Posted in Books

Challenge #1- Getting Creative with our Book Storage

I now have a fair number of blogs that I follow through my RSS feeds and other methods. One of those I added a month or so ago is Honey Bee Books.  Through this blog I found out about the Little Book Adventure of 2012.  This is a cool initiative created by My Little Bookcase out of Australia.  I know because we are in North America we will not be eligible for any of the prizes but for us that is not a reason not to participate.  I am always looking for new and excited literacy projects and challenges with my kids and this is a perfect fit for us.  So I registered us and we got started.

Challenge #1: Get Creative with your book storage.

We have A LOT of books in our house.  It is a bit of a pet peeve of my husband’s but he has slowly learned not to complain when I bring home more books for the kids – he complaints are futile and fall on deaf ears.  The problem we now have is that we have so many great kids books but are running out of places to put them.  I am not ready to purge but I want to make sure we can find those great treasures when looking.  This was a perfect task for us.

Most of the books are in the kids rooms but I wanted to start included some in our playroom so I hit pinterest for ideas on easy, and inexpensive book storage.  I quickly came across rain gutter book shelves that would be perfect for the location I had in mind. I pinned a few sites but the most useful was at Raising Olives.  She gives a great step by step guide for installing shelves and of someone as unhandy as me this was perfect.  For full disclosure I didn’t end up doing most of the tricky parts.  My dad is who I usually call on for all things handy and he did most of the cutting and installing.  I also knew that I wanted to personalize the shelves for the kids and over at More than Mundane she shared with me how acrylic paint worked when she decorated her shelves.

So they turned out pretty good.  I am not an artist but I did manage to paint each child’s name on their shelf and then I let them decorate them with stickers I picked up at the dollar store.  In total the three shelves, completely installed was less than $100.  The gutters themselves are rather inexpensive but the brackets and the ends add up quickly.  I wanted them pretty sturdy since little hands will be putting books in and taking them out so I used 3 brackets on each 5 foot shelf.  I also put Michael’s shelf at the bottom so he can reach his books, and it also works best as he can’t reach Kaitlyn’s books – which he like to rip sometimes.

Our New Playroom Book Shelves!!

Once the new shelves were up we decided it was time to organize ALL our kids books.  These new shelves were going to hold feature books.  Every month the kids can change which books they put in the shelves but these are to be their choices only (Mommy and Daddy have no say)!

We have other book shelves in our house for kids books.  Right now both of the girls have castle book shelves in their rooms. We working on deciding what style to build Michael (and by we I mean Grampa who is the handyman).  For now Michael’s book are just stacking on his toy shelf in his closet.

Kaitlyn’s Shelf

Eileen’s Shelf

Michael’s Closet

There are a couple of other locations of books around the house.  In the playroom we have a bin of mini board books that are at perfect height for Michael.  In our kitchen island there is a shelf with ABC books the kids often read when I am planning dinner.  Finally, in the great room there is a small unit that has book that I have picked out for the kids.  These are often books we have done activities around or will be reading soon.  Any books that I blog about (and all our getting ready for Kindergarten book) will be added to this shelf.

We had fun on our first challenge and look forward to challenge #2!

 

Posted in Preparing for Kindergarten

Getting Reading for Kindergarten

When you register for Kindergarten in our school board (Grand Erie District School Board), one of the items in your package is the calendar “Kindergarten: Ready Set Go!” This is a collaboration of a number of organizations included school boards, heath units, libraries and the Ontario Early Years Centre.  Throughout the calendar there are pages to help parents prepare their children for Kindergarten.

For February the information was on immunization requirements.  My children are up to date on their immunizations but tracking them is a pain.  In this age of electronics I don’t know why I can’t just authorize my family doctor to send the records to the health unit every time they get a new vaccination.  It just seems it would save a lot of time and man power on every end.  But I digress from the reason I am blogging.

In each month there are 2 or 3 books listed.  When Kaitlyn was getting ready for JK we read all the books listed but this year I thought we would do something a little more formal with Eileen.  We are going to be reading all the book in the calendar and sharing the activities we do for each book.  My goal is to do this every Saturday or Sunday but we will see how that schedule goes.  We are starting a bit behind the eight ball.  We didn’t register until February so we missed January (we will try and make those books up later).  It took a few weeks for the February books to come in so we will work on collecting our books earlier but hopefully we are on a roll now.

