Items filtered by date: June 2012

Thursday, 26 July 2012 05:36

Just Say No Poster

1 page. This poster covers it all, and is a gentle reminder to say "No!" Use it as a writing prompt: Why should you say no? Do you say no? How should you say no? Do you have friends that don't say no? What are the consequences of not saying no?
Published in Downloads
Thursday, 26 July 2012 04:08

Stamp Of Approval Activity

5 pages. This is a wonderful activity to get to know your students and a terrific icebreaker for the 1st day or first week of school. It also makes an instant back to school bulletin board that showcases your new students!
Published in Downloads

A Fun Way To Get To Know Your Students

first week of school activities, first week of school ideas, first week of school lessons, icebreakers for the first day of school, icebreakers for the first week of school, first day of school activities, first day of school lessons, first day of school ideas, lower elementary first day of school ideas, upper elementary first day of school ideas, getting to know your students ideas, getting to know your students activities, september bulletin boards, september bulletin board ideas, back to school bulletin boards, back to school bulletin board ideas,Stamp of Approval Stamps make a great icebreaker for the first week of school and a terrific way to get to know your students + they are an instant back to school bulletin board showcasing your new students!

Send a copy in your Welcome to School - Summer Letter, or tuck them in your Open House packet, so that they can be completed ahead of time, and then shared on the first day of school.

You can also show your example on the first day, so that your students can learn a little bit about you, and then send the stamps home as an assignment for that first day.

How to fill in a stamp:

Students can write, type (using a fun(ky) font), or cut out letters (like a ransom note), or use stickers to make their name.

This goes on the wavy line portion of the cancelled stamp, in the top left-hand corner.

The PLACE where they were born, goes around the top of the circle.

The YEAR they were born, goes on the bottom-middle of the circle.

The MONTH and DAY they were born, goes in the center of the circle.

Months should be abbreviated, unless they are 4 or less letters long.

Places and dates appear on real cancelled stamps; making it personal, makes this assignment more relevant and fun!

Students draw a self-portrait of themselves. (Just a headshot) This needs to be colored. Hair and eye color etc. need to be appropriate, so students can possibly guess whose picture belongs to whom, if the teacher wants to add that activity before the “real” student comes up to share.

first week of school activities, first week of school ideas, first week of school lessons, icebreakers for the first day of school, icebreakers for the first week of school, first day of school activities, first day of school lessons, first day of school ideas, lower elementary first day of school ideas, upper elementary first day of school ideas, getting to know your students ideas, getting to know your students activities, september bulletin boards, september bulletin board ideas, back to school bulletin boards, back to school bulletin board ideas,Students need to think of their favorite things to do, their hobbies, or sports or “stuff” they are involved in, or possibly what they want to be when they grow up.  Basically, anything that represents them or will help us get to know them.

After they have thought up their “list” they need to find pictures, clip art, or stickers of those things and glue them around their self-portrait.

Students write or cut out 3-5 words that describe them. These should be scattered around on their stamp.

Challenge older students to include a word that begins with the same letter as their name.  i.e. I chose driven (Diane) for mine.

Students share their stamp with their classmates.  I always had my students clap for each person when they were through.

Hang them in the hallway or on a b. board, along with the “Stamp of approval star student” poster.

first week of school activities, first week of school ideas, first week of school lessons, icebreakers for the first day of school, icebreakers for the first week of school, first day of school activities, first day of school lessons, first day of school ideas, lower elementary first day of school ideas, upper elementary first day of school ideas, getting to know your students ideas, getting to know your students activities, september bulletin boards, september bulletin board ideas, back to school bulletin boards, back to school bulletin board ideas,To add some 3D effects, suspend some glittery stars of various sizes, from fish line, just above the board, at various lengths.

Click on the link to view/download Stamp of Approval Stamp activity

Do you have a “Getting To Know Your Students” activity you can share with us? I’d enjoy hearing from you! diane@teachwithme.com

first week of school activities, first week of school ideas, first week of school lessons, icebreakers for the first day of school, icebreakers for the first week of school, first day of school activities, first day of school lessons, first day of school ideas, lower elementary first day of school ideas, upper elementary first day of school ideas, getting to know your students ideas, getting to know your students activities, september bulletin boards, september bulletin board ideas, back to school bulletin boards, back to school bulletin board ideas,You can also post a comment here.  Thanks in advance for taking the time to do that.

Thanks too for visiting.  I hope you can drop by tomorrow for more back to school ideas and teaching tips.

Feel free to PIN anything you think others might find worthwhile.

