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family lifeschool

hello, kindergarten: blingin’ the backpack, boy-style

by Teach Mama August 25, 2011
written by Teach Mama

I’ve been waiting for two years now to bling Owen’s backpack like we did when Maddy started Kindergarten, but I knew I couldn’t make felt flower pins for him.

He needed something cool, something quick, and something totally big-guy.

And what better backpack bling for a rising Kindergartener than Mario Brothers Shrinky-Dinks?

I’m not talking store-bought, super-expensive Shrinky-Dinks, either; I’m talking we searched for images that the kids liked, we saved them onto a file, and we printed them onto special Shrinky-Dink paper.  And we also searched for characters that the kids wanted to color.  We added them to the mix and they beautified them with colored pencils.

And they really turned out shrinky-dink adorable. (I mean really cool-dude smooth.)

But I bookmarked a post by my friend Christy of Superheroes and Princesses waaaay back when, and we just used her idea today. So thanks, Christy, for the inspiration!

Here’s the skinny:

  • Blingin’ the Backpack, Boy-Style: I like to send my kids off to school with a little something special, something that they like, something that will make them smile.

I like to help them bling out their backpacks.

Maddy colors a Toadette. . .

I’m sure that it’s not going to happen much longer with Owen, but he was game this year, so I ran with it. But I knew that I had to play on his faves in order for him to be even a little bit interested, so I asked him–while we played a few rounds of Word Feud: Hey Owen, if you were going to have any kind of character on a keychain, who’d you want?

He thought for a few minutes and said, Probably somebody from Mario Brothers or Mario Kart.

Cool. Like who’s your favorite–your absolute number one Mario guy?

Uh, Koopa Troopa or maybe Funky Kong.

Great. Thanks.

. . . and Owen twirls his Koopa Troopa on his colored pencil.

So, I, being the totally-hip mom that I am–down with everything cool for Kindergarten--searched for some Koopa Troopa and Funky Kong images, and I saved them on my computer in one document.

(The Shrinky Dink images are here if you’d like to use ours!)

Then I did the same sort of shady, top-secret character inquiry with Maddy and Cora.

They, oddly enough, answered me without hesitation or question about why I asked, but they gave me Mulan, Hannah Montana, Pocahontas, Toad and Toadette (from Mario Bros), Princess Peach, and My Little Ponies.

I added their faves to the document, and I lightened the colors (according to the directions, you need to do this with photos).

 

Cora grabs her (twisted–waaaah!) Toadette.

Then I called everyone to the computer to tell them what I was doing: Remember at the craft store when we picked up that special Shrinky-Dink paper? 

(They did.)

Your totally amazing mom found all of your favorite characters–and we can print them on Shrinky Dink paper, color the ones that are blank, shrink them, and add them to your backpacks this year. HOW cool is that?!

Shrinky Dinks: cooled and sprayed and ready for backpacks!

 

They agreed that it was pretty. darn. cool.

So I printed out the images on the special paper.  We used Shrinky Dinks for Computer InkJet Printers and Shrinky Dinks Frosted Ruff N’ Ready sheets for coloring. They were not cheap, but I had a coupon, which at craft stores equals big savings.

We cut out the images, the kids colored them with pencils, and we punched a hole in the corner of each Shrinky Dink. And then we placed them on brown paper, on top of a cookie sheet, and we baked tho

se puppies (probably a little too long).

I tried to flatten gently–according to directions–but it was hard because we had put so many on the tray.

Woot! Mario rockin’ Owen’s backpack–

Some shrunk down perfectly, but others got crazy and twisted, which I think is cool but which sent Cora into mad tears. I explained it was our first time, that sometimes it takes many tries to get something right, and that we can make more tomorrow, but it didn’t help.

We sprayed them with sealer, let them try, and headed off to Baltimore for the afternoon.

Later in the day, when I was ready to revisit our Shrinkies, I put a pipe cleaner, about 3-4″ long, through the hole of each one and twisted them into the zippers of the kids’ backpacks and lunchbags. They looked so cool.

I think I may be in love with Shrinky Dinks.

I may make Maddy, Owen, Cora faces and hang them on a necklace.  Or something.

 

And that’s that–just a little bit of fine-motor, creative-thinking, coloring, Shrinky Dink, backpack-blingin’ fun before school begins next week.  Here’s to a happy 2011-2012 school year!

Love, love, love this simple and adaptable-for-anything idea and seriously may be Shrinky Dink obsessed this year. Watch out.

August 25, 2011 8 comments
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writing

meeting new teachers: hello, teacher notes!

by Teach Mama August 16, 2011
written by Teach Mama

Today we spent a few minutes doing one of our favorite back-to-school activities–one that gives my kiddos a chance to say a little ‘hello’ to their teachers even before they meet them at the Open House.

A while after breakfast and after we all enjoyed some much-needed end-of-summer downtime, I printed out Hello, Teacher Notes for Maddy, Owen, and Cora.

It was a gorgeous morning, so I thought it would be perfect for a slow walk up to the school to deliver the notes before we crammed in a front-yard, clean-out-the-fridge picnic and an afternoon pool trip.

Here’s the note-writing skinny:

Meeting New Teachers with Hello Teacher Notes:

We sat down at the dining room table, sharpened pencils in hand, and we got rolling.

Owen and Cora used the same template, the Hello Teacher Note. It has a spot for kiddos to add a tiny picture of themselves and to write their name and birthday (because kids need to know their birthdates!).

The Hello Teacher Note also have spaces for kids to write their favorite food, sport, animal, book, holiday, and activity.

hello teacher notesOwen works on his Hello Teacher Note

As Owen wrote, we talked through the spelling of the words he didn’t know. I’d say something along the lines of, Okay, Owen, what’s your favorite food? 

hello teacher notes

He’d think for a minute or so and give me his answer, and I’d say, ‘Hot dogs’ are your favorite food.  What sound do you hear at the beginning of ‘hot dog’? (He’d tell me.)  You got it. And what letter makes the ‘hhhh’ sound?  Right–‘h’.  So we spell ‘hot dog’ with an ‘h’, then an ‘o’, and what sound do you hear at the end of ‘hot’? Yes, my friend. ‘Tttt’ and ‘t’ makes the ‘tttt’ sound. Hot is spelled, ‘h-o-t’.

We walked through the Hello Teacher Note with this kind of shared writing, with me writing the words on a sheet above his and giving him the difficult sounds. My focus was to have him isolate and identify the beginning and ending sounds of the words.

 

With Cora’s note, I really just had her write her name, and I wrote as she dictated.  She was happy to be able to write her name on her own while we talked about her favorites.

I really was glad that she has reached a point where she’s comfortable–and confident–writing her name. Woo-hoo!

hello teacher notes

Maddy’s finished Hello Teacher Note–my soon-to-be second grader!

 

I made Maddy’s note a little bit different, since she’s heading to grade two–the bigger leagues.  I wanted Maddy to have more ownership of the note and to respect the fact that she is becoming a stronger writer and more creative thinker.

The Hello Teacher Note, grade two has a spot for a photo and a place for the child and teacher’s name, but instead of a quick favorites fill-in, it has lines for a short note. Maddy wrote something along the lines of,

hello teacher notes

Dear [teacher’s name],

My favorite things are [favorite food], [favorite sport], [favorite animal], and [favorite holiday].  I am excited for school to start!

Love, Maddy

 

She used the fill-in’s on Owen and Cora’s notes as a guide, which was fine with me. I didn’t have her do a rough draft and a final, but I did have her re-check the spelling of some of her words before she put it into an envelope.

And really, she didn’t stretch her brain like I’d hoped, but she did write the note without complaint, which really, is all I can ask for some days.

 

hello teacher notes Cora mails her Hello Teacher Note to her new teacher–exciting!

When everyone was finished, they folded their notes and put them in envelopes, writing the teacher’s name on the front. I wrote the address to Cora’s preschool on her envelope, added a stamp, and she sent it on its way.

We walked up to the school to put Maddy and Owen’s notes in their teachers’ mailboxes, and we headed back to the homefront for one of our last lazy days of summer.

And that’s it–a little bit of sneaky learning, happy back-to-school style!

Do you want the notes to download for yourself? 

Here you go!

hello teacher note | teachmama.com

Hello Teacher Note, K: hello teacher note g K 2011

 

hello teacher note | teachmama.com

 

Hello Teacher Note, Maddy grade 2: hello teacher note gr 2 2011

ALL of our Hello Teacher Notes can be downloaded here:

 

 

Check out a few other posts that may help you develop strong and healthy habits for your family:

  • wait time
  • my day, your day
  • frozen peas
  • kids who rock the kitchen
  • kids who rock the laundry
  • rest time
  • gem jars
  • arm circles
  • noticing kids
  • homework routine

 

August 16, 2011 11 comments
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family lifeoutdoor activities

easy, frugal, backyard water fun

by Teach Mama July 30, 2011
written by Teach Mama

It’s H-O-T.  Hot, hot, Hot with a capital ‘H’.

I know I’ve been a total complainer, but I really don’t care.

So rather than complain any more, I thought I’d just skip to some of the fun–inexpensive–things we’ve done that involved water, since we’re rounding out the Water Fun Smart Summer week.

Sure, these are mostly fun and silly activities, but they involve water. And lately, around here, any reason to hang around some agua is a good one in my book, learning or no learning involved. . .

 

Here’s the skinny:

  • Pet Rocks: Who doesn’t LOVE Pet Rocks??! Find rocks.

 Clean them.

 

 Make them into the easiest pets you’ll ever have.

  • Pimp that Cozy Coupe: It’s sitting in your back yard, and it’s probably so sad-looking.

Double hand-me-down from two different neighbors, so make him happy.  Your kiddo and the coupe.

 

Pimp that Cozy Coupe!

 

And while you’re at it, Beautify that Baby Slide!

  •  Water Painting: The hotter the sidewalk, the quicker they have to write!  They write, and you guess the word–and then switch!

All you need is water and brushes. . .

 . . . and words, letters, or numbers to paint!

  •  Clean Toys, Play with Bubbles: Gather all of the pieces to the tea set, all of those Matchbox cars that’ve spent the spring outside, and let the kids clean ’em.

Then find all of the medicine droppers you used for infant medicine, and let the kids play with them!

Water droppers double as toys.

 And toys need to be cleaned.

  • Sneeeeeaky Backyard Learning: While you and your kids are watering the flowers, cleaning the toys, or just playing in the hose, these ideas will maximize what little time you do spend out back this weekend.

 

  • Water-Happy Cupcakes: For any summertime party, these Teddy Graham Bears have never been happier than they are having fun in the sun!

 

Week #6 of our Smart Summer Challenge starts tomorrow–so I’ll share some cool ideas for you to rock your way through this last exciting week.

But you can still link up your Week 5 Smart Summer Challenge ideas. You have ALL week–until late Thursday, August 4, 2011, to link up your ideas to win last week’s prize. SO worth it–so take a second and share your ideas for a chance to win $200 from Guidecraft!

We’re now only one week away from our HUGE giveaways which I cannot wait to share.  Please check out the skinny on our Smart Summer Challenge, the 6-week fun summer learning campaign I’m running with Candace and MaryLea, where we’re challenging all parents to do what they can to throw in a little bit of fun learning every day (or as often as they can!). And seriously–summer reading counts!! So link up your ideas through the whole week and win prizes.  That’s how much we love our readers and value summertime learning!

July 30, 2011 1 comment
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outdoor learningscience

ice experiments: quick, easy (and on our driveway)

by Teach Mama July 26, 2011
written by Teach Mama

Lots has been going on over here this week, but the most exciting news has been the break in the heat.

Finally we’re able to get out and enjoy the sunshine a bit–and see what it can to ice on a 95-degree afternoon!

So after we came home from a local summertime fair, we took a few minutes to see what would help a few ice cubes melt faster–paper, foil, plastic, glass, or concrete.  In the spirit of Water Fun Week of our Smart Summer Challenge, it seemed to fit right in!

We had been talking about ice earlier, after I put a handful of cubes into Brady’s water bowl but wouldn’t let him take one out of the kitchen.  I don’t want a huge puddle of water on the living room floor, so keep Brady in the kitchen until the ice cube is gone, I said.

Cora asked what made it melt, and I told her that heat made the ice melt–but I thought I’d have her see for herself.

Here’s the super-quick, Smart Summer skinny:

  • Ice Experiments — Quick, Easy (and On Our Driveway):  This was no huge scientific experiment, don’t get me wrong. It was quick, and on the fly, and all I wanted was for Maddy, Owen, and Cora to see firsthand how ice melted on different surfaces.

I grabbed a piece of paper, a paper plate, a plastic plate, a glass bowl, and a piece of aluminum foil.  I put a few ice cubes in a bowl and we all went outside.

 

our ice experiment

 

The only spot of sun in our front yard was on the driveway, so we set up our experiment right smack dab in the middle of the driveway.

