Well, today was the first day of school! I know, I didn't blog at all this weekend. Let me tell you why. Friday was Open House, so I was at school from 8 am to 8 pm, and when I walked out, I left my computer right there in my classroom, along with my camera! I was in so much withdrawal this weekend without them! I did give myself a pass, figuring a 12 hour day at school was enough to make anyone forget something. But I have everything now, and I'm ready for you! Let's go backward a bit and I'll show you my final preparations for my room. I did finish my crate chairs in time, so I have them around my teaching table. I'm really happy about it too, considering the number of desks I have to have in my room!
So here they are, they turned out great!
Let me show you my room. I tried to take pictures of every part of it.
OK, so the picture above is my reading area. The bulletin board isn't 100 percent complete, as I'm going to add phonics and grammar skills to it as we learn them. The top of the cart will be the writing area, where students can get their writing binders and other supplies they will need for writing. The bottom picture is my computer center. I hate that big L-shaped desk, and whenever I used it as a teacher's desk it just got in my way, and ended up being a place to "collect" stuff. So, I put it to better use this year and made it into my computer center. The bulletin board is for great papers or work I want to show off. I wrapped pink "cheer" material around the desk to hide the hanging cords, and made a little pink curtain that I hung from the bottom of the bulletin board to hide those cords. The empty space on the desk won't stay empty. I've got a little 13 inch TV and V-smile game system that will go there. The V-smile has three different educational games and two controllers. (and only $2 from a yard sale!) And if you are curious, the little pink piece of paper on the wall is a sentence strip that has the computer password on it. There is a large chart on the left side of the picture that I'll use to add websites to, as students learn how to use them. (they will also be bookmarked on the computer)
Next is my birthday wall. This wasn't a bulletin board space, I created one with hot glue and fabric. *wink* It is for the birthday idea I got from Pinterest, which came from someone 's blog. I am going to take a picture of students whose birthdays fall in the same month, having them hold a sign up with the date of his/her birthday on it. Then, I'll post the pictures of the students under each month's heading.
The bottom picture shows my AR board and my center cart. The AR board is designed to look like a football field, and there are footballs at the bottom with student numbers on them. Each section of the field is 1 point. As students earn points, they move their football up the field. I'm going to add a heading that says "Score in Reading with AR." The center cart is just that, a place to keep all my centers, which I keep organized in containers. When center time is over, students know where to return their boxes.
The above picture you've seen before, and here it is finished. I did glue the dugouts at the bottom to appeal to my fella's sports nature. The bottom part has my Homeworkopoly board on it and the game pieces.
The next picture is the smaller desk in the room, which I use as my desk. It has the computer that is hooked up to the Promethean board on it, and other technology, as well as a few office supplies. On the board above it is my Boggle game and my lesson chart, which we have to have posted in our rooms. Up above you see a glimpse of my number line, on which I used baseball and soccer stickers to mark off the numbers used to count by 5s and 10s.
Next is my guided reading area. See how the crate chairs fit so beautifully! Yay! Behind the table are some drawers that hold supplies and my leveled readers, as well as the calendar. The bottom picture is my listening center. The boxes on the left are those divided boxes. Last year I used them for sorting papers, this year I'm am going to use it as a drying rack for art, since last year I had papers lying all over the room after art. I'll sort papers in a file crate this year. As you can see, I use the space under the table for a little extra storage. Turned longways like they are, there is still plenty of room for students to place their feet when at a chair at the table.
And here is my room from as far back as I can get, so you see how my desks are arranged. I've got groups of five, with the stools in the middle as materials tables. The two other stools I had gotten where not really sturdy enough for me to use after all, so I am short two again, and HOPING that I find two more quick, fast, and in a hurry! As of today, I already have 24 kids, and I am supposed to get 2-3 more tomorrow, and so I have no idea where I am going to put 2 MORE desks, but I guess I'll have to make do.
Fast forward to today, the first day of school. It actually went pretty well considering I had 24 kids in the room, and my para didn't come in till almost 1. They seem to know a lot from last year, so I was really impressed. I've got a couple of darlings who will need a little catch up, but I think they'll be fine. We just went over some basic concepts so I could see what they knew, and I was quite impressed when they recognized and could tell me the value of the four basic coins. I actually acted like they knocked me off my feet with their "smart-ness," they got a kick out of that.
Of course we went over rules and procedures, a LOT of them, and they did really well considering I had to talk so much. They loved the hallway song and the name on the paper song. I've got a great group of kids this year. Oh, I showed them the voki of Molly, and they enjoyed that too, especially after I brought her out to actually meet them. They were just a talking to her and asking her all kinds of questions! They even wanted me to bring out Jade to meet her. Jade is a stuffed dragon that I introduced at Open House. He gets to go home with a student every Friday and the student writes in Jade's journal about what they did together. We had a lot of fun with those two. It was nice break from talking rules and routines all morning.
