Posted in Books, Preparing for Kindergarten

Camouflage – Snow Rabbit, Spring Rabbit

It was one of those really long, but good days.  I want to just curl up and go to bed but I thought I should post about our book today.

Our next book from the “Kindergarten Ready, Set Go!” calendar was Snow Rabbit, Spring Rabbit: A Book of Changing Seasons by Il Sung Na.  I read this book to my Kindergarten class back in March as a diagnostic task for assessing their ability to Make Connections.  After studying signs off Fall and our unit on migration in November I wanted to see they  could connect with this book and how the different animals know that it is time for winter.   After that activity I put in on the shelf but pulled it out today to read to Eileen and my niece who is visiting for a couple of days.

Since it is not really a time of year when they can relate to changing seasons, just VERY warm dry weather, I decided to focus on a different aspect of the book.  The rabbit in the book know it is time to change the season and changes the colour of it’s coat.  We talked about why he might change his colour, and with some prompting we figured out that he might want to be able to hide.  In the winter with a white coat, he can hide in the snow but that wouldn’t work very well in the spring so he changes his colour to blend into different surroundings.

I then sent the girls on a hunt to each find 3 stuffed animals in our ‘stuffy bin’ that they could hide outside.  I talked about how we would want them to blend in with their environment.  They really didn’t understand this at all but had fun playing find the stuffy.  I was glad I picked 2 to hide so that it was bit harder for them to find.

They didn’t quite understand the hiding concept and I found them just laying on the grass.  It was kind of funny that Lyric hid her first and then Eileen pretty much just went and put them in the same spot.

I thought that I hid mine in places a bit more difficult to find but I also was more strategic picking what animals to use.

They found the hummingbird pretty easy but needed a lot of guidance to find the brown monkey in the bush – can you find it?

Even though the girls didn’t understand the purpose of the game or really understand camouflage at all we had fun.  If I was to do this again, after reading the book I would show them some images of real animals and how they use their colours to camouflage.  Then I would give them toy animals to hid that they would be able to blend into their environment.  For example they may have had more luck with the green turtle.

After playing we went on a search for some very special twigs and then took them back in to the air conditioned house.  I told them we were going to make our own animals that we would then later hide for Kaitlyn to try and find outside.  I got out the goggly eyes, pipe cleaners, white glue and a bit of gold glitter glue.  We made our own creatures out of our sticks, and the two pinecones the girls just had to use.  I found my inspiration at KinderNature.

They are a bit more camouflaged but the urge for the girls to pick bright colours for their legs won out (mine is the one with the brown legs).  We didn’t have time to hide them for Kailtyn today but we will make sure we do it sometime this weekend before my nieces go home!

Posted in Books

Everything I Need to Know Before I’m Five

It is summer time and that means more frequent trip to our local public library.  Last week I took Michael and Eileen to the launch of the summer program and told them they could both pick out a few books to borrow.  Michael randomly picked a board book and Eileen came back with 4 picture books.  They all looked pretty cool but I don’t know if there was much method behind her selections.

Tonight we read Everything I Need to Know Before I’m Five by Valorie Fisher.  This is not what I would call a prime Read Aloud but it is a cool book none the less.  The title pretty much gives it away, this book is a a series of pages introducing the concepts of numbers, opposites, shapes, colours, seasons, weather, and the alphabet.   As a Kindergarten teach I would have to say it is pretty much the basic rote information a child learns in JK.  In school there is much more that they learn in terms of comprehension, social skills and critical thinking but for the things that just need to be memorized this book pretty much covers it!  The illustrations are bright and simple photographs appropriate for the under 5 crowd.  Michael loved pointing to things he recognized as we read along.

This is a book I definitely want to get for the concept book section of my classroom library.  I can see many of my students spending lots of time going through the pages quizzing each other and reinforcing their knowledge.  A cute idea for a book!

Posted in Books, Preparing for Kindergarten

Black All Around

Our next book in the 2012-2013 Kindergarten Ready Set Go Calendary was Black all Around written by Patricia Hubbell and illustrated by Don Tate.  The girls have really enjoyed making their movies so I thought I would expand on that.  I gave them my iPhone and sent them on a hunt throughout the house to find items the colour black.  They love taking pictures on my phone so this wasn’t much of a request.  We then downloaded them to the computer, decided which ones needed retakes, and made a quick slideshow using iPhoto.  They helped me create the opening and closing slides.  Everyone was tired today so I did most of the picture cropping but I think this is something Kaitlyn is almost old enough to do herself.  Voila!