Our first book was Happy Valentine Day, Curious George by N. Di Angelo.

I realize Valentines Day had already passed but I thought we could read the book anyway.  This is a very cute Valentines Day book, with fold out flaps.  For us that means we keep it well out of Michael’s reach!  For teachable moments, the flaps give a great opportunity for making predictions. In the story George and the man in the yellow had invite the neighbourhood over for Valentines Day.  They  decorate the house, make cookies, and make valentines to exchange.  Like many children George finds a box and is immediate intrigued with the box.  He set to decorating the box to put his valentines in.  This would have been a perfect book to read before Valentines Day and then we could make a box for our Valentines, but I wasn’t going to let that stop us.  Instead we made our own special treasure boxes.

I had my niece and Eileen for the afternoon last Sunday while Kaitlyn was at a birthday party so I thought it would be the perfect time.  We went to the dollar store to find boxes.  I didn’t want to use cardboard so that they would be more sturdy and last longer but you could easily use cardboard boxes.   I also let them each get a package of letter stickers.  I wanted them to practice spelling their names on their boxes but other than that they could decorate them any way they wanted.  First I let them paint the box any colour they wanted.  Of course they both picked pink.  I didn’t have any pink paint but that never stops us – we learned that when you mix red and white together you get pink.

After drying Gramma had come by so she helped the girls spell their names on their boxes.  Then I gave them a wide variety of materials from our craft bins to decorate their boxes.  They mostly picked hearts, jewels and stickers to decorate.  Many stuck on themselves but a few needed to be glued.

They turned out pretty cute – and we could make a connection to the book we had just read. We decorated boxes just like George!

Posted in Literacy Tuesdays

R is for Rainbow

We are getting much more adventurous with our letter crafts.  A couple of weeks ago we had R and as my girls love Rainbows we had to find a way to make “R is for Rainbow” .  I can’t take the credit for this great idea as I found it over at Mom to 2 Post Lil Divas.

I started like I do every week by printing off the letter for Eileen and the word for Kaitlyn.  I realized that the word Rainbow would be too long to do the way I normally do but it didn’t really matter as we were going to cut out the letters anyway, so I just printed a page with all the necessary letters.  Next I took them to the window and traced the letters on the opposite side so I would have a template to cut out the letters once they were done.

To prepare I cut out strips of papers of a variety of colours.  I gave them to the girls in a pile and asked them to sort them by colour, great sorting practice!

Next they glued colour strips onto their papers totally covering their letters.  I suggested they do a pattern but this became difficult with the number of colours we had (and they wanted to use every colour).

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

After they had time to dry I used an Exacto Knife to cut out their letters.  Eileen’s was finished but Kaitlyn then glued the letters in order to spell the word Rainbow.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Posted in Books, Kindercrafts

Awesome Chinese New Year Unit

This was my first Kindergarten unit I pretty much developed on my own.  I was so excited to do it and had been looking forward to it since we had our own Chinese New Year celebration at home last year.  We did this unit from the time we got back to school after the Christmas break and culminated at our Chinese New Year party on January 23rd, it was a total of 4 classes.  I had a number of picture books we used throughout the unit.

Day 1:

Book – Lion Dancer by Kate Waters.  This may seem like a strange book to start the unit with but I had a method to my madness.  Our biggest creation was going to be our own Chinese Lion costumes and we were going to make our own dance and musical instruments.  This was a great book to introduce the Lion Dance.  After reading we made a list of all the Chinese customs in the book.

After reading the book we watched a few youtube clips of lion dancing. Each group was going to make their own lion head. On this first day all they did was paint a base colour for their box.  The key for success is finding the perfect size box.  I happen to find 4 boxes all the same size that were perfect to fit over a 4/5 year old’s head.  My EA had pre-cut eye holes in each box so the kids didn’t have to worry about that.  We also learned our “Lion Dance Song” and  made up or own clapping pattern for our dance.

Before we left for the day we added Chinese New Year to our calendar and found China on our map of the world.