Well, I've been writing for the better part of half an hour now, and I guess that by now you are tired of reading. If I had not had Open House on Friday, and not left my computer at school, I was going to start doing installments of FYI Friday, in which I discuss ADHD, what it is, it's indications, and how to accommodate for and teach children with ADHD. So, I'll start it up this Friday instead. Hope you enjoy!
A blog for teachers- This blog has two main purposes, one, to share creative ideas for lessons, management, and organization in the classroom, and two, as an outlet to educate others about ADHD, and how to work with children and adults who have the disorder.
Monday, August 13, 2012
Tuesday, August 7, 2012
Ahhhh!! You HAVE to see this!
Ok, I wasn't going to post tonight but I could not help myself. I learned about this from another blog I found on Pinterest. The blog is called "A Turn to Learn" and here is the link:
http://aturntolearn.blogspot.com
It is a really cool blog. But the amazing thing I learned about tonight that I couldn't wait to post is voki! It creates talking avatars and has many different options to make it unique. It is awesome!!! I can see SOOO many applications for this, especially introducing historical characters to my students in a fun and new way! I just created a voki and I created this specific one first because I just got this new puppet that I also LOVE. It's a cheerleader puppet, to go with my sports theme, and I love her and named her Molly. Here she is:
And.... here is the voki I created to match her, I think the kids will totally get a kick out of it! I'll play the voki first, then bring out the puppet after saying Molly came to see them!


Totally awesome, right! I flipped over it. Of course, I am easily amused... but you have to admit this is cool! It took me all of two minutes to create this voki so it's not time consuming and will get your kids interested! Check it out yourself at www.voki.com!!
http://aturntolearn.blogspot.com
It is a really cool blog. But the amazing thing I learned about tonight that I couldn't wait to post is voki! It creates talking avatars and has many different options to make it unique. It is awesome!!! I can see SOOO many applications for this, especially introducing historical characters to my students in a fun and new way! I just created a voki and I created this specific one first because I just got this new puppet that I also LOVE. It's a cheerleader puppet, to go with my sports theme, and I love her and named her Molly. Here she is:


Totally awesome, right! I flipped over it. Of course, I am easily amused... but you have to admit this is cool! It took me all of two minutes to create this voki so it's not time consuming and will get your kids interested! Check it out yourself at www.voki.com!!
Monday, August 6, 2012
Almost there!
Oh my goodness, the days are just counting down! We officially go back to work on Wednesday. I went in today and got most everything finished by around lunchtime. I was going to take pictures then, but I do have some finishing touches to do. I need to get a couple of borders, because I did not have any that suited me, so when I get them I will show you! I do have some other things to show you in the meantime that I've finished.
Ok, first is the take home binder that I am going to use this year. I have already made a mostly complete one, minus the agenda our school sells, so that I can show my parents at Open House and explain how it works.
Using my sports theme, the binder will be called a PLAY book. PLAY stands for "Preparing for Life All Year." This is the cover I made to go in the binder's front sleeve. I'll put each of my little darlin's names on the front.
Let's look at the inside!
When you first open it, you will see a label on the inside pocket. It says "Please sign and return." Obvious, yes. I will put anything I want mom or dad to sign and send back to school right up front. On the right side, the very first thing is a pencil pouch, this one just happens to be clear because they were on sale at Office Max for 50 cents a piece. The label on the pouch says "Notes and Money" It also gives a brief reminder of how money is supposed to be sent to school and that a written note is needed anytime a student is absent. I am also going to have my kids keep a pencil in this pouch, so they can never say they didn't have one for HW. (Yes... I've heard that excuse, I'm sure you have too *wink*)
Next are three sheet protectors. The first one is seen here, holding the PLAY book directions. It gives a description of pretty much what I'm writing here, only it's addressed to the parents. I am leaving NO room for excuses from parents or students about what I require done nightly or where things I send home can be found. The next sleeve is for my weekly newsletter, and the last sleeve is for my word work HW sheet. I give students options of what they can do for their spelling and vocabulary homework so A) they don't always have to do the same thing and B) it's a good way to differentiate because it plays to a lot of different learning styles. I've got the normal, write words 4 times each, to the unusual, draw a picture and "hide" your words in it. One assignment choice I used last year a few kids really liked, and that was to find the letters to each word in newspapers or magazines, cut them out, and glue them to paper to spell each word. I kept that choice of course. Anything that gets them working with words right?
OK, so in the complete thing, you would see the school agenda first, then a notebook like the one pictured above. The agenda is going to be used for: daily conduct, HW assignments, reading log, weekly sight words, quick reminders and short parent/teacher contact. Last year I had a separate page for the reading log, but I decided to include it in the agenda this year to save me time and paper. One thing that happened last year was that when a student brought me a complete sheet, it took me a couple of days to get them a new one, so that's no good. I do participate in Pizza Hut's Book It program, and I use their reading log with it. When a student completes his or her reading log for a month, they get a free pizza coupon. The log being in the agenda will also be easier to keep track of because I can go back and reference it anytime.