These activities are to help prepare Eileen for Kindergarten and this one was great for colour practice but I got some good ideas for Kaitlyn out of this exercise.  Some of the photos were not great so in 1 minute I talked to her about staging the items and holding the camera/phone very still – her retakes were a huge improvement. I am thinking she may almost be ready for her own camera – or maybe even just giving her my old camera.      It needs to be fixed but I may take it in and if it doesn’t cost too much I think she would love it.  Then we can start to teach her how to use a camera properly and I am pretty sure that soon enough she will be taking better pictures than me!

Posted in Books, Cooking with the Kiddies, Craft Thursdays, Literacy Tuesdays

5 Little Ducks, a Donkey and a Wolf – MeMe Tales Readathon Week #1

I was very excited to learn about the MeMe tales readathon and we downloaded the app and the first books a couple of weeks ago.  However, as school had not finished yet we are a couple of weeks behind.

Week 1 of the Readathon was all about Animals.  We have tonnes of animal books at home but it was cool that both of the books for the readathon were traditional tales.  I am been trying to introduce the kids to nursery rhymes and fairy tales so this fit in perfectly.

We started with 5 Little Ducks.

The Five Little Ducklings
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The Five Little Ducklings

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This is a familiar tale and instantly my girls started to sing the song.  I went to iTunes and downloaded them the Raffi version.  They listened to it over and over again and then decided that they were going to act it out for themselves.  I sent them on a hunt to find as many toy ducks as they could.  Michael’s favourite toy is his stuffed duckie but we managed to find a bunch more, especially when we got into the bath toys!  We used two large pillows covered by my green table cloth for the hill (they called it the mountain), and we filmed in the backyard on a sunny day.  It took a bit of rehearsing and distracting of one little brother but it ended up pretty cute!

I got inspired to create a special breakfast for the girls around the duck theme. I found a gluten free pancake mix in the pantry and decided pancakes and fruit would be perfect.   The only problem was that most of my cool shaped cookie cutters are plastic.  I found a tutorial at Time 2 Save that helped me use tinfoil to copy my pastic duck cookie cutters.  This was supper easy and let me make duck shaped pancakes for breakfast.  They asked why they didn’t have 5 ducks each but I am glad I didn’t make that many – they each ate only 2!

Continue reading “5 Little Ducks, a Donkey and a Wolf – MeMe Tales Readathon Week #1”

Posted in Books, Professional Development

Teaching in the Digital Age – Blog Party (Chapter 1)

I had been waiting to see what the book was going to be for the pre-K/K blog party this year and  was excited to hear it was selected to be: Teaching in the Digital Age by Brian Puerling.  I like to thing that I am techie but I am always striving to find developmentally appropriate ways to use technology in my JK/SK classroom.  This past year I found that 75% of the time I was the one using the technology and my class were simply passively observing.  The only times they were engaged is when we were using the Smartboard but even then there was very little critical thinking taking place. I am starting the book study a bit late for a couple of reasons.  First it took a month for my book to come in – it was on back order.   Also in Canada we don’t finish school until the end of June so I didn’t have time to crack my book open until school ended.  Now that school is finished and I am starting to feel relaxed I am catching up on my reading!

I started by reading the introduction and chapter 1.   I love how it is written very simply.  I find too often I am reading education texts that I first have to think about decoding the vocabulary and it takes a bit more concentration to understand the deeper meaning.  It is summer and as a rule I don’t want to have to think too hard about anything!  Before I even got to chapter 1 I started to take advantage of the QR codes and I downloaded a QR code reader on my iPhone – I don’t know why I hadn’t done this earlier, it is so cool!  As an aside I also downloaded one on my new playbook but I can’t get it to work.  I especially like how it points out what should be obvious to me but I need to think about.  For example it talks about getting media consent.  I never post any pictures or names of my students on the web but this is something I need to figure out for September.  I would love to have a closed website/blog that parents can view with a password and then I can post student pictures and videos.  I need to figure this out.  With the new ELK program we are starting in September many of our assessments and observations will be done on my new playbook through a lot of pictures and videos I would love to be able to have the students use this material more interactively and also share it with student’s families.  That is one of the things I am hoping to get out of this book.

