1-2-3 Come Park It With Me!
If you do a unit on transportation, you'll definitely want to include "Park It!" in your lessons.
The original idea for the parking lot, came from a home-schooling mom over at "I can teach my child", who made one out of tape for her sons. Click on the link to check out her wonderful site.
I wanted to make this easier, and something you could put away, so I designed the template. I used traceable letters so children could also practice writing with dry erase markers. They can trace the top letter, park their car, and then write the letter(s) under their vehicle.
The Dollar Store sells small cars 6 in a pack. You can also pick them up at garage sales any where from a dime to 25 cents.
Instead of tape, I used tough-stick colored dots. Don't get garage sale ones, because they will peel off easily. For an even more professional look, watch for all of those 40% off coupons from Hobby Lobby, JoAnne Fabrics & Michaels, to buy stickers that already have the letters written on them!
Here's How To Make Your Letter Matching Parking Lot:
Click on the link to view/download the "Park It Packet." Thanks for visiting today. Feel free to PIN anything you think others may find helpful. My "Pin it" button is at the top. If you'd like to see all the adorable educational items that I PIN, simply click on the "Follow me" heart on the right.
"Time is the most valuable thing a person can spend." -Diogenes
1-2-3 Come Go Away With Me! 240 Ways To Travel
One of the themes that quite a few people have requested is transportation, although I have bus, train, and Seuss's, Oh The Places You'll Go activities on the site, working on specific activities for transportation was on my "To Do" list.
I wanted to think up as many vehicles as I could, in order to compile an alphabetical list of them.
After several hours of research, I came up with a list of 240 vehicles + 26 means of getting from here to there.
When you're looking for vehicles that start with the letter Q, X, and Z you are bound to increase your vocabulary.
Do you know what a palanquin, quinquireme, xebec or zebu are? I didn't; I so enjoy increasing my vocabulary, and hope you and your students will too.
You can use the list to help build vocabulary (ask students to circle all of the means of transporation that they have used in one color, the modes they've never tried or heard of in another, and finally the modes of transportation they'd like to try in yet another color. )
Introduce a selection of words a day and have students write them in a vehicle dictionary. Any words that they don't know, they should look up and then add the definition to their booklet.
You can also feature a daily vehicle word and then discuss it.
Click on the link to view/download the List of 240 Vehicles.
After I completed my list, I chose some favorites and designed a Vehicle Alphabet Anchor Chart Poster.
Hang it up in your room, or run off copies for your students. You can use it as an "I Spy A..." game to help increase letter as well as word recognition.
Click on the link to view/download the Vehicle Alphabet Anchor Chart Poster.
Once I had these things done, I made the easy reader Transporation Alphabet Booklet.
I used over 40 sight and Dolch words, added rhyming words, and incorporated lots of Common Core State Standards.
With the help of picture clues, students read the simple sentences, circle the capital letters, and add end punctuation.
Remind them that they are reading from left to right, top down, and that there are spaces between the words, and you've covered even more Standards.
Students also trace and write the mode of transportation word, cut and then glue the pictures to their matching numbered box in the booklet.
Also in this packet, is a Transporation Class Book. It's a nice writing activity to go with Seuss's Oh The Places You'll Go story.
Click on the link to view/download the A to Z Easy Reader Transporation Booklet.
Thanks for visiting today. Feel free to PIN anything you think others may find helpful.
"Each day of our lives we make deposits in the memory banks of our children." -Charles Swindoll