 

Day 2:

Book: Happy Chinese New Year, Kai-lan by Lauryn Silverhardt.  I am always hesitant using book based on shows the kids watch because sometimes the writing is forced but this book was pretty good – and had lots of great Chinese traditions.  I also tied in nicely to our Character Ed trait of Responsibility that we were learning about in January.

After reading this book we watched a few clips on youtube and compared the Chinese Lion and Dragon dances.  They are very different but both very important in Chinese culture.  We finished our Lion Head costumes this day and I attached a red strip of fabric to each for the tails.  Basically all I did was give them as many craft materials that I could find and let them explore.  For some reason I am missing a number of my pictures but when I find better pictures I will add them in.

We started working on our dance, which was pretty much just a marching pattern to match the clapping pattern we had created.  Now we added instruments instead of clapping.  We used small hand drums and small cymbals.

For fun the kids made Chinese spin drums using old CDs we painted red, doweling, string and wooden beads.  We didn’t use them in our dance as it would have been chaos but it was fun for the kids to make and take home.

Day 3: 

Book: My First Chinese New Year by Karen Katz.  This is a very simple book but great at showing the variety of Chinese traditions around Chinese New Year.  Again we made a list while reading the book.

After reading the book we made a Venn Diagram (with pictures) comparing the traditions in each of the tree books we had read.

It was a crude drawing but showed how special food and red envelopes were in all the books.  From here I suggested that maybe we could use some of these common traditions to hold our own Chinese New Year celebration.

To finish off our day we integrated our patterning studies in math into our Chinese New Year studies.  In math we created patterns on strips of paper that were to be used as tails for kites.  At the end of the day our Big Buddies came to visit an helped us make dragons on diamond paper for our kites.  We used our handprints for the body, cut out the head and then got creative with the decorations.

Day 4: Chinese New Year!!

Book: A New Year’s Reunion by Yu Li-Qiong.  This is an awesome new book.  It was great for retell as we told what happened on each day of the new year celebration.  We also did a text-to-text connection picture where they made a connection between this book and one of the three previous books we read.

During math we made Chinese lanterns and decorated them with patterns using different colours and shapes.

During the last block we had our party.  Most of the party was spent eating.  We order Won Ton Soup, Sweet and Sour Chicken Balls and Vegetable Lo Mein from our local chinese food restaurant.  We bought small egg rolls at the grocery store and I made sticky balls for desert.  I was so proud that everyone tried everything and I didn’t hear any complaints.  After eating any students that wanted make dragon masks.

Day 5: The Wrap Up

 To summarize everything we learned on Chinese New Year every student completed a glyph.  I found a colouring page of a dragon and simplified it for our use.  You can find the instructions for the glyph dragon glyphs.  I know I took pictures of the bulletin board with the glyphs and when I find it I will add them to this blog.

Posted in Literacy Tuesdays

K is for Kite

So what have you done this Family Day?  Daddy always works on Family Day (he gets an extra day in the summer instead) so it is just another normally day with me and the kids, just not a normal Monday.  We decided to finish a few of our letter crafts that were almost done and do our letter for the week.

K is a letter I often miss in my Kindergarten class because in Jolly Phonics it is grouped with C.  The girls had been asking to do a K craft so I thought we would add it to our letter wall.

I decided on K is for Kite.  I printed off a large K for Eileen to colour and the word Kite for Kaitlyn.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

After they had coloured them we cut out the letters.  Eileen added a tail and decorations to make her kite in the shape of a K.  Kaitlyn glued her letters on a diamond shaped piece of paper and then added her tail.

Posted in Cooking with the Kiddies

Gluten Free – Mommy’s Turn

If you have been following my blog for a while you might remember that last spring my kids went on a trial gluten free diet for a couple of months.  If not you can check out my posts (2).  It turned out that my kids are fine with gluten but had other issues.  Now that I seem to have their diets mostly under control and they have not been getting as sick this  year (fingers crossed to keep it that way), I figured it was about time to think about what I eat.  I have had stomach issues for years, but I have not really worried about them lately as they  seemed to get better whenever I was pregnant or nursing (ironically).  That has been pretty much my constant state for the past 6 years but now that I am done having children I have been finding the problems coming back.  When this problem initially started as a teenager the doctor gave me some pills for the pain but not much else was done.  At one time I thought I had a chicken allergy but after taking that out of my diet it didn’t get any better.