Now for the spiral notebook. I haven't put the label on it yet because my printer quit... again.. this time for good I think. (I talked to HP, and my poor baby, my first teacher printer, is 6 years old) Anyway, I digress.... the notebook is for their word work HW. Lord knows I hate loose leaf paper all over the place and I hate wasting paper. So, all word work will be done in the notebook and stay in one place. They can do more than one night on one page if there is room and not waste paper or space. I can quickly check if it's done and move on, voila! NOTE: I am going to glue a ribbon to the back of both the agenda and the word work notebook to use as a bookmark, so that my students and myself can quickly get to the page they are on.
Next you will see dividers behind the notebook. Each divider also has... a LABEL! Can you tell I'm totally into labels this year? Ok, so the first divider is for "other homework." Math is usually a page from the student workbook and they have social studies and science projects now and then and those handouts will go here too. If I just put the math sheet in a pocket, sometimes it just mysteriously disappears... how odd. :)
The next divider is for school notes and notices. All that stuff that comes from the front office, I'm going to stick here. School newsletters, lunch notices, PTA reminders, etc. Just a side note, on the PLAY book directions I point out that parents should check out every section of the binder NIGHTLY. The last divider is for graded papers. I don't commit to sending them home weekly, though I do try. But at worst, I'm good for every two weeks on average. The graded papers label is a bit larger because I give directions on them. The directions are; look through the papers, correct papers that have a grade of C or lower, sign the cover sheet, and return it all to school the next day. Hopefully that last part will change when we get the IPads we are supposed to get, and I'll only ask for corrected papers to be sent back. There is a really cool app called Three Ring I want that will allow me to photograph student work and keep a virtual portfolio of their actual work and eliminate me having to keep up with all the ACTUAL paper. Yay technology!
Last but not least.... the back! Not wasted space...
I duct taped a Ziploc bag to the back. It too will have a label, "Spelling Words." Every Monday, I will have my little darlins write their spelling words on flash cards (half of an index card) and stick them in the bag, so they have them to practice with all week.
So there it is! My take home binder, my kids (and me!) WILL be organized this year doggone it!
An addendum to this, my son will be too! He is going to go to the fourth grade this year and will be changing classes! (Tries not to faint) I've been imagining all summer my brilliant, highly unorganized, trashy book bag, ADHD son going from class to class and actually making it home with everything! *cringes* So.... we are going to make him a binder VERY similar to this one. I am going to label EVERYTHING and make sure he knows that he better come home with it every day complete! Hopefully, (crosses my fingers and prays real hard) this will help him stay organized and have what he needs too.
A couple more things for ya:
My hall passes this year! I found these cute sports ball luggage tags at the store on clearance for a dollar. So I scooped them right on up, brought them home and turned them into hall passes!
I finished painting my stools!!! I am still waiting on my sweetie to spray paint the legs of the other two stools, but I can't paint the tops of those. :( I have to cover them in my sports material. But here are the ones I painted, and they turned out SOOO good! We have to go get some polyurethane (spell that?) to put on top so that every little bump doesn't mess up my paint job though! I was so excited about how well they turned out!
I am almost finished with the crate chairs for my small group area too. My fella and I cut and screwed the tops together yesterday and I cut the foam for the seats. I left my handy dandy staple gun at school today ..grr.. so I have to go by in the morning and pick it up so I can upholster those bad boys. Then I'll post them for you to see and say "oo! That's cute! I wish I had time to do that!" Just like I used to say about, oh, everything! haha... ok, well maybe I have inspired you to realize you do have the time after all!
That's all for today, I have to put my blog away and my boy to bed. So see ya later world!
Ok, first is the take home binder that I am going to use this year. I have already made a mostly complete one, minus the agenda our school sells, so that I can show my parents at Open House and explain how it works.
Using my sports theme, the binder will be called a PLAY book. PLAY stands for "Preparing for Life All Year." This is the cover I made to go in the binder's front sleeve. I'll put each of my little darlin's names on the front.
Let's look at the inside!
When you first open it, you will see a label on the inside pocket. It says "Please sign and return." Obvious, yes. I will put anything I want mom or dad to sign and send back to school right up front. On the right side, the very first thing is a pencil pouch, this one just happens to be clear because they were on sale at Office Max for 50 cents a piece. The label on the pouch says "Notes and Money" It also gives a brief reminder of how money is supposed to be sent to school and that a written note is needed anytime a student is absent. I am also going to have my kids keep a pencil in this pouch, so they can never say they didn't have one for HW. (Yes... I've heard that excuse, I'm sure you have too *wink*)
Next are three sheet protectors. The first one is seen here, holding the PLAY book directions. It gives a description of pretty much what I'm writing here, only it's addressed to the parents. I am leaving NO room for excuses from parents or students about what I require done nightly or where things I send home can be found. The next sleeve is for my weekly newsletter, and the last sleeve is for my word work HW sheet. I give students options of what they can do for their spelling and vocabulary homework so A) they don't always have to do the same thing and B) it's a good way to differentiate because it plays to a lot of different learning styles. I've got the normal, write words 4 times each, to the unusual, draw a picture and "hide" your words in it. One assignment choice I used last year a few kids really liked, and that was to find the letters to each word in newspapers or magazines, cut them out, and glue them to paper to spell each word. I kept that choice of course. Anything that gets them working with words right?
