Showing posts with label triangles. Show all posts
Showing posts with label triangles. Show all posts

Friday, April 10, 2015

Flowers! (Z, 23, Triangles, Blue)

The theme for the first week of April was "Flowers"! It was a short week this week as we were off in observance of Good Friday, but we worked hard the days that we were in school! We finished our Letter of the Week study with the letter Z and continued our number study with the number 23! We have gone through our shapes and colors once, so from now until graduation, we will talk about two each week and do some small review activities. We worked this week on blue and triangle.

With the beginning of April, we finished our calendar pattern, and we compared this month's weather with last year.

This week we readQuiet Bunny by Lisa McCue
                                        1,2,3 to the Zoo by Eric Carle
                                        Easter Mice! by Bethany Roberts
                                        Happy Easter Curious George by Margret & HA Rey
                                 
Our question of the week was "What is your favorite flower?"

To review the color blue we colored pictures of blue things. I found these pages on pinterest, and I love the concept! My general rule of thumb is that if the children can explain to me their reasoning for coloring an object, then I am all for it! At our group times, we would also brainstorm things that are blue.

To review the  triangle shape the children practiced recognizing the shape and colored triangles. I created this little picture with hidden triangle in it. They needed to color the triangles blue and then the rest of the picture! At our group times, we talked about real things that are triangles... Mmm, pie!

For the number of the week:23 we started off by counting to and backward from twenty-three. They love doing this every day and when we get to the end of counting backward, they all scream blast off!! ;) The kids also practiced writing the number and word for twenty-three. 

When I started in my class, I found a page like this from education.com, so I made my own for the number 23. The children have to practice writing the number and then color in that number of squares. It's a great way to introduce graphing and helps them to work on their one-to-one correspondence.

For our theme "Flowers", we went outside to search for flowers! It was such a simple activity, but the children love it and get so much out of it. We had some trouble finding many flowers, as the weather was still a bit chilly, but the search was the fun part!

In our structure book that I have in the block center, I added pages of creations made with flowers!

In the Plants and Animals book in the science center, I added information pages of flowers and flowering plants native to New Jersey.

We sang "Pretty Flowers" to the tune of Jingle Bells.

"Pretty flowers, pretty flowers,
Growing everywhere.
Here are some pretty flowers
For your coat or hair.

Pretty flowers, pretty flowers,
Gold and pink and blue.
Red and yellow, orange and purple,
I picked them just for you!!"
(C) 2001 - 2011 Jean Warren www.preschoolexpress.com

The kids played a quick flower sorting game that I made. I made a set of flowers that I "laminated" with contact paper. The set worked so that they could be sorted by color of the petals or number of the petals. They did so great!


Making flower art with yarn was a great way to the children to work on their fine motor control. I "drew" a flower with glue, and the children picked yarn pieces to put on the glue. 

The letter of the week: Z activities that we worked on this week were zany!! The book Sounds Like fun, Phonemic Awareness has great phonics activities for the alphabet. For the letter Y, the children have to cut out and glue the words that "Begins like Zebra". Together we talked about the beginning sounds of the words, and then they work on their fine motor cutting skills.

As we work through the alphabet, the children make projects to go on  our "alphabet wall". It's a very fun way for the class to see the alphabet in a new way. This week we made the children had to give the Zebras their stripes!

We have now finished our Alphabet wall!!

I created envelope games for each letter of the alphabet. I adapted them from activities from Mailbox Letter of the Week projects, both book one and two. The children had to place the "Z" items in the zoo.  All the other letters? Maybe there's room at the aquarium!


The children water color painted animals going to the Zoo! I can't show you the final projects because this is something we will be putting into our Eric Carle themed art show in April, but here's a preview!

We practice and work on our handwriting for each letter as well. The Original Summer Bridge Activities, for PreK-K has great handwriting practice sheets. The kids trace and write the letters and then have a little phonics practice at the bottom.

Each child has a journal that they write in every week. When we focus on a letter, they write for that letter. On shorter weeks and during our review later in the year, they write to the theme. This is such a great way to get children excited about writing and reading. I start the children out by tracing, and once they are comfortable and controlling the crayon well, they move onto copying.