I figured it was time to give the G-Free diet a try for myself.  So far I have made it through one week with only a couple of slip ups.   I figured I should start with a bit of inspirational reading so I picked up a copy of Elisabeth Hasselbeck’s The G-Free Diet (and also a copy of her cookbook).  I am 60 pages into the book so far and have learned a bit – most surprising to me were the number of things with gluten in them that I would never have thought of (I read this after sealing a pile of envelopes that probably had gluten in them).  My one slip up was at school on Wednesday when we had cupcakes for my teaching partner’s birthday and I ate one without even thinking.  The biggest difficulty is snacking, especially when I am not at home.  I use to often visit Tim Hortons for an afternoon snack before picking up the kids from daycare and can’t do that anymore.  I haven’t yet, but this may lead to some weight loss due to less snacking.  I have been trying to plan ahead packing carrot sticks or G-Free crackers but I am not normally the person who plans ahead (for myself anyway).

So my major focus is my own diet, I am not making the rest of my family go G-Free.  Saying this they will be eating a lot less gluten as I am the one preparing the meals.  Our meal plans for the week are all G-free and sometimes I give them an alternative (I had a rice wrap while they had ww tortillas) but most of the time their dinners are 100% gluten free.  I even found a cool site with a weekly menu plan that we are going to try this week.

Sunday morning are our big breakfast mornings.  Lately Kaitlyn has been asking for waffles all the time so I thought I would try to make some G-Free waffles for all of us.  Using google I quickly discovered that most recipes called for tapioca flour or other strange ingredients that I don’t have but I did eventually find a recipe at Gluten Free Cooking School using ingredients I had in my pantry and fridge.  They turned out pretty good, even if they had a bit too much butter for my liking.  Kaitlyn kept saying that they were the best waffles she ever had and Michael ate his entire plate and seconds.  They have already decided I need to get strawberries to try with them next Sunday.

The biggest problem I have going gluten free in my small town is getting ingredients.  We have a pretty good natural food store and an aisle at the Superstore that I can get stuff at but the selection is limited.  I did discover that our favourite pizza place now has a Gluten Free crust and I tried it on Friday – awesome!

We will see how this new adventure goes but if it makes me feel better it is all worth it!

Posted in Literacy Tuesdays

H is for Hearts

We have been waiting until after Christmas to restart our Literacy Tuesday letters and it was perfect that we are at H.  I kind of knew that we were going to do hearts but the dollar store just got in all of their Valentines day stuff so the timing was perfect.  Last week when I was in getting a few things for my c lass I stocked up on heart shaped items for the girls’ craft boxes.  This included a variety of sizes and shapes of hearts in a variety of materials.

For H today I printed off a large uppercase H for Eileen and the word Heart for Kaitlyn.  I gave them a bowl with a variety of hearts and told them to fill their letters. The only rule was they couldn’t go outside of the lines. Kaitlyn asked if she could draw on her own hearts and of course I said yes.  To stick with the cliche I made sure to print them on pink paper!  An easy craft and a way to reinforce our letter of the day.

To reinforce our letter we brainstorm words that start with it throughout the day.  This is a great and easy way to keep them thinking while driving in the van.  Kaitlyn is really good at this and often comes up with words that I don’t think of. Eileen is getting better and has a remarkable memory. If Kaitlyn mentions a word earlier in the day Eileen will remember it when asked for more words later.  I am hoping to keep a pace of a letter a week from now on as we work to prepare Eileen for Junior Kindergarten in September.  My goal is for her to recognize every letter of the alphabet, know at least one word for each, and be able to print her name with an uppercase E and the remainder in lower case.  We will see how that goes.

Posted in Craft Thursdays

Months of the Year Calendar Wheel

In the land of Kindergarten the role of the calendar in the school day has been changing over the last couple of years.  There is an interesting article about how traditional calendar time in a Kindergarten or Preschool classroom may be wasted time.  I have been playing with the calendar in my classroom since September and am still not happy with how we do it, right now we are using if for counting and patterning but I think I may switch things up again.  I don’t concentrate on the days of the week or months of the year with my students right now, I am trying to figure out the best way to approach the topic.