OK, so in the complete thing, you would see the school agenda first, then a notebook like the one pictured above. The agenda is going to be used for: daily conduct, HW assignments, reading log, weekly sight words, quick reminders and short parent/teacher contact. Last year I had a separate page for the reading log, but I decided to include it in the agenda this year to save me time and paper. One thing that happened last year was that when a student brought me a complete sheet, it took me a couple of days to get them a new one, so that's no good. I do participate in Pizza Hut's Book It program, and I use their reading log with it. When a student completes his or her reading log for a month, they get a free pizza coupon. The log being in the agenda will also be easier to keep track of because I can go back and reference it anytime.
Now for the spiral notebook. I haven't put the label on it yet because my printer quit... again.. this time for good I think. (I talked to HP, and my poor baby, my first teacher printer, is 6 years old) Anyway, I digress.... the notebook is for their word work HW. Lord knows I hate loose leaf paper all over the place and I hate wasting paper. So, all word work will be done in the notebook and stay in one place. They can do more than one night on one page if there is room and not waste paper or space. I can quickly check if it's done and move on, voila! NOTE: I am going to glue a ribbon to the back of both the agenda and the word work notebook to use as a bookmark, so that my students and myself can quickly get to the page they are on.
Next you will see dividers behind the notebook. Each divider also has... a LABEL! Can you tell I'm totally into labels this year? Ok, so the first divider is for "other homework." Math is usually a page from the student workbook and they have social studies and science projects now and then and those handouts will go here too. If I just put the math sheet in a pocket, sometimes it just mysteriously disappears... how odd. :)
The next divider is for school notes and notices. All that stuff that comes from the front office, I'm going to stick here. School newsletters, lunch notices, PTA reminders, etc. Just a side note, on the PLAY book directions I point out that parents should check out every section of the binder NIGHTLY. The last divider is for graded papers. I don't commit to sending them home weekly, though I do try. But at worst, I'm good for every two weeks on average. The graded papers label is a bit larger because I give directions on them. The directions are; look through the papers, correct papers that have a grade of C or lower, sign the cover sheet, and return it all to school the next day. Hopefully that last part will change when we get the IPads we are supposed to get, and I'll only ask for corrected papers to be sent back. There is a really cool app called Three Ring I want that will allow me to photograph student work and keep a virtual portfolio of their actual work and eliminate me having to keep up with all the ACTUAL paper. Yay technology!
Last but not least.... the back! Not wasted space...
I duct taped a Ziploc bag to the back. It too will have a label, "Spelling Words." Every Monday, I will have my little darlins write their spelling words on flash cards (half of an index card) and stick them in the bag, so they have them to practice with all week.
So there it is! My take home binder, my kids (and me!) WILL be organized this year doggone it!
An addendum to this, my son will be too! He is going to go to the fourth grade this year and will be changing classes! (Tries not to faint) I've been imagining all summer my brilliant, highly unorganized, trashy book bag, ADHD son going from class to class and actually making it home with everything! *cringes* So.... we are going to make him a binder VERY similar to this one. I am going to label EVERYTHING and make sure he knows that he better come home with it every day complete! Hopefully, (crosses my fingers and prays real hard) this will help him stay organized and have what he needs too.
A couple more things for ya:
My hall passes this year! I found these cute sports ball luggage tags at the store on clearance for a dollar. So I scooped them right on up, brought them home and turned them into hall passes!
I finished painting my stools!!! I am still waiting on my sweetie to spray paint the legs of the other two stools, but I can't paint the tops of those. :( I have to cover them in my sports material. But here are the ones I painted, and they turned out SOOO good! We have to go get some polyurethane (spell that?) to put on top so that every little bump doesn't mess up my paint job though! I was so excited about how well they turned out!
I am almost finished with the crate chairs for my small group area too. My fella and I cut and screwed the tops together yesterday and I cut the foam for the seats. I left my handy dandy staple gun at school today ..grr.. so I have to go by in the morning and pick it up so I can upholster those bad boys. Then I'll post them for you to see and say "oo! That's cute! I wish I had time to do that!" Just like I used to say about, oh, everything! haha... ok, well maybe I have inspired you to realize you do have the time after all!
That's all for today, I have to put my blog away and my boy to bed. So see ya later world!
Thursday, August 2, 2012
On a roll!
