word that represents that character. I was the yellow brick road and my word was journey. These pictures I can post :)

We also added the "Guess the Young Reader" board this year.  Teachers and staff provided pictures of them reading as youngsters with their favorite book. Students had to put a name to a face. It was a blast! (I'm number three!)

Mini Note Takers

I don't know about you all, but my students love to do things that they "older kids" get to do. During our recent Solar System unit I taught the kids how to take two column notes. We started slowly and with a ton of modeling but they loved it! (I should remind them of this when they get to middle school. hahaha)  As a reward for "class compliments" my students chose to watch a Magic School Bus movie on space. I was correcting papers when I noticed one of the kids not on the carpet sprawled out like the others. He was taking notes!!!! How adorable is this? I asked if he wanted to join the others but he told me "I have to study and go to college. I can watch movies at home."  Can't wait to see where this kid goes!

My Creative Ma!

Since I can remember my mother has created things; cloths when we were kids, cabbage patch kids because the demand was so high, beautiful woven scarves, amazing quilts, and most recently these amazing art quilts (and cards too!).  I hope that her creative gene rubs off on me!

My sister-in-law is a school librarian in MA (MrsLodgesLibrary.com) and she is incredible! My mother made us these alphabet letters for our classrooms.  I use them for for centers and decoration. Each letter has fabric that represents the letter. X has xray, Y has yellow and yoyo.  If you want your own, she sells them in her Etsy Store - To Keep Ewe Warm.  We have spent many trips to fabric stores trying to find fun fabric~


Math Manipulatives

Our current math program calls for the use of a lot of manipulatives. I am a firm believer that students at this age and developmental level rely heavily on the use of manipulatives.  I do find about 25% don't want to use the materials because they know how to solve the problem in other ways or as they say "faster ways". I usually have these students show me they know how to do it and then allow them to use their own way to solve.  It is important that students learn many ways to solve problems and then independently choose the strategy that works best for them. 

For this particular lesson, students were just starting to learn about arrays, making rows and columns, and understanding that this represents multiplication.    On a previous worksheet, the students were asked to draw lines to represent the rows. I thought this group was so creative. Although I didn't ask them to draw the rows, they used their pencils! So creative. Just another reminder that allowing students to be creative always leads to something great! (my apologies for the crooked picture...looks like columns here :-) )