Cora put two ice cubes in the aluminum foil, two on the paper plate, two on the plastic plate, two in the glass bowl, and we had two left.  We put those last two on the driveway.

I said, Okay, my friends. We’ve got two ice cubes on the foil, two on the paper plate, two on plastic plate, two in the glass bowl, and two on the driveway.  What is your prediction–where do you think the ice will melt fastest? Think for a minute and let me know.

Cora called out, The driveway! It’s so hot on the driveway, and I think it will make ice melt fast. It’s already very, very hot.

Who’s prediction would be correct?

 

Maddy said, Maybe the metal will make it melt–metal gets hot the quickest. And I think that foil is like metal.

Okay, let’s see. We’ll check back in one minute, then five minutes, then ten minutes. And each time, we’ll see which is melting the most.

 

 Cora checks on our ice cubes. . . and the driveway was well ahead of the other spots.

 

We hung around out front for a bit, watering flowers, picking up the mail, and playing with the hose.

Owen made a river down the driveway, and Maddy and Cora set their stuffed animals in the tree.

Before we knew it, about five minutes passed, and we checked back with our experiment. Maddy, Owen, and Cora decided unanimously that the driveway was winning, then the foil, then the glass, followed by the plastic, then the paper.

And that’s really how it ended up–the hot driveway one hands down.

I asked them why they thought it made the ice melt fastest, and they said Cora was correct–that the driveway was so, so hot from so many hot days, that the ice cubes started melting from the beginning, compared to the other surfaces.  And they were right on target–go, Cora!

And that’s about as far as we got with the day’s Smart Summer learning-the kids got hungry, it was lunchtime, and they saw the ice melt–right on their very own driveway. Better there than on my living room floor!


Remember, it’s week 5 of our Smart Summer Challenge! You have ALL week–until late Thursday, July 28, 2011, to link up your ideas to win last week’s prize. SO worth it–so take a second and share your ideas for a chance to win BIG from LeapFrog!

We’re now only one week away from our HUGE giveaways which I cannot wait to share.  Please check out the skinny on our Smart Summer Challenge, the 6-week fun summer learning campaign I’m running with Candace and MaryLea, where we’re challenging all parents to do what they can to throw in a little bit of fun learning every day (or as often as they can!). And seriously–summer reading counts!! So link up your ideas through the whole week and win prizes.  That’s how much we love our readers and value summertime learning!

July 26, 2011 2 comments
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learning during read-alouds: making connections and questioning (with siblings!)
comprehensionconnectingreading

learning during read-alouds: making connections and questioning (with siblings!)

by Teach Mama July 25, 2011
written by Teach Mama
post contains affiliate links

 

connecting and questioning during read alouds

 

We have been putting in a lot of pool time lately, but we’ve also been spending a boatload of time indoors–staying cool in the comfort of our ac, eating popsicles and ices, playing games, Wii, and reading.

Even though Maddy, Owen, and Cora often play well together, a ton of at-home time also opens up opportunities for bickering, arguments, and fighting.

So when I saw Kevin Henkes’ book, Julius: The Baby of the World, with a cover illustration of Lilly making a scary face at the baby in the bassinet, I thought it may open up some good, old-fashioned conversation about sibling relationships and allow us to do some questioning and connecting.

It was perfect.

Not that Maddy, Owen, and Cora’s relationship is now perfectly perfect–it’s not, and please don’t get me wrong. But it was a worthwhile conversation and some meaningful connecting during the read-aloud.

Here’s the skinny:

  • Making Connections & Questioning (With Siblings!): Julius: The Baby of the World focuses on Lilly, (yes! Lilly of Lilly’s Purple Plastic Purse!) and her feelings toward her new baby brother, Julius. Before Julius is born, she loves him with her whole heart. But after Julius arrives, she is nasty, unkind, and hateful towards him. Her parents try everything they can to change her feelings–from punishing her to showering her with love and attention–but nothing works. Nothing works until Cousin Garland is unkind to Julius; then Lilly becomes his biggest fan and most fierce protector.

We sat down with a pile of new library books, and Cora chose Julius–.   No one had ever read the book before, so I started with some simple–quick!–questions:

  • What is going on in the cover illustration?
  • Why would a little girl do something like that to a new baby?
  • How do you think the baby feels?
  • How do you think the mommy and daddy feel?

Then we started reading. And the minute I read: After Julius was born, it was a different story. Lilly took her things back.  She pinched his tail and she yelled insulting comments into his crib, I stopped.

 

My kids looooove to hear about times when kids are naughty or misbehaving. So they were hooked from page two of this book.

 

Maddy, Owen, and Cora were silent. They knew that Lilly’s behavior was inappropriate, unkind, and nasty.  And like many kiddos, my kids love to read or hear about naughty kids.

I said, OH. MY. GOSH. I cannot believe this. I have never seen Lilly act so unkindly, and I’m totally confused. Why would her behavior have changed so quickly?  I asked:

  • How do you think she feels? 
  • When have you felt the same way that Lilly feels–jealous, confused, upset?
  • How do you think baby Julius feels?
  • Can you think of a time when someone else was unkind toward you?
  • What did you do?

 We asked questions, made connections, and talked about being kind toward each other.

 

We read on and talked about these same topics, briefly, and now and again, I’d ask:

  • Lilly is being so rude toward Julius. What would Daddy or I do if you acted this way towards each other?
  • What do you think Lilly’s mom and dad should do?
  • What else could Lilly do instead of [banging on instruments; scaring Julius; telling a nasty story]?

The kids were really into this story, so I tried not to stop too often or for too long. They were totally curious about how this was possibly going to end.  And honestly, so was I.

Lilly changes her attitude towards Julius. . . and we were so happy!

Finally, towards the end, when Lilly’s feelings turn from anger towards Julius to anger towards Cousin Garland, Maddy, Owen, and Cora were sitting with eyes wide open.  As soon as I read, ‘Lilly’s nose twitched. Her eyes narrowed. Her fur stood on end. And her tail quivered’ I asked:

  • You are all siting here with your mouths open. What’s on your mind?
  • Why did Lilly change her feelings toward Julius?
  • Have you ever felt protective towards a friend or each other?
  • Why is it super important for us to stand up for each other and for our friends?
  • What do you think will happen now? How will Lilly and Julius’s relationship change?

And on the last page, when Lilly makes Cousin Garland scream, ‘JULIUS IS THE BABY OF THE WORLD!‘, we were all smiling.  Big.

I didn’t make a big deal about how much better we feel when we’re kind toward each other, when brothers and sisters and friends are loving and kind toward each other. All I said was, I feel so much better looking at this last illustration of Lilly and Julius than I felt when I saw this cover picture. 

And everyone agreed.

Super book, Kevin Henkes. Thank you, thank you, thank you.

And that was our super-sneaky summer learning for today. . . here’s to hoping this heat breaks and that we can get back outside, play a little with our buddies, and have some outdoor fun.

Talk about some sneaky smart summer learning!

Welcome to Week 5 of our Smart Summer Challenge! You have ALL week–until late Thursday, July 28, 2011, to link up your ideas to win last week’s prize. SO worth it–so take a second and share your ideas for a chance to win BIG from LeapFrog!

We’re now only one week away from our HUGE giveaways which I cannot wait to share.  Please check out the skinny on our Smart Summer Challenge, the 6-week fun summer learning campaign I’m running with Candace and MaryLea, where we’re challenging all parents to do what they can to throw in a little bit of fun learning every day (or as often as they can!). And seriously–summer reading counts!! So link up your ideas through the whole week and win prizes.  That’s how much we love our readers and value summertime learning!

Check out:

  • learning during read-alouds: visualizing.
  • making connections– with poems we love
  • super-important inferring during read-alouds
  • help with letters b and d
  • time to rhyme–go fish!
  • putting the pieces together–story repair
  • every picture tells a story
July 25, 2011 8 comments
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family lifeschool

getting ready for kindergarten: summertime prep

by Teach Mama July 16, 2011
written by Teach Mama

children's section of the library

We’re almost exactly at the mid-summer point, and before we know it, the new school year will be upon us.

What can families do this super-important summer before Kindergarten?

How can we prep our rising Kinders for this big year?

So with my sweet Owen heading off to the wilds of Kindergarten this year (wah!),

I thought it would be worthwhile to share a few things we’re doing over here to get our big man ready for his first year of elementary school.

This isn’t a list of terribly involved, time-consuming activities; rather, these are little things that we try to sneak in now and again to make learning fun and to get him started on the right foot. There seems to be a big discrepancy between what some parents think that kids need to know before they start school; some think that kids have to be reading fluently so they prep, prep, prep and practice, practice, practice while others leave all of the ‘teaching’ up to teachers and don’t even talk numbers or letters with their kiddos.

It’s up to us to find a happy, comfortable place somewhere in between so that we, as parents, feel good walking our child to school or putting him on the bus that first day, and he feels comfortable, and confident, doing the same.

Here are just a few things that you can do now (yes, right now, like immediately after you read this) to get your child ready for kindergarten:

everyday name booksThe Everyday Name books are just one way we celebrate–and practice!–names around here.

Practicing name writing:

Kids should be able to write their names by the time they get to kindergarten. Really. Kids are 5 or 6 by the time they hit elementary school, and many have been in preschool or daycare for a year or two before that.  That’s a lot of time for practicing the few letters that make up a child’s name.

The writing doesn’t have to be perfect, but it should be legible. Most likely on day one, kiddos are going to be asked to write their names, and what a confidence boost for a nervous child if he’s able to do it!

Do this by: Starting an Everyday Name Book; playing with names, playing with family names; finding any and every excuse to write names!

Talking about letters–and identifying them and knowing their sounds

There are tons of ways of playing with the letters of the alphabet, and by kindergarten, children should be able to identify most–if not all–of both uppercase and lowercase letters.

child writing sight words on bingo board

Sure, they’ll learn all about letters throughout the kindergarten year, but it’s important to make sure that children are able to identify of most of the letters so that they can focus on learning the sounds they make–often this is the more tricky part.  But we can help them learn letters, and we can do it in really fun, sneaky ways.

Do this by: Doing ABC Hunts; playing clothespin games with letters; putting letters on lids, play alphabingo; playing some alphabet board games; exercising with ABC’s; going on a backyard alphabet hunt; doing an on-the-road (or at the grocery store or anywhere) alphabet hunt.

Rockin’ some sight words

Many school districts suggest that parents even start some sight word practice with their rising kindergartners before school starts, and I think it’s a really great idea. Most children know that when they go to kindergarten, they’ll learn to read. And learning sight words–the words that are best learned by memorizing because they need to be recognized quickly and automatically (and because many don’t follow phonics rules!)–can be a confidence booster just like learning how to write names can be.

But the days of standing in front of a child flipping flashcards and making them read them for you are over. There are a ton of cool ways that kids can start practicing–and learning–these words that trump the ole ‘drill-and-kill’ methods.

Do this by:  Taking out the magnetic letters and using them for building sight words; using sight-word word searches; making wiggly words; writing sticky finger words; playing sight word Go Fish! or Memory; playing WORDO!; or check out a ton of other cool ways to play with sight words.

child counting items in a box on a piece of paperNumber Boxes are a great way for kids to connect numerals with quantities.

Playing with numbers

We will do a lot of number-playing this summer, in card games, in street sign games, and in simple pool-snack-bar addition, but it’s really important for our kids to be exposed to math concepts and have a general number sense before kindergarten.

child holding weather section of newspaper

Counting during walks, lining up Lego guys and counting them as you add them to the bridge you just built, or something as simple as timing how quickly ice-cubes melt in the sunshine all helps build a solid mathematics foundation in our kiddos.

Do this by:

  • Including math in your everyday activities or newspaper reading;
  • counting money and skip counting;
  • playing with numbers and number words;
  • pulling out the ole grid games;
  • reading some math-poetry;
  • playing with number boxes.

Reading, reading, reading

We really cannot read too much to our kids. We can’t. Reading can–and should–be done throughout the day, in a number of ways and not just reserved for before bedtime when everyone’s beat and you can hardly keep your eyes open.

We–as parents–need to show our kiddos that we don’t only read our friends’ and family members’ Facebook updates; it’s our job to demonstrate to kiddos that we read instructions so we can put together that bookshelf from Ikea, we read the newspaper so we know what’s going on in the world, and we read recipes so we know how to make Nanny’s awesome zucchini bread.  And probably most importantly–we need to show our kids that we read for pleasure. We read to relax, we read for enjoyment.

We want them to get psyched for kindergarten and learning to read because then. . . then the world is open to them and they can learn about anything and everything they want!

Do this by:

  • Reading, reading, reading. Reading the newspaper.
  • Reading street signs, reading cereal boxes, reading the words on their Wii games.
  • Making reading fun.
  • Talking about words and celebrating words.
  • Throwing in easy, natural reading strategies during read-alouds.

The Shoelace Box–or Ribbon Rows–no matter what you call it, it works.

