Friday, October 30, 2015

Red Ribbon Week

This week we are celebrating Red Ribbon Week at our school. It has been a fun week with lots of great opportunities to dress up and celebrate being drug free. Here is a quick highlight of our week!

"We've Got Better Things to Do Than Drugs!!" 


Monday: Red Ribbon week kickoff (wear red) Originally, we planned for the whole school to meet on the field for a "Jammin Minute" to kick off the week. However, the rain had another plan and we couldn't do our Jammin minute on the field, and instead completed it in the classroom. I have attached the link in case your kids want to do it at home.


Jammin Minute Video:
http://safeshare.tv/v/ss562e0e484f5b7

Tuesday: Neon "We are too bright for drugs"


Wednesday: Wear hats "Hats off to being positive"



Thursday: Crazy hair day "Hair's to creativity!"




Friday: Barnwell Spirit Day "We are all a team"

Pumpkins

It's the week of Halloween and who doesn't love some pumpkin fun?!?

This week we used our schema to create an anchor chart on what we already knew about pumpkins. As the week passed by and we looked at many different sources of literature, we were able to add to our anchor chart with our new learning about pumpkins. Here is a picture of our anchor chart. The left shows our background knowledge on pumpkins and the right side shows new learning on pumpkins:



Here are some of the sources we used this week for pumpkins:

1. Scholastic News Article

2. Reading A-Z From Pumpkin Seed to Jack-O-Lantern 


3. Many classroom books 


In the spirit of Halloween we also had some great parent volunteers that came in and helped the kids make these adorable spider webs! 




Friday, October 23, 2015

Compare and Contrast

So... last April I was very fortunate and got to attend a teacher conference at The Ron Clark Academy. I was inspired in soooooo many ways of all the exciting things that were happening at the Ron Clark school. I was so anxious to take a few ideas back to my classroom to help keep students engaged and make learning so MUCH fun. However, when I returned from Ron Clark at 9 months pregnant, I figured it probably wasn't the smartest, nor safest thing, to teach while standing on a table! So this was the week I started.... and let me tell you the kids LOVED it.... well after they looked at me kinda crazy and asked why I was standing on a table. Anyway, sorry for that quick tangent.

Another week of October has come and gone with a blink of an eye. This week we learned a lot about comparing and contrasting, and with Halloween quickly approaching we tied in a favorite book by everyone, Stellaluna.

After learning all about bats last week, students did a great job comparing and contrasting bats and birds. In the beginning of the week, I asked my kiddos how the two animals were different and there were maybe only one or two responses. However, at the of the week each student was able to recall several ways that they are similar and different.

Here is our Venn-diagram that showed how bats and birds were similar and different:

Then each student had to fill out their own chart of how bats and birds were different in specific categories: 


Bats and birds were not the only thing students had to compare and contrast this week. Students also had to compare and contrast their Halloween costume with a friend's Halloween costume. They then wrote a narrative piece on their Halloween costume. We learned how to use a graphic organizer to help get our thoughts down for our writing. Here is a picture of our graphic organizer that we used:

Lastly, in the spirit of Halloween and nonfiction  we did a little reading about spiders!! Scholastic had a great article this month on spiders where we learned some creepy facts and all about their different body parts.
Today, we did a little creative project where students were able to create a spider and then write 8 "th" words (spelling pattern for the week) on each of their spider's legs. 


Thanks for tuning in to this blog post and look back again soon for another week of great learning! 

Monday, October 19, 2015

Bats

Meet my co-author for this blog post: Ansleigh Marie!


October is such a fun month in our classroom for many reasons. One of my favorite reasons is our connection with reading and Halloween. Over the month of October we do a big study on nonfiction texts.

We started out our month-long nonfiction study on bats. At the beginning of the week our class used our "schema" to make an anchor chart on our prior knowledge of bats. As the week went on we looked at various nonfiction sources to learn more about bats. As we looked at every different source we added to our anchor chart. Throughout the week we focused on 3 vocabulary words:
echolocation



 wingspan

and nocturnal


Some of the sources we used are:

1. Books

2. Scholastic News Article

3. Bat reading passage and questions




4. And a kid favorite video on Echolocation. Be sure to check it out, but one warning it is quite catchy. I caught myself singing it a few times around the house this week!
 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Hr-Y2Tt8gFE




As the week conclude our anchor chart became quite full. During this week students jotted down their own facts they had been learning about bats and created their own "All About Bats" fact sheet. On Friday they each LOVED creating their own bat book! It was a fun week full of bats.




Here are a few examples of our first grade hall full of bats!




Tune in next week for another update on our classroom learning!