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Friday, October 25, 2013

Five Little Pumpkins

   

Our poem this week was The Five Little Pumpkins.  On Friday we made our own Five Little Pumpkins project to take home.  Students had to look at the first letters of each speech bubble and try to read the words to get the speech bubbles in the right order.  I precut brown strips and orange circles to save on time.  We glued the title and pumpkins on the front and the rest of the poem on the back.  Click here for a free copy :)

  
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Tuesday, October 22, 2013

Sorting Mats

I have  my students use the words their way sorts to work on phonics skills in the classroom.  They are partnered up with a student on their phonics skill level to assist them with this work.  They do the same sort twice a week.  On Mondays they are expected to sort out all of the cards and put them in the right category.  If they finish early they can pick up a card and verbally ask their partner what letter the picture starts with or how to spell the word depending on what type of sort they are working on.  If you do not have the words their way program it is very easy to type up a list of words and have students work on categorizing them.  I like to take the sorts and laminate them ahead of time.  This cuts down on all the time it takes for students to cut them out.  Then I place them in a small envelope and rotate the sort through my groups based on their ability.  On Wednesday pairs re-sort their cards and put them under the correct category again, moving faster this time.  After their sort is complete they use a sorting sheet to record their answers.  Partners take turns quizzing each other over how to spell words and this time they write it on their recording sheet.  I like to put the sheets in a page protector and have students use a dry erase marker to play the game.  This allows students much need writing practice along with reading the words.  



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Tuesday, October 15, 2013

CVC Phonics Activities

The majority of my class knows all of their letters and sounds now. We are moving on to CVC activities. This will allow students that need to still learn a few sounds that opportunity, but will teach students how to blend sounds together in order to read and write three letter words. We start each morning using our CVC folders. This 5-7 minute activity packs in a lot of great skill work. We work on reading words, blending sounds, learning onsets and rhymes, identifying nouns and verbs, and writing words. After we complete our "warm up" we move on to a 15-20 minute for each day of the week.



\You can purchase the cvc folder activity and cvc posters that make great references for students by                                                                clicking on the following links.                                   
                      folder                                                                                     posters




                                                                Monday Letter Swap
Each student has their whiteboard out and we start by writing a three letter word. Students write the word large enough to take up the entire whiteboard. Then I pick a new word that is very similar to the one we previously had the board. Only one letter needs to be changed out to make the new word. For example if the word was hot. I might say the new word is pot. Erase one letter on your board to change hot to pot. I call on one student to come up and point to the new letter on the classroom alphabet. The kids sing "letter swap, swap a letter to make a word" while the student finds and points to the new letter we need to make the word. Then I pick a new word changing only one letter again. Pot becomes pat, pat to pad, pad to sad and so on.






                                                                          Tuesday Basketball Plinko
We ordered this from oriental trading. We taped letters on the basketballs and chunks at the bottom. One student comes up and drops a basketball down the board. They read the onset and rhyme and we decide if it is a real word or a nonsense word. Students are given a recording sheet and write the word on the correct side. A new student is called on and the game is repeated. A different letter is written on the front and the back of the basketballs to give opportunities to create different words each Tuesday when this game is played.






Wednesday Slide Show
All of the chunks are put into a slide show and projected one slide at a time. Each week a new letter is picked to put in front of each chunk. I click through the slides having a student read the word. We decide if it is a real or nonsense word. If the word is real we write it on our recording sheet and draw a picture to represent it. If it is a nonsense word we go on to the next slide.  Click on the cvc words game picture to purchase this game for $1.00.






    



                                                Thursday Spin the Wheel

We ordered this prize wheel from oriental trading and tape word family chunks to it. One student comes up and spins the wheel. We write down the chunk that it lands on at the top of our whiteboard. Then we come up with a list of words that you can make from that word family. We erase our boards and have a new student spin and repeat with the new chunk it lands on.






                                                               Friday Letter Vests
Each student is given a vest to wear. To start the game three students are called to the front to make a word. I have each student wearing a letter say their sound loudly and then as a class we repeat the sounds and blend the word. Every child sits at their desk and has a whiteboard, they all write the word down. One child is asked to sit down and a new one comes up in their place. For example if 3 students are standing up front wearing b-u-g. To make the new word I would sing: (Tune: Alice the Camel)
Letter Uu can sit down, Letter Aa can come up, letter Aa can come up,
So we can make a word boom, boom, boom
Students erase the u and change it to an a on their whiteboards. Then the 3 students standing up front say their sound and the class blends the new word.




