Thursday, January 31, 2013

Super Sale At TPT and Teacher's Notebook!

Well, the Superbowl is almost upon us! While hubby and the boys will have their faces buried in the television screen, mine will be buried in my laptop screen hunting down some amazing bargains on TPT and Teacher's Notebook! They are both have amazing sales where you can score up to 28% off tons of items!

300SundaySuper

Tuesday, January 29, 2013

Send a Problem Mini-math lesson - SIOP Math Tip

This math activity was one that I had used back in my 7th grade math teaching days. I had learned about it in a SIOP training.  I decided to try it with my 3rd graders today as a mini-lesson



Here is what you do:

1. Place students into pairs or triads.
2. Distribute two index cards or pieces of paper to each group.
3. Tell students in each group to make up a problem to be solved (e.g., a math equation, a word problem, a short answer question on any math topic), discuss it, and write it on their index card. They need to solve it as well on a separate card.
4. Model a sample problem for the class before the groups begin their work.
5. As groups write, circulate to check work and provide assistance.
6. When all groups finish, have each pass its problem to another pair or triad.

7. The groups then discuss and solve the problem they received.
8. Circulate and assist as needed.
9. Have student pairs or triads share out the problem they received and the solution. This could be done by students writing on the board and explaining, or if the problems are not too complicated, they could be shared orally. The group that wrote the problem can confirm or correct, as can the teacher afterwards.

SIOP features highlighted in this activity:
* Peer to peer interaction
* Adaptation of materials by students
* Meaningful usage of key vocabulary
* Learning strategy: problem-solving
* Higher-order thinking
* Clarification of the concepts in the L1 if students are grouped homogenously by language
* Application of content and language knowledge
* Integration of all four language skills

Have you used any SIOP methods in your instruction?

Friday, January 25, 2013

Learning About Area and Perimeter- Snowball Style!

I had seen the idea of having a snowball fight to review material around the blogosphere, but when I saw this post from Looking From Third To Fourth who used the idea to review multiplication, something made the wheels in my brain to start spinning and I came up with a fun way to review perimeter and area which is the unit we are currently working on.

I had the students take a piece of paper and fold it in fours and rip them apart.  They wrote numbers from 1 to 10 on each of their papers, and crumpled them.





 On my call they threw all of their snowballs into the center of the classroom.  They again waited for my call to go collect two snowballs each to bring back to their desks.



Aim!

Fire!

Then they had to solve for the perimeter and area.  Once everyone had solved, we had another snowball fight returning their two snowballs and retrieving two more.  I had the students each solve 4 problems.



They loved it!


Thursday, January 24, 2013

My Little Guy's Birthday and A Great Writing Idea

Today was my youngest son's 7th birthday! We were lucky enough to be able to celebrate together with his class and mine.  His class is our reading buddy class, so he wanted to share cupcakes with my class. We went to their room and enoyed some yummy Steelers (his team) cupcakes.  My class made him this giant birthday card.

While we were in his room I learned a great writing idea from his first grade teacher.  At the beginning of the year she gave each student a circle map to write about themselves and the things that they liked.  Luke's circle graph had: dolphins, nachos, Chinese food, and action figures.  On the student's birthday, she has all of the students write them a letter picking one of these items as their topic to focus on.  Many letters said things about dolphins and nachos, but it was a great way to teach the kiddos to stay on topic.

Here are a few of the letters:

Luke even wrote a letter to himself!


I think I will be stealing this idea for next year, although with my 3rd graders I might have them write a paragraph for each item.

Do you have any ideas for teaching the idea of staying on topic while writing?

Thursday, January 17, 2013

Martin Luther King Timeline and Writing Activity



Like many classes across the US we have been learning about Martin Luther King Jr. this week. Yesterday we read Martin's Big Words by Doreen Rappaport.  Then I gave the students copies of the important dates and asked them to choose the four that they thought were most important in describing why we celebrate Martin Luther King Day. I thought it might give them a little practice in picking out main ideas as we seem to still struggle a bit with this skill.



The students colored in pictures of Martin Luther King Jr. and pasted them to the beginning of their paper.  They drew a timeline across and used speech bubbles to write down the events they chose.  Here is what the final product looked like:


Today we worked on our essays comparing our dreams to Martin Luther King Jr.'s dreams. We started with a graphic organizer that looked like this:


Then I asked the students to brainstorm the dreams that they had for their school, their community, and the World.  This is what they came up with:



You can tell that some of their dreams are related to recent news events :(

We used the brainstorms to write a paragraph about each of these dreams.  After the students wrote about their own dreams, we went to the computer lab to research Martin Luther King Jr.'s dreams.  They wrote a paragraph about what they found.  We put the two together for a cute craftivity.



Wednesday, January 16, 2013

Learning About Frogs - Carousel

We are beginning a research/non-fiction unit on frogs (since we will be getting a class pet soon!). Before I told the kiddos what the unit was about (and what pet we were going to get), I had them complete a carousel activity.  I set up 6 stations around the room with pictures and chart paper. The chart paper was pre-labeled with "What I Notice" and "What I Wonder".


The students worked in groups of 3 and had 3 minutes at each station to talk about what they noticed.  Each group had a different colored marker and wrote down some of their observations and questions.


It was really fun to see what things they noticed (and what things grossed them out!). It was a great way to introduce the unit and get their brains engaged.  They did eventually guess that we would be learning about frogs.

I am working on the complete unit as they work on it, but I will eventually post the final unit to TpT when it is done.  In the meantime, you might want to check out my Can We Get a Pet Unit which kicked off the whole project you see here!

Have you used a carousel in class before? What other engagement ideas do you use?

Tuesday, January 15, 2013

Listening Center From Donor's Choice and Freebie!



I am on cloud nine! I got my first project funded from Donor's Choice - a listening center.  The items arrived last week and I am loving them!  I have a few students who are very low readers, and they take a lot of my time.  They have a difficult time working independently, and the listening center has changed that!  I set them up with the listening center first thing in the morning which frees me up to meet or conference with other students.  I know that many of you already have listening centers in your classrooms, but I did not have one in the room I have now, and coming from 7th grade math I had no need for one in the past.

Other students have been eyeing the CD/MP3 players and I can't wait to get a few above grade level books such as the Diary of A Wimpy Kid series for them to use and hopefully build their skills as well.




Do you use a listening center in your class?  What do you do with it?


I have this listening center sheet to help hold students accountable for what they are reading  and you can download it here:

Listen to Reading Worksheet

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