Sunday, April 26, 2015

Planes, Trains, and Automobiles!

 
If a boy were to ever tell you what he did in school- it would be this week! Transportation week is always one of the boys' favorite weeks in kindergarten. The girls like it quite a bit too. And what's not to love? We began the week by reading Curious George and the Hot Air Balloon. We watched for, then recorded, the three modes of transportation George used in the story: a car, a hot air balloon, and a helicopter. Then we sorted them on the transportation anchor chart. The next day, we read Harbor by Donald Crews. The boys were INTENSELY into it.  It names and shows the many different types of boat you can see in a harbor. 

 That same day, the students paired up and were given a picture of a vehicle. Together they decided if it went by land, air, or sea. They took turns coming up in front of the class and sharing about their vehicles, then posting it onto the anchor chart under its correct category. 




On Wednesday, I read "I'm Dirty"by Kate and Jim McMullen. Some of the boys were really excited to share what they already knew about construction/clean up vehicles. 
After that, each students reached into the mystery box and pulled out a picture of a vehicle. This time, instead of sorting it on the chart and telling about it verbally. The students had to write about that vehicle in their journals. As a special treat, they got to use the picture as a part of their illustrations.  










Our new sight words this week were 'now', 'goes', and 'does.' I always try to use the new sight words as much as possible in our group writing time and have it be a part of their journal writing as well. So our chart this week modeled how to use two of the words in a sentence. For two days, we made and read sentences about how a vehicle goes (on land, air, or sea).  Then I posed questions about which way a vehicle goes. Does a car go in the air? Then the students answered these questions using the word 'goes' in their responses. No. A car goes on the road.  

To wrap up the unit, we watched a great video about transportation on brainpopjr.  Then the students wrote about which vehicle they thought was the best. I encouraged them to write at least two sentences but told them that 3 sentences would be too hard for them-that they wouldn't be able to write any more than two until they got to first grade. And they wouldn't be able to write more than 4 until they were second graders. This reverse psychology worked on a handful of them. I had some that completely filled up the page! (But I forgot to take pics)!
This week's centers got the students really pumped up.  In the word word center, the students used letter beads to create sight words in individual "parking spaces." Once a word was complete, they got to park a car in that spot. 
 
In the math games center, the students played "By Land, Air, & Sea." In this subtraction game, the students start in the air, rolling the dice and traveling down the numbers. Once they've landed on zero, they trade out their plane for a car and travel down the road. Lastly, they change their car to a boat and work their way down the sea.
  
In the writing center, they wrote sentences similar to the ones we'd written on the anchor chart. This center is mainly about teaching the students correct letter formation, and then, as they advance, correct sentence formation -using spaces, keeping letter in words close together, using punctuation, etc.  
The students put together a firetruck, a ship, a plane, a train, and a construction vehicle in the puzzle center.


And they built  a road in the number work center. The unifix tracks had to be put together to go from 1 to 100. After that, the students had a bag of yellow "mile markers" that they had to place on the road. Once those tasks were complete, they could pretend to make long trains or other vehicles on the road. 

For whole group math in April, our calendar/Smartboard time looks like this.

 
There is no regular pattern on the calendar this month. Instead, the students are learning about the life cycles of various "springy" things: frogs, flowers, butterflies, and hens.  

On the next page, the students have to read and then solve a word problem.  We try to solve using mental math or our fingers. Then we can check our answers using the pictures on the left of the page. We go back and forth between addition and subtraction problems. 
On the next page, the students go on an Easter egg hunt.  They touch an egg and it disappears to reveal a number. Then they add that many green squares to the odd-looking hundred grid. This grid is set up in vertical groups of ten to look like we're working with base ten blocks.  This activity is great for learning to count on from numbers other than one, determining how many more we need to get to a certain number, and figuring out how many we will have once a new amount of blocks has been added.  We also review how many tens and ones are in the number.
For example, in the picture below, we had started off on the number 38. Before Sydni touched an egg to reveal a number, I asked the students, "How many squares do we need to reach 40?" After she touched an egg and revealed the number 4, then I asked, "What number will we finish on?" Finally, after Sydni placed the last square on number 42, I asked, "How many tens are in 42? How many ones?" 
One the last page, the students track the days in school and adjust the amounts of tens and ones.
Sometimes we finish up our group math time with an online game. One we've been playing a lot in April is Shark Numbers. It works on identifying how many tens and ones make up a number. The students really enjoy it. 

I"ll leave you with a few pics from a wonderfully entertaining assembly that the AM class attended this week. The Zuzu African Acrobats put on an awesome show and even got some of the kiddos involved!




This was not taken at our performance, but this is one of the tricks they did.











Friday, April 17, 2015

Spring Has Sprung!

This is a THREE week wrap-up: this week, last week, and the week before Spring Break.  I'm going to summarize starting with our most recent activities and then do a photo-summary of the two weeks before.
This week we learned about mammals and what makes them different from other animals.  We made an anchor chart which we added to each day that told mammal facts. The students read the sentences in the correct order. Then they had to reconstruct them. One day, I mixed the sentences all up and they had to figure out how to make them correct again.
 On Wednesday, we read the book, Animals Dads (Sneed B. Collins) and figured out which animals were mammals based on the clues in the text (Did it mention eggs? Does the animal have hair?). Afterward, the students wrote about what their dads and granddads do for them or with them.


The next day, I passed out tiny pictures of various animals. Each student had to decide whether or not their animal was a mammal, and then tell why or why not.



 Then they wrote about their animal in their journals, once again telling if it was or wasn't a mammal and explaining why or why not.





The students did another animal sorting activity on Tuesday.

In other learning news, we have been watching the heck out of this video for the last two weeks to learn about the r-controlled vowel sounds.



Last week was all about /ar/ (pictures of the cute craft to come later in this post). This week was all about /or/. To remember it, the students clap their hands together and bark the sound like a sea lion.
During our group literacy time, the students brainstorm with partners and come up with words that have the new sound of the week. I write them on the anchor chart and each class challenges the other to read their words.

   Just as we did while learning the letters, we check our mailbox a few times each week to find items with the new sounds.  This week we found an ear of corn and a fork. We also review the new sound with some sort of game on the Smartboard everyday. We typically use www.starfall.com - as we did this week and last week for this game, and this game, and this game. We also use the Smartboard to create word ladders. We start with a simple word at the top, then change one letter to make a new word. We keep going until we get to the bottom of the ladder.

    During centers this week, the students put together CVC word puzzles, then sorted them out by vowel sound.
 They built their own robots in the math games center. This is the exact same game we played on the Smartboard during the March calendar time, only in tangible form. The students spin an addition or subtraction problem, use the number line (or mental math) to solve it, and earn a piece of their robot. 



The students worked with math AND mammals in the number work center. The students had to count by fives to sequence the pieces to the mammal puzzles.
 In the writing center, the students recorded/copied facts about mammals.

 And in the shapes center, they got to play with our brand new wooden shape games.

Now for the last two weeks. How about I just post the pictures and explain a bit in the captions?  Have a great weekend!

LAST WEEK: SPRING IS SO EGG-CITING!












We learned about symmetry








They got the first Super Dojo Award (Given on Fridays to all who have earned ten or more points that week). 

They got to write with special pens all day and then got to take them home!
The pirates' favorite phonics sound is Ar!



 WEEK BEFORE SPRING BREAK: TELLING TIME



Students worked together to reconstruct sentences about clocks.










Students raced two little mice around the clock in the math games center after reading "Boom Chicka Rock"

Decomposing teen numbers using a rainbow visual. Sometimes we use the Smartboard to do our worksheets all together.