Tying shoes (and zipping and buttoning)

Yep. Kids should start learning how to tie shoes, zip zippers, and button buttons. and though most are wearing flip-flops or crocs right about now, they’ll be wearing sneaks soon–and they’ll feel great if they can tie those pups themselves.

It was Owen’s goal last summer–but it only happened recently, and with a lot of practice–that he learned how to tie his shoes on his own. It’s not easy for many kids, and it takes practice. But it may be a great summer rainy-day activity in the next few weeks. . .

Do this by:

  • Making a shoelace box.  Though Maddy taught herself on her dolls’ clothes and by wearing dress-ups, Owen used the shoelace box for about four weeks this winter and spring, and he finally got it. His ties aren’t perfect, but he can (almost) do it on his own.
  • When it comes to zippering or buttoning, have your child practice by zippering or buttoning the sweatshirt that you’re wearing so she sees how it works more clearly than when she tries to zipper or button the one wearing the sweatshirt herself.  Yours is bigger, too, so that sometimes helps.

little child holding up the circles of 'me on the map'Me on the Map may help kiddos learn their stats.

Memorizing their info–full name, phone number, and address

Kids should know their stuff by elementary school.  If they don’t know their whole name–first, middle, and last–then start on that pronto! They don’t need to spell the whole thing (that would be nice . . . ) but your child needs to know that he’s Travis J, or Travis Johnson, not to be confused with Travis K, Travis O, or Travis W.

Okay, so the phone number and address are a little more difficult, and admittedly, I’m not sure that Maddy knew ours when she went to kindergarten. But Owen will know his, because I’m now a much older and wiser parent (not really).

Do this by:

  • A good friend of mine taught her girls to memorize their phone number with this song, set to the tune of Frere Jacques (Are you sleeping, are you sleeping? Brother John. . . ):

1-2-3, [Insert your own phone number for these–]

1-2-3,

4-5-6.

4-5-6.

7-8-9-10,

7-8-9-10,

Call any time. [I can’t remember if these are the words she used, but these are the words our family uses.]

Call any time.

  • The address? The only thing we’ve done is the Me on the Map activity, but aside from that, I don’t have a trick for learning addresses. But I know that we talk more about it than we did with Maddy, and even if Owen doesn’t know our exact number, he at least knows our street name.

Talking about stranger safety:

Ugh. I totally despise this ‘life lesson’ but it has to be taught–over and over and over.

Do this by:

  • Watching The Safeside: Stranger Safety DVD with the kids and being informed myself was all we did, have done, and plan to do with Owen.

pink lunchbox with flower pinned to it

Eating lunch out of a lunchbox:

Many kids do this at preschool before they hit the big K-year, and Owen’s preschool included. But when his new lunchbox arrives, I’ll pack it–just like I will for the first day–and we’ll have a picnic somewhere.

Do this by:

  • Packing his lunch in his brand-new, just-for-kindergarten lunchbox and picnicking somewhere!

Blingin’ his backpack

I have read that it’s not wise to get backpacks monogrammed with kids’ names because then it’s easier for a stranger to call their name and lure them way.  I don’t remember where I read it, and don’t mark my words.

So rather than make a huge, fancy name-plate for new kindergartners, I do think it’s important to personalize their bags a bit.

Do this by:

  • Making something simple and fancilicioius, like the felt flower pins we made for Maddy, or make it a little more subdued.
  • My plan for Owen is to make some shrinky-dink bling like my friend Christy, of Superheroes and Princesses, did waaaay back when her son went to kindergarten.

Saying ‘Hello’ to his teacher

We’ve done this every year since Maddy started Kindergarten, and the kids love it–and I think the teachers do, too.

It’s just a quick introduction–nothing fancy or involved–between student and teacher before Open House, Back-to-School picnic, whatever.

Do this by:

  • Sending Hello Teacher Notes to the new teacher.  We’ll find out Owen’s teacher pretty soon, so once we do, Owen will write his letter which tells the teacher a little bit about him, and he’ll send a blank one to the teacher. She (or he) will complete the letter (some quick one-word answers–I know teachers need a summer break!), and she (or he) will use the stamped envelope we provide to send the response back to us.

little kids swinging on swings on backyard playsetLet them play, let them play, let them play. With new friends and old.

Hanging with friends

It’s so important for kids to have at least one familiar face when they walk into the building, but I am well aware that that is not always possible.  I do know though, that at this point in time, so many communities have online message boards that help with the organization of a summertime playdate.  So take a second, sit down at the computer, and do a little research!

Do this by:

  • Post a park playdate event on a community message board, something along the lines of: Let’s get the Bayside Elementary School 2011 rising kindergartners together!  Plan to meet at [this park] on [this date] at [this time].  Bring snacks! Bring outside toys! Siblings welcome!!  Any questions, please contact [your email].
  • And be sure to stop by the grocery store for some cheap freeze pops if you can and bring paper and a pen so you can gather everyone’s contact information for the next park playdate.
  • Or post a sign at your community pool or the library or wherever.  You can meet at the library, or just meet with some of the parents the first time, or send a note to your MOMS Club or church or even the counselor at the school could possibly help connect you to a person who may be able to help you.

dandelions in grassy field

Giving him jobs:

Having kids listen to verbal directions–and then follow them–is super-important for success in school.   I have no secrets as to how we get our kids to follow directions (they don’t always, believe me), and my husband and I are perpetual students in this parenting gig–learning every single day.

For us, Gem Jars have worked and Game Time Tickets have worked as incentives for listening and being respectful. But it’s uber important to give kids specific tasks with clear directions so they practice those listening skills.  Maybe it’s not always a ‘Get in there and clean your room‘, ‘Hang up those wet towels!!’ or a ‘Please turn off the light‘– maybe if we occasionally throw in a ‘Please make yourself–and me–a huge bowl of ice-cream‘ or a ‘Will you please teach me how to play Mario Kart?‘ they’ll listen more closely. . .

Giving him space

It’s hard, but free time is important. I’m not talking about setting our kids free to roam the ‘hood with the instructions to return at dinnertime. I’m talking about taking a break from our helicopter tendencies, from our incessant worrying, from our need to fill space and time, from our perpetual ‘where-is-he-and-what-is-he-doing?’

Kindergarten’s a big step.  And our kids need to know that we have confidence in their success.

Thanks to a good friend of mine, I recently read an article in the July/ August 2011 The Atlantic, How to Land Your Kid in Therapy.  Interesting stuff. Gave me a ton to think about and is totally worth reading.

four leaf clovers

Giving him love

I’ll never stop hugging and kissing on my kids. I can’t keep my hands off of their sun-tanned shoulders and bleach-blonde heads.  I love the feel of Owen’s calloused, monkey-bar hands; I adore Cora’s crooked, self-cut bangs, and my heart sings when Maddy hugs me with her whole body–her long legs included.  Their hoots and hollers crack me up and the sparkle in each of their blue eyes is enough to bring me to tears.

But I have come to realize that love comes in so many different forms–and that a hard part of demonstrating love for my children involves me letting go, even if it’s just a little.  I’m working on showing them my love for them by letting them fall and get themselves back up.  Letting them run to me with a skinned knee instead of me running to them, waving a band-aid and Neosporin and a face full of worry.  Allowing them to explain to their coaches why they were late for swim practice rather than me doing the explaining. Not bringing back-up goggles when they lose their second pair in two days.

Showing my sweets that I trust in them and believe in their ability to bounce back.

It’s not easy–but I’m trying.

And so it goes. . . my second-to-last summer before my second child is off to Kindergarten.  Let’s do what we can to enjoy the journey!

July 16, 2011 22 comments
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easy backyard fun with flowers: dissecting, examining, and learning about flowers
plantsscience

backyard fun: dissecting, examining, and learning about flowers

by Teach Mama July 14, 2011
written by Teach Mama

 Dissecting flowers–totally pulling them apart–is a little bit funny for some kids.

At least it was for mine.

We tell them they can’t pick the flowers in our gardens unless they have permission; we teach them to care for and nurture our plants by watering and weeding.  We give flowers to loved ones for gifts and put fancy flowers in vases and ooooh and ahhhh over them for days on end.

So when I placed a bunch of flowers on our back porch and gave Maddy, Owen, and Cora permission to dissect them, they all balked.easy backyard fun with flowers

My kids have always loved playing with flowers–really I can give them any excuse to pick them and pull them apart, they’re totally game.

Whether we’re painting flower pots, painting with flowers, making backyard rainbows, changing flowers’ colors, or conducting fragrance experiments, it doesn’t matter. Flower free-for-all’s mean F-U-N for Maddy, Owen, and Cora. Most days, at least.

But I suppose that the open-ended invitation to pull them apart–to look closely at how they were made–was just a little too strange for them.

Here’s the skinny:

Dissecting Flowers, Examining, and Learning:

When I told the kids after lunch one day that we were going to look a little more closely at flowers today and that we were going to pull petals off and look at the parts of a flower, Maddy froze.

She said that what we were doing wasn’t ‘being kind to nature’ and that it wasn’t okay.  I assured her that what we were using were fine–most of the flowers were older and were on their way out anyway and that it was totally okay.  We were learning a little bit about flowers–the parts of them and how they work–so it was not like we were pulling out every flower in the garden.

 

My kids had a hard time dissecting flowers. . . at first.

 

She bought it–hesitantly–in the name of science.

But it reminded me that maybe I need to give my kiddos a little more leeway, let them run through mud more, finger paint, dance around in the rain, and live a little more on the edge. Or maybe it was just a sign that right now my little ones are conscious and careful around pretty things, that they love–or at least respect–nature’s creations.  Who knows?

I’m probably just thinking too much about it because I’ve caught Maddy’s cold and have been totally under the weather lately. I do have to say that this was a really easy, relaxing, and worthwhile activity once we got started.

And looking at pretty flower parts is always a good reason to smile–even when you’re all congested and haven’t stopped coughing for three days.

 

 

The parts of a few flowers. . .

 

I wanted to keep this activity simple. I wanted it to be free, open-ended, and fun.

I thought about trying to have the kids identify parts of a flower, and I even printed out a teacher’s guide to parts of a flower and a child’s sheet for identifying parts of a flower.  But we didn’t use them.

 

  . . . before they became a part of Cora’s flower salad.

 Instead, our focus was:

  • talking about how the petals felt;
  • estimating how many petals each flower had;
  • figuring out which parts of the flowers were alike and which parts were different;
  • talking about the shapes of each petal, leaf, and stem;
  • deciding which petals were our favorites;
  • assessing which flowers were our favorites;
  • making pictures on plates with flower petals;
  • pretending that the flowers were microphones and their petals were salads;
  • enjoying the day, our time together, and conversation.

Really. That’s it.

I had the parts of a flower sheets there in case anyone asked me what the official names were of the parts, but no one did, and I totally know they’ll cover that in science class down the road.

That wasn’t all that important to me.

I just hope that on that day when their teacher hits them with the news that they’re going to learn about the parts of a flower, that Maddy, Owen, and Cora can recall a teeny, tiny, distant–but fond–memory of a warm summer day on the back porch when their mom let them pull apart flowers.

Just for the fun of it.

 Flower salads don’t get much more beautiful than this. . .

 

 

Our goal is to show all parents that if we can do it, anyone can do it. And if we want our kids meet with success in school and to enjoy learning about the world around them, it’s our job to create a lifestyle of learning for our families.  Join us!

__________________________________________

smart summer challenge teachmama.com

 

fyi: Some of the links in the post above are “affiliate links.” This means if you click on the link and purchase the item, I will receive an affiliate commission. Forever and always I recommend only products or services I use personally and believe will add value to my readers. I am disclosing this in accordance with the Federal Trade Commission’s 16 CFR, Part 255: “Guides Concerning the Use of Endorsements and Testimonials in Advertising.”  For more information, please see teachmama media, llc. disclosure policy. 

July 14, 2011 6 comments
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get word conscious as a family cover
readingword consciousness

a word a day: getting the family involved

by Teach Mama July 9, 2011
written by Teach Mama

get word conscious as a family cover

Maddy, Owen, and Cora have loved the Word a Day we’ve been doing for the past two weeks–more than I anticipated and much to my surprise. 

It’s been funny to see which kiddo is the first to remember to flip the card or ask how to pronounce the word as we’re throwing back cereal on our way out the door to swim and dive.

And the incentive of a gem (or two) when they actually use the word throughout the day hasn’t hurt the word-consciousness cause, either. It’s made it more of a game, and my kids pretty much dig games.

So when I reminded them that they all could help choose the words we covered in the next batch, they were pretty excited.

I’ve had a word of the day list on the fridge since we started, and every now and again Maddy would add a word. But when we sit down every so often to write down some words together, undoubtedly, the kids come up with some pretty super ones.

 

We have all contributed to this set of Word a Day cards. . .

 

  • word a day cards set 2 teachmama.com: So today, though I’m not sharing an activity per se, I’m sharing Word a Day Cards, set numero dos. It’s a list created mostly though the words that Maddy, Owen, Cora, and I have encountered in the past two weeks.

