Wednesday, September 7, 2011

Apples Continued...


Along with the apple works described in the last post, I purchased some apple books that looked interesting for preschoolers.  One was "Ten Red Apples" by Pat Hutchins.  http://www.amazon.com/Ten-Red-Apples-Pat-Hutchins/dp/0688167977   Pat Hutchins is the same author who wrote "Rosie's Walk".  "Ten Red Apples" would be a good book to get objects or stamps for so the children can act out the story.    It's a fun rhyming story that includes math too.  

Monday, September 5, 2011

Apple Time

                                 

The 2011/2012 School Year has started! There is an apple festival next weekend in my area - where there are 100s of varieties of apples to try that you cannot find at the grocery. Over the years I have collected various apple items, trays, apple clips, etc. so we are going to study apples this month. We are going to taste different apples, make apple sauce, do some apple Practical life works, apple math, parts of the apple, etc.. There was also an apple fraction set I couldn't resist buying at a teacher supply store.

Last year I had found some very cute apple clips at a Japanese store. From the forest unit I had a winter wire tree which unfortunately had snow on the branches. So my youngest son and I colored over the snow with a brown marker and we now have to figure out how to add leaves.

Here is the tree in progress:





I have glued the tree base to the tray, and once the leaves get on the tree it will be a clipping apples on the apple tree work. Here is the work pre-leaves:



                                            

I had some felt leaves for collage and ended up using those to hot glue gun on the tree - here is the final apple tree:



At circle this week I am going to demo the Geometric Solids (for now - sphere, cube, and cone). After demoing this work I am going to demo making apples with playdoh. I found this idea on the Internet, will try and find the source so I can give credit where credit is due. First you make a sphere using red, green, or yellow playdoh (or clay) you can then add a stem and a leaf to make your apple. Thought this was a good start to the year, showing the sphere shape, getting into making an easy basic shape for clay/playdoh, and we can point out some apple parts too. Here is an example:


                                             

Happy Apple Picking!

Friday, February 4, 2011

How to get an older child to write more...

There is an older 4 year old boy in class who is not a big writer. He is very interested in dragons. So today, he came up to me and asked me "Do we have an animal book making work?" Well at the moment we don't, unfortunately - because this would be a great opportunity for him to write. A little later he asked me again. I had recently bought a children's picture dictionary for those times when a child asks "How do you draw a ..." or when they want to know more about something. So I gave that to him so that he could at least look up a dragon and see the picture. He decided to make a 'parts of the dragon' book. He got bunches of paper and pencils and proceeded to draw a dragon. We then talked about how, if he's making a 'parts-of' book that he needed to make more pages for each of the parts. He made the head on one page, and the body on another. He started to write the words head and body on his two pages, by listening to the sounds phonetically. He wanted to keep going but unfortunately it was our outside time so he decided to save his work. It's amazing how going with their interests can really spark something inside of the child. Sometimes it might not be something we consider "appropriate" or "Montessori" but I would bet Maria Montessori would feel that following the child is more important in these instances. I forgot to take a picture of his work, will try and do that on Monday to post!

Wednesday, January 26, 2011

A great problem solving moment...

My favorite moments in the classroom are when a group of children problem solve together and I am invisible to them.

Today there was a great example of: perseverance, thinking things through and problem solving. There were 3 boys doing a stamping story work ("The Cat on the Mat"). This is where they read the story and use stamps to re-create it. The goat, for one of the boys, would not stamp completely on the paper. He persevered and kept re-stamping it to no avail. So the other two kept brain-storming what he could do differently to get it to work. After many tries of different ideas (keeping it on the pad longer, moving it around on the pad more, etc) and one of the other boy's getting theirs to work, they figured out the best way. We tend to forget how important problem solving and discovery is for the children - many times feeling like we have to provide the answer. This was a great reminder for me to let them discover and problem solve and to not jump in unless asked!

Monday, January 24, 2011

I'm back and Spring is in the air?






It's been awhile since I have blogged. Life took over. The 2010/2011 school year has been flying by, the children have settled in quickly and as usual they are so much fun to observe and be around. We have been talking about Antarctica. We do this every year, and almost didn't this year but it is such a fun continent to talk about my assistant and I couldn't resist! Right now we have various works out for the continent: a penguin balancing game (store bought) which we added dice to so they roll the die to figure out how many penguins to add; penguin tonging, making a sand map of Antarctica, a stamping work on a map (polar bears - in the Arctic, penguins in Antarctica). We also have a 'Penguins of the World' book making work. A few years ago I had purchased a penguin toob that has various types of penguins (there are around 17 different types!). I picked out 5 different types: Rockhopper, Emperor, Little Blue, Chinstrap, and African. I then found some great photos of each type to show the children.
At circle, we talked about how all penguins live south of the Equator and the uniqueness of each one and where they live. The children could then make a book. I used an outline of a regular penguin and the children could color it in and add the details needed (i.e. for a Rockhopper they could add the feathers on top of the head, for the Emperor they could add the orange and yellow around the bottom of the head, African penguins have pink coloring above the eyes etc.). For some reason the children really enjoy Little Blue the most. I will post a picture of the work soon.

We have had a very cold winter for our area but recently it's been warming up and feels like Spring. Here is a photo of a Spring work we did a few years ago when talking about flowers. It was an object to picture matching work. Enjoy and think Spring! (Update - here are a couple of photos of the "Penguins of the World" book making work.)