I am currently readying Carol Copple’s Growing Minds: Building Strong Cognitive Foundations in Early Childhood.  This was the latest publication I have received with my NAEYC membership.    In the article on Cognitive Development in the Preschool Years I appreciated the quote:

“Even though research shows that preschoolers’ capacities are at time underestimated, they do have limitation in their reasoning skills that affect learning.  They have a limited understanding of ideas such as time, space or age, for instance, and don’t use these abstract concepts to help themselves reason unless the ideas are made real and relevant to their current lives”.

This is an American publication so the students in my class fit into the categories of both preschool and kindergarten, the joy of a junior & senior kindergarten mixed class.  My youngest student just turned 4 and I have a student who will be 6 in a few weeks.  I can see this development in my own girls, Eileen is almost 3 1/2 and Kaitlyn will be 6 tomorrow.  Eileen is learning the months of the year song at school but to her it is just a song that she sings like any other song.  Kaitlyn knows all the months of the year, the order they go in (without singing), can relate them to the seasons, and can read most of them.  So knowing where they are I set a goal for us – I want to see if I can get Eileen to start to understand the concept of a year and the months, and I would like Kaitlyn to be able to spell the words. Out of this came our months of the year calendar.

To make this calendar you will need a large piece of bristol board or other heavyweight paper, a piece of scrap heavy weight paper in a different colour, a metal fastener, pictures of family members and events, markers and glue.  To prepare an adult needs to cut out a large circle from the bistol board and divide it into 12 slices.  I went over the lines with a black sharpie to make them stand out.

The girls and I then reviewed the months of the year song to remind Kaitlyn, and to make some connections for Eileen to the song she already knows.  I found a version on Youtube that we watched.  With their help I printed the name of each month at the top of the slices.  I did it in pencil and then Kaitlyn went over them with marker.  Next we brainstormed special days in each month.  I wanted to make this a concrete activity and tie it to things that are important to them.  For every event with I either printed out a picture on the computer or they drew their own pictures.  Kaitlyn did an awesome job with her drawings and backgrounds and Eileen even got her hands in their with her own decorations.  Both girls played an active role in deciding what would go on our calendar.  Their selection included: birthdays (all 5 of us), holidays, trips we would take this year (Great Wolf Lodge, Skiing in Vermont & Disney World) and the start and beginning of school.  The best part of this calendar is that it is personalized for our family.  We hung it on the wall in our playroom and hopefully Eileen will begin to associate the different months to the events in her life.  To finish off I cut out an arrow to indicate which month we are in right now and attached it with a metal fastener.

The other great thing about this style of calendar is that it is continuous.  It shows that after December the months start over again.

If anyone makes your own wheel I would love to hear how it turns out!

Posted in Books, Kinder science, Kindercrafts

Kindergarten Migration

We finished our migration unit in room 11 at the end of November but I hadn’t had a chance to blog about it yet so this is catching me up.  Being my first year in Kindergarten I didn’t want to rock the boat too much so with a few exceptions I have been sticking to the themes my predecessor used.  Between Halloween and Christmas we studied the topic of migration.  I really had no idea how to approach this and wanted to do more than just talk about he Canada Goose.  I started by getting some books – I simply used Google and the Indigo-Chapters website to look for picture books on migration.  I picked a variety and placed an order.  When my order came it I took a look at one book and easily decided how I would approach this unit.

“Going home, going home,

We feel the urge to go.

It’s time for us to travel on,

It’s something we just know.

Many of us look for food,

Others find a mate.

And when the weather starts to change,

There is no time to wait.”