Ok, I am getting ready and cooking with gas now! I got into my classroom a little bit and got to organize is it some, and I'm excited about how it's coming together. When it's finished I'll post pictures of it. What I'm not so excited about is today we found out that thanks to budget cuts and economic crisis, I could have up to 27 little darlings in my class! Oh my goodness!!! I'm just going to have to pray about that and have faith that God is going to keep me strong and able to teach all those babies! (As you will learn quickly, all my students, from 1st to fifth grade, are my babies. I'm known as the Drama Mama by my Drama students! :) )
Ok, so what have I done to prepare? Well I'm have been working on the cute and efficient today. I finished my behavior management board:
It's a baseball field! (It is mounted on one really cool, one really big, oil pan from Wal-Mart, at a little less than 12 bucks.) Student's start in the "dugout" every day. (the brown area) My fella lovingly pointed out that the dugouts should be at the bottom, to which I replied I knew that... BUT, this was more efficient.. haha... At any rate, it is my plan to clear the board every afternoon, and students place their baseball in the dugout when they arrive in the morning, (attendance check!) and then they can go from there. If they do well, are caught being good, show kindness, whatever, they can "run the bases," meaning they move their baseball to 1st, 2nd, and so on. If they make a home run I make a BIG deal about it, raving and hugging and bragging to other classes, and even announce it on the morning show! My kids loved this last year, because they LOVE it when someone earns a home run, so they are really eager to run the bases. On the other hand, misbehavior earns a "strike," on the lines below. Again my lovely pointed out there are only 3 strikes... (he's a sports nut, can you tell?) and I replied.. they are "1st graders dear... trust me" Strike 1 is just a reminder, a warning to get it straight, and I take no points from conduct. Strikes 2 and 3 lose conduct points and earn consequences. They have to fill out a reflection in the "penalty box" (a time out area) where they have time to think about and correct their behavior. They also lose some of their recess time. If they don't get it together, then they get their "out." If my kids get out, they really are out, I'm putting them in time out with another teacher, calling their parents, or sending them to the office.
What's with the big space at the bottom you ask? Well, I like to utilize space as much as possible, so that space is just the right size for my Homeworkopoly board, I'm still trying to decide what I'm going to use for student game pieces though.
The second thing I'm working on is my stools. These stools have taken some time to find, I got this idea stuck in my head and couldn't quit till I found them. So anyway, I finally got a hold of 5 stools, 3 perfect, 2 that will "do for now." *wink* So My fella, who loves me and goes along with most of my crazy whims, has been spray painting the legs green for me, and, on the perfect ones, I am painting the seats to look like sports balls. The other two are not perfect because they have padded seats. :( So, I'm just going to cover those with my sports fabric. These stools are going to go in the center of my groups of desks at school. They will pull triple duty. First, they will hold the group supply boxes. Second, they will be author's chairs for special presentations, and third, they are just so darn cute to go with my theme! Here is the first one, and I'll post the rest when I'm through painting!
Whew! I'm tired now! I am going to get up in the morning and run down to the resource center and die cut some jersey shirts for my door for open house: "Tucker's Team Starting Line Up" with student names on each jersey! I can't believe school is about to start again! More to come!
Ok, so what have I done to prepare? Well I'm have been working on the cute and efficient today. I finished my behavior management board:
It's a baseball field! (It is mounted on one really cool, one really big, oil pan from Wal-Mart, at a little less than 12 bucks.) Student's start in the "dugout" every day. (the brown area) My fella lovingly pointed out that the dugouts should be at the bottom, to which I replied I knew that... BUT, this was more efficient.. haha... At any rate, it is my plan to clear the board every afternoon, and students place their baseball in the dugout when they arrive in the morning, (attendance check!) and then they can go from there. If they do well, are caught being good, show kindness, whatever, they can "run the bases," meaning they move their baseball to 1st, 2nd, and so on. If they make a home run I make a BIG deal about it, raving and hugging and bragging to other classes, and even announce it on the morning show! My kids loved this last year, because they LOVE it when someone earns a home run, so they are really eager to run the bases. On the other hand, misbehavior earns a "strike," on the lines below. Again my lovely pointed out there are only 3 strikes... (he's a sports nut, can you tell?) and I replied.. they are "1st graders dear... trust me" Strike 1 is just a reminder, a warning to get it straight, and I take no points from conduct. Strikes 2 and 3 lose conduct points and earn consequences. They have to fill out a reflection in the "penalty box" (a time out area) where they have time to think about and correct their behavior. They also lose some of their recess time. If they don't get it together, then they get their "out." If my kids get out, they really are out, I'm putting them in time out with another teacher, calling their parents, or sending them to the office.
What's with the big space at the bottom you ask? Well, I like to utilize space as much as possible, so that space is just the right size for my Homeworkopoly board, I'm still trying to decide what I'm going to use for student game pieces though.
The second thing I'm working on is my stools. These stools have taken some time to find, I got this idea stuck in my head and couldn't quit till I found them. So anyway, I finally got a hold of 5 stools, 3 perfect, 2 that will "do for now." *wink* So My fella, who loves me and goes along with most of my crazy whims, has been spray painting the legs green for me, and, on the perfect ones, I am painting the seats to look like sports balls. The other two are not perfect because they have padded seats. :( So, I'm just going to cover those with my sports fabric. These stools are going to go in the center of my groups of desks at school. They will pull triple duty. First, they will hold the group supply boxes. Second, they will be author's chairs for special presentations, and third, they are just so darn cute to go with my theme! Here is the first one, and I'll post the rest when I'm through painting!
