Monday, February 17, 2014

 
 
Well it has been a busy and wet couple of weeks. Between all the snow days, delayed openings, and special events at school, I am surprised we were able to accomplish as much as we did in class. Your children have developed a wonderful work ethic and at times keep me on track. :)
 

All About Walruses

In class we have managed to combine many different themes over the last several weeks. We learned about Chinese New Year (Gung Ho Fat Choy), walruses, the Arctic, the Sochi Winter Olympics and had time to celebrate Valentine's Day.  Many of our Daily 5 centers were centered around practicing skills already introduced as well as some new skills like alphabetical order, CVC words, sentence writing, non-fiction writing (writing for information), and story sequence. The class researched and wrote their second All About books featuring the walrus from Deanna Jump's walrus unit. One of their favorite facts was finding out that the male walrus (bull) will whistle to a female walrus (cow) to get her attention. To accompany their books the children made an adorable paper plate walrus craft. They did such a fantastic job that we had to hang them up in the classroom.

 IHeartCraftyThings.com
DeannaJump.com
 
 

Sochi Winter Olympics

 
Learning about the winter Olympics has not only been fun but quite a learning experience for everyone; including me. Did you know that the colors of  Olympic rings were chosen because every national flag in the world includes at least one of the five colors? Neither did I. We found Sochi, Russia on the world map and brainstormed the best modes of transportation to get there for the winter games. The children and I read about most of the winter sports included in the Sochi Winter Olympics and learned their names. For instance, Skeleton is like Luge which involves racing a sled down an icy track. However, unlike luge, skeleton sleds are ridden face first. And the sport of Curling always gives me chuckle, but to each their own. After the children watched Discover the Winter Olympics with Cecile and Pepo DVD, they each created a page in our Winter Sports class book. I can tell you this much, we have a lot of ice hockey fans in our class this year.
 
Onceuponaclassroom.com
 


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Valentine's Day


Finally Valentine's Day! And what better way is there to tell someone you like them than by writing them a letter. So during the week we spent a part of our literacy time learning about the ancient art of letter writing. In order to introduce the concept I read Dear Mr. Blueberry by Simon James. We discussed the purpose of writing a letter, the parts of a letter, and the importance of writing good sentences. By this time we were ready to try our hand at writing our first letters. Let's face it....some children do not enjoy writing, so in order to make this fun, our first letters were written to a family member. I have to say I was very impressed with how well the children did and how much they enjoyed expressing their feelings to their moms, dads, siblings, and grandparents. Hopefully, you received your letter by now and were just as excited reading them as we were writing them.
 
Our big culminating project for this unit was our Valentine letters to a classmate. The children were given a classmate to write a friendly letter to. They were to write at least one nice thing about the person and wish them a Happy Valentine's Day. We then created festive covers for our letters to be given out on Valentine's Day. During our Valentine's celebration, the students read their friendly Valentine letters to the class and "delivered" them to their recipients. They were really very sweet!
 
 

Math

We have shifted gears from our math workbook to our Investigations unit called How Many In All. In this unit the children will practice counting and measuring, creating different combinations to make 6 and other numbers (decomposing numbers), learning how to solve story problems, and writing number sentences. In the Investigations series, these skills are introduced and practiced through games and hands-on activities. Therefore, you may not see a lot of  math "paperwork" coming home in your child's Bee folder. But do not worry your children are learning these concepts by investigating and discovering.
 
 
 
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