Going Home: The Mystery of Animal Migration, by Marianne Berkes and illustrated by Jennifer DiRubbio is a must have book for any teacher doing a unit on migration.  Beautifully written with accompanying illustrations it tells of 10 animals that all migration for a variety of reasons.  Each page has an 8 line rhyming verse introducing the animal and it’s migration patterns, accompanying a detailed illustration.  On the facing page is also a small write-up giving more detail on the animals.  At the end of the book there is a map showing where each animal migrates. more detailed information on the migrating animals, a list of places to look for more information and tips from the author on activities.  On the first day of our unit I introduced the first page of the book to my class (seen above) and picture of all the 10 animals in the book.  I told them we would be learning about the Canadian Goose and Ruby-Throated Hummingbird because they both spend their summers where we live, and that we would also be learning about 3 other animals.  The part that really got them excited is that they would be picking the 3 other animals from the other 8 in our book.  I made a chart with pictures of each of the 8 animals and each student was given two stickers.  They were to put a sticker underneath the two animals that they wanted to learn about the most.  We talked about picking what you wanted to learn about and not worrying about what your friends and classmates picked.  We had just finished a unit on Data Management in Math so they were very familiar with tallies and graphs.  I still have the graph on my wall at school and when I go back into the school I will take a picture and post it here.

The winners were: Pacific Salmon, Manatee, and Caribou.

Day #1 – Canada Goose

In our study of fall we went on a walk in the neighbourhood around the school which included a visit to a pond near the school.  Here we saw a large number of Canadian Geese.

Canada Geese are not at all an uncommon sight in our town.  We actually have an over population of Canada Geese at our main park downtown.  I decided to start with an animal that the kids would easily see everyday.  I started by reading them the page in Going Home about Canada Geese, and we learned why they fly in a V formation (to conserve energy).  Then I read them Grady the Goose which also tied in nicely to our character ed trait of the month compassion.  There were some great text-to-text connections when Grady became tired very easily when flying by himself (didn’t have others to make a V formation).  Next I introduced them to our migration maps.  Throughout our unit we made two maps that showed the migration of the animals we studied – one inside the classroom and one in the hall to share with the rest of the school.  We also posted our crafts of the different animals and a cool fact on each on our board in the hallway.

My amazing ECE student Sheena prepared a craft station that was made available to the students during activity time every day.  They could make a craft of the animal that we learned about that day if they wanted to.   We borrow the Canada Goose craft from my teacher partner.  The students sponge painted colours on the Canada Geese that Sheena had prepared (a body outline and a rectangle for the wings).  When they dried she stapled the wings on the body.

Day 2 – Ruby-Throated Hummingbird

I have hummingbird feeders outside of my house but never seem to get as many hummingbirds in the summer as my dad does.  When we are over at my parents house we often see them at the feeders on his back porch.  I have seen them many times but never thought about their migration before.  Again I started by reading the class the page in Going Home, where we learned that they migrate to lay their eggs south of the Gulf of Mexico.  The EA in my room, Alison, showed the kids a cute YouTube video of a rescued baby hummingbird.  I didn’t have any books on Hummingbirds so I also read them Tree of Birds  by Susan Meddaugh.  This is a story of a boy Harry who rescues a tropical bird when she is hurt by a car but doesn’t want to let her go to migrate south.  The story is about a fictional bird but we made connections on the importance of weather for some types of birds.  One word of caution – if reading this book aloud you may want to change some of the language.  At one point Harry screams “Stupid, Stupid Birds”, which I changed to “Silly, Silly Birds”.  For craft Sheena helped the kids make their own hummingbirds using pom-poms, toothpicks, and muffin cups as I found in a blog post by Ramblings of a Crazy Woman.   They turned out supper cute.

Day 3 – Pacific Salmon

I was surprised when the students selected the Pacific Salmon as one of the animals they wanted to learn about.  In Going Home they learned that salmon migrate up streams to lay their eggs in the same place where they were born.  As a story I read them the classic A Salmon for Simon, about a young boy named Simon who desperately wants to catch a fish.  He lives on the West Coast of Canada and the Salmon approach shore when heading for the streams where they will go to lay their eggs.  I found a very cute video on the life cycle of Pacific Salmon I showed the class.  For a craft we made fish using construction paper outlines and contact paper that can be found at any dollar store.  The students torn up small pieces of tissue paper to stick to the contact  paper making their salmon.