“Teaching is a lighting of sparks and setting minds aflame;

it’s a creative mind that knows what kind of gasoline to throw on to get it glowing and burning even brighter the next day and the next…” -Diane Henderson

Published in Getting to the Core
Wednesday, 25 July 2012 07:32

More Back To School Ideas: Organizing Paper

A Rainbow Of Organization!

getting organized, organizing your classroom, classroom tips, teaching tips, how to organized your classroom, back to school ideas, decorating your classroom, getting students to be neat, teaching life skills to students, organizing construction paperI LOVE being organized.  I guess it’s the neat freak in me.

One of the things that was always a huge mess and really bugging me was my construction paper.

I’d stack it on the shelf and of course the color I wanted was on the bottom, which caused a tug of war to get it out, and piles often tipped over.

Children could not access it, doing something with scraps was a nightmare, and corners and edges were getting dog-eared and torn.

I had to do something!  My organizing system actually came about because I had to haul all of it back and forth to the place with a huge collection of die cuts.

Every summer I spent 2 entire days cutting out all the adorable little pieces of whatever, that I needed through out the year, for various projects.

getting organized, organizing your classroom, classroom tips, teaching tips, how to organized your classroom, back to school ideas, decorating your classroom, getting students to be neat, teaching life skills to students, organizing construction paperI put the construction paper in 2 plastic files, so I could easily tote them and see at a glance what colors I had.

The first file had the colors of the rainbow. The second, pink, brown, white, buff, black, gray, and multi-speckled.

I separate the colors with green hanging file folders. 

I include the various shades as well, and go from darkest to lightest (i.e. see the shades of blue.)

The hanging files are also perfect for putting large scraps of that same color in.

If I get too many scraps, I put the scraps in a separate crate and fold over a piece of that colored paper into a tab and tape it to the top of the file, so that I know what color is inside the files.

I do the same thing for my colored and fancy printed copy paper.

These files come with lids so you can stack them to save on storage space.

The plastic protects the paper, so no more ripped and dog-eared corners.  The paper doesn't get dusty nor faded either, and  I can see at a glance what colors I need more of.

Another big + is they are portable! When I need construction paper for my students, I simply take out a file and put it where the students can access it.

I explain to them how hard I’ve worked to make this neat and to please help me keep it that way.

We have “Scrap Patrol” to help pick up and put away scraps to teach conservation and responsibility.

I feel teaching life skills and showing students how to be neat and organized is valuable and extremely important.

Children are eager to please, and I praise their efforts.  As long as you make clean up fun and give students an easy system they can work with, you are good to go.

If you don't have these files, but have a lot of plastic crates, they would also work and store easily under a desk. Crates also have the little ledges needed to hang a file folder, and can be stacked.

getting organized, organizing your classroom, classroom tips, teaching tips, how to organized your classroom, back to school ideas, decorating your classroom, getting students to be neat, teaching life skills to students, organizing construction paperDo you have an organizational tip you could share with us?  I’d enjoy hearing from you. diane@teachwithme.com or you can leave a comment here.  Thanks in advance for taking the time to share.

Thank you too, for visiting.  I hope you can pop on over tomorrow for more back to school ideas and teaching tips.

Feel free to PIN anything you think others may find helpful.

“To teach is to be full of HOPE!” –Larry Cuban

Published in Getting to the Core

back to school ideas, ideas for the first week of school, activities for the first week of school, lessons for the first week of school, daily 5 activities for the first week of school, graphing how you get to school, easy reader booklet of how you get to school,

Picture Clues Help Students Read

How Do You Go To School? Is a fun easy reader for your students to do the first week of school.

It’s a great way to reinforce the end of the day routine and who should line up where, because of how they will get home.

Graphing how everyone does that, will help children get to know the different means of transportation available, plus get to know their new friends better.

Children read the simple sentences using picture clues, trace and write the mode of transportation word, and then cut and glue the matching numbered picture to the page.

When everyone has completed their booklet, read it together as a whole group activity to reinforce concepts of print.

This will also enable students to share it with their families at home.

Click on the link to view/download the How Do You Go To School? easy reader.

back to school ideas, ideas for the first week of school, activities for the first week of school, lessons for the first week of school, daily 5 activities for the first week of school, graphing how you get to school, easy reader booklet of how you get to school, Thank you for visiting today.  Feel free to PIN anything you think others might find helpful.

I hope you can stop by tomorrow, for another back to school idea.