We’ve added words that we read in the newspaper, that we’ve heard in conversation, and that the kids have learned on Word Girl.

 

. . . so everyone’s a bit more invested.

 

word a day cards set 2 teachmama.com–ready to be cut and hung!

 And that’s it–just another little way we’re having a word conscious, word-happy summer!

 

Want to check out the first set of Word a Day Cards? Click on the image:

 

word-a-day-cards-cover

 

 

Please join us and share YOUR ideas! We’d love for you to share your ideas as part of our Smart Summer Challenge!  You can add a link to a post on your blog or even a photo set on Flickr or any types of publicly viewable “journal” entry on a social media or community site.

Not a blogger? If you do not have access to posting entries on any public site, you can also leave a comment on this post, sharing the learning opportunities you incorporated into your week with your children.

Your post (or comment) can be something from your archives that speaks to our theme for the week (Government) or it can just be a general post about how you are fitting fun learning into your summer activities. You can find our weekly themes on our calendar of ideas but ANY learning activities, big or small, are welcomed!

Just add your link(s) (as many relevant links as you would like) to a our Smart Summer Challenge Week 2 Link-up, and you’re in the mix!

 

July 9, 2011 6 comments
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how to teach kids where in the world they live

by Teach Mama July 7, 2011
written by Teach Mama

For a long time now, I’ve realized that Maddy, Owen, and Cora have no idea where they live.

Sure, they get that they live in Maryland and their Nanny and Pap and most aunts and uncles live in Pennsylvania, but they don’t really know where they live in relation to the rest of the world.

Cora sees the American flag and calls it the American Idol flag.

me on the map teachmama.com

I know she’s four and that this knowledge and perspective is something that comes with time–and maturity–but I thought that it was about time we addressed the issue head-on.

In order to really understand even why our country has different types of coins (and governments) than other countries–like we discussed when we wrapped and counted coins earlier this week–they have to first learn that they live in the United States of America–a place quite different from the United Kingdom where William and Kate got married this spring, or Japan where Cars 2 took place, or Italy where their Grandma and Grandpa visited this year.

Younger kids sometimes get confused when we tell them they live on a continent, in a country, in a state, in a city. 

How can they live in so many places at once?

Believe me, I know there are tons of ways to do this, but I thought I’d give it a try with a Me on the Map activity I saw on Jenn from Finally in First’s awesome blog a few months ago. Among other things, I liked how this activity brought everything together, from planet to home, in one bright and happy package.

How to Teach Kids Where in the World They Live:

This Me on the Map activity spotlights where kids live from big picture to small–their planet to their home (or school).  It allows them to hold in their hands all of the places they can call ‘home’ which is why I really love it.

I created circles for each part which can be downloaded here. 

And for our friends in Canada: Me on the Map: Canada version is a part of the Me on the Map Circles.  Feel free to download, share with our friends up north, and watch our Canadian little ones learn about their place in this big world!

me on the map teachmama.com

 Owen helped cut out the circles at swim this week when he couldn’t go in the water.

me on the map teachmama.com

The circles include:

  • our planet;
  • our continent;
  • our country;
  • our state;
  • our city;
  • our street;
  • our home (or school)

I also added some links to resources I used to print out an earth for the planet circle, a map of the continents, the USA map, the state of Maryland map, our state flower and flag, and our city.

As cool as it would be to have kids do the research to find this information and to really work hard to draw pictures of each part, I know it’s the summer.  And my focus was simply to give Maddy, Owen, and Cora a more clear picture about where they live in relation to the rest of the world.

me on the map teachmama.com

me on the map teachmama.com

Cora colors North America–the continent where we live.

me on the map teachmama.com

and Owen writes ‘Earth’ for our planet.
me on the map teachmama.com

To get this party started, I said,

Okay my friends. This week we organized coins and found a lot of coins that belonged to other countries. I have no idea how they got in our coin jar, but they did. They obviously got really mixed up–somehow they made it from their countries all the way over to our country, the United States of America.

Today we’re going to take a look at where we are–where we live compared to other places in the world–and all of the places we can call our home. 

Because you know we live in Maryland. You know that Nanny and Pap live in Pennsylvania. And you probably know we live [on our street, in our city].  But it gets confusing to live in so many places at once.

This is going to make where we live a little bit more clear, but I’m really going to need your help because there are a few steps to this. I know you can handle it. Ready?

I had organized all of the circles by size, and I placed the ‘extras’ above them.

I said, First we’ll start with our planet. We don’t live on Mars, and we don’t live on Jupiter.  We live on. ..

Earth!! Owen and Maddy yelled.

Yep. We live on good ole planet Earth.  So glue your earth on the circle that says ‘our planet’ and write ‘Earth’ above it.

me on the map teachmama.com

Our Me on the Map circles, all spread out and drying.

We did the same for each circle, and as we went, I wrote the name on a piece of paper so they could copy it.

Really, Maddy was not feeling this activity. She was totally not into it. So I let her do what she was up for without pushing her.  She wanted to do her sketching, and that’s totally fine with me.

me on the map teachmama.com

She scribbled the words and glued quickly and didn’t care a bit.

Owen was into it; he worked hard to write each word, and he placed his circles carefully on the table to dry.

I found I had a really hard time keeping up with Owen and being slow enough for Cora, but when I finally just let Owen zip ahead while I stayed along with Cora, and I wasn’t worrying about Maddy, it was fine.  Maddy actually came back to it the next morning, when she was more in the mood. I love it.

I took photos before we added our street and home–so that our location’s not plastered in cyberspace–but the kids drew cute pictures of our house and their perception of our street.

me on the map teachmama.com

Cora holds her ‘Me on a Map’ proudly. . . and now that the picture’s taken, we can add our street and home.

me on the map teachmama.com

We linked them all together with a circle clip, and we were ready to go.  Now finally Maddy, Owen, and Cora will be able to tell anyone who asks where in the world we live. I totally love it.

I wanted the kids to be excited about doing this without dreading the work, and I think this did the job.  It gave them enough to do to be invested but not too much so that they thought it was work. . .

Happy mapping!

And check out these other fun activities for kids:

  • our fave programming for 6-9 year olds
  • make plastic bag ice-cream
  • apple taste test
  • backyard learning made FUN
  • start a blog– for kids!
  • backyard chopped challenge
  • make slime
  • take your family to the white house
July 7, 2011 60 comments
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playing with money: counting, wrapping, estimating coins

by Teach Mama July 5, 2011
written by Teach Mama

This week our Smart Summer Challenge theme is Government–and what better way to start the week off than by playing with money? Okay, so we really started the week off with a flag cake, but who’s really keeping track?

We’ve had a huge jug in our craft room, just sitting there collecting loose change for months and months and months so I thought it would be a perfect day and unload those coins so Maddy, Owen, and Cora could practice some counting, estimating, and wrapping.

We skipped swim and dive today because Maddy and Owen are still not 100%, but before we took Cora to her ‘mini-team’, we did some serious money-playing. . .

  • Playing With Money–Counting, Wrapping, and Estimating: We started off by sorting the coins, and in order to keep things separate, I put a piece of colored construction paper in front of Maddy, Owen, Cora, and myself.

 I said, Okay, we’ve got soooo many coins in here, and they’re just sitting here waiting to be counted and wrapped. How about we sort and count this money and then use it to go out tonight to celebrate Mommy and Daddy’s anniversary? 

Yeeeesssss! Hoooray! Let’s go out for dinner–a family date! Woooo-hoooo! It was unanimous. We were counting and spending.

Super. Each one of us is going to be in charge of one coin–either a quarter, dime, nickel, or penny. Who wants what?

They decided that Cora would do quarters, Maddy pennies, Owen dimes, and I’d do nickels.

We dumped the coins on the dining room table, and started sorting, each person putting his or her coin on the paper in front of them.

 

We sorted and sorted and sorted some more.

 We sorted and chatted, sorted and chatted, and we sorted some more until all of the coins were in the correct spot and we had a huge pile of ‘extras’–random coins from other countries, paper clips, beads, and other funny things that somehow found a home in our coin jar.

 

 The Uglies. And they were realllly ugly.

Before we started counting and wrapping, we really examined and talked about the coins:

  • We went on an ‘Ugly Hunt‘–we all searched for the absolute most dirty, beat-up, and ugly coin;
  • We hunted for the most perfectly perfect, shiny and sparkly coin;
  • We studied on our coin for 3 cool things to share with everyone–a picture, word, or something unusual or awesome about your coin;
  • We shared our ‘cool things’ with each other and looked at each other’s coin;
  • We talked about how many cents each coin was worth (this was obviously hard for Cora to understand, but Owen’s slowly getting it, and Maddy learned about money last year, so it was a great review for her);
  • We looked at the wrappers and figured out how many we needed of each coin so that the appropriate amount was in each wrapper;
  • We estimated–we each took a guess at how much money we had total, and wrote down our predictions (Maddy guessed $175; Owen guessed $820; Cora guessed $85; and I guessed $60).

Owen counts his dimes–five rows of ten.

 And then we started counting.

I modeled for each kiddo how to do it in an organized way–Maddy put her pennies in five piles of ten; Owen placed his dimes in rows of ten; Cora put her quarters in ten rows of four.

And then they were on their own.

One row is wrapped, and he’s got four to go!

We double-checked their rows before we wrapped, and then I started the wrapping for the kids–it’s very difficult at first to fold and get it started.

 And after the coins were lined up and ready, they wrapped and wrapped and wrapped.

We took a big break for Cora’s mini-team and then lunch, and after lunch we finished it up.

And then. . . for the finale–counting our wrapped coins! We organized the coins by type and added it all together.  As much as I truly wished that Owen was closest in his estimation, I was the closest (boo).

But no complaints here–we were all totally excited to use our $58.00 on a happy anniversary family dinner tonight! Woo-hoo!

 

Our wrapped coins, ready to get cashed in at the bank and our final tally. . .

And that’s it for today–with two kids on the mend, counting and wrapping coins was about all we could do. . . but it was a blast! We all had fun, and Maddy, Owen, and Cora had no idea that they were practicing their math and fine motor skills today–I love it!

 Check out President’s Day Coin Polishing.

 

 

Remember to please join Candace of Naturally Educational, MaryLea of Pink and Green Mama, and me for the Smart Summer Challenge, a six-week campaign where we all pledging to sneak in some sort of fun learning into our children’s summer days.

You can follow our calendar if you’d like, but you don’t have to.  You can get really crazy, but you don’t have to do that either.

It can be simple learning–even 5 or 10 minutes a day. Anything and everything counts, and all we ask is that you link up here on Fridays and share what you’ve done (meaning: share one way you participated). Each Friday for the next six weeks, we’ll choose one participant to receive an awesome (and I mean totally worth your time awesome) prize.

Our goal is to show all parents that if we can do it, anyone can do it. And if we want our kids meet with success in school and to enjoy learning about the world around them, it’s our job to create a lifestyle of learning for our families.  Join us!

July 5, 2011 15 comments
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super-important inferring during read-alouds
comprehensionquestioningreading

questioning and connecting during read-alouds

by Teach Mama July 2, 2011
written by Teach Mama
post contains affiliate links

super-important inferring during read-alouds

 

 

I’m not going to lie–some summer days, I really think that if it weren’t for the 15 minutes of Adult Swim, my kids wouldn’t stop moving all day long.

Even the rest times that I once relied on as a definite break to our day, Maddy has renamed as ‘play time’.  (It’s still in their rooms, but she thought ‘rest time’ sounded too babyish.)

So I have to try very hard to make reading–especially summer reading–engaging, relaxing, and inviting.  I’ve mixed it up so far: some days I do the reading (modeling fluency is muy importante), some days we take turns, some days Maddy or Owen reads, and some days we all read silently.

It doesn’t matter what we do as long as we’re reading. Period.

For this Smart Summer Challenge day, I’m sharing one easy, sneaky way we threw in some reading comprehension strategy learning–some questioning and connecting–this week before we headed over to swim team.

We used two books that focused on the idea of ‘home’, since the theme this past week was ‘Me on the Map’–and everyone needs a starting point, a place to call home, right?

  • Questioning and Connecting During Read-Alouds: I’ve waxed on about the importance of sneaking in reading comprehension strategies during read-alouds, especially with our little guys–the ones who aren’t decoding the text themselves–because with our modeling of these strategies, kiddos will see what strong readers do as they read and will make these behaviors habitual as they do start reading on their own.

Questioning, simply asking questions about a text as its read, is an incredibly powerful strategy. According to Harvey and Goudvis “questions propel us forward and take us deeper into reading” (2000, Strategies That Work), and it’s totally true. When kids ask questions, they want to read on to find answers, and ultimately, they can make better connections with the text.

 

Fly Away Home is a perfect text for questioning and connecting.

