December 16, 2019
Is it a pyramid or a prism?
To assist the boys and girls with practice at home for Tuesday's Math test, here is the strategy we use to help remember the difference between a pyramid and a prism.
December 10, 2019
The countdown is on!
Parents, you have some homework to do...sort of! Tuesday night's Practice Page is all about you! The boys and girls are going to ask you about your favorite Christmas gift as a child.
I'm posting this nice and early in the day so you have time to think about that special gift.
Maybe your gift was handmade by someone special in your life. Perhaps it was a Cabbage Patch Kid or an Atari Game System! Or maybe it was the Barbie Camper?! ! 😉
You don't have to do the work for this assignment, but you do have to provide the subject. I can't wait to read the results on Wednesday, this is my favorite homework activity of the year!
I'm posting this nice and early in the day so you have time to think about that special gift.
Maybe your gift was handmade by someone special in your life. Perhaps it was a Cabbage Patch Kid or an Atari Game System! Or maybe it was the Barbie Camper?! ! 😉
You don't have to do the work for this assignment, but you do have to provide the subject. I can't wait to read the results on Wednesday, this is my favorite homework activity of the year!
December 06, 2019
Reindeer Directed Drawing
As part of our Fun Friday activity, the boys and girls are learning how to draw a reindeer! They're coming a long very nicely! We'll continue to work on them on Monday, but in case blog visitors would like to draw one at home or have their own class create one, here's the video I made with directions!
December 04, 2019
Let's talk about procedural writing
We've started procedural writing this week. The boys and girls are writing all about what Mrs. Claus does on Christmas Eve while Santa is out delivering all the presents. The purpose of this activity is multi-layered. I'm teaching my students to:
- think like a character
- write an interesting paragraph with sparkly, memorable details that evoke a response from the reader
- write steps in sequence
- implement feedback from their writing pieces thus far
We've talked a lot about procedural writing in my class. Actually, you might say we've done so since the first day of school. Our Morning Message letter is an example of procedural writing. I always first tell my purpose for writing and then explain what we'll be doing throughout the day. Here's an example of what this looks like:
Over the next few days, students will learn the key features of procedural writing pictured below.
I'll be thrilled if everyone finished their paragraph, but it's this ideas page that I'm most interested in. Since such a heavy focus has been placed on creating an interesting and memorable paragraph, I want to see that my students are capable of generating these ideas on their own. We're using the two commercials and my paragraph pictured below as inspiration.
On Wednesday and Thursday, I'll conference with each student, look at their ideas and give a bit of feedback to help guide them along. I'm really looking to see that they can come up with their own ideas (sometimes kids tend to follow the teacher's example) and ask themselves the following questions:
- Have I included the essential details so that the reader can make a picture in their mind?
- Have I included some details that will be memorable to the reader like the ones in the commercials we watched?
- Have I included details that will evoke a response from the reader (likely it will be laughter, but you never know!)
After looking at and discussing key features from a few samples I wrote, along with television commercials that include many interesting details, I set my little authors loose to create their own literary works of art. I'm really looking forward to seeing how these all turn out; it's a lot harder than it looks and requires students to think very critically about their own work.
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