Welp! It's definitely warm here in Texas.... Rain on the way tomorrow though :) I've been sort of saving this for a while. I used it when I taught Kindergarten and the kids LOVED it! (Not to mention the parents!) It is really a versatile concept, it can be used with just about anything. I've seen teachers do something like it with What's in the Bag?, or their purse. (I don't know about you but my purse is a bottomless pit! We'd be pulling things out all day!) I came across this idea about 15 years ago. It just an idea that teachers could take and manipulate. I created the cards and the question marks for the outside for the bags to make it more of a game and to add a little spark to our show & tell. It had gotten a little bland and I didn't allow the children to bring toys unless it was a 'special' one. I hope you can use it in your classroom! CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD A COPY Enjoy!
Showing posts with label sight words. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sight words. Show all posts
Tuesday, May 14, 2013
Tuesday, April 9, 2013
A Walk Down Memory Lane
I've been going through some of my old teaching boxes from my elementary teaching days. I found so many things about beginning literacy that I'd forgotten that I did and I wanted to share some of them.
This is Mr. Alphabet :). He helped my Kindergartners learn their beginning, middle and ending sounds. I would feed the items from the letter of the week into his mouth and (in his funny voice) would "spit" them out and ask them if the items started with, ended with or had the sound in the middle of the object. It was so much fun! It was great RTI as well. One of my parents made him for me out of a trash can. (How creative was that parent?)
Next, I had parents take home bags with a specific letter marked on them and had them fill the bags with items that began, ended and had the letter in the middle of the objects. I also had them put two or three items that did not to make that sound for Mr. Alphabet spit them out :). He would swallow and make "yummy" sound if the items corresponded with the letter sounds.
I used to line 11x14 paper and make copies of it until I found this paper in a catalog somewhere. It had the perfect amount of lines and space for illustrations.
Students told a "story" each morning (usually the Star Student chosen for the math calendar). After they finished telling me their story, I underlined three words in red for them to illustrate at the top. Later, I would underline sight words in blue for recognition practice. The stories are funny and amazing! I plan to publish them in a book! :)
The name Kindergarten Star News is totally something I came up with... I guess from my Journalism background. I would display them in the room once the students illustrated them. I put past years books in the library for current students to look at them. I hope this gives you some ideas for your own classroom!
Enjoy!
This is Mr. Alphabet :). He helped my Kindergartners learn their beginning, middle and ending sounds. I would feed the items from the letter of the week into his mouth and (in his funny voice) would "spit" them out and ask them if the items started with, ended with or had the sound in the middle of the object. It was so much fun! It was great RTI as well. One of my parents made him for me out of a trash can. (How creative was that parent?)
Next, I had parents take home bags with a specific letter marked on them and had them fill the bags with items that began, ended and had the letter in the middle of the objects. I also had them put two or three items that did not to make that sound for Mr. Alphabet spit them out :). He would swallow and make "yummy" sound if the items corresponded with the letter sounds.
I would just store the items in bags and keep them in boxes in the cabinet.
This is the Kindergarten Star News. I started doing this in 1998 and stopped in 2007 when I went into teaching at the high school level. I know some of you have actually downloaded my optional cover from my TPT store and have made it your own. I'm a firm believer in taking things and making them suit my style of teaching. I'm also a firm believer in - if it's not an original idea, don't change it around and claim it's yours and sell it. Some of the ideas I use have been around forever! I just took them and changed them for my needs in the classroom.
Okay... this is two of the covers I actually made for my books. (Yes, my name used to be Nash but it's now Cummings for those of you who don't know me personally!)
Students told a "story" each morning (usually the Star Student chosen for the math calendar). After they finished telling me their story, I underlined three words in red for them to illustrate at the top. Later, I would underline sight words in blue for recognition practice. The stories are funny and amazing! I plan to publish them in a book! :)
The name Kindergarten Star News is totally something I came up with... I guess from my Journalism background. I would display them in the room once the students illustrated them. I put past years books in the library for current students to look at them. I hope this gives you some ideas for your own classroom!
Enjoy!
Monday, February 18, 2013
Kindergarten Bakery
Hello! I've been sooooo busy but I found time to sketch out my lesson plan for my Kindergarten Bakery. I did this lesson every year. It is actually very extensive and include community helpers, sink and float, weighing, graphing, counting, etc. It was always such a blast! The whole school got involved, especially parents of former students. It got so big, we started donating the money. Just click HERE and go to my TPT store. Enjoy!
Tuesday, November 27, 2012
Center Time
That is probably one of the best things to hear in elementary
school! My center time was introduced slowly and revolved around the skills
that we were working on at that time. I used a poster with four colored dots.
The dots corresponded to dots placed on an alligator’s belly next to each
center. I had center teams, which meant four to six students were on the same
color dot. I had four center per dot, so that kids could spread out. I rotated
the dots every day, or every-other day, depending on how much time we had for
centers. Bunny Bucks was a special center that any color dot team could do to
help learn their sight words and phonics. I had centers such as listening,
writing, reading, magnets (which math and word work could be done along with
other things), math (time, numbers, etc.), creative art, free play, felt board
stories, science (lots of interactive things like the bean tub, in which I hid
something new every week!), puppet theatre, building blocks and puzzles. I
constantly updated the centers to reflect, not only a skill they needed to
master, but also skills they already had so that they could build on them.
–Mrs. C J
Enjoy!Tuesday, November 13, 2012
Word Wands!
These are awesome little pointers, wands and great word work tools. Kindergarteners can use them to practice sight words, as well as, spot them in books, around the room, etc. Click HERE to go to Twist, Twirl, Teach blog and see the original post from Lindsay Domenico. Enjoy!
Sunday, May 13, 2012
Sight Words
This poster and worksheet are great tools for sight words of the week. Kids give a high five when saying the word, leaving the room to go home and, after writing them, to their peers. Velcro allows the words to be changed out weekly on the poster. Brilliant! Enjoy!
Thursday, March 22, 2012
Sight Word Freebie
HELLO! Been off-line for a while! Spring Fever :)
Here is a freebie from Kreative in Kindergarten. Go check it out! Click Here
Here is a freebie from Kreative in Kindergarten. Go check it out! Click Here
Sunday, March 4, 2012
Sight Word Sundaes
Armed with the bowl and scoop cutouts, invite your kinders to “build” the selected sight words by matching the mixed up letter scoops to the words on the bowls. Copy the them onto different ice cream-colored contruction paper. Enjoy! Click here to download a copy of the template from Literacy Center Activities.
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