Chapter 1 is entitled “The Digital Classroom”.  This immediately reminded me of David Warlick’s Redefining Literacy for the 21st Century.  This was a great book I used when I use to run the school library but many of the strategies I found too difficult an abstract for my kinders.  Often the limiting factor is a requirement of basic literacy: reading and writing.

In chapter 1 Puerling discusses the world our students are experiencing inside and outside of the classroom.  As a parent I immediately thought of my own children.

This is not an unusual sight – to see all three of my kids sitting around the iPad.  What is more common is to see one on the iPad, one on my iPhone and one on the computer.  My youngest, Michael is very adept at using the iPad and can easily find his favourite apps (he is not 2 years old yet).  Now don’t worry my kids aren’t on technology all day.  Often they play a bit in the morning while they are still waking up and then maybe a bit in the afternoon on a really hot day, like we have had all week, when it is just too hot to go outside.  When they are not on technology they are usually dancing (to the same songs over and over again) or doing crafts.  But I digress …

The reason I mention my kids is because I feel they are not indicative of the population we live in.  Last year I set up a symbaloo site for my class to use at home and very few actually did.  I want to set up a class website/blog but I am not sure how many families may actually use it.  A few families in my class don’t have internet at home and of those that do some are still on dial-up.  Our county is expanding broadband to the more rural areas but this process is slow and frustrating.  This does not mean that I shouldn’t use the technologies in my class but it means that I need to be aware that my students will come with varying levels of background experience.

The key is to marry the use of technology with my play based classroom.  I love Bonnie Blagojevic’s comment that we need to: “Use technology to enrich, not replace, hands-on learning experiences so important to young children”.  We don’t use the technology to teach the technology but rather as a tool to learning.  If we keep this in the forefront of our minds I believe both teachers and students will be successful!

Take away from this chapter:

  • Check out the forms at the back of the chapter.  I may not be able to use all with the new way of planning in the ELK program but they will help me get organized.
  • I want a document camera!  After they were mentioned I looked them up and one would be awesome to use in my class.  We could use it to share the awesome work students will be doing and exploring in our inquiry based class.  Think how we can share the items my students bring in from the natural world!
  • Use my Evernote!  This is one of my goals for the summer.  Come September I am hoping to use Evernote to record assessments of my students (using my new Playbook) and why not start now.  I hadn’t thought of it until Karen on Pre-Kinders commented on using Evernote to record comments so I am going to try it with chapter 2.
Posted in Books

Little Book Adventure – Challenge #3 A Spineless Book

For challenge #3 we decided upon the Dr. Seuss classic Horton Hears a Who! This past April completed a Dr. Seuss unit with my Kinderoos and this is a book I didn’t have a chance to sad with them.  Kaitlyn also got a number of Dr. Seuss books a few Christmas’ ago and this one we hadn’t looked at much.  I had seen the movie on Netflix a while ago but it isn’t there now so we ended up purchasing the film from iTunes.

We started by reading the book together.  Kaitlyn had already seen the film at school but she didn’t remember much.  Next they watched the film (I watched most of it with them but missed part putting Michael down for a nap).  We didn’t have time to do much follow up so again today the kids watched the film and revisited the book.  Next we went through the 6 guiding questions, and most of the answers are from Kaitlyn.

Did the characters look the same as in the book?

The Who’s looked different, especially their hair.  The Kangaroo also had different hair (she seemed fixated on everyones hair).  After some prompting she did say that the characters were different colours.  Our classic Dr. Seuss book has only white, black, blue and red so this is a pretty big difference.  Finally she said the clover in the movie was purple as opposed to red in the book.  On further investigation the clover is more pink in the movie and red in the book.

Did the characters speak the way you imagined?

This is a great question and one I often think about when seeing movie adaptations but I think it is a bit to abstract for my children.  Kaitlyn’s quick answer was yes.  I always find that when I watch films the accents sometimes throw me off!

What parts of the story were left out of the film? Were there any extra parts in the film?

