Showing posts with label number recognition. Show all posts
Showing posts with label number recognition. Show all posts

Saturday, February 1, 2020

Polar Animals

Dramatic Play

Week 1, Antarctica Expedition
One of the objectives of this unit is to learn that penguins live in Antarctica, the South Pole, and polar bears live in the Arctic, the North Pole. As well as identify other animals that live at either, or both, of those poles. So our first week was everything South Pole.






We had our tent for the scientists with pictures of scientists working in Antarctica. They had notebooks, pencils, maps, binoculars, and magnifying glasses. Outside the tent, they could find animal pictures and toy animals.




Week 2, the tent became a polar bear cave. The pictures and animal toys switched to those that can be found in the Arctic.








The kids loved both centers, and switching up the animals halfway through definitely made the center more exciting the second week.

Blocks

Foam animal ABCs


Bristle blocks
(forgot a pic)

ABC blocks


Fishing poles and numbered fish


We also had different puzzles and surprisingly, they really liked the 2 with world maps on them.

Art

Fake snow and polar animals. They always love watching the snow grow when I add water. This group of kids is not nearly as into sensory experiences as past groups I've taught, where they fought over these 6 spots. Several of the kids wouldn't even touch it, while some felt it, then moved on. I've never taught a group like this! The half that liked it, really liked it, and played here most of the day.

before water


after water


"Snow" paint made from shaving cream, glue, and glitter. It's so fun and fluffy to paint with, and really soft to touch when it dries!


Paint!


Shaving cream and bears. Another hit with past classes, but some kids didn't even dare touch it, and were surprised I'd let them smear it all over the table! After I joined in with a few kids, a few of the reticent ones came over, but some others wouldn't even consider putting their hands in this.


For reference, this is how my sensory-loving kids do shaving cream on a table!


Small Manipulatives

Magnetic writing boards


ABC beads

Bunch-ems


Counting books with magnetic numbers


Listening Center: Polar Animal books


Magnet board: ABCs and beginning sound sorting


Writing

Colored pens

Penguin stickers


Polar animal stickers


Large Group

We learned the word Antarctica the first week, and Arctic the second week. We also learned the song, Penguins on Parade.

Day 1, we read the book, Polar Animals, which is about penguins in Antarctica. It also talked about the scientists who go there. Then, we sorted animal toys by North Pole (Arctic) and South Pole (Antarctica), using an animal map to help us.


Day 2, we read Little Penguin and learned how penguin parents care for their eggs and babies. We tried to be penguin parents by carrying an egg on our feet. The toy eggs rolled off easily, so we did beanbags too. We learned our feet aren't like a penguin so it's hard for us, but we waddled and passed beanbags back and forth with our feet.

Day 3, we read The Three Snow Bears and compared it to the fairy tale The Three Little Bears that we'd read weeks earlier. Then we went fishing for toy fish with numbers on them. We placed the fish in order 1-10. Then they got cards with a number of objects on them to count, and match to the numeral. They liked it so much, it was the block center the next day!

Day 4, we read The Snow Bear. We sorted our polar animals by their beginning sound. They are doing so so well at hearing the beginning sound in words and isolating it!


Small Group

Week 1, my group copied, extended, and made patterns with the pattern bears. Then, they cut out winter pattern pictures to glue on and extend winter patterns.
The other group worked on number puzzles.

Week 2, my group played a number game with dice. Each child had their own die and would roll it,  and count the dots, then place an "ice chunk" on the matching numeral on their paper.
The other group made patterns with the counting bears and bear pattern cards.
 

Saturday, January 18, 2020

Winter

I hate January, and the cold, and the snow, and all of it. But I do love teaching this theme! The snowflakes hanging from the ceiling make winter feel beautiful and magical, plus we're inside and warm, so a win-win!

Dramatic Play

A wintery hot cocoa stand and snowball fights. Both were a big hit. I used brown rice covered in cocoa (mix them in a bag with some rubbing alcohol to help it stick) for the hot chocolate. I like that the smell adds to the sensory experience. Sure, rice falls everywhere, but it vacuums easily! It's worth it to give them something to pour and serve. Their hands get a little chocolate-y too, but nothing they can't wash off!




The daily snowball fights were super fun, and they were great about following the rules to keep it to this side of the room, and not throw them at people who didn't want to play. It's good to get some large motor movement in when we spend less time running and moving outside because of the cold.


Blocks

Winter floor puzzle


Snowmen counting bottles


The Mitten and masks to retell the story




And cars. Nothing to do with winter, just a popular request!


Art

Epsom salt painting. They love how the crystals appear like magic when it's dry, because it looks like they're only painting with water!


Watercolors

Frozen paint. They stared at me like they didn't know what to do. Then they figured out they're kind of like crayons at first. As they melt, they're more like paint and start to break off of the sticks.


Glue and cotton "snow" balls


Small Manipulatives

Clothesline with ABC mittens
This had one of those exciting teaching moments, when one student was trying to find the right letters to spell his name. Because these all have capital and lowercase letters, it was tricking him. I recommended he grab his name and name letters from the pocket chart where we practice spelling our names. He did, and a bunch of kids followed suit! And, even better, they had to problem solve to pin them on the line, because they kept flipping upside down. They learned they had to hold the letters and pin from the bottom instead of the top. My teacher heart just bursts when they engage in this type of play-based learning that is child-centered because they thought up the idea, and then engaged in an academic learning with their name, problem-solving with the clips, and a small motor skill, all rolled into one!


Frozen file folder games and weather bears from totschooling






M is for Mitten flat marbles


Alphabet sensory cards. The letters are outlined in puffy paint.


Counting snowman buttons


Snowmen on the magnet board


Writing

Snowflake stickers

Index cards. These were a huge hit and got the kids started on sending cards to everyone!

Snack

Our special winter snack was cinnamon snowflake tortillas.


Outside
We actually got snow on week 2, so we had colored water in recycled bottles outside and painted the snow a beautiful rainbow!



Large Group

We learned the word "coniferous" to go along with our fall word, "deciduous." We compared and sorted pictures of coniferous and deciduous trees.

Day 1, we read The Snowy Day. Then we divided into 2 groups and did the summer and winter puzzles. When we were done, we used the puzzles to help us make a Venn diagram to compare summer and winter.


Day 2, we read The Mitten and acted out the story. They had a great time taking turns going inside the giant mitten! They wanted to try over and over, so it was in the block center the next school day. The kids who didn't want to go inside got to play the parts of Nikki, Baba, and the mouse, and they had fun too!


Day 3, we read Millions of Snowflakes. We counted snowflakes in the book, and noticed how each one was unique. They used pipe cleaners to make their own unique snowflake and we put it in borax water to grow a crystal. They turned out great!










Day 4, we read Hello Snow! We did an experiment testing different gloves on our hands in a bucket of snow to see which one was the warmest. Some chose the same glove they had guessed to be warmest, even if it wasn't warmest, but most chose the thickest ones as the warmest.


Small Group

Week 1, my group played a fly swatter game with snowflakes with numbers on them. I said the number and they swatted it. Then they got to choose an action (jump, spin, kick, punch, etc) and we would count to that number.
The second group colored in their journal about their favorite thing to do in the winter.


Week 2, my group made name snowmen, practicing putting the letters in their name in order to build their snowman.
I had a mom volunteer for the other group, and they played a number matching game from Jan Brett and practiced counting.