Whew! I'm tired now! I am going to get up in the morning and run down to the resource center and die cut some jersey shirts for my door for open house: "Tucker's Team Starting Line Up" with student names on each jersey! I can't believe school is about to start again! More to come!
Monday, July 30, 2012
Getting Ready for School!
I have been busy this evening! I finally got some card stock today so I started printing things I've created for school, getting ready to go to GLRS tomorrow and get it all laminated. I printed so much I had a printer go on strike! I had to switch printers! I'm a little worried this one will go on strike when I start printing my labels tomorrow! But I am going to stay positive about it. Let me show you some of the things I have created.
My classroom has a sports theme this year, same as last year, but I am still learning to go overboard with the theme! So, here are my job cards that I will post on my whiteboard. They are soccer goals with the job name on top. I am going to get some little soccer balls from Hobby Lobby and put student numbers on them. (not names, so I can use them year after year!) To show students what their jobs are, I'll put their soccer ball in the goal of their job for the day! The jobs I have are Table Washers, Class Blogger, HW checker, and Official Filer. The Table Washer job is pretty self explanatory, they clean up the lunchroom and wipe down the tables. The Class Blogger is going to be a great job that I am starting this year. Since I'll be back in 1st after all, it will be slightly different than I originally planned it, but I'm still going to make it work. I applied for the funding for a project from Donor's Choose. (an amazing site I suggest you check out!) I asked for a digital camera and the accessories for it so that I could get my kids excited about learning and allow them to be a part of the social media and technology world. For the first half of the year, I will change this job weekly. The Class Blogger will get to use the camera to take one or two pictures of some learning activity they found exciting that week. Then, with the help of a parent volunteer or my paraprofessional, they will upload the picture to the computer and then write about the event in the picture on an educational social media site called Edmodo. Their parents will have Edmodo accounts too and will be able to see what they post! (I'll blog about Edmodo later!) When I get this project started, I will blog about it separately, because I am really excited about it! Another job is HW checker. This job description has changed too since my return assignment to first grade. Anyway, this student's job is basically to make sure that each student turns in their binder to its proper place in the morning. This student will also let me know who is absent for the day, based on an empty binder slot. The last job is Official Filer. This student will sort student papers into their "mail slots" so they can go home.
Next thing I did!
I got this idea from Pinterest, which, thanks to my friend Drea, I am TOTALLY addicted to! OK, so anyway, this is a chart I'm going to put on my whiteboard as well. It basically shows the options that might be available for a given assignment. I will simply check off the ones that go with the task so students don't constantly raise their hands to ask if they can or not. Either that, or I'm going to cut them out and put magnets on the back, and just put up the appropriate ones at the time, I haven't decided yet. That last one, "stick a rubric to it," is because of a local thing we have going on, where the county is encouraging us to have students evaluate their own work. So I made a bunch of labels that have a mini, student friendly rubric on it, where students can check off how well they think they did on their work. My rubric has a sports theme too, so I'll post that later too.
This is another Pinterest idea I found. It is a classroom management strategy that doesn't disrupt others. Each stop sign says "Please STOP what you are doing and make a better choice." Of course, 1st graders won't be able to read these at first, but they will be explained, and the bright STOP sign gets the point across. I can carry these with me in the hall, to assemblies, lunch, specials, library, and even in the classroom to use. I will simply hand out a stop sign to a student when he/she needs to check a behavior. They will hold onto it until they have corrected the behavior, then I'll take it back. If this doesn't work, then further action will be taken.
A game I created for a math center. Base ten memory. Students play memory where they match the number to its base ten representation. As we learn more number sense skills, I'll add expanded form memory and word form memory.
Obviously didn't print these, I made them by hand, but they are another math center. I am pretty sure I got this idea from Pinterest too. This is a game played with playing cards. You would take out the face cards and use only the number cards. (keep Ace and explain that it is one) Students pick a task card, then find playing cards to fit on the empty spaces that will make the card true. Some are more open ended then others, and students will also learn that they may have to change cards to be able to complete the task. (for example, on the far card to the right, students will have to find a low card to add to the 8 to be able to find another card to put after the equal sign)
Sports theme alphabet cards. Thanks to Pinterest again, I got the idea to have a bulletin board, sectioned area, whatever, to post a Boggle board on! Students can play Boggle as an activity if they finish work early. I think my friend Drea is going to use her Boggle as a word work station. This reminds me, I need to print out another set, because Boggle can have repeat letters!
These are my sports theme months labels for my birthday board. I have never posted birthdays, shame on me, but this year I am going to! (BTW, I have always celebrated birthdays with my students! More on how later!) Anyway, I saw on, ahem, Pinterest, a really cute birthday board. Here's what you do. Take all the students who have birthdays in the same month and take their picture together, with each holding a card with the date of the birthday on it! Then, post the pictures under the month it goes with. Love it! I'll post it once we've done it.
I got these cards from another blogger out there, who I found on, you guessed it, Pinterest! Anyway, I like how she did these cards, she made each set of 100 Fry words bordered with a different color. This is the printing that caused my printer to go on strike, btw. Anyway, I printed out 2 sets of the first 100 (eep!) so that I could use them in a Language Arts center. They are going to be available to play sight word Go Fish!