From the book Alphabet, Colors, Numbers and Shapes, the kids practice letter recognition AND direction following. Some weeks certain letters have to be colored specifically and sometimes it's up to them. I love these!


The children turned a capital letter Z into a Zebra. I got the idea from the book Alphabet and Counting from Twin Sister Productions. They give tips for how to make it a glue and paste projects, but I like to give them crayons and the challenge to add the parts of the animal to the letter. It opens up room for more conversation about the shape of the letter AND the features of the animal.

We watched these cool videos about zebras! One, two, three and four.

I made a cube of cardboard and glued pictures of "Z" things one each side. The children say "Zebra, Zebra, what do I see.... I see a ____ looking at me!" They roll the cube and fill in the blank. This idea came from a Mailbox activity book for the letter A, and let me tell you, it was a hit!! They loved it!


During the week we made a list of words that begin with the letter Z. Here is what we thought of!

There is our wall of alphabet words!!

 Leave a comment below and let me know that you stopped by!

Monday, September 30, 2013

Our Feelings (C, Triangle)

Our theme this week was "Our Feelings" and we focused on the letter Cc and the shape triangle.


We read this week: Corduroy by Don Freeman
                               Curious George Goes Camping by Margret and H.A. Reys
                               The Cat in the Hat by Dr. Seuss
                               The Pout Pout Fish by Deborah Diesen
                               The Pout Pout Fish in the Big Big Dark by Deborah Diesen

Our question of the week was "What is something that you're not so good at?" We talked about not being good at something is not always a bad thing, that with practice we can always get better. Some children raised their hands multiple times to tell me things. I love when we get a great discussion going like that.


In the beginning of the year I always like to have the students practice tracing and writing their names.  I found this great website that lets me put in the words that I want them to practice. I choose the largest text and it gives three lines of tracing and one where they have to write the letters on their own. I like to do this activity a few times a year and keep them in their portfolios to see the improvement in their writing over the course of the school year.


For our theme of the week, we talked a lot about our different feelings, why we feel them and how to deal with them.

We made "Happy Cards" I found the idea at this blog. The kids loved getting smiley faces painted on their hands. After they made their hand prints, I asked them to tell me "Things that make me smile"and I scribed what they said.


 We made water color relief sad faces. They used white crayons to draw sad faces on white paper. Then they used blue watercolor paint to make the faces "appear"! They loved the "magic" and it got us talking about why blue is a color associated with sadness.


We made our own class feelings book. In the same idea as those emotion posters, we practiced making happy, sad, mad and worried faces. Then I took their pictures for each child with each face, then turned it into a book! I got the idea from a blog online that I know can't find :(.

I cut out circles in different colors (blue, orange, red and green) and we talked about what happy, sad, mad and worried/scared faces look like. Then I asked them to make each circle into one of those faces. I let them decide which colors to make each face.


We talked a lot this week about the shape triangles. We sang the song:
"Triangles, triangles, triangles I see,
Count the points and count the sides,
Count them 1,2,3
Triangles triangles, just for you and me,
Count the points and count the sides,
Count them 1,2,3!
-Found here, to the tune of 'twinkle twinkle' 

The kids practiced drawing triangles with this cool worksheet of triangles and squares, which I found here. We also worked on recognizing triangles among of other shapes.


For our letter activities, we used our handwriting sheet for the letter C, the sheet that helps work on letter recognition, both are from books that are mentioned in the "All About Me" post. The students also wrote in their journals for the letter C.


From one of The Mailbox books, I got the idea of having the students make a "C Collection" book. 


We turned C's into Caterpillars!




We also made Crocodile Puppets!



For our alphabet wall we made clouds of white paint on blue paper. I showed the kids examples of the three main kinds of clouds (Stratus, Cumulus and Cirrus). We talked about the differences, where they are and what they look like. Then each child got to make their own cloud.


And with the C addition, our wall now looks like...


Our list for words beginning with C's was very impressive. Here it is!


Up next week: The letter Dd, the number 1, rectangles and "Being Healthy".