When we sat down to read, I grabbed Eve Bunting’s Fly Away Home, a really thought-provoking and moving book about a homeless boy and his father who live in an airport. Ronald Himler’s illustrations are fantastic, and I love this book, the story and the message so much, I used it to teach theme when I taught high school English.   I thought it would be worthwhile for Maddy, Owen, and Cora to read because it’s really grounding.

Questioning started from the minute we sat down.  I held the book, and as I looked at the cover, I said, The title of this book by Eve Bunting is ‘Fly Away Home’.  I notice an airplane in the background, and it looks like these people are going on a trip.  I wonder where ‘home’ is for them. I also wonder why they have such sad faces. What questions do you wonder about this book before I read?

Simple–and I did this kind of thinking out loud every few pages–enough to ask some questions, have the kids ask questions, but not totally interrupt the flow of the story.

We asked things like:

  • I wonder how they feel about living in an airport?
  • Do they feel scared every day?
  • Where are his toys?
  • Where is the boy’s mom and grandma?
  • How does he feel when he sees other kids leaving the airport?
  • Will they ever leave?
  • I wonder if they ever watch tv or go to a movie?

And as we found answers to our questions, I’d make mention of it.  And by the end, they were doing the same.

It was inevitable that we’d make connections as we read, because connecting is so natural for kids (who often love, love, love any chance to talk about themselves).  Connections were along the lines of:

  • If I lived there, I’d feel. . .
  • Remember that homeless person we saw. . .
  • I’d feel sad if I wore only blue like they do. . .
  • It would scare me if I slept there. . .

 

As our next book, Owen vehemently requested we read Corduroy, by Don Freeman, and it turned out it was a great pairing for Fly Away Home–perfect for making text-to-text connections.

Because this was a familiar book to the kids, I didn’t do the pre-reading questioning like before. They know the gist of the story, so there was no need for it. Instead, as I read the first page, “Corduroy is a bear who once lived in the toy department. .  . Day after day he waited with all the other animals and dolls for somebody to come along and take him home,” I saw a light go on in the kids’ heads.

Hey–this is similar to what we just read in ‘Fly Away Home’, I said.  Corduroy is looking for a home, and Andrew and his dad are hoping to find a new home.  Let’s read on to find other ways the books are alike and different. . .

And that’s it–connections are easy, really, and can be done on a number of levels:

  • text to self: How does the text relate to you?
  • text to text: How does the text relate to other books, plays, poems, etc. you’ve read?
  • text to world: How does the text relate to events or ideas or situations in the world around you?

Playing with each type of connection helps deepen a reader’s understanding of a text, and seriously, kids. love. connecting. They’re learning and they don’t even realize it.  And they love talking about themselves, so connecting is usually easy for them.

And that’s it–two simple but totally important reading comprehension strategies as part of my Read-Aloud Learning series (that I sneaked into our Me on the Map week of the Smart Summer Challenge.)

Check out learning during read-alouds: making connections and questioning (with siblings!)

 

Please join Candace of Naturally Educational, MaryLea of Pink and Green Mama, and me for the Smart Summer Challenge, a six-week campaign where we all pledging to sneak in some sort of fun learning into our children’s summer days.

You can follow our calendar if you’d like, but you don’t have to.  You can get really crazy, but you don’t have to do that either.

It can be simple learning–even 5 or 10 minutes a day. Anything and everything counts, and all we ask is that you link up here on Fridays and share what you’ve done (meaning: share one way you participated). Each Friday for the next six weeks, we’ll choose one participant to receive an awesome (and I mean totally worth your time awesome) prize.

Our goal is to show all parents that if we can do it, anyone can do it. And if we want our kids meet with success in school and to enjoy learning about the world around them, it’s our job to create a lifestyle of learning for our families.  Join us!

A few more literacy-related posts worth reading. . . (click on image to read!)
 
 
what to say when kids make reading mistakes  teachmama.com.png
 
 
 
literacy terms every parent must know
 
talk to kids about books
 
 
how to help kids choose just right books
 
 
Want a little more help with all things literacy?  
Follow Teach Mama’s board literacy on Pinterest.

 

July 2, 2011 10 comments
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word a day cards: creating word conscious, word-happy kids
readingword consciousness

word a day: creating word conscious, word happy kids

by Teach Mama June 27, 2011
written by Teach Mama

word a day cards

Our very first day of the Smart Summer Challenge found us lazying around at home because Owen returned from swim and dive feeling really under the weather.

So while he caught up on some telly and gave his body a rest, Maddy, Cora, and I did some reading, puzzles, and organizing.

But before our plans hit the fan, we walked into the Smart Summer Challenge bright-eyed and bushy-tailed at breakfast time. We started our day with some fancy new words– a Word a Day, summer style.

Nothing nuts, crazy, or difficult–just a word a day from now until the end of the summer.

  • A Word a Day: I know that tons of people do this, from classroom teachers to at-home parents, and in fact Roger Rosenblatt writes about how he does this with his grandchildren in his memoir (that I literally ugly-cried my way through), Making Toast.

I am too much of a planner to write a word on an index card every day, so I put mine in a document and added some pictures that will help my kids remember each word.

 

A Word a Day Cards fresh off the printing press

I‘m creating the word a day cards set 1 teachmama.com in sets of 10-14 so that I can add relevant words for our family.  I hope to include new and fun words that we encounter in our summer reading books, movies, shows, and life in general.

The first set of word a day cards set 1 teachmama.com is here to download as a pdf if you’d like.

I printed these on cardstock–a mix of white, tan, and grey because that’s all we had left–and then I hole punched one corner.  I connected them via a binder ring, and that’s it.

I used a bright blue ribbon to hang them right there in our kitchen so that our Word of the Day will be the first thing we tackle every morning–and something we revisit throughout the day.

I wanted to start with ‘aspire’ because the sentence I wrote dealt with summer reading, and I knew I wanted to begin some ‘official’ summer reading today. So at breakfast I said, Hey! Did anyone even notice our brand new, totally fancy wall hanging?

 

Our brand-new, totally fancy wall hanging: Word of the Day Cards

Owen glanced up from his Honey Nutters and said, I do! Hey! It’s right there.

I grabbed the cards and said, Yep. Here are our incredibly fancy Word a Day Cards. Each and every day this summer, we’re going to rock out a new word so our brains stay sharp and so we can ‘wow!’ our friends and family with our advanced vocabulary. How cool is that? You are so lucky to have a mom who cares so much about you.

Our first word is ‘aspire’. Anyone ever hear the word used before?

Maddy said, I do! My teacher aspired me to write a story this year.  He gave me great ideas and helped me. That’s aspire.

I know your teacher did inspire you to write your book this past year, but can you hear the difference between the word I said and the word you said? Listen: [Maddy’s teacher] inspired you to write your book this year by teaching you strong writing skills and by helping you come up with a great idea.

Our word today is ‘aspire’.  ‘Aspire’ means to have a strong desire to do something or attain something.  You may aspire to be a doctor or a teacher or the President of the United States, or you may aspire to one day speak another language.  Here’s a sentence to help make it more clear: I aspire to read at least 20 books this summer, and with hard work, I know I can do it.

Got it? Okay–now here’s the challenge: if you can find this word anywhere today–in a book, on tv, on a sign, anywhere–or if you use this word, you get an extra gem.  Easy as pie.

Throughout the day we mentioned ‘aspire’--when we sat down to do some reading and I said, Remember, I aspire to be a busy reader this summer. I need help. Big-time. So let’s get started.

We also chatted ‘aspire’ when we were talking about what Maddy, Owen, and Cora aspired to be when they grow up. Maddy aspires to be in art school, Owen aspires to be a Mario Kart expert, and Cora aspires to have sparkly lip gloss and very long hair.  Okay, so we can all dream, right?

 

Hello, Smart Summer Challenge Calendar—

with Post-It’s hiding our activities, it’s like a surprise every day to see what fun is to be had!

I did create a sheet–word of the day list–that I’ll hang on our fridge next to our top-secret Smart Summer Challenge Calendar. The A Word a Day: Words to Include is a list where anyone can write a word they want me to include in our next batch of word a day cards set 1 teachmama.com. Hopefully, since we’ve got huge Word Girl fans over here, they’ll add some and I can add some, and we’ll all be more invested in the end.

Want a little more?  Click on the image for more word-consciousness fun!

get-word-conscious-as-a-family-cover-

 

And that’s it for day #1–Happy Smart Summer Word Learning!

Please join us for the Smart Summer Challenge, a six-week campaign where we all pledging to sneak in some sort of fun learning into our children’s summer days.

You can follow our calendar if you’d like, but you don’t have to.  You can get really crazy, but you don’t have to do that either. It can be simple learning–even 5 or 10 minutes a day. Anything and everything counts.

Our goal is to show all parents that if we can do it, anyone can do it. And if we want our kids to do well in school and to enjoy learning about the world around them, we have to create a lifestyle of learning for our families. Join us!

fyi: affiliate link used in this post

June 27, 2011 35 comments
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5 things to never say to emerging reader
Best Of Teach Mamacomprehensionreading

learning during read-alouds: 5 things never to say to emerging readers

by Teach Mama June 26, 2011
written by Teach Mama

5 things to never say to emerging reader

Sometimes it’s very easy for teachers and parents to feel impatient with emerging readers.

It’s hard to listen to kids sound out every word on a page and get through only five words a minute.

It’s hard to know what to do when kids insist on reading books that aren’t the ‘right fit’ –either too easy or too difficult.

It’s hard to sit still when a kiddo reads a whole page of nonsense rhyming words.

Or when he reads a whole page fluently and is completely unable to tell you anything about what he just read.

It’s also frustrating when you sit down to read with a child and he refuses to read out loud, saying, I’m not in school, and I’m not a good reader. I’m not reading to you.

In the Read-Aloud Learning Series I’ve been doing, I’ve tackled some easy and very cool strategies that any parent can sneak in during the short span of a read-aloud.  And the feedback I’ve received has been awesome–I definitely plan to continue it. But as parents, it needs to be our number one priority to make our kiddos comfortable reading with us–and want to read with us–especially in the summer.  They need the practice, and they need to know that reading with mom and dad is a safe, enjoyable, natural thing.

So before our Smart Summer Challenge begins, I wanted to throw in a post that I’ve been working on for some time because it’s just that important and because so many people have asked me, emailed me, and questioned me about: What should parents NEVER say to their child during a read-aloud?

So here we go, in no particular order — What Not to Say to an Emerging Reader:


DON’T SAY: Stop. Re-read this line correctly.

 

  • DON’T SAY: Stop. Re-read this line correctly.

INSTEAD: If the mistake didn’t interfere with the meaning of the text (like if it was ‘a’ for ‘the’ or ‘fine’ for ‘fun’) let it go.

Do. Not. Interrupt. Your. Child’s. Reading.

Period.

How would you feel if you were putting your heart out on the line, trying something you weren’t totally comfortable with, in front of someone who you were afraid would challenge you, only to have that person stop you, interrupt your flow, and make you start over before you even finished?  Over and over and over again?

Right. So that’s why if your kiddo’s reading and makes a mistake in reading a word, let it go. We want our kids to be comfortable reading with us–we want them to feel safe–so let it go.

Just make the correction when you read it the next time.

DON’T SAY: Speed up! OR  Slow down!!

  • DON’T SAY: C’mon, speed up–you have to read a little faster! OR  Slow down–you’re zipping through this!!

INSTEAD: Model appropriate pacing and fluency.

Fluency–or reading with appropriate speed, pacing, and intonation–is something that is best taught through parent or teacher modeling and tons of reader practice. Seriously. Fluent reading sounds like conversation, or natural speaking, and it’s something that has to be learned.

So if your kiddo is a total speed-reader or if, at this point, she’s as slow as molasses, it’s time to switch gears. Grab a level-appropriate book and say, Hey! I found this awesome book for us, and it’s going to be our book this week. We’re going to read this book until we become experts on this book– we’ll be book-reading super-stars by the end of this week, mark my word. . .

And the first day, you read the whole thing in its entirety. And then do an echo read, page by page.  An echo read is really just like an echo–a portion of a text is read and then re-read by a second person (or class if you’re in the classroom).  You can echo words, phrases, or whole pages.  In this case, with an early-emergent text, it’s great to echo read page-by-page.  First, you read a page and then your emerging reader reads that same page.  And then you read the next page and she reads that very same page, like an echo.

And on day two, you read it in its entirety the first time, and then together, you echo read every two pages. Or every three pages.

Day three, you read it the first time, and either echo read by three pages or try a chorus read. A chorus read is where you read it together, in unison, like a chorus. Sometimes these are hard, but for pacing, it helps.

Day four, you read it the first time then hand the book over to your kiddo for an entire kid-read. Give her specific praises for her super-star parts: I really like how you paid close attention to the punctuation here (point to the specific part). You noticed the question mark, and you knew that meant that [the character] was asking a question, so you made your voice go higher at the end. Awesome.

Maybe on day four, you can tape yourselves reading or put it on video (not a big deal–just grab your flip cam or camera–it doesn’t have to be a huge, complicated video production) and talk about what sounded great and what you both need to work on.

