Bright Idea..... Cupcake Liners!

May 23, 2015

Hello again friends!


While I know MOST of you are winding down, but I find that when the year starts winding down, my brain starts taking off!  Hence why I can't.stop.thinking.about.next.year....... already.  So, if you're like me and are ready to get a *little* jump on next year, keep reading. 

The past few years, I've stopped using the typical teacher borders in trying to save a little bit of money.  For the last two years, I've used crepe paper which works pretty good, but the bad part is that I teach in a room with NO air conditioning.  Yes you read that right, no air.  It gets hot.  Really hot.  And humid.  Really humid.  So when that happens, the crepe paper sags.  It's not pretty, so I needed another solution.

Recently, my girls and I were on a shopping trip to Michael's in search of Beanie Boos.  Are your kiddos mad about these guys too?  Anyhoo, while shopping I came across some black, chevron cupcake liners and I bought them ALL!  I mean I seriously emptied the bin.  They were only 50 cents, plus a teacher discount?!?!?!  It was a steal I tell you. :)  So here's my new border that is slowly but surely going up around my classroom. Who knew cupcake liners could look so cute! 





 Happy decorating friends!!!!

For more Bright Ideas, please check the other bloggers below that have topics of your interest!  If you enjoyed this idea, please consider following us on Facebook or Maria's TPT.

Multi-Sensory Videos with Rock N Learn

May 19, 2015

 In March, a fellow blogger friend came to visit.  Jennifer from Stories and Songs in Second won over the hearts of my two little girls with her kindness, gift of books, but most of all, music.  Using my guitar (the one that she had to clean and tune because I have no idea how to use it), Jennifer sang the songs that she shares daily with the students in her classroom.  It got me thinking...

There is so much research behind the power of a multi-sensory approach in the classroom.  I remember learning in college how motivating and engaging music is to children.  They promote rhyme and rhythm.  I immediately went out and bought a keyboard because it was going to be used everyday in my classroom.

It has never been used.

I don't know what happened.  Somehow the music got lost.

But Jennifer reminded me of the importance that music plays in our little ones' lives.  I witnessed it again this year when my partner Jess introduced a shape song and a doubles fact song.  I would catch them singing these songs ALL the time and pretty soon they were also stuck in my head.

 A few weeks after this realization, Rock N Learn contacted me about trying out their Musical DVDs that are skill based.  How odd that this opportunity arose when it did!!  I jumped at the chance to add more music into our lessons.


After viewing these different DVDs, Jess and I decided that the time songs would be most beneficial to our firsties at this time in the year.  In first grade, we study time to the hour and half hour.  Immediately, I examined the table of contents for the DVD.  I really liked the way that they have time skills broken up.  It allowed us to show only what was needed and not the entire video.



The DVD teaches the skills with animated characters, songs, a rhythm, but also a lot of practice.  The video visually shows what it means to be half past the hour.  Modeling and explaining the different positions of the hands on the clock provided an excellent support to the lesson that we were teaching.

As we moved on with our classroom lessons and activities, what struck me as being most beneficial was the repetitive nature of the video and song.  It asked the students to tell time over and over and over again.   My firsties got to practice telling time to the half hour multiple times during this short segment.  Here is a short sample of the telling time DVD:



The DVD provided us with a quick, efficient, and engaging review but also a multi-sensory support to our lessons.

After we tried these video clips out, we have decided to begin the year off with the addition and subtraction Rock N Learn DVD.  It will provide another support to our little learners.

Rock N Learn has offered a 25% discount to all my readers (contiguous U.S. residents only).  The coupon code is KR8822.

You can also enter below for a chance to win the Early Math 3 DVD Collection.



a Rafflecopter giveaway

I can't wait to hear about how this tool works for your students!
 

Making Measurement Meaningful

May 6, 2015

Wednesday is our planning morning for math.  Jess, Carrie, and I sit down, look at our curriculum map, and start talking.  It is truly one of my favorite things to do because it always pushes me to think a bit deeper.  One of our main goals this year was to intentionally plan lessons that make each math skill as meaningful to our students' lives as possible.

Well...after our planning session last Wednesday, I could not WAIT to write this post.

We sat down to discuss measurement but realized that we had covered what we wanted in order to hit the standards but we weren't satisfied that they truly saw how measurement impacted their lives.  Honestly, our minds were blank.  We had nothing.

I pulled up EngageNY's lesson on measurement just to see if anything fired up our creative juices.  What we found were some lessons on paths.  YEP! That was it.


Measuring distance with nonstandard units.  This is something that we do daily (well, not with nonstandard units).  Even if it is just running up to the grocery store, we typically think about what the shortest path would be to get there.  Or if there is a traffic jam we try to think about another route to take that would not be TOO out of the way.  Another example...sleeping babies.  When my girls would fall asleep in the car, I would take the longest possible way home just to keep from waking them up.

All of this conversation led to the construction of a small town in our classroom.  Luckily (for this lesson only), we have very ugly green and tan tile.  This was our nonstandard unit of measurement.  I taped off the floor with black duct tape.  Constructed a school, fire station, police station, post office, and a home with a cardboard box. Our firsties added some of their own buildings (like the bank below) as the lessons unfolded.


Jess and I decided that this was going to be a two day lesson.  On day one we took a lot of time explaining the purpose and importance of measuring paths.  Then we showed them the two paths that we had made using colored masking tape.  After a bit of debate, the class decided to measure the path using the tiles on the floor.


The tiles were counted for each path and we recorded the information on the board.  Our firsties were asked to determine the shorter path and explain why.  The class then constructed their own path together as we followed with a third color of masking tape.  We added this data to the board and put the three paths in order from longest to shortest.

To bring the lesson to a close, the students tried it out on their own in a paper format.


Day 2 played out much like the first; however, there were no paths when the students walked in.  They constructed all three paths together and we asked them to come up with a short story to go along with why the individual was walking from one location to another.

Then they were asked to try it out on their own.  It was so interesting to look at the different paths that the students created.


Now...not all of the sheets looked like this.  Some students wanted to just cut diagonally across the whole sheet or some took the loooooongest route possible even though the directions said "shortest."  But for the most part they could apply what they learned whole group to the independent practice.

And I have to admit...it was a lesson that came about rather spontaneously because of one worksheet we saw on EngageNY's website.  But it was one of my f.a.v.o.r.i.t.e lessons from this year.  I can't wait to do it again next year.







You can find this post and some other great "real life" and hand-on math at: 

Check it out Here.

4mulaFunThe Teacher StudioTeaching to Inspire in 5th, AND MissMathDork,

We ARE Mathletes!

May 1, 2015


This time of year can be so much fun in so many different ways.  One of those ways....showing what you've learned.
Today was Mathlete Day in my K-2 building.  I can and will take NO credit for this event.  My teammate, Jess, coordinated this event and it was one of the best times that I have had all year!

Here is what the scene looked like:
One playground.
20 math games.

14 staff members.
10-ish parent volunteers.
200 HAPPY, screaming, engaged children.

Here is how it worked:
Each kid received a 20 frame with a penny in each box.


They could go to any of the 20 games that they wanted.  Once the game was completed, the game volunteer would mark it off on their sheet.  15 games=15 cents=1 popsicle from the concession stand.


 There were 20 different games that hit the standards through interactive games like kicking soccer balls, throwing basketballs (into trash cans), or hitting shapes with water balls.  So many games...so much fun!

But one of my favorite...the human sized calculator!

We ARE mathletes!