This is interesting because often in adult adaptations much has to be left out due to time but when adapting a children’s picture book the reverse often happens and more has to be added to increase the length.  Kaitlyn’s biggest worry was that  there was no snow in the book but there was in the film.  She also came up with on her own that the cage they held Horton in was different.  I found it interesting that she focused on the small details and missed some of the bigger differences. For starters there are a lot more characters in the film and one main character was changed.  In the book JoJo is a little Who with no connection to other characters but in the film he is the mayor’s only son (and he as A LOT of daughters).  She did come up with this with some suggesting but still seemed focused on the small details.  The thing that struck me was that in the film Horton had an ultimate destination and was trying to get the clover up to the flower to protect it but in the book he was just trying to protect it without having a specific plan.

What did you like about the film?

The song at the end.  My girls are obsessed with the song Can’t Fight this Feeling at the end of the film. If anyone knows where I can get a copy of this version please let me know.  I played the REO Speedwagon version and even the GLEE version for them but they really want the Horton version.

What didn’t you like about the film?

That the Mommy Kangaroo didn’t believe Horton.  In both versions the Kangaroo didn’t believe Horton but it seemed much more exaggerated in the film – especially after the Who’s are heard by everyone else.

What did you like better – the book or the film? Why?

The Film – because of the song (I should have seen that answer coming).

Kaitlyn drew a picture of her favourite part to share.  It you read carefully it is Mommy and Daddy Who with JoJo in the middle singing “I Can’t Fight this Feeling Anymore”.

Eileen was more interested in renaming one of Michael’s stuffed elephants Horton (he seems to have a fair number) and running around the house pretending to get away from the other animals.  It was quiet cute and her way of retelling the story!

Posted in Books

Little Book Adventure – Challenge #2

So we are way behind on everything!  It is the long weekend and we have been working hard outside but had to come inside while Daddy was cutting the grass.  Eileen asked to do a craft, and not just a craft in the basement but a ‘Mommy craft’ upstairs in the kitchen.  I figured this was a great chance to do one of the many things we have been trying to get through.  We decided to tackle challenge #2 from the Little Book Adventure.  This was the challenge from April but it’s better late than never.

We started by reading Surprise by Karen Andrews.  I had ordered this book back at the beginning of April and hadn’t had a chance to read it to the girls yet – it is awesome and I would recommend it to anyone (international shipping wasn’t even too bad).  It is the story of a number of children who each sign out the same library book and find a surprise picture from the previous reader  – a cool idea.

The girls each picked one of their library books we signed out last week and I read it to them.  Then I printed off the letterhead for the challenge and wrote a note at the bottom so that the parent or librarian who sees the picture will know what it is.  I am pretty sure not many people in our small town will be participating in the Litte Book Adventure so I wanted to make sure the reader understood what the picture is.  I also placed the link to this blog so if you are visited because you saw our pictures we would love for you to comment!

Kaitlyn picked Dr. Seuss’s The Lorax because she loves it and thought it would have the greatest chance of being signed out by another person.  The challenge said to write a letter to the next reader but Kaitlyn really wanted to draw a picture so we did both!  I helped her with spelling a few words but she did most of it herself.  I love how she thought to looking the book to spell Truffula.  On the other side she drew a smiling picture because she was happy the little boy was planting the seed.  I told her she could draw anything but she wanted to draw a smile because in Surprise the kids drew pictures of how they felt.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Eileen chose Crocodiles Play by Robert Heidbreder.  This was Blue Spruce nominee from a few years ago.  She needed a bit more help so I helped her with her letter.  She started by saying she wanted to draw a picture of a crocodile but then came to the conclusion that it looked more like a person and changed it to a picture of her family.  I am so excited that her people are starting to look like people.  She has made huge progress with her fine motor skills in the past couple of months.  She even signed her own name at the bottom of her letter!!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

This was a quick and easy challenge.  I and looking forward to seeing what Challenge #3 will is?

Posted in Books, Preparing for Kindergarten

Best Babysitter

The next book on our “Getting Ready for Kindergarten” list was Froggy’s Best Babysitter by Jonathan London and illustrated by Frank Remkiewicz.  This would be a great book for teaching concepts of print, styles of text or even onomatopeia but we decided to continue making connections.  This worked very well for us because a favourite movie of ours lately has been Mary Poppins.  Last time we watched it I made sure to point out the part at the beginning when Michael and Jane are reading their father their own advertisement for their new nanny.  After reading the book today I challenged my children to come up with their own qualification for their “Best Babysitter”.  We decided to share their ideas in a movie.

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 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.