Day five, it’s showtime. You both give yourselves ‘practice reads’– start by reading the book yourself and then give it to your child.  Then it’s the BEST READ EVER–you both get to go on ‘stage’ for the most awesome, perfect, wonderful read ever.  Video tape it, audio tape it, or Skype-read with your faraway aunts, cousins, grandparents, or friends.  You both practiced all week–now show off your skills!

 

DON’T: Laugh.

  • DON’T: Laugh.

INSTEAD: Think about something serious and ugly and breathe deeply until you regain composure.

Even if your kiddo replaces ‘bat’ with ‘butt’ or ‘fact’ with ‘fart’ don’t laugh.  The fastest way to kill confidence is to have the person a kiddo loves and trusts the most laugh in his face.

If you can laugh together, that’s one thing; most likely if your kid is reading aloud and says ‘butt’, he’ll break out into hysterics and you will too. But if he’s working hard, concentrating, and trying his best and still managed to make a mistake that tickles your funny bone, then just move on.

 

DON’T SAY: You know this. . .

  • DON’T SAY: You know this. . .

INSTEAD SAY: What part of the word do you recognize? If you get no response, say, Do you recognize this part (point to the beginning chunk or letter) or this part (point to the ending chunk or letter)?

Three things here:

1. If the kid knew it, she would have read it.

2. We all hate to be reminded that we knew something but forgot it.

3. By picking out two parts of the word, you’re setting her up for success. It all goes back to the choices thing that really helps with kids. Most likely she will recognize either the ‘b’ or ‘-at’ part of ‘bat’ or the ‘th’ or ‘-ick’ parts of ‘thick’.  If she can pick up either part, say, You got it! That does say ‘ick’. Now let’s put the first part, (give it to her and pronounce it) ‘th’ together with ‘ick’: th-ick. Thick!

Then put that new word into the sentence and give her a high-five for getting through it.

 

DON’T SAY: You’re wrong. That says, . . .

  • DON’T SAY: You’re wrong. That says, . . .

INSTEAD SAY: Nothing. Really. Remain silent. As hard as that may be.

It goes back to the very first thing I said about stopping kids as they read and making them re-read.

Let. Them. Read.

And unless it’s a mistake that interferes with the meaning of the text, let it go.  And even more importantly, if every time your child gets stuck, he looks at you and you give him the word, then he’ll have a pretty easy time reading with you and won’t get to practice any decoding skills.

Now, that being said, if he did make a huge meaning-changing mistake, at the end of the page, go back and say,

  • Are you correct?  (And if he says Yes! then say. . . )
  • Read it again and check closely. (If he reads it again incorrectly, say. . . )
  • Can you use the picture to help you figure it out?
  • Does it make sense?
  • Does it sound right?

(And if he looks at it again and still misses the error, say. . .  )

  • Can you find the tricky part? (And if not. . . )
  • It’s in this line.
  • I’ll point it out and help you find it. (And then go back to pointing out the two chunks he may know. . . )

After kids become more comfortable reading with you, then hit them with an Are you correct? every so often on a page that he did read correctly. It’s not to make kids think you’re a pain in the neck; it’s to help them become better self-monitors.  And as self-monitors, we’re constantly checking and re-checking to make sure that what we read made sense.

 

And that’s my initial list of what not to say to emerging reader: which can be downloaded below:

 

My amazing friends have helped me with this post, giving me feedback on my ideas and also adding some other things never to say to our little emerging readers.  They’ve added:

  • Good readers say the first sound in the word. . . . Good readers do this (or that. . . )
  • Come on, try harder!
  • You should already know that!
  • All the other kids can do this!
  • Why aren’t you paying attention?
  • Didn’t we just go over this yesterday?
  • You’ll thank me for making you read this when you grow up.
  • I loved this book when I was a kid; you’ll love it too.
  • That’s an easy word.
  • That’s a Kindergarten word; you should already know it.

Cheers, and happy reading during this incredibly exciting journey!

A few more literacy-related posts worth reading. . . (click on image to read!)
what to say when kids make reading mistakes teachmama.com.png
literacy terms every parent must know
talk to kids about books
how to help kids choose just right books
Want a little more help with all things literacy?  
Follow Teach Mama’s board literacy on Pinterest.
June 26, 2011 89 comments
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alphabetearly literacy

getting ready for kindergarten: short e picture-word sort

by Teach Mama June 14, 2011
written by Teach Mama

One of the best activities for practicing early word learning is the picture-word sort.

Nothing takes the pressure off of reading like adding pictures since a huuuuge chunk of early reading involves kids using the pictures to help them figure out words.  It’s a natural partnership.

So while Maddy worked on her last (woooo-hoooo!) homework packet of the year, Owen got busy with some work that will help prepare him for kindergarten: the short e picture and word sort.

Here’s the skinny (and it’s much easier than you may think!):

  • Short e Picture-Word Sort: Owen tackled the short a word/ picture sort a few weeks ago, and he asked to do ‘e words’ numerous times, so it was time to bring them out.

Though I used the short e sort from Words Their Way, I do have a short e picture-word sort to download and try yourself.

We followed the same basic system as we’ve done in the past, but this time Owen’s extension was really simple–he copied the words in his notebook. Pretty easy.

Owen sorts the short e pictures first. . .

 

I started by saying, Okay, Owen, today while Maddy works and Cora paints, you’re going to rock out the short e words.  First we’ll organize and sort these pictures that have the short e (I demonstrated the sound ‘eh’) in the middle. We’re going to listen closely for the end sounds of these words and then we’ll put them in family groups.

Listen as I say these three words: pet, beg, ten. Pet, beg, ten.  I can hear a different end sound in each word.  Pet.  What sound do you hear at the end of ‘pet’?

‘T’–it’s the ‘t’.

Right. ‘Pet’ ends with a ‘ttt’ sound, so I’ll put it here. Listen to ‘beg’. Can you hear a different sound? Can you hear the ‘ggg’ sound?

Yes, it’s ‘ggg’  for ‘g’. And ‘ten’ has an ‘nnn’ sound. It’s an ‘n’ at the end.

You got it. So we’ll put ‘pet’ in the middle and ‘ten’ right here. Listen as I say each of the other pictures.  When I’m finished, I’ll help Maddy with her work and you can put these picture cards in the right family group. Okay?

 

 

. . . and then he matches the words to the pictures.

 

I checked back with him after just a few minutes, once I saw he had three columns (kind of) of pictures.

I said, Looks like you’re finished. Why don’t you say the words you put in each group so we can make sure everyone fits.

He did, and he was on target.  He was ready for the next step: picture and word matching.

 

Okay, Owen, you know the next step, and it’s a toughie: matching the correct word to the picture. Here are the teeny short e word cards.  Take a few minutes to match each word to its picture and let me know when you’re ready for me to check.

He gave me the signal a few minutes later, and he read each word. I pointed to each word as he read.

OH my goodness, Owen, you are rocking it today, my friend. What do you notice about the sounds of the words in each column?

He said, They’re mostly rhyming, and we talked about the rhyme sounds a bit. Then I said,

Okay, after we match the words and pictures, we always do one last activity. Today, let’s just have you write each word in your red notebook. (His red notebook is just a spiral notebook that’s ‘his’.)

I’ve made three columns, one for each word family.  In this first one, you can write down words from the ‘-et’ family. In the middle one, you can write words from the ‘-eg’ family, and in the last one, you can write the words from the ‘-en’ family.  After you write the word, just flip the card over, and when I see all blank cards, I’ll come back over.

I came back over when he was finished, and I read each word in each column. Then I said, Awesome.  Can you think of any other words that aren’t here that fit into the ‘-et’ family? I can–I’m thinking of ‘bet’. He came up with ‘zet’ and ‘vet’–and I gave him a high five for each one. Okay, we came up with ‘bet’, ‘zet’, and ‘vet’.  Pick one and write it on the bottom of the list.

We did the same for each family, and he was done. He grabbed a coloring book and colored a bit until we headed over to the pool.

Super-quick, super-worthwhile picture and word sorting in a really, really short amount of time and with four distinct steps that are predictable and keep things moving for kids:

  1. demonstrate: introduce the sort, the focus, and anchor words or pictures
  2. sort and check: sort away! check back and encourage self-monitoring
  3. reflect: take a second and have kiddos think about the words, sounds, patterns, etc.
  4. extend: take the sort a step further by writing words and adding to list, playing with the words, searching for the words in a text, etc.

I didn’t this time, but it’s always wise to throw in an ‘oddball’ words that ‘are at odds with the consistencies within each category‘ (I love the way it’s described in Words Their Way, 2004).  The oddball might be something like the word ‘have’ in a short -a / long -a sort–a word that doesn’t follow the rules of pronunciation.   I usually just make a big question mark on a card for any words that might cause confusion for students when they’re sorting, but, of course, I forgot this time for Owen.

Anyway, thanks to Bear’s Words Their Way (2004) for the fabulous sorting information and for Rockingham k-12 site for providing the images I used in the short -e picture/ word sort I created. Happy sorting!

June 14, 2011 5 comments
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weather math | newspaper for math learning teachmama.com
countingmath

using the weather forecast for sneaky math learning

by Teach Mama June 12, 2011
written by Teach Mama

weather math | newspaper for math learning teachmama.com

We are huge weather fans over here. Looking at the day’s forecast has become a regular part of our morning ever since the kids were really little.

Though our family may be a growing minority of people who are still getting it delivered on a daily basis, I love getting the paper, not only because in my mind there’s nothing like relaxing (even if it’s only for two minutes) with a cup of java over the day’s news, but also because the newspaper offers a wealth of learning opportunities for kids.

This past week, we all went nuts crazy because we saw for the first time in ages that the temperature was predicted to be 100 degrees.  It. Was. Totally. Exciting.

Here’s how we use the weather section of the paper first thing in the morning to throw in a little math learning and some conversation before we hit the Kids Post:

  • Weather Forecast Math Learning: It really evolved naturally over time, beginning when Maddy was teeny and I checked the weather to make sure I could take her for a walk around the neighborhood and then becoming the partner to our day of the week vitamins.

But now if my husband forgets to bring in the paper or if we are moving slowly (or if I’m scrambling to pack three lunches) and we don’t sit down and open up the paper, the kids get really funny: Mom! What’s the weather today??! Where’s the newspaper!! Wait! We didn’t check the weather!!

Our weather forecast conversation takes all of two minutes in the morning–if that.  Unless there’s something really crazy, like the 100 degree day, or five sunny/rainy’s in a row (everyone’s favorite!), it goes a little something like this:

Me: Okay, today is Monday (pointing to each day’s weather as I read) then we have Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, and Friday.  Take a look at what we have going today and tell me what you think.

Maddy: HOT! 92 degrees! I have to wear flip-flops to school because I’ll be sweating. (She always wants to wear flips to school and I always say ‘No’ and it’s an ongoing challenge.)

Me: You’re right–92 degrees is hot, but flip-flops aren’t great shoes for the playground. You’ll be fine in sneakers until you get home.  (Please note: she often ends up wearing flip-flops by the time we exit the house.)

Owen: Ahhh! Two rainy’s this week. Not bad.

Cora: Sunny, sunny, and sunny! Three sunny days!!

OR. . .

Me: (After I read through the days of the week) Take a look at all the temperature highs and lows and tell me which day will be the warmest.

weather math | newspaper for math learning teachmama.comOr I’ll say something like:

  • Take a look at all of the temperature lows and let’s figure out which day will be the coolest.
  • Wow! One day this week will be in the 80’s–which day will that be?
  • Who can tell me if there’s a pattern in the week’s weather?
  • What do we need to wear on Thursday, with the temperature just over 60 degrees and rain predicted?
  • Let’s put the days in order from highest temperature to lowest.
  • What weather would come next in this pattern: rainy, sunny, sunny, rainy. . . ?

Or for Cora (or Owen or Maddy when they were younger):

  • Today it will be sunny and tomorrow will be sunny.  What will the weather be on Wednesday (as I point)?
  • How many rainy days will we have this week?
  • Will there be more rainy days or more sunny days this week?
  • What kind of shoes should we wear on this day (pointing to a rain cloud or big sun)?

That’s it. Just a teeny bit of sneaky learning over Cheerios, juice, and yogurt before the days starts and life gets crazy.

My focus is just to get the kids thinking about the day, looking forward toward the week, and talking (a little bit) about numbers, math, and (okay) a little bit of science.  And really, the non-fiction reading practice and interest in news doesn’t hurt, either.  Happy newspaper reading!

June 12, 2011 14 comments
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quick trick: how to use recyclables with kids–get fun, crafty, creative

by Teach Mama June 8, 2011
written by Teach Mama

With summer right around the corner and kids home a lot more than usual, many of us need to keep a few tricks in our back pocket for rainy days or those occasions when we feel like we might lose our minds.

