Showing posts with label Literacy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Literacy. Show all posts

May 15, 2013

Easy DIY Name Center

I saw this idea in one of my colleague's rooms and loved it at first sight. It is so simple and super cheap to make.  It is a great letter matching game and the clothespins help build fine motor skills.



What you will need:
  • a couple packages of clothespins 
  • a sharpie (permanent marker)
  • printed & laminated name cards (or sight words!)

Write the letters (I used uppercase - you could use both) on both sides of the clothespin.
Make sure you have at least two of each letter and a bunch of vowels!!

The children find the matching clothespin letters and put them on the card - on the corresponding letter.

The children love searching for friends names and then the letters.



April 27, 2013

Alphabet Play

This is a lovely idea I saw in my colleague Kati's classroom.  I had to make one for my class and share it with you.

 It is easy to set up.  Put the printed pages into page protectors and slip into a binder.  (I have included a cover for the binder.)

You will need the JUMBO glass gems for the activity.  This activity requires adult supervision with those discs.  This is not recommended for very young children.  Be wise.  You can also use large flat river rocks.

 The children put the gems on the letter.  


So much fun!


Click here or on the image below for your FREE copy of this game.


April 18, 2013

Storytelling in Blocks

Oh my word!  I was so excited to discover a lost thumb drive with photos from my classroom in 2007-2008.   I thought I had lost all of my photos when my first laptop crashed.   My daughter found a random thumb drive and . . . well . . . a treasure trove of photos!

One of the folders had photos of Three Billy Goats Gruff "puppet" play in blocks.  I had made two simple Waldorf style troll "marionettes" out of fabric and provided a variety of toy goats.   I read the story every day for a week before putting these props in blocks.  I also retold the story using these props to model how to tell a story.

The addition of story props from a fairy tale spurred a whole new level of building.  Bridges abounded - small bridges, huge bridges, long bridges, short bridges - all inside the telling of the very mean and naughty troll.

 Huge bridges were built for the troll.
 Smaller bridges were built for the goats.

The story took on a whole new dimension as the children expanded the tale.  It was a collaborative storytelling journey.

The most stunning thing about this was the fact that a little boy who had not entered cooperative play yet (or parallel play for that matter) - began to take up the part of a goat.  It was such a moment, even the children stopped to listen to him "trip, trap."

 A few children began to write a new version of the story!

There was even a bit of fighting over who was going to be the troll!

It amazed me how much bridge building began out the simple addition of the story, "The Three Billy Goats Gruff."  The block center was vibrant with activity - with as many as 10 children at a time building bridges.

 "Whose that trip trapping across my bridge?  Who ever you are - I am going to eat you up!"

One student removed all of the goats from the blocks and put them in order of size.  Too cool.

Simple props from a favorite story + blocks = amazing!

April 14, 2013

Glue Multi-Media Paintings

This is a very fun way to produce a process based painting.

I love the texture and dimension it produces!
 I begin with a canvas that the children have previously painted.  These canvases were painted with red, yellow, and orange paints.


What you need:
  • glue
  • liquid watercolors or food coloring (these will keep the glue transparent as it dries)
  • plastic "stir pots"
  • popsicle stick to stir the mixture
  • assorted materials to stir into the pot (beads, yarn, little tiles, buttons, pieces of paper, etc.)
  • plastic table cloth to protect your table (I buy them on sale)
The best part of this project is that the children mix up a brew of paint, glue and stuff.  I let the children squeeze their glue into the pot, I let them squeeze the paint, and add whatever they want from the buffet of materials.  Ooo so fun!! 

 The children LOVE making their own concoctions.  Pure bliss.

When the pot is ready - it is dumped onto the canvas.

 The mixtures are drizzled, dumped, swirled and applied in all sorts of ways.  It was so interesting to see one of my students discover how she could create swirls of orange on top of the yellow.  Another student added a bit of water to his mixture to see how it changed his mixture.


Let the painting dry flat.  It will take up to three days.

 Display!

It adds a lovely bit of color to the corner.

March 11, 2013

Global Art Lesson Pack + Bonus Wish Pouch Lesson


 PLUS a special bonus lesson plan from Handwork Homeschool!


The lesson pack includes these four multimedia art projects:

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African masks            French Windows      India Elephants      3-D Chinese Lanterns



 Over 38 pages of instructions including:
  • Recommended literature to read with project 
  •  Documentation "worksheets" (arts integration)
  • Research based learning with non-fiction sources
  • Featured art skills and adaptations for younger and older students
  • Each art project is tied to an artist or art object


All this for only $5.99!
Recommended for Kindergarten through Second Grade 

Click on this button to purchase!
Add to Cart View Cart -->

February 02, 2013

Patty's Room: Writing Materials

There is are so many meaningful opportunities for Patty's Pre-k children to write.  Here are a few:

Color sorted markers and colored pencils. 

 The writing center materials.  I love the two choices - fat pencil or golf pencil.  These are both developmentally appropriate.  And providing tape!  So important!

  More writing center materials- a tray of paper, a basket of words (blue cards) and a basket of picture + word cards.

 The picture + word cards are related to their current inquiry - air.

 The children write their name before entering the classroom.

 A basket of weather journals.

 Writing in housekeeping.

Computer play - typing away in housekeeping (pretend- of course).

 Writing is valued and displayed.

Love the writing hanging within these frames.

 Writing samples hanging in a window related their weather study (which came out of the air inquiry).

Tomorrow we will look at Hanging Art in Patty's classroom.
Monday we will look at how the air inquiry was demonstrated in the classroom environment.

Thank you to Patty and her co-teacher Jenni for sharing their amazing classrooms!!

January 23, 2013

DIY Clipboards

I don't know about you but I love having a clipboard for every child in my class but holy moly that can get expensive!

Well, I ran into someone  (Stacy)  who came up with a DIY version and I couldn't wait to share the goodness!


WHAT YOU WILL NEED:
  • bulldog clips or binder clips (the binder clips are cheaper)
  • 9 x 12 hardboard panel (Nasco carries one for 75 cents :: Click here)
    • You could have boards cut at your local hardware store - but I like having the board's edges already sanded and smooth

Super simple - just attach the clip!  Done!

You are ready to go!

I use clipboards for guided drawings, group work, writing. . . . the list goes on!

TIP:   
A subscriber, Danielle, wrote me and said she was taking this idea and using it with her white boards.  Every student has a white board in their chair pocket.  (Check HERE for my DIY White boards)  She is going to add a bulldog clip to their white boards - and voila!  It doubles as a clipboard!   Brilliant!  Thank you Danielle! 

December 13, 2012

Elves and the Shoemaker


This is one of my favorite Holiday stories.  It highlights the gift of giving without expecting a return for your generosity.


Here are some key hands-on links to tie into your learning stations. (Click on yellow links for instructions).  These are very engaging activities - just what you need as you approach Winter break!


 Write a story about what you would do if you were an elf.  What kind deed would you do?  For who?

What is his/her name?  Where does she live? 

Make an elfin village.  Create a house for your elf.

Open a shoe art museum!

Be like the elves and sew!  What other words start with the same sound as your name?  Make a list of 25 words.

It's math! It's a pattern!  Loop and Pull!  A/B!  
Make friendship bracelets!

Enjoy!

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