Ok, so this wasn't printed today, I did this a couple of weeks ago, but it's in the stack to get laminated. It's my Homeworkopoly board. I have never done this before but I have seen it very successfully done. My friend has done it for many years and I never got inspired to do it until last year, when another friend who uses it showed me the chance cards she created herself. Then I got excited about it. I asked her if she would share the cards with me and she said yes! Yay! She um, has since forgotten to email the file to me, so I'm going to have to give her a friendly nudge to send them before school starts.
Obviously not printed, but I did this today. I learned about a token system on Pinterest which seemed about the easiest way ever to offer incentives without keeping up with charts or rewards or anything. Which is great for me, because I am awful with keeping up with that sort of thing. Notice that on my job boards earlier I didn't have those staple jobs that all early elementary teachers have, including me, up till now. Those jobs like line leader, paper handler, helper, messenger, etc. Well...... here's why I scrapped them. I found these chips (finally!!) and wrote student numbers on them, about 15 of each number, and placed them in this sectioned off case. When a student does something great, is caught being good, kind, showing a character trait, paying attention, whatever you want, you reward them with a token. You do not give it to them, nor do they need to keep up with it. Instead, you just put the token in a bag. Anytime you reward a token, you add it to the bag. Now, you need a message sent, you need a line leader to PE, you need someone to pass out or take up papers, etc, which of course we know, students LOVE to do. I reach into the bag and pull out a chip and voila! I have someone to do the job. I can pull a token for virtually anything, including who will go to the smart board first, who will demonstrate something, someone to read... etc. Students learn quickly that the more they do good things, the more chips they have in the bag, and the more chances they have to earn extra privileges. You also explain this at first, and use it a LOT the first week or two so they get the idea. Of course, a disclaimer is you would not want to use the "pull a token" for normal classroom response, you want all students to have a chance to get called on. Oh, and I'll start over every week.
Whew! I posted way more than I thought I would today! I got a lot accomplished! I'm proud of myself, hehe. Now it's time to sit back and relax for a little while, watch some of the Olympics, (gymnastics is my fav!) and play, instead of work, on my "nerd box." (Nerd box is my fella's playful nickname for my computer :))
Hope you got some great ideas from my post today! If you have ideas to improve mine, by all means, tell me!
My classroom has a sports theme this year, same as last year, but I am still learning to go overboard with the theme! So, here are my job cards that I will post on my whiteboard. They are soccer goals with the job name on top. I am going to get some little soccer balls from Hobby Lobby and put student numbers on them. (not names, so I can use them year after year!) To show students what their jobs are, I'll put their soccer ball in the goal of their job for the day! The jobs I have are Table Washers, Class Blogger, HW checker, and Official Filer. The Table Washer job is pretty self explanatory, they clean up the lunchroom and wipe down the tables. The Class Blogger is going to be a great job that I am starting this year. Since I'll be back in 1st after all, it will be slightly different than I originally planned it, but I'm still going to make it work. I applied for the funding for a project from Donor's Choose. (an amazing site I suggest you check out!) I asked for a digital camera and the accessories for it so that I could get my kids excited about learning and allow them to be a part of the social media and technology world. For the first half of the year, I will change this job weekly. The Class Blogger will get to use the camera to take one or two pictures of some learning activity they found exciting that week. Then, with the help of a parent volunteer or my paraprofessional, they will upload the picture to the computer and then write about the event in the picture on an educational social media site called Edmodo. Their parents will have Edmodo accounts too and will be able to see what they post! (I'll blog about Edmodo later!) When I get this project started, I will blog about it separately, because I am really excited about it! Another job is HW checker. This job description has changed too since my return assignment to first grade. Anyway, this student's job is basically to make sure that each student turns in their binder to its proper place in the morning. This student will also let me know who is absent for the day, based on an empty binder slot. The last job is Official Filer. This student will sort student papers into their "mail slots" so they can go home.
Next thing I did!
I got this idea from Pinterest, which, thanks to my friend Drea, I am TOTALLY addicted to! OK, so anyway, this is a chart I'm going to put on my whiteboard as well. It basically shows the options that might be available for a given assignment. I will simply check off the ones that go with the task so students don't constantly raise their hands to ask if they can or not. Either that, or I'm going to cut them out and put magnets on the back, and just put up the appropriate ones at the time, I haven't decided yet. That last one, "stick a rubric to it," is because of a local thing we have going on, where the county is encouraging us to have students evaluate their own work. So I made a bunch of labels that have a mini, student friendly rubric on it, where students can check off how well they think they did on their work. My rubric has a sports theme too, so I'll post that later too.
This is another Pinterest idea I found. It is a classroom management strategy that doesn't disrupt others. Each stop sign says "Please STOP what you are doing and make a better choice." Of course, 1st graders won't be able to read these at first, but they will be explained, and the bright STOP sign gets the point across. I can carry these with me in the hall, to assemblies, lunch, specials, library, and even in the classroom to use. I will simply hand out a stop sign to a student when he/she needs to check a behavior. They will hold onto it until they have corrected the behavior, then I'll take it back. If this doesn't work, then further action will be taken.