This Quick Trick is certainly a keeper; it’s all about what kinds of recyclables parents should keep–and how they can use them with their kids–for unusual, free, earth-friendly fun.

Many of my friends have said, Seriously, Amy, why didn’t I think of saving those yogurt cups? or Smart idea to use those play-doh containers for sand toys–who cares if you lose one, right? And I’m totally not sharing this to toot my own horn; I’m sharing it because these are things we all can do–things we all can save and bring back to life in new and exciting ways for our kids.

I grew up with an extremely creative and resourceful mom–she kept things most people didn’t keep and taught us to use them in cool, new ways. We played with buttons, ribbons, material, and boxes like they were million dollar toys. Don’t get me wrong; we had Cabbage Patch Kids and Barbies and Legos, but sometimes, the ‘untoys’ were just as cool.

So here are the things you should consider keeping instead of immediately throwing into the recycling bin, starting now.

And if you are interested in having this in one happy, printable list, either print the post or scroll to the end.

  • Lids: Any and all lids, from milk cartons to juice containers, from peanut butter jars to fluff containers.
  • Why: They live a double life–no joking. They start out as lids and then morph into toys and learning games. Use them for:
  1. Sorting: by colors, shapes, sizes, textures. Throw pieces of colored construction paper on the floor and help your little one match the colored lids to the correct color paper.
  2. Throwing: experiment with gross motor practice (in a safe environment). Use some bowls or plates as targets, and see how many make it to the designated point.
  3. Playing math games: assign bowls, cups, and containers point values, put initials inside the lids, and keep score!
  4. Letter games and word building: with a few alphabet stickers stuck on (or written on with a permanent marker) these little lids spells F-U-N.
  5. Building: throw a pile on the table or floor and challenge your kids to create. They will.

 

Kids can build words with letter lids. . .

. . . or just build sculptures with them.

  • Play-doh Containers: If you buy the stuff in the yellow containers, keep them.
  • Why: Kids not only love cleaning them in a big, soapy celebration on a hot summer day, but these things are perfect for:
  1. Using in the sand or dirt: who cares if you lose them or if another family takes them home?
  2. Holding beads, sequins, stickers-anything small: use chopsticks or tongs to move objects from one place to another for fine motor practice. Have kids move pom-poms, beads, buttons, cottonballs, whatever.
  3. Taking them to the pool: throw these pups into your pool bag for baby pool especially–because, again, you won’t care if you lose them, and it will boggle your mind how kids will reach for them.

 

Clean the play-doh containers and save the lids–add them to your lid collection!

 

  • Yogurt Containers: Any size, but we love the small Yoplait and Danonino ones
  • Why: Run them through the dishwasher, and the possibilities for these guys are endless:
  1. Snack holders: perfect for tiny hands, stacking together, throwing in a ziplock, and dishing out at park playdates.
  2. Stackables, pyramid-builders: how many can your kids stack up and how sturdy can they make a pyramid on the kitchen floor?
  3. Counting games: throw numbers on the bottom, mix them up, and have kids put them in order!
  4. Spelling, and letter games: same as with numbers, but add letters!
  5. Tissue paper flower vases: when you want to make flowers that last forever, you can make a little something pretty with them.

 

Yogurt cup counting games

Who knew fruit containers could become so darn pretty?

  • Apple sauce or mixed fruit containers: Love these.
  • Why: Use them for:
  1. Water dishes for painting or crafting: they hold up remarkably well, and everyone knows when it’s time to change the water.
  2. Shakers: add some tiny beads, some ribbon, and stick two together for a shakin’ good time.
  3. Pretend play: add these to your play kitchen as bowls for kids or pets!

Don’t be afraid–these helped us talk about emotions!

  • Paper rolls: Paper towel rolls, toilet paper rolls, any rolls will do
  • Why: Use them for fun, crafty, unusual ways:
  1. Making family dolls: print out pictures or glue old ones onto a paper roll and have a few good laughs
  2. Talking about emotions with kids: same as above but make sure the photos show different emotions–happy, angry, sad, surprised–and do some role-playing, talking about emotions and how to handle them
  3. Target practice: (thanks to my pal, MaryLea of Pink and Green Mama) decorate some rolls, then set them up outside and squirt away!!
  4. Print making: (again, thanks to MaryLea) cut rolls into about 4-5 pieces, fold into different shapes (think diamond, clover, flower petal, etc) dip in paint, and print!

 

Kids have to be so careful with them when they’re full that they love to have egg cartons as playthings. . .

  • Egg cartons: Keep them, keep them, keep them! Kids love these!
  • Why: With the tiny little compartments already built in, these are great for sorting, playing, cutting, and combining.
  1. Color sorting: you know we love any excuse to play with candy over here, so this combined candy, colors, and chopsticks and let the kids move candy from one bowl to designated compartments inside an egg carton.
  2. Tiny things holder: Cora loves to cut paper and store the pieces inside, in different compartments

 

 

Color Hunts are more fun with recycled jars to keep colors separate.

  • Jars: From pickles, rice, peppers, baby food, whatever, whether glass or plastic, jars can–and have–been re-used for years.
  • Why: Have kids clean them out in soapy water, and let them start collecting!
  1. Outside color hunt: (or inside, if you choose!)  Label each jar a different color and hunt for items outside to put into each jar.  Perfect for a cooler day or one that’s rainy and grey–just bring in inside.
  2. Spend, Save, and Give jars: to teach your kiddos smart money sense and have them put aside a certain percent of their money in each jar–maybe 60% save; 30% spend; 10% give?
  3. Gem Jars: play on positive behavior and try something new.  Award kiddos a ‘gem’ for each awesome behavior caught by you!  When gem jars are full, it’s time for a small celebration or reward.

Once, a coffee can. Now, a park explorer kit. . .

  • Coffee Cans: plastic or tin, keep these for sure.
  • Why: They’re big, sturdy, and they’ve got tight-fitting lids. Just make sure to clean them thoroughly so that kids don’t complain about coffee smell.
  1. Coffee-can stilts: poke holes through the bottom of the can and tie strong yarn or string through, making sure it reaches hands. Then–with support and watchful eyes–let your kids try to walk! (Gulp.)
  2. Park explorer kits: soon to be shared on PBS Parents, essentially this is an all-in-one park explorer kit that fits happily inside a coffee can.

 

 

a cardboard box, or a sensory box?!

  • Cardboard Box: In any size, these are more fun than you’d expect for kids of almost any age.
  • Why: Either with some prompting and focus, or just with free play, boxes can be houses, cars, games, or learning materials.
  1. Sensory Box: one of my kids’ favorite guessing games, playing with senses.  Players take turns hiding an object in the box and having their friend guess what’s inside, using only their sense of touch.
  2. Shoelace Box: teach little ones to tie shoes or even to braid using a cardboard shoe box (and check out the linky below the shoelace box post to read 50 other ways of using cardboard boxes for learning and play!

 

oh, the fun to be had with a lonely sock

A few other things to think about before you toss them:

  • Socks: The clean, lonely ones of course! Make sock puppets!
  • Kid plates: we love these as divided craft palates, as holders for paint and/or water, or for bead sorting.
  • Bottle caps: for ornaments, for bingo markers, for pretty ornaments or bookmarks.
  • Tiny tins: from mints, sweets, or gum, these are great to keep. Who knows when your kids will ask to go on a teeny, tiny hunt?
  • Toothbrushes: yes, for making painting CRA-ZY fun! Draw a big, ole mouth and have kids paint really clean teeth–or really dirty teeth.
  • Milk cartons: the gallon ones, to make bird feeders, of course.
  • Paint swatches: from the paint store, from the days of trying desperately to figure out the best color for your playroom.  I used cardstock in this activity with paperclips, but use paint swatches!

Want a list of Recyclables: What to Keep and Why to hang on your fridge? It’s here to download as a pdf. Woot!

What recyclables does your family keep and how do you use them?

Let’s make this Quick Trick everyone’s Quick Trick and share your ways of using recyclables for games, crafts, and learning.  Take a sec to leave a comment here or link back to one of your recycled-item posts!

Check out how to make Rainbow Loom Bracelets without the loom!

 

June 8, 2011 44 comments
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activating schema get kids ready for reading
activating schemacomprehensionreading

learning during read-alouds: activating schema

by Teach Mama June 1, 2011
written by Teach Mama

activating schema get kids ready for reading

According to Rachel and Mary Gabriel, the “schema theory tells us that prior knowledge is essential for comprehension of new knowledge and that learning difficulties can often be traced back to insufficient background knowledge” (Gabriel & Gabriel, “Power in Pictures: How a Schoolwide Photo Library Can Build a Community of Readers and Writers.” The Reading Teacher, 63(8), pp. 679.).

Parents and teachers can help our little ones pull from their growing schema so that they can better understand and appreciate the texts we’re reading to them in read-alouds. Activating their prior knowledge or experience with a certain topic will increase their comprehension even before the children are reading the text themselves.

We can do this with ease, and it won’t take too much time at all.

And watching that lightbulb go off for your kiddo when she picks up a book about animal footprints and you remind her about the time she found raccoon prints (or whatever they were!), on the walk to the park last spring–it’ll be worth a million bucks. Not to mention that it’ll make her even more invested in the book and more able to make connections to the concepts, which will help her to understand everything that much better!

  • Activating Schema: Activating schema is just a fancy schmancy way of saying that a person is pulling from prior experience or involvement with a topic in order to better understand a new subject.

We can show children how to activate schema in the short span of one read-aloud, and if we deliberately model and practice the technique, it can become a strategy kiddos will begin to use automatically!

Everyone knows that certain textures, tastes, sounds, or smells have the power to bring us back to an experience that may seem long forgotten. Maybe it’s the woman on the train wearing your grandmother’s perfume or the smell of your great-aunt’s famous pumpkin muffins wafting from a neighborhood bakery. Whatever it may be, one little spark can trigger an avalanche of memories, so it only makes sense to draw on those pieces of information (called, “schemata”) in order for our children to create new and fuller understandings.

 

Reading a book about a bakery?

Talk about the times you’ve spent in bakeries, the foods you ate,
the smells, the sounds.

 

Depending on how much time, effort, and preparation you have, activating schema can be done with low-prep, medium-prep, or high-prep manner. Here are just a few of the many ways to activate prior knowledge:

  • Low-Prep: Just talk about what your child knows about a subject before you read the text. Ask him, What do you remember about being on a plane? How did it sound? What did you eat? How did you feel? Then introduce the text and start reading!
  • Medium-Prep: Gather several photos of your child from a time when she was in a situation similar to what he will read about in the text. Look at the pictures together and talk about what she sees in the photos, what she remembers personally from the experience, and what she liked–or disliked–about the experience.
  • High-Prep: Create a box or bag filled with items that relate to the subject of a text. For a book about the beach, grab some seashells, sand, a towel, and sunscreen. Have your child take the items out, one by one, and chat about how the items feel, smell, sound, and taste (if applicable). Talk about what your child knows about each item and how those items connect to the subject of the book.

Activating schema is just one reading comprehension strategy that parents can model, practice, and use with their children during read-alouds. It doesn’t have to be something formal; you can go through these steps casually, and you can use it in along with other strategies–like connecting or predicting–to further increase your child’s understanding of a text. The more we use these strategies now, before our kids are reading, the more likely that the strategies will become habits when our readers get older!

Originally posted as a series on ABC and 123: A Learning Cooperative, this is part of a series I’m doing here on Learning During Read-Alouds.

Next up is a biggie, one that I’ve had help with from the experts over at we teach: 5 Things Never to Say to Emerging Readers.

June 1, 2011 18 comments
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a game for practicing spelling, sight words, or letters: WORDO!
early literacy

a game for practicing spelling, sight words, or letters: WORDO!

by Teach Mama May 26, 2011
written by Teach Mama

a game for practicing spelling, sight words, or letters: WORDO | teachmama.com

With the end of the school year quickly approaching, we’re all getting antsy for summer.

So I’ve had to be super crafty during our work time in order to keep Maddy, Owen, and Cora engaged and excited.  As I’ve said before, most days I go with whatever Owen and Cora are up for doing, but at least 2-3 times a week I sneak in some deliberate math or literacy learning.

This week and last, I’ve hit the jackpot with a game that everyone wants to play–Maddy included.  WORDO! WORDO! totally rocks because it’s so completely adaptable to just about every game you need, similar to our pal, Tic-Tac-Toe. We’ve used WORDO! to practice Maddy’s spelling words (a very difficult list. . .), to practice sight words with Owen, and to practice letter writing and recognition with Cora. All at the same time.

I haven’t pulled out WORDO! for ages (gulp! it was the summer before Maddy entered kindergarten!), but when I finally did, they all loved it.

WORDO! is crazy simple. Here’s what we did:

  • WORDO! (to practice spelling words, sight words, letters–or just about anything!): All you need to play WORDO! is a board and some cards to flash.

You can download the wordo boards here as a pdf, and there are four boards in the document.

a game for practicing spelling, sight words, or letters: WORDO!

