Saturday, April 29, 2017
Monday, May 23, 2016
Writing about our Playground
We read several of Donald Crew's books and talked about them as mentor texts.

We decided that Donald Crews must like transportation vehicles! We supposed that he observed the places where the vehicles were to get more information to write. He must have looked at the vehicles and listened to them. We also noticed that he used a few words and that he placed the words at the bottom of the page. He also liked to use colors and details in his illustrations.
For our writing piece, we chose chose a place that we loved at school - the playground. First, we observed the playground and took some notes about what we saw, what we heard, and the actions that took place there. I took a picture of the students on the playground. Later, they wrote sentences about what they saw, what they heard, and what actions took place at the playground. They glued their black and white photograph to the top of the large writing paper. They added color to their picture and extended the playground to the entire space.
We decided that Donald Crews must like transportation vehicles! We supposed that he observed the places where the vehicles were to get more information to write. He must have looked at the vehicles and listened to them. We also noticed that he used a few words and that he placed the words at the bottom of the page. He also liked to use colors and details in his illustrations.
For our writing piece, we chose chose a place that we loved at school - the playground. First, we observed the playground and took some notes about what we saw, what we heard, and the actions that took place there. I took a picture of the students on the playground. Later, they wrote sentences about what they saw, what they heard, and what actions took place at the playground. They glued their black and white photograph to the top of the large writing paper. They added color to their picture and extended the playground to the entire space.
For some additional fun and learning, we designed a playground for an ant a few days later. I showed the children a few ways to fold paper to make it 3D. They took off on the idea and added many ways of their own.
Enjoy! Molly
Monday, May 9, 2016
Measure Me!
With Spring here we have been growing sunflowers (see earlier blog), sorting seeds, and comparing heights and lengths. It's a good time to introduce non-standard measurement activities. Last week we measured many classroom objects - scissors, pencils, glue sticks . . . But, the very best kindergarten measuring activity was measuring each other. What fun!
The children measured each other and recorded how many cubes long the parts were on a body picture (feel free to copy the page below if you'd like to try it). I left it open to see what they would like to measure. They measured feet, head width, ear length, mouth width, hand length, leg length and even body length! They giggled and laughed during measuring, but turned into serious mathematicians when recording:) It was time to end math even before they were finished.
Enjoy! Molly
Feel free to copy recording paper here:
Sunday, April 24, 2016
Word Family Flowers
I was searching for ways to have children generate word family words. I found this cute idea from Playdough to Plato http://www.playdoughtoplato.com/a-word-family-garden/
But, I am working with a whole class of kindergartners, instead of a small home setting. So, I made a flower template and copied the flowers on bright colors. We completed a lesson on word families, then I let them make their own word family flowers on their own. This was a big task for some, but all children were successful. I differentiated by the number of flowers and word families each child completed.
Here's a flower template if you'd like to try with your class too, feel free to copy it.
Enjoy! Molly
Friday, April 15, 2016
Rainy Day Drip Art
Oh, rainy April Days! No outside recess? Here's what I did yesterday afternoon --drip painting.
I simply made up some thin paint by adding water to tempera and adding some to liquid watercolors to apply with droppers. Then, I offered a padded tray and white construction paper to drip on.
They loved the break and our room came back to the excited hum of working kindergartners.
As we picked up each drip page, we sang "It's Raining, it's Pouring". At another table, some children even used watercolor paints to try their own drips and one child made a page illustrating the song!
Over the next few days we'll cut large raindrops from the pages, write sound words, and perform some rain songs.
This lesson and many, many more is available in our Spring Weather lesson pack.
Enjoy! Molly
Wednesday, April 6, 2016
Working with Peers - Math
We are continuously trying to set up opportunities for children to work with each other. I took a little look at how I am encouraging peer sharing in math lately. Here's what I found:
We also try to work on problems together at our tables. After writing or drawing, I sometimes ask them to take a moment to share their thoughts with someone sitting next to them. |
Thursday, March 17, 2016
ELA the Kindergarten Way
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| Happy Spring! |
Fellow kindergarten teachers....
We are excited to announce that our book of language arts lessons and strategies for kindergarten teachers will be published by Capstone in spring 2017!
Here is the official book description:
Kindergarten
teachers know that a child's first taste of school should be engaging, active,
social and fun! Yet we are presented
with a challenge. How do we nurture the
holistic, exploratory nature of early childhood while teaching with the intentionality
and rigor required for meeting specific and ever-higher learning goals? Let
this resource show you. ELA the Kindergarten Way contains a year-full of methods for teaching
foundational reading skills, building vocabulary, inspiring and developing
writing, and for helping children respond to literature and informational text
- while inherently fulfilling the needs of the whole child. All activities are classroom-tested and
naturally infuse visual art, music, drama, poetry, movement and puppetry - so
that kindergartners meet standards their
way.
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