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EASY DIY Classroom Projects

Happy Summer, y'all!! I'm so excited to be back with you...I hope you're enjoying your time at home, and not working too hard on school stuff!  Of course, if you're anything like me, relaxing IS organizing and getting ready for next year...ha!

I wanted to share some of my Summer DIY To-Do List with you today, partly to make myself accountable for following through on these projects, but also to share some of my ideas with you!!

Here's what I'm planning on working on this summer (in between moving into our hopefully new house, getting Harper's nursery set up, and a family beach vacation):

Use a paint stir stick for word work during small group reading!:

The Elementary Math Maniac: Quick and Fun Math Practice for Little Kids. Another cute way to show number recolonization and one to one correspondence.:

Empower young students by implementing age-appropriate data collection in your primary classroom.  (Pictured:  Sample pages from "Student Data Graphs, K-2")  #studentdata  #datafolders  $:

Ouchie Lotion is perfect for those "My arm hurts! Can I go to the nurse?" questions... a squirt of Ouchie Lotion and they're magically better! Click to get the FREE label and read more fun classroom management strategies and ideas!:

Morning Work Buckets:

What are some of your summer DIY goals?  I may not get all of these accomplished this summer, but they're too great not to at least try!

Emily Carnes
www.carnescorner.com

What Worked Well Wednesday Linky: A-Z Countdown to Summer

Hey, y'all! It's Breanna from A Pinch of Primary!


I am so excited to be popping in to the #KinderTribe blog again for the #WWWW linky.

I don't know about you guys, but we are full-swing into end-of-year madness. We have 13 days. THIRTEEN. DAYS.

If you have never heard of the A-Z Countdown to Summer, you need to check it out somewhere. Keep reading this post, check out my Instagram (Molly from Miss K's Little Rays is doing Z-A countdown, which is so cool!), check Pinterest...ANYTHING you can to try this awesome and engaging ABC activity to end the year.

To start this, I mapped out a calendar of what I wanted to do and created a paper chain with the letters in reverse order. My calendar is according to dates and just so happens to correlate with a lot of holidays, field trips, and activities at our school this year. The chain serves as a great visual for how many letters/days we have left. Some of the days are what some would call 'standards-based'...others are simply letting them have fun and play. They're 5 and 6 and it is just what they need at this time of year. :)



Click HERE to find a 'generic' version of the calendar without the dates and my school-related events!

Click HERE to find my poster that I used next to my paper chain!






Here's a glimpse at some of the fun so far:









I do not send home the calendar with my kids because I like to have them predict what they day will be. It brings up a fabulous discussion/review of letter sounds!! For example, Monday was 'L'. One of my kiddos said elephant, so we had a discussion about the beginning sound/letter for elephant. Another teacher on my team sent the calendar home so parents were able to send items in, plan ahead, etc. I planned for a few days of treats and small gifts, but nothing major and definitely nothing that is breaking the bank. Hello, Dollar Tree and Target Dollar Spot. To make this as easy as possible, I like to prep my entire week on the weekend or on Thursday/Friday when I do all of my lesson planning.

It is a fun way to keep the kids engaged and ready to go each morning. In my experience, it's a quick behavior fix as soon as I say it is time to do the countdown activity.

Do you do an A-Z (Z-A) countdown in your classroom? How's it going? I'm sure you all have amazing end-of-year tips and tricks and I'd love for you to link-up and let me know! :)



Alphabet Small Group Intervention Tools

Hi friends! This is Yukari from A Pinch of Kinder and I have been thinking long and hard for what to share with you for my featured post! 

Today I'm posting about something that is very important to my planning and that is interventions. We are very data driven at our school for both language and math. But what do we do with all of that data we collect? Here is what I do for language at the beginning of the year. 


First I assess all students on their letter identification and sound production and record the data.  Here are the sheets that I use. Click on the image below to download them for free!


Since I teach JK/SK (or Pre-K/K) we only perform letter interventions at the beginning of the year for our SK's.  So I look through the SK assessment sheets and write down the students name for each letter they still need to learn the letter name or sound for.

It looks like this:





I used fake names to show you what it might look like!
Do you know what TV show they are from? :P

Then I get to grouping my students for interventions.

I teach my intervention groups in McCracken letter order.  I'm sure you can do it in any order but this is what has worked well for me.  The McCracken letter order is:

M, S, F, B, T
C, A, R, L, P
O, D, G, N, W
I, H, J, K, V
Q, Y, U, Z, X

I can usually get through 3-4 letters a week.

