If a child can’t learn the way we teach, maybe we should teach the way they learn. ~Michael J. Fox

Sunday, January 11, 2015

Team Painting

One of my favorite activities to do during the school year is team painting. This is an activity that builds communication, teamwork, and skills.

To do team paining, you need paint, smocks, paper, and something to paint. Every year it's something different. This year was one of our stuffed frog friends sitting in a chair with a jester's hat on. The key is to find colorful things that makes them think.


I paired the class up with partners that they don't usually work with or play with. I also put quieter ones with those who like to talk. This was done to get the quieter ones to come out of their shell a bit. 


They are instructed to pain what they see but they have to work together. They have to talk about who is painting what, what do they see as a team, and decide how they want their 1 picture to look like. In years past I have seen some amazing finished works. There is always 1 kid or 1 team who completely stun me with how great their work is and there is always 1 team who have more fun just painting all the colors together and making a mess. 


This team decided they wanted to pain the frog but give him a house too. 

This team did an awesome job! Love the detail.

In the end, most of the teams painted 2 frogs on their canvas. Some got the details, and some I'm not sure what they painted! Either way, it's a fun activity and really is neat to see how these different personalities work together as a team. My assistant suggested a great idea to add on to this. Have them do a painting at the start of school, middle of the year, and at the end. All with the same partner. In the end, we can compare how their work has changed and how they have grown as a team. I want to try this next year! 


This was my "messy" team! :-)

Trying to get those colors right.

Starting small and working out.




Frederick the Mouse

During my daughter's book fair, I found this adorable book called Frederick. It is the sweetest story about a mouse (named Frederick) who collects things such as words, colors, and stories instead of food and supplies like his den mates. During the ho-hum days of winter, it's Frederick's stories and colors that brighten their lives.

The poem at the end of the story about the 4 mice that live in the sky and provide the seasons was the best. It inspired me to use the story in my class and have the kids make a picture based around the poem.

The items needed for this project are:

- 4 oval mice shapes in grey
- A flower, snowflake, fish, and a pumpkin
- Copy of the Frederick poem
- Grey circles

I framed the poem with paper. Each student glued the mice down in a row and added each season's shape onto their backs. We added yarn for their tails and used the grey circles for their ears. We used the 1-inch circle punch for the ear shapes. It made it a lot easier.

After gluing the mice down, the students then glued the poem to the top. I drew in some lines to look like rocks in the background since the story takes place with Frederick talking to his den mates in the stones of a wall. You can change up the season's shapes to fit with whatever you have. A sun would work great for summer and even a leaf for fall.





My Name


For an early school year activity, I like to have the kids work on recognizing their names. For many, they know what their name looks like but they don't necessarily know how to spell it. This activity covers both concerns.

Items Needed:

- Arms and Hands
- Construction Paper
- Circles
- Markers

To make these adorable people, cut out the heads in flesh toned construction paper. One for each student. My assistant cut out hands and arms just by sketching onto the same color paper. There really is no template for those. Of course, cut 2 for each student. 

For the t-shirt, what I did was cut out the top of the t-shirt but left the length very long. After the student glued their letters on, I went back and just trimmed it to the right length. This helped with those who had really long names. When cutting out the t-shirts, cut them in different colors. It allows the kids to get to personalize it that much more. 

For the buttons, we used a 1-inch circle punch. Count how many letters your students names add up to. Then punch that many out of a contrasting paper color. 

Since this was a very early activity in the school year, my assistant and I wrote the letters on the buttons but if we were to do it for a bit older child or even later on in the school year I would let the child write the letters. 

The students lined their buttons up in the correct order then glued them onto the shirt. They used markers to add faces and scraps of paper for hair. We told them to make the faces look like theirs. A couple of the boys who have hysterical personalities asked to add a little to their faces. Hence why there is a "pirate" and a boy with a mustache. :-)



We glued the heads and arms on and they were done! I love how these came out and the kids had so much fun doing them. They really liked adding the details to make them look like themselves. 





Monday, January 5, 2015

Grassy Monsters

To add to our fun, we made grassy monsters!
The items you will need for this project is:

- Black knee high pantie hose
- Google Eyes
- Tacky Glue
- Plastic Cups
- Sequence, buttons, etc
- Top Soil
- Grass Seed

1. Using a plastic cup, place the knee high into the cup with the toe area facing the bottom.
2. Pour about 1/8th of a cup of grass seed into the toe area.
3. Pour about 1 to 2 cups of top soil in. This is determined by how large of a monster you want to make.
4. Tie very tight and clip off any excess.


5. Glue eyes and decorations onto the front to make a face.



6. When dry- place (knot side down) into a plastic cup of water and place in the window.


After a week or two, you will start to see hair!! They all grew at different rates but it was fun to see where the grass grew in accordance to the face. I had some students put eyes all over the top, so when the grass grew in it was between all the eyes. 



Fun With Dry Ice

Trying to catch up on a few posts. This one is one of my favorites. One of my favorite things to teach is Science. At this age, students think everything is magical, so no matter how complex or simple the science experiment is, the kids think it's the best thing ever. That alone makes science at this age so much fun! For the following science experiment we made "ghost bubbles."

The items you need are:

- Large chunk of dry ice (this can be found in most grocery stores)
- Large bowl
- Dish soap
- Water

1. Pour the water into the bowl.
2. Add a few drops of dish soap to the water.
3. Using gloves, take a piece of the dry ice and put it into the water solution.

The water should start bubbling. The bubbles will pop when touched and you should see "smoke" come from the bubble when it pops. You can play with the surface bubbles and work it into one large bubble. It's takes some time to get this to happen but it's fun in the process!


As more bubbles are created, it's time to start popping! I let the kids pop the bubbles as they over flow from the bowl. When there is enough, I'll scoop them out and put piles of them on the kid's hands. This is not a harmful experiment as long as the kids do not touch the dry ice. Hence why I'll put piles of bubbles on their hands to pop. Also, once the dry ice wears down to nothing, the kids love to put their hands in and play. By this time the water has become VERY cold. 




Extra Fun? Make a coin SCREAM!
For extra fun, you can do this with dry ice and a coin:


What you will need to do is take a good chunk of the dry ice and place it on a towel. Take a coin, any coin, start to push it into the block of ice. I suggest larger coins like quarters, half dollars, or dollars, so that there is more surface space to work with.

As you begin to push it into the ice, you will begin to hear it "scream."  I would tell the kids that I could make my average quarter sing. After doing this a few times the kids determined that it wasn't singing but instead screaming. So we went with that instead. :)

The reason why the coin screams like that is because of simple science! As you can see from the block of ice, it dissipates when it begins to evaporate from heat. When you push the coin into the ice, the steam from the ice rushes past the coin at a fast rate and causes a whistle sound. Kind of like when you whistle through your lips.

If you let go of the coin, the coin will "dance" and bring even more entertainment. This is caused by the same reason but because your not putting pressure on the coin, the steam will cause it to vibrate instead of whistle.

I hope you enjoy the fun you can have with dry ice!