 

Maddy plays WORDO! to practice spelling words.

To play WORDO!, every player gets a board. These WORDO! boards have nine boxes, 3 x 3.

And then depending on what your focus is–spelling words, sight words, letters, numbers, family names, whatever–each person chooses nine words from a set of flash cards to write in the boxes. A different word goes in each box.

Then, just like BINGO, someone flips the cards, and when a word is chosen that’s on your board, you cover it up. We play that a full board wins.

Maddy remembered playing the game, so when I suggested that Owen, Cora, and I play while Maddy finished her homework, she said, Noooooo! I want to play. Pleasepleaseplease? I can do my spelling words! It’ll be perfect.

So that’s what we did. She took a break from her work, got her spelling word cards, and chose nine words for her board.

a game for practicing spelling, sight words, or letters: WORDO!

Owen chooses the sight words he wants for his WORDO! board.

While Maddy wrote her words, Owen chose nine words from his early emergent word list.

When he was finished, I gave him high fives, and then I placed 3-4 word cards next to the board. I said, You did a great job, Owen, writing these words, but take a minute to double-check these three (or four) words before we begin.

I did this so that he was checking his work and so it wasn’t me who was saying, Oh great job but this is wrong and this is wrong and this is wrong. . .

Presenting kiddos with something along the line of ‘check your work‘ helps them recognize their successes (Hey! MY word looks just like the word on the card–I’m CORRECT!!) and it helps them recognize when they need to revise (Whoops–there’s an ‘n’ instead of an ‘m’ at the end of ‘can’; I better change it!).

a game for practicing spelling, sight words, or letters: WORDO! a game for practicing spelling, sight words, or letters: WORDO!

Owen checks the words on his board. . .

. . . and here he’s playing game 2 (or 3 or 4)!

a game for practicing spelling, sight words, or letters: WORDO!

I pulled nine uppercase alphabet letters for Cora to use for her WORDO! boards. The first time I pulled the letters of her name, and several letters I knew she frequently mixed up (M/ W) and then some ones I knew she could write easily (O, X, P).

I wanted her to practice the letters of her name, I wanted to challenge her a little, and I wanted her to have some certain successes.

 

So after each board was created, Maddy, Owen, and Cora each had a small pile of 12 cards next to them.  Nine of the cards were definitely on their board, and the three extra would throw them off a bit, mix-up our game a little.

Once everyone was ready and had nine markers–either ‘gems’ from our gem jar, beads from our bead box, or a combo of both.   I’d say, Okay. . . FLIP! and they’d flip a card, search for it on their board, and cover it if they had it. That’s it.

And the first person to fill his or her board yelled, WORDO! as loud as he or she could. (I secretly think this was everyone’s favorite part.)

a game for practicing spelling, sight words, or letters: WORDO!

 

Cora carefully covers the letters on her board.

 a game for practicing spelling, sight words, or letters: WORDO!

So we played WORDO! for a few days last week and a few days this week, and the kids have been happy. I’m betting the long weekend ahead will knock us out of our WORDO! craze, but if it doesn’t, we’ll just keep playing.

I like it because it works for everyone–Maddy, Owen, and Cora, and though it was tough at first to get everyone into the swing of flipping together, we have it now, and it’s cool.  Everyone waits, everyone helps, and everyone celebrates. . . most of the time.

a game for practicing spelling, sight words, or letters: WORDO!

Sometimes we mix it up, and here’s how:

  • we use M & M’s for our markers (looove this one!)
  • they write with rainbow colors on their board
  • they choose each others’ words/ letters
  • they flip for each other
  • they use stickers as markers. . .

Our summertime plan is to:

  • introduce Owen to the upper emergent words
  • maybe throw in an early fluency words or even fluency words
  • review Maddy’s spelling words–pull from the lists she’s covered this past year
  • use alphabet cards and number cards for Maddy and Owen so they can learn spelling list-math words list 1
  • continue alphabet cards & games teachmama.comfor Cora, trying uppercase and mix in some lowercase

And that’s it–a little bit of learning, a lot of fun, and a teeny bit of our day! Happy WORDO! playing!

Want a few more alphabet activities? Check out:

  • backyard alphabet hunt
  • homemade alphabet book
  • leafy letter learning
  • ABC hunt
  • on the road ABC hunt
  • lowercase ABC hunt
  • build your own bingo: uppercase and lowercase match
  • ABC cards and clothespin match
  • alphabet letter splash
  • alphabingo (play with lowercase letters)
  • alphabet letter lids
  • leafy outdoor alphabet hunt
  • build your own board game
  • clothespin letter match
  • 10 fun ways to learn the alphabet

 

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May 26, 2011 25 comments
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learning during read-alouds: making connections
comprehensionconnectingreading

learning during read-alouds: making connections

by Teach Mama May 15, 2011
written by Teach Mama

connectionsMy kiddos are huge fans of popping pop beads, stringing beads, connecting nuts and bolts, and just sticking things together.

Not only are these great activities to help develop kiddos’ fine motor skills, but it shows how connecting–putting things together–is a natural inclination for people.

I’ve found that among all of the comprehension strategies out there, connecting is one of the easiest for children to learn and for parents to model. It’s one that we do around here most often, without thinking, because it’s natural to try to figure out where we fit compared to the world around us.

Many important reading comprehension strategies can be taught to children even before children can read–they just take some solid modeling by parents and teachers during read alouds. Connecting, activating schema, questioning, predicting, visualizing, inferring, determining importance, or synthesizing, can all be taught in casual, relaxed–but meaningful–ways during the short span of a read aloud.

Here are a few ways parents can model for their children the reading comprehension strategy of making connections:

  • Making Connections: Making connections is usually one of the first reading comprehension strategies that children do naturally when reading a text, since most young ones looove to talk about themselves.

When your daughter shouts, Mommy! I have the same pink tutu as Zoe! while reading a Sesame Street book, she’s making a connection. Your son is making a connection when he says, Hey! There’s a clown fish like Nemo! during your trip to the aquarium. When Arthur’s Family Vacation gets your kiddos reminiscing about your own family’s crazy beach trip, they’re all making connections.

Connecting allows readers to relate directly to the characters, events, or ideas in a text. When readers are able to draw a connection to a text, they’re more likely to remember what they’re reading, appreciate what they’re reading, and be more invested in what they’re reading. Connections can be personal (self-to-text), they can be between two texts (text-to-text), or they can be between the text and some other world event (text-to-world).

During read alouds, parents or teachers can model connection-making by saying something like:

  • I remember feeling the same way when I lost my favorite lovie. . .
  • Oh, Lilly is so excited about her purse, she just can’t stop talking about it. When you got your new shoes, you felt the same way! Remember, you wanted to tell everyone how happy you were. . .
  • It’s sometimes difficult to try new things. Michael in this book is just like Taylor in the book we read yesterday. . .
  • It looks like the people in this story are really struggling with litterbugs. We just worked hard to pick up the litter we found in our park. . .
  • Remember how the girl in The Gardner sent letters to her family while she was away, the little boy in this book. . .

Connections are pretty easy to make, no matter the text. And modeling this strategy doesn’t have to be a huge, time-consuming endeavor. If one or two connections are made during one read aloud, that’s great. Our hope is that when emerging readers–and even toddlers or preschoolers–hear the adults in their lives making natural connections as they read, that the little ones, too, will make connections when they are the ones decoding the text.

And when readers make connections, they’re drawing themselves closer to the text which will ultimately help them to better understand what they read. Very simply, we’re hoping that our little ones will pick up on the habits of strong readers early on, and then they will naturally use these strategies on their own when they’re able. Pretty awesome, right?

Originally posted as a series on ABC and 123: A Learning Cooperative, this is part of a series I’m starting here on Learning During Read-Alouds.

May 15, 2011 12 comments
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how to teach kids to tie their shoes
Best Of Teach Mamafoundations

how to teach kids to tie their shoes

by Teach Mama May 6, 2011
written by Teach Mama

This Quick Trick is admittedly a work in progress. While Owen hasn’t quite mastered tying his shoes yet, he’s getting there. Slowly.

He expressed interest last summer to learn how to tie his shoes, but each time we sat down to try it, he balked. Now, as he’s only a few months away from making the big leap into kindergarten, he’s ready to learn how to tie those kicks, solo.how to teach kids to tie their shoes

For many preschoolers and early elementary students, learning how to tie their shoes takes a simultaneous jiving of both fine motor skill readiness and cognitive readiness. Learning how to tie shoes takes a huge heap of concentration, and kiddos must be at a developmental stage where they are able to try, fail, try again, fail again, and re-try until it finally clicks.  That’s the hard part.

Oh, and they have to want to learn how to do it. If they don’t want to do it, forgettabout it.

That’s where were were last summer with Owen.  But now, he wants to learn, and seriously, just like potty training, I feel like I’ve got to jump on this train while it’s here. Or it might not arrive again until he’s in like second–or fifth–grade.

So when I was invited to participate in a Cardboard Box Creative Challenge this week, I knew exactly what we needed to do.  I  grabbed a small cardboard box, some ribbon, and a huge chunk of patience, and I set out to create a little something that I thought would help the O-Man learn to tie his shoes: A Shoelace Box.

Or, as Owen named it, Ribbon Rows.

Here’s the skinny. . .

How to Teach Kids to Tie Their Shoes:

how to teach kids to tie their shoes Owen cuts ribbon for his Shoelace Box

I grabbed a small cardboard box, a shoe box, and I gathered tons of ribbon and string from our ribbon bag.

I made several holes on the box: three sets of two holes, one inch apart on the top and two sets of holes on each side.

 

how to teach kids to tie their shoes Owen threads the ribbon through the holes.

I wanted a variety of textures in the ribbons and string I chose so that some would be thick, some thin, some long, some short, some rough, and some smooth.

how to teach kids to tie their shoes

 

My thinking was that some would be easier than others, and whatever worked we’d go with.

I was also thinking that once he got the tying thing down pat, he could use the other lengths and textures to hone his new skeeeels.

We used the language that I had heard but was not taught–that each loop was a ‘bunny ear’, but that wasn’t sticking, so I moved to something that I knew would: swords.  I used the image of a sword fight, since I thought it would be more enticing than bunny ears. I was right.

Make one sword, then make the other. Then cross them. Bam! This guy ducks under, through, and PULL!

how to teach kids to tie their shoes

Owen tries the loop–or sword–as we called it.

how to teach kids to tie their shoes

how to teach kids to tie their shoes He stayed with it, but it got ugly at times. . .

 

But it was frustrating, slippery, and challenging for him–even though his brain and hands seemed ready.

So we took some breaks, focused on his successes, which was the first part. He could totally complete the first step in shoe-tying; it was just the blasted bunny ear/ sword part that got him all jumbled up.

We took breaks, and tried and re-tried.  Rewarded and took deep breaths.

And then we had a break-through. . .

——————————————————————-

BIG CHANGES! BIG CHANGES: two-toned ribbon did the trick!

After a few days with Owen practicing on his Shoelace Box, I noticed he was still having a hard time with the second part of tying–the looping under and pulling through.

So I un-taped his box and took out the red ribbon on the bottom and the white ribbon in the middle; I tied them together so that one side was red and the other side was white, and the two-toned ribbon made a world of difference!

how to teach kids to tie their shoes

Owen rocks out his *new* box. . .

how to teach kids to tie their shoes

. . . and seems to have an easier time keeping track of loops and pulls.

how to teach kids to tie their shoes

So, so, so, SO happy!

We figured out something that will work–and he wants to try to tie a few times each day. Some days we forget, and some days he’s not feeling it, but most days, he’s ready to practice tying his shoes.

Woot!  Now I have TWO kids who can tie their shoes in ONE house! I can hardly contain my excitement!

how to teach kids to tie their shoes

Want another few fun ways for using shoeboxes? Check out 2 Cool Ways to Use Shoeboxes or Learning & Fun with Recyclables!

 

Check out a few other posts that may help you develop strong and healthy habits for your family:

  • wait time
  • my day, your day
  • frozen peas
  • kids who rock the kitchen
  • kids who rock the laundry
  • rest time
  • gem jars
  • arm circles
  • noticing kids
  • homework routine

 

fyi: Some of the links in the post above are “affiliate links.” This means if you click on the link and purchase the item, I will receive an affiliate commission. Forever and always I recommend only products or services I use personally and believe will add value to my readers. I am disclosing this in accordance with the Federal Trade Commission’s 16 CFR, Part 255: “Guides Concerning the Use of Endorsements and Testimonials in Advertising.”  For more information, please see teachmama media, llc. disclosure policy. 

May 6, 2011 44 comments
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Hi! I'm Patricia.

nice to meet you!

My family currently lives in Central Texas. A few of my favorite things include baking, teaching, and working with children.

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About Me

I love to cook, create delicious recipes with beautiful photos. I also share my life stories and my relationship with food.

Phone: (012) 345 6789
Email: pencidesign@gmail.com

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