So for the first week I might plan:

Monday: Meet with M group #1: Morgan, Mindy and Danny

Tuesday: Meet with M group #2: Jeremy, Beverly and Tamra

Wednesday: Meet with S group #1: Danny, Morgan

Thursday: Meet with S group #2: Tamra, Jeremy

Friday: Meet with F group #1: Morgan, Jeremy, Mindy, Beverly and Tamra (I will only meet with 2-3 kids but I write all of their names down so that I make enough copies for everyone who needs an F book.  Then I will meet with the second group on the following Monday.)

Here is what my intervention basket looks like:


It includes: Whiteboards, The Alphabet QR Books, Alphabet Linking Charts, Verbal Path for the Formation of Letters Sheet, Crayons, Markers, Expo Markers, Date Stamper and the Letter Booklets. And pencils/erasers. But they are missing from the picture because someone took my pencil bin when I wasn't looking and now I can't find it... #reallife

For the actual intervention lesson we:

1. Recite the alphabet linking chart (mine is from the LLI kit, there are lots of free ones if you search on TPT!) or read our QR Code Alphabet Book.



(You can read more about the QR Code Alphabet Book by clicking here.)

2. Write our name on our letter booklet and talk about the letter and letter sound we will be learning today.



3. Learn the path of motion (I use the "Verbal Path for the Formation of Letters" sheet from the LLI kit as a guide but you can make up your own wording too) for the uppercase and lowercase letter and practice printing them.

For example for A you might say

"Slant, slant, across"

and for a you might say

"Make a c and pull down"


4. Read the mini book portion together.  Students take turns answering what the picture on each page is using the initial sound.  Then I read the sentence and model pointing at each word as I read.  Finally the students read.



5. Have students color the circles with the focus letter in it.


6.  I start pulling 1 student at a time to do the last page with me while the others are working on step 5.  I have the student say the word for the picture and circle the picture if it has the focus letter at the beginning and put an X if it does not.  I like to do this 1 on 1 so I get a quick assessment on their beginning sound identification each time we meet.


Once they are done their booklet it goes in their book boxes and they have a book they can read independently at independent reading time.  At the end of the week they take the books home to share with their family :)

We also send home these personalized alphabet books.  I use the data I gain from our September alphabet assessment to put these books together.  



This post is already getting super long so if you want to learn more about the personalized alphabet books you can read more about that here.

And as a thank you for reading this long post I am giving you a free week of alphabet intervention booklets! It includes the letters M, S and F.  Click on the image below to download the booklets!


I will also leave all of my intervention resources 20% off until Wednesday! Click on the image below if you would like to check them out.


I hope that this is useful for those of you who are new to Kindergarten! 

Thank you for reading!


What Worked Well Wednesday: ABC Easy as 1-2-3

Happy Wednesday, Kinder Tribe! This is Deirdre from Mrs. Garcia's Super Scholars! Today I'm showing you how alphabet instruction has been REALLY working in my classroom!

**DISCLAIMER*** It's been a hectic week! Pictures will be up this afternoon! Thanks for bearing with me guys!

Teaching the alphabet has always been difficult for me. Sure, they can sing the ABC song, but do they know the sounds those letters make? Can they identify them in print? Are they able to write them legibly? In most cases, the answer is no. And the way I went about teaching it.... didn't work so well. I used an old list I had from an old basal with a suggested scope and sequence. It was a little too slow and unorganized for me, and my kids struggled as well. They didn't have as solid of a grasp as I had hoped.


Over the summer, I looked into different methods to try this school year, and I came up with a mishmash of a few of them that is working well. A big influence was Kindergarten Smorgasbord's ABC Bootcamp. I liked the idea of focusing on letters in order, and spending time on the sound and the formation of the letter.

Here is how we are learning our letters.

Our Morning Message gives us a hint each day of the letter we will tackle. We hear the sound as we read our message, and we start to see what the letter looks like.

Then, we make a letter chart together. We go over the upper/lowercase letter name, how it is formed, and practice writing it in the air. We brainstorm words that start with that sound, and I (poorly) draw them. We then label each picture, sounding it out together. I really love the labeling- it teachers them what a label is and how to add it to your work (aligning to our Lucy Calkins instruction), allows me to model stretching and writing a word, and gives a little challenge to those who already know their letters and sounds.

We also made an "oddball" chart with words that don't fit in... such as when a little guy suggested "photographer" for our "F" chart. I am proud they are hearing the sounds, and this gives a bit of exposure to patterns the whole group won't get to for awhile.

I stress legible writing to my kids, so obligatory letter writing practice is involved. I use the Moffat Girls Handwriting Packet. On the back, I have Over the Big Moon's Letter Identification Set copied. My kids love to see what they will use to dot the letters that day (will it be crayon... or will she be awesome and bust out the bingo dotters?!?) We do a paper version, and then I add them to dry erase sleeves in our early finisher activities.

