Thursday, February 7, 2013
Wednesday, February 6, 2013
This week at The Bridge
Friday, January 25, 2013
Wednesday, January 23, 2013
Week of 1/14
Saturday, December 15, 2012
Week of 12/10
It’s almost time for our winter break! This week has been a
busy one as usual, and it seems like most everyone is ready for a bit of
relaxation before moving forward. This was a week to wrap up projects, pieces
of work, and other tasks that the kids have been working on.
On Monday, we had a special visitor come speak to us.
Teacher Nettie was back in the U.S. to visit family, but while she was here,
she told us all about the elementary school that she founded in Tanzania, where
she now lives. She showed dozens of striking photographs of African schools and
children, and told the kids stories about how children live there. The
comparison was fascinating, and is a great conversation starter for your kids.
During our morning literacy centers, students have been
working with adults playing a variety of phonics game, across levels. We have a
growing collection of card and board games that help kids practice basic letter
recognition and sounds, sight words, long vowels, short vowels, consonant
blends, and more. These games have been a popular choice this week, and are a
fantastic way to reinforce learning.
Teacher Christie has been using the word game Bananagrams
with students to build words, and thanks to our newfound internet access, the
kids also have a choice of computer time. We’ve just begun this choice, and
right now we’re mainly using the website Starfall, which is a wonderful reading
resource.
The beginning readers and writers also presented their pet
rock owner manuals, along with their pet rocks. They’ve worked so hard on these
books, and it was wonderful to see them show pride in their product.
Nouns, verbs, and adjectives have been a recurring focus,
and writing with descriptive language was a topic this week. The beginning readers
read the book “Gingerbread Baby” and then decorated their own gingerbread
people based on descriptive sentences that they wrote.
During math time, we are continuing to look closely at place
value, and we are using the vocabulary to reinforce the concept: the ones
place, the tens place, the hundreds place. We also have spent some time
studying odd and even numbers and discussing what makes an odd or an even
number. This is a great opportunity to look for patterns in even or odd
numbers!
Our big family group project this week was to make “stepping
stones.” We began by setting up a class
store where students were able to “buy” various gems, tiles, and other
treasures for their individual stepping stone. For younger learners, they were
asked to choose 20 items. Another group were given $1.00 in change and told
that each item cost 5 cents each. They then shopped the store, spending pennies
and nickels, and swapping out dimes and quarters for smaller change. After
winter break, the concept of money will be more of a focus for the beginning
math learners.
The kids then designed their stepping stone by setting up
their treasures and copying onto a sheet of paper. The next day, we all had fun
working with the cement to create artistic stepping stones.
Sunday, December 9, 2012
Week of 12/3
We had a great week,
especially on our mid-week trip to The Seattle Children’s Theater to see The Wizard of Oz. They put on a great
show, and we had a really good time discussing the play – as well as the books
– in class, as well as doing some fun themed activities: we painted bricks on
the yellow brick road, we created stories about the characters, and we compared
various versions of the story that we have in class.
During literacy, the kids have been hard at work creating
their “Pet Rock Owner Manuals.” In order to write the manual, we had to discuss
all of the important things to know about taking care of a pet rock, like where
it sleeps and what it eats, as well as the conventions of a “How-to” book. Many
of the kids included a table of contents and relevant chapters, as well.
Writing “How-to” guides will be something that we will
continue to work on. In the future, we will look at how to write instructions
and how to follow sequence in giving these instructions so that if another
person were to follow the guide, the end result would be the same. This can be
something you start to do at home, as well: asking your child to explain the
steps in making a sandwich, or in getting ready for school.
Other learning centers that we had this week were an exploration
of sugar and salt crystals, with students given the chance to create their own
crystal structures out of clay; weighing and measuring various rocks; and
reading alone or with a partner.
During the afternoon family group time, one group categorized
minerals by various characteristics: color, shape, smell, texture. Another
group formed hypotheses about what rocks might or might be able to do, and then
tested these. Can rocks float? Can rocks write on paper?
Saturday, December 1, 2012
Week of 11/24
Welcome back from our long holiday weekend!
Us teachers have been adjusting our morning schedule a bit,
and we seem to have found a good stride for the morning time: the first chunk
of our morning block will include centers that stretch beyond literacy, into
math, science, social studies, and beyond. As we start our next topic of “Rocks
and Bones,” our learning centers revolved around rocks. All week, the centers
stayed the same, so students had the opportunity to really dive into each of
the centers, while also taking time for small-group work with Christie or
Andrea.
At one center, students wrote stories from the point of view
of a rock. Another center included a pile of books and the task of finding
different information about rocks. A rock “guessing game” was another center,
with students trying to figure out rock-and-mineral-related riddles, and then,
of course, create their own. And a fourth learning center took place in the
block area, as students built structures, then drew what they had created, then
repeated the process backwards.
Our reading word work introduced sight words “why,” “when,” “where,”
and “said.” These are very common words in print and speech, and constant
practice will help kids become fluent in these sometimes-tricky words. We also
looked at words ending in “ill,” as well as other words with the “wh” consonant
blend. Soon, we’re hoping to create a consonant blend (or “digraph”) chart for
the classroom.
During math time, the first graders are beginning to look
more closely at the concept of place value. This is a hugely important topic,
and one that will be a focus for months to come. Having a printed-out 100s
chart at home is a great way to support the work we’ve done this week, looking
at patterns in the numbers and exploring questions like “if 12 and 21 have the
same numbers in them, how are they not the same number?” and “what is a digit?”
Our afternoon family group time was spent finished up our
farm topic from the previous weeks, as well as looking ahead to our new topic.
We reflected upon our work, our groups, and what we liked or did not like about
our previous project time. And, we brainstormed some ideas of future themes we
might want to explore. Hopefully, even more ideas will come up over the next
few weeks. Our Burke Box (a classroom resource from the Burke Museum in
Seattle) arrived, full of rocks and minerals for us to look at, so we began to
explore its contents, while also thinking about what we already know about rocks.
Several questions have already come up, and some
experiments, too! While we spent a chunk of time exploring the rocks, several
kids wanted to know what happens if you put certain rocks in water – will they
just get wet? Disintegrate? Melt? A great deal of scientific conversation
followed. Other students have expressed interest in sparkly rocks and crystals,
and geodes seem to be a fascinating favorite, which will be great to look more
closely at.
Also, another field trip is upon us! We will be going rock
collecting at Saltwater State Park on Monday afternoon. There, we will hold an
Explorers outing, as well as have exploration time. One specific activity will
be to find and collect some extra special rocks for our “pet rock” project for
next week.
Our trip to see Wizard
of Oz is next Wednesday, and we also have a parent meeting this coming
Tuesday night. See you all soon!
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