A game I created for a math center. Base ten memory. Students play memory where they match the number to its base ten representation. As we learn more number sense skills, I'll add expanded form memory and word form memory.
Obviously didn't print these, I made them by hand, but they are another math center. I am pretty sure I got this idea from Pinterest too. This is a game played with playing cards. You would take out the face cards and use only the number cards. (keep Ace and explain that it is one) Students pick a task card, then find playing cards to fit on the empty spaces that will make the card true. Some are more open ended then others, and students will also learn that they may have to change cards to be able to complete the task. (for example, on the far card to the right, students will have to find a low card to add to the 8 to be able to find another card to put after the equal sign)
Sports theme alphabet cards. Thanks to Pinterest again, I got the idea to have a bulletin board, sectioned area, whatever, to post a Boggle board on! Students can play Boggle as an activity if they finish work early. I think my friend Drea is going to use her Boggle as a word work station. This reminds me, I need to print out another set, because Boggle can have repeat letters!
These are my sports theme months labels for my birthday board. I have never posted birthdays, shame on me, but this year I am going to! (BTW, I have always celebrated birthdays with my students! More on how later!) Anyway, I saw on, ahem, Pinterest, a really cute birthday board. Here's what you do. Take all the students who have birthdays in the same month and take their picture together, with each holding a card with the date of the birthday on it! Then, post the pictures under the month it goes with. Love it! I'll post it once we've done it.
I got these cards from another blogger out there, who I found on, you guessed it, Pinterest! Anyway, I like how she did these cards, she made each set of 100 Fry words bordered with a different color. This is the printing that caused my printer to go on strike, btw. Anyway, I printed out 2 sets of the first 100 (eep!) so that I could use them in a Language Arts center. They are going to be available to play sight word Go Fish!
Ok, so this wasn't printed today, I did this a couple of weeks ago, but it's in the stack to get laminated. It's my Homeworkopoly board. I have never done this before but I have seen it very successfully done. My friend has done it for many years and I never got inspired to do it until last year, when another friend who uses it showed me the chance cards she created herself. Then I got excited about it. I asked her if she would share the cards with me and she said yes! Yay! She um, has since forgotten to email the file to me, so I'm going to have to give her a friendly nudge to send them before school starts.
Obviously not printed, but I did this today. I learned about a token system on Pinterest which seemed about the easiest way ever to offer incentives without keeping up with charts or rewards or anything. Which is great for me, because I am awful with keeping up with that sort of thing. Notice that on my job boards earlier I didn't have those staple jobs that all early elementary teachers have, including me, up till now. Those jobs like line leader, paper handler, helper, messenger, etc. Well...... here's why I scrapped them. I found these chips (finally!!) and wrote student numbers on them, about 15 of each number, and placed them in this sectioned off case. When a student does something great, is caught being good, kind, showing a character trait, paying attention, whatever you want, you reward them with a token. You do not give it to them, nor do they need to keep up with it. Instead, you just put the token in a bag. Anytime you reward a token, you add it to the bag. Now, you need a message sent, you need a line leader to PE, you need someone to pass out or take up papers, etc, which of course we know, students LOVE to do. I reach into the bag and pull out a chip and voila! I have someone to do the job. I can pull a token for virtually anything, including who will go to the smart board first, who will demonstrate something, someone to read... etc. Students learn quickly that the more they do good things, the more chips they have in the bag, and the more chances they have to earn extra privileges. You also explain this at first, and use it a LOT the first week or two so they get the idea. Of course, a disclaimer is you would not want to use the "pull a token" for normal classroom response, you want all students to have a chance to get called on. Oh, and I'll start over every week.
Whew! I posted way more than I thought I would today! I got a lot accomplished! I'm proud of myself, hehe. Now it's time to sit back and relax for a little while, watch some of the Olympics, (gymnastics is my fav!) and play, instead of work, on my "nerd box." (Nerd box is my fella's playful nickname for my computer :))
Hope you got some great ideas from my post today! If you have ideas to improve mine, by all means, tell me!
Sunday, July 29, 2012
New to Blogging
OK, so here I go. I can't believe I am actually starting a blog. As I type, I am wondering how in the world am I going to keep up with it on top of everything else I do! Let's see, School for me starts in about a week, and as of right now, I think I'm going to teach 1st grade again... the verdict is still out though, because a week ago I was teaching 2nd this year. Take a bet anyone? In addition to teaching school, I am a busy mom, and I have another half that I keep around because he makes me so happy. :) My son takes karate 3 times a week, my fella plays softball, I'm the Drama Coach and I teach Sunday school children's church. Whew! And now I'm a blogger. Well, I'm going to try to be one. We'll see. I am not going to say that this blog is going to be strictly about my teaching, or about being a mom, or anything else. It's going to be about all of it. All the things that make me, well, me! So, sit back and follow me, if you are as scatter-brained as me it will make perfect sense!
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