“Spoon feeding in the long run teaches us nothing but the shape of the spoon.” -E.M. Forster

Published in Getting to the Core
6 pages. Common Core State Standard:Common Core State Standard:RF.1.1 Students will enjoy going on a dino hunt as they search for dinosaur sentence cards whose capital letter and end punctuation marks are extinct!
Published in Downloads

Teaching Beginning Word Capitalization and Ending Punctuation Common Core Standards, By Hunting For Sentences And Fixing Them!

Goin on a bear hunt activities, goin on a bear hunt lessons, activities for the first week of school, lessons for the first week of school, daily 5 activities, daily 5 lessons, back to school lessons, back to school ideas, back to school activities, capitalization activities, capitalization lessons, ending punctuation activities, ending punctuation lessons, common core state standard lessons, common core state standard activities, common core state standard: RL1.5 lesson,I’ve been trying to think of some fun activities to go with Common Core State Standards and thought sprinkling sentence cards around the room for students to find would be something different.

My Y5’s LOVED Goin' on a bear hunt during our hibernation studies, so I dreamed up sentences that would go with the adorable clip art bears of Laura Strickland.

I made up  12 bear sentence cards, that are missing a capital letter and end punctuation, so you can work on the Common Core State Standard: RF.1.1 

Here students need to demonstrate an understanding of the organization and basic features of print, by recognizing the distinguishing features of a sentence.  i.e. first word capitalization,  and ending punctuation.

Here’s how to Go On A Bear Hunt:

Print and Laminate the cards.

Decide which 10 you want to use for the bear hunt and number them with a dry erase marker.

If you use a permanent marker, a Mr. Clean Eraser will wipe off the numbers.

Goin on a bear hunt activities, goin on a bear hunt lessons, activities for the first week of school, lessons for the first week of school, daily 5 activities, daily 5 lessons, back to school lessons, back to school ideas, back to school activities, capitalization activities, capitalization lessons, ending punctuation activities, ending punctuation lessons, common core state standard lessons, common core state standard activities, common core state standard: RL1.5 lesson,Put a magnet on the back, so students can put them on your white board, or use a pocket chart.

The one pictured I just bought at Target. They were in their Dollar Deal section.  They also had red and green.

This pocket chart only has 8 pockets so you’ll need 2, or you can put a magnet strip on the pocket chart and a magnet on card number 1 and card number 10. Students place the cards in the pockets and put card #1 above the chart and card #10 under the chart.

Sprinkle the cards around the room. Students find them and put them on the white board or in your pocket chart in 1-10 order so that they can rewrite the sentences on their recording sheet,.

When students write their sentences they put a beginning capital letter, and the appropriate end punctuation on their sentences, circling both for easy identification.

Before students take their seats and work on their own papers, read the cards as a whole group, adding inflection so that students can determine where an exclamation mark goes,

You may want to give students an FYI that the Oh no! The bear sees me. and  Help! I see a bear. cards are made up of two sentences.

Have students gather in front of the board and have them take turns filling in the correct answers with a red dry erase marker.

A nice "get the wiggles out" activity to do afterwards, is to play "Goin On A Bear Hunt." and have students go through the motions.

One of my favorite versions of this is from Greg and Steve's Kid's In Action CD.  It's on YouTube. Click on the link to have a listen.  My Y5's begged to do this all the time.

Later, you can use different sentences and use the recording sheets as an assessment.

This packet also includes a certificate of praise.

Click on the link to view/download Goin On A Bear Hunt Sentence Punctuation Packet

If you like this way of working on capitalization and punctuation, be sure to watch for my up coming  Piggy Punctuation,  Kitty Capitalization, Hop To It Frog Capitalization and Punctuation, and I’m Dino-mite At Doing Capitalization and Punctuation.

They all follow the same format as Goin’ On A Bear Hunt and will be completed this week. To find them click on the reading apple on my home page and then click on capitalization or punctuation in the list under grammar.

Thanks for visiting!  I hope you can stop by tomorrow for another back to school idea.

Goin on a bear hunt activities, goin on a bear hunt lessons, activities for the first week of school, lessons for the first week of school, daily 5 activities, daily 5 lessons, back to school lessons, back to school ideas, back to school activities, capitalization activities, capitalization lessons, ending punctuation activities, ending punctuation lessons, common core state standard lessons, common core state standard activities, common core state standard: RL1.5 lesson,Feel free to PIN anything that you think might be helpful to others.