Day 4 – Manatee

This was probably the most surprising selection by the class and the most difficult to plan.  In Going Home we learned that Manatees migrate to find warmer water when the temperature drops.  Books on Manatees are limited but I did read them portions of Dances with Manatees by Faith McNulty.  This is a level 4 reader that has tonnes of great information on Manatees, but it it way too long to use as a read-aloud so I only ready portions of it to the entire class.  I left it in the class library for students to explore on their own.  We were doing well with the videos so I continued the trend with another Youtube video, this time showing them what manatee looks like and why it is nicknamed the ‘sea cow’.   We were at a loss for a craft but we managed to find a pattern for a paper bag puppet that we made available in the craft centre.

Day 5 – Caribou / Reindeer

This was a great cross-over, our last day of our migration unit we learned about Caribou which are also called Reindeer in different parts of the world.  This was a great segway into our Christmas unit!  From Going Home we learned that caribou migrate south into the forest for protection from the wind in the winter but in the spring migrate north to fee on the tundra.  I showed them a final video, this time of the caribou migration.  To finish off I read them Jan Brett’s The Wild Christmas Reindeer.  Our final craft was not an optional craft but instead a handprint craft for our memory books that I create for the kids to take home at the end of the school year.  Every month we make a different handprints so our November handprint was a caribou.  I found the idea at Reading Confetti and modified it slightly to exclude the red nose (wanted to make sure it was more like a caribou and less like Rudolph) and excluded the bell so that it would lay flat in our memory book.  We used scrap foam for the nose and mouth.

Our unit turned out pretty cool!

Posted in Milestones

New Year’s Resolutions

I have never been a fan of New Years Resolutions.  When I use to teach fitness classes more regularly  I always found January so frustrating because my class number would skyrocket for a few weeks and then I would never see them again.  The reason I don’t like them is there is too much pressure to follow them and often they are unrealistic.

Instead this year I am going to set some goals that I would like to achieve but if we fail a bit at the beginning of the year we won’t stop but try again.

1 – Declutter!  This is pretty much due to Gord’s nagging for the past year.  We have too much stuff and it all usually just ends up thrown in the basement.  This year I want to get my basement organized and functional!  I would love for Eileen to be able to shoot a puck around with Daddy in the basement and have a better chance of hitting the net than a pile of junk.  We have already decided that we are having a yard sale in the spring but now we are starting to sort through things.  Today I cleaned the fridge, freezer and pantry; while Gord and Kaitlyn cleaned out the barn and garage.  Then we did a little bit of work in the basement.  Gord took a load of large items to the transfer station and I organized my wrapping station in the basement  throwing out tonnes of old gift bags that are ripped or that I know I will never use again.  My supplies are organized so it should be much easier to wrap gifts for the many birthday parties the kids go to.

2 – Get moving! I look back at my fitness level 5 years ago and it makes me want to cry.  It is very ironic because even just a year ago I was preaching about how it is not hard to get moving with your kids.  I could use some of my own advice now.  I think much of it is because we have become so busy both in and out of the home.  Work is a lot more work, and we are doing more literacy and craft activities but our home exercise routine is definitely lacking.  I am not too worried about the kids because they have dance and skating/hockey and swimming, and they never stop moving at home unless in a specific stationary activity.  The problem is Mommy is not moving.  My second goal it so find ways to incorporate more physical activity into my day.

3 – Reading!  I love to read.  I use to be a teacher-librarian and that was only a couple of years ago.  The pile of books and magazines beside my desk is very high and doesn’t seem to be going down at all.  The problem is that when I am finally sitting at the end of the day I am usually either on my computer or watching T.V. (something I have PVR’d or through Netflix).  I really want to read more, both for fun and professionally.  This past year I joined NAEYC when I moved to Kindergarten and I keep getting these amazing resources in the mail.  Sometimes it seems a little overwhelming – especially adding to the professional resources already in my pile, but I really want to get through a few of these.  I also was to read for fun – I use to be in a book club but could never get through the books in time – I need to make the time.

4 – Time for Me!  When Michael was born I decided I needed one hour a week to myself and I started going to Yoga.  It was amazing, but it doesn’t hurt that I found an amazing teacher.  I NEED to start doing this again.  It keeps me grounded both emotionally and physically.  It may seem like I am taking time away from other things but I think it makes me a better mother, teacher, and person!

I don’t normally share things like this on my blog but I wanted to put it all in writing because maybe then I will have to be accountable!