Monday, October 14, 2013

Class Goals

This year my classroom has a carnival theme. I decided to make my goals board match my theme. I set a reading, writing, and math goal for students to achieve every couple of months. This helps me pace out the year and provides me a good visual of how close the class is to mastering each goal.



I made a sight word tracking board as well. I brake my sight word lists up into different colored books. When a student masters a list they move on to the next colored book. They get to color in one juggling ball each time they move to a new list of words. They color the ball the matching color of the book they are on. See my previous post for more details about what the books look like.




I changed my sight words bulletin board to popcorn words. My students have been noticing popcorn words popping up everywhere. When they find a sight word on a worksheet they butter the popcorn word by highlighting it with a yellow crayon.


Friday, October 4, 2013

Letter Sound Activities K.RFS.1d, K.RFS.2c, K.RFS.2d, K.RFS.3a,

For 20 minutes each morning we work on letter sounds whole group since at least 80% of my class has not mastered all letters and sounds. I use 5 different activities, one for each day of the week.

Bingo
Everyone has their own bingo card. I call out words and they use a chip to cover the letter that begins with that word. I put a bingo sheet under the document camera and shine it on the whiteboard. I circle the letter after I call on a student to say what the word begins with. This is a good visual for the kids struggling with recognizing letters.
* After a few weeks I use this same game to work on ending sounds, saying a word and having students put a chip on the letter that correspondences to the last sound in the word.

Objects in a bag
I love the lakeshore alphabet teaching tubs, but this would work with any small items. I place 20 objects that have 3 or 4 sounds that can be heard in the word into a denim bag. We sit in a circle, every student has their whiteboard and marker. Then one child picks something out of the bag. We all say the name of the object and I chop up the word several times slowly. For example if a goat is drawn. I would say /g/ /o/ /t/. Write the sounds you hear in /g/ /o/ /t/. After a minute or so I write it on my whiteboard saying each individual sound. If these aren't the sounds they thought they can erase and write them. Then we put our finger under each sound and say them slowly then quick to blend the sounds. We usually do 8-10 objects in one setting. I write down who got a turn and who needs a turn to pick an item next week.



ABC template
I put this document up on the whiteboard as a visual and each student has their own copy in a page protector sleeve.
I tell them to put their finger on the row with one of the pictures and then say a word that starts with one of the letters in that row. I call a student to identify the beginning sound. For example put your finger on the smiley face. What does pencil start with? Students trace over the p with their dry erase marker.
* I change this to ending sounds after a few weeks. For example what is the last sound in map or what do you hear at the end of the word map.
I let students be the teacher and tell us what icon to put our finger on and make the sound for the letter we should trace. I call the student by their last name and everyone gets a chance to be the teacher. This keeps everyone engaged!



Sorting cards
I use the lakeshore alphabet sounds photo library cards for this activity. However, any picture cards would work. I choose three different letters aNd hand out a picture card that starts with one of those letters to each student. Then they come to the carpet and sit on their card until it is their turn. We sit in a circle and each child has a turn to say the name if the object pictured and sort it into the right category.
* After a few weeks I move on to ending sounds sorts.



Jeopardy games
I have all of my students come to the carpet with their whiteboards to use as a lap board. I pass out a recording sheet to each student (this can be printed of, it's the last slide on the game.). I divide the class into two teams. We play boys vs girls. I call on a boy to pick a category and point value. Everyone writes their answer on their recording sheet. I check the student who's turn it is and award that team the points. Then I call on a girl to pick a question and repeat the process. We usually do half of the game in one sitting and I collect their sheets to hand back out the next week. Click on the link for beginning sounds jeopardy and CVC jeopardy.



Tuesday, October 1, 2013

Writing Office

I have my students take out their offices during writing time. This has all the resources a writer needs right in front of them while they write. I tape 2 file folders together and glue on the resources. Then I run it through the laminator to make it more durable. On the left side I have all the sight words we learn for the year in alphabetical order. In the middle I put an alphabet chart, blends chart, and color words. On the right hand side I put all the word families or chunks we will work on throughout the year. I also include vowel patterns at the bottom of the office. On the back of the office I put all the things a good writer does. In the beginning of the year the office is mainly used as a way to keep kids focused on looking at their own paper, staying quiet, and thinking about their writing. I refer to the alphabet chart as kids begin to learn letters and sounds. Once the school year gets going and other skills are introduced students start to use all the resources they have right in front of them.