“Everyone who remembers his own educational experience, remembers the teacher, not methods and techniques.” -Sidney Hook

Published in Getting to the Core
1 page. Common Core State Standard: RL.1.2 Tips of how to retell a fiction and non fiction story.
Published in Downloads
6 pages. Common Core State Standard:RF.1.1 Students will enjoy Goin' on a bear hunt to look for these 12 bear sentence cards that are missing a capital letter and end punctuation.
Published in Downloads

Common Core State Standard Letter Perfect Activity Poster

back to school ideas, back to school activities, back to school lessons, anchor charts, activities for the first week of school, lessons for the first week of school, ideas for the first week of school, common core state standards for kindergarten and first grade, activities for common core for kindergarten and first grade, lessons for common core for kindergartn and first grade, common core reading activities for kindergarten and first grade, activity posters, Here is a simple, easy, and relatively quick activity that you can plug in, to nail quite a few Common Core State Standards with one fell swoop!

Laminate this poster and use it during your calendar or reading block time.

Take a letter each day and fill in the appropriate boxes.

Using a dry erase marker demonstrate to your students how you write an uppercase and lowercase letter.

Students can practice on a dry erase board, or you can make a copy of the Letter Perfect sheets for them.

You can keep these as individual sheets or run off a set of 26 and collate them into an alphabet booklet for each child that they will take out and use during Daily 5 for the writing portion or word work.

If you don’t do Daily 5 this can be an independent writing center, or as in the example above, you can do these as whole group skill sheets.

Have students listen to the sound the letter makes as you say it.

Have students repeat the sound.

Ask them if they can think of any words that make that sound.

By demonstrating basic knowledge of letter-sound correspondence by producing the primary or most frequent sound for each consonant, they are working on Common Core State Standard: RF:K.3a

If the letter is a vowel, have students tell you what other letters are vowels.

I have my students sing the vowel song to the tune of B-I-N-G-O

There was a class who learned their vowels

And this is what they sang Oh

A-E-I-O-U

A-E-I-O-U

A-E-I-O-U

They were so very smart! Oh!

back to school ideas, back to school activities, back to school lessons, anchor charts, activities for the first week of school, lessons for the first week of school, ideas for the first week of school, common core state standards for kindergarten and first grade, activities for common core for kindergarten and first grade, lessons for common core for kindergartn and first grade, common core reading activities for kindergarten and first grade, activity posters, Differentiate between long and short vowels and fill in the appropriate boxes on the chart with words that they can think of.

By associating the long and short sounds with the common spellings for these 5 major vowel sounds, students are working on Common Core State Standard: RF: K. 3b.

By distinguishing long from short vowel sounds in any spoken single syllable words they come up with, they are working on Common Core State Standard: RF.1. 2a.

Have them become ABCDe-tectives and look around the room for words on their Word Wall or Read The Room signs that begin with that letter and then as they say them aloud, ask them to what box/category they should put the word in.

If the letter is a consonant decide if it is a hard or soft consonant and do the same thing as above.

Ask the children if there are any students who have a first or last name that begins with the letter of the day and have them come up and write it on the chart.

Finally, choose a quiet child to find and circle the letter of the day in the alphabet.

You can end by giving someone a pointer (I turned out the lights and used a laser light) to point to each letter of the alphabet on our border and we sang the ABC song.

back to school ideas, back to school activities, back to school lessons, anchor charts, activities for the first week of school, lessons for the first week of school, ideas for the first week of school, common core state standards for kindergarten and first grade, activities for common core for kindergarten and first grade, lessons for common core for kindergartn and first grade, common core reading activities for kindergarten and first grade, activity posters, By consistently reviewing all of the letters, you are helping students to recognize and name all of the upper and lowercase letters of the alphabet which is Common Core State Standard: RF:K.1d and L.1.1a

If you are also going to do these as a skill sheet for your students, they can record at the same time as you do, or after the group modeling, can return to their seats and fill in their own paper.

In order to cover the Common Core State Standard RF: K. 1b make sure that you:

Explain to children each day that “Spoken words are represented in written language by specific sequences of letters.”

As you can see, quite a few standards are covered in one simple and fun poster activity, which can also double as a skill sheet for your students!

Click on the link to view/download Common Core State Standard Letter Activity Poster

back to school ideas, back to school activities, back to school lessons, anchor charts, activities for the first week of school, lessons for the first week of school, ideas for the first week of school, common core state standards for kindergarten and first grade, activities for common core for kindergarten and first grade, lessons for common core for kindergartn and first grade, common core reading activities for kindergarten and first grade, activity posters, Thanks for visiting today.  I hope you can pop back tomorrow for more back to school ideas.

Feel free to PIN anything from my site you think others would find helpful.

“The Constitution only gives people the right to pursue happiness. You have to catch it yourself.” –Benjamin Franklin

Published in Getting to the Core
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