The last part- and I swear by this part- is the fun part, the part they are proud of all day and can show off. The part they remember. Some people make cute hats. Some use letter bracelets. Some use stickers. Some people, like me, get major sensory overload when kids are playing with hats and sticking stickers everywhere. These don't work for neurotic old me.

What DOES work and my kids ABSOLUTELY adore are letter tattoos.  My kids are obsessed with rub-on tattoos, and any time I bring ink pads out they are covering themselves in stamps. So, I thought I'd turn it in to something productive. Using a letter stamp and some DIY ink pads, I give each of them a tattoo of the letters (they don't have to, but they all want to)! I catch them tracing them with their fingers, other teachers ask them what their letter says, and it's a reminder to tell their parents about our letter of the day when they get home.

This approach is working very well for me. We are only in week 6 of school, and I am already seeing a huge difference in their letter knowledge. I am starting to see them stretch and hear letters when they label and write, and they have been ROCKING their ESGI assessments.

 How do you teach the alphabet? I'd love to hear about it!

What is working in YOUR class? Link up with us and tell us all about it!


Organizing Your Alphabet Activities

Hi friends!  It's Amanda from Mrs. Pauley's Kindergarten here with you today.  I have a quick tip for you about organizing your alphabet activities.


Each year I spend two days for each letter at the beginning of the year.  We focus on forming the letter correctly, learning the name and sound, and of course do our Heidisong songs for the letters.  I use many different resources for this time and it was hard to keep them all straight.

I decided to change up how I keep track of all these resources.  Here is my new Alphabet binder:



I bought a white binder and added this cute new binder cover.  (You can grab it here for free!)

Then I went to Staples and bought these tab dividers.


I put all my resources together and separated them by letter.


The best part about this is that later on when I have a student who is struggling with their letters and sounds I can pull out just the resources they need for the letters they are struggling with.

Here is an example of one of the many activities in my binder.  This was a freebie on the blog Over the Big Moon.  Grab this freebie here.



I will have a post on my blog soon about interventions I use for students who do not know their letters and what I do to help them.

I hope you enjoy these freebies and that they are useful to you in your kindergarten classroom.



Morning Work Buckets for Kindergarten and 1st Grade

Hey, everyone! 

This is Kelly from My Fabulous Class.

I am so excited to share something that Worked Well for me last year. If you follow my blog or Facebook, you know last year, I started using Morning Work Buckets. These are the BEST thing I implemented in my classroom last year. You can read all about it HERE.


Morning Work Buckets were a HUGE time saver for me. They gave kids the opportunity to have something meaningful to do when they walked in the door, while I took attendance, checked binders, kissed boo-boos, and listened to stories. I started using them in the spring and I WISH I had used them all year long. They worked so well, I am going to start the year out with them.

Morning Work Buckets are meant to be INDEPENDENT. For the first 2-3 days, I am planning on only using simple math manipulatives, such as unifix cubes and pattern blocks.  Even before I started using Morning Work Buckets, I have always started the year off with buckets of math manipulatives. It has always worked well, since I do not have expectations for how students use them, yet. It is about more about playing and discovering.


At the beginning of the year, I like to incorporate fine motor activities to help strengthen little fingers and clothes pins are perfect for that. This activity is simple enough that kids to do it independently, after I have modeled it. This is also a simple activity to make. The letters and numbers are die-cuts that I had and laminated. For the letter clothes pins, I added some washi tape before sticking foam letters on them.

Beading is always a class favorite. Kids LOVE it. Some kids may not have one to one correspondence at the beginning of the year and that is okay. You can just view this as a fine motor activity or you can have some kids work with a partner. To make these, I just hot glued the apple numbers to the pipe cleaner. You can the apples FREE HERE.


I am also a HUGE fan of sensory buckets. I am excited to incorporate sensory buckets into morning work buckets. This one won't come until week 2, when I feel comfortable that students understand the expectations of rice. It is still a simple activity. Kids pull out a magnet and see if it matches their mat. I would recommend doubling the number of magnets so students do not fight over them. You can see how I make colored rice HERE.  It is pretty simple. It just takes time to dry. You can get the mats I made FREE HERE.

Really, you can use any of your favorite activities for Morning Work Buckets. At the beginning of the year, keep it simple. 

Do you want more?

Do to popular demand, I created Kindergarten Morning Work Buckets for the year. This Growing bundle is heavily discounted for Summer 2018. The price will go up when the bundle is complete.



First Grade Friends, I have you covered too! Check out First Grade Morning Work Buckets.