First Grade to the Zoo!

This is the first year I’ve taken kids to the zoo in the fall.  And you know, I wonder why we’ve never done it before!?  Who needs to be there in May when it’s hot and ALL of the other teachers around town also have the idea of going to the zoo during their animal unit?  We had the idea to go now, when we thought we’d have a chance for good weather as well as a chance to front-load our kiddos with information for when we do study animals later this year.  We tried it last year in 5th grade for our study on the Cahokians (went to Cahokia Mounds BEFORE the unit instead of after!) and it was great!  Once we got into the unit, there were so many times where we could tie our conversations to specific experiences we knew that all of our learners had been a part of.  This made the connections they created even more powerful!

That being said, we knew it this would be a great idea, and THANKFULLY we got one of those sunny, crisp and cool kind of all days instead of one of those St. Louis fall days that are cold, rainy and dreary!  Our kids were excited, we had loads of helpful parents and we were on our way!

Our kiddos went with a job–to take the temperature of certain places in the zoo and record the time as well as the temperature.  This would tie to the work in our Matter & Energy unit where they are expected to know how to do just this thing.  They decided on the places we’d record, as well, which made this an even more meaningful task.

Thanks to Mrs. Ross, Ms. Branco and Mrs. Buesching (plus a few of my own!) I have LOADS of pictures to share with you.  While I should probably caption every last one of them, I am just going to show them all to you here in a fabulous slide show.  It’s really hard not to smile when you see how stinking cute all the kids–and the animals–are!

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Just one more thing…I asked everyone what their favorite thing about the trip was and here’s what they said.  Priceless answers 🙂 :

Charlie: “Being in Landen’s group!”

Landen: “The picture I took with the bear!”

Amelia: “When I saw the giraffes…”

Makayla: “The elephants.”

Sara: “Seeing the zebras and being with my friends.”

JKB: “Penguins.”

Lauren: “We joined up with another group and spent time with our friends and took pictures together!”

Ava: “Elephant poop.”

Kylie: “The seal tunnel.”

C.J.: “Seeing the tigers, lions, giraffes, and zebras.”

Emily: “The reptile house.”

Millie: “We saw the seal show before lunch!”

Ella Marie: “The log with snake eggs and the zebras.”

Nate: “When we saw an eagle.”

Jacob: “I ate a second lunch.”

Peyton: “I got to stand by an eagle.”

Thomas: “Lions!”

Diego: “Lions!”

We had a great time and learned a ton!  I’m excited to see how this learning connects with our animal study that comes this Spring. 🙂  THANK YOU to the parents who helped make this happen!  What a fun day at one of the best zoos in the country! 🙂

Let Creativity Rule!

I am often inspired by things I see.  It goes with the kind of learner I tend to be, too, as things make more sense when I see them in addition to hearing them.  So let’s start with a picture.  It’s what inspired this post:

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If you have been around here for a while, you know that I am a thinker.  Sometimes I think too much.  Like I-can’t-get-to-sleep-for-a-long-time-at-night-because-my-brain-won’t-turn-off kind of thinking.  Most often, though, I can use my overactive brain for good things.

I discovered this bracelet the other night in my jewelry box, after not having worn it for a while.  I actually forgot I had it.  It was a gift from a fabulous family I’ve had the pleasure of working with at school.  I was lucky enough to have taught two of their children–one of them twice!  As I looked down at the charm, I thought of how “Let Creativity Rule” could really be one of the phrases for my life.  It seems to come up in so many places for me.

In my classroom, I try to be the kind of teacher who is a facilitator and a designer, rather than a dictator or an information-dumper (yeah, I just made that up, I think).  I believe that knowledge is most powerful when you create it for yourself, and that connections kids make on their own mean much more than ones I make for them.  I see my role as an educator as the one who helps create opportunities for my learners to figure things out, to put things together, to wonder and then discover answers for themselves.  Don’t get me wrong–there are times when you have to lay it all out there, because yes, there are some things that kiddos would never just find out without guidance.  But for the most part, I want my students to be in charge of their learning.

Alongside the opportunities, comes the freedom to make choices about how that learning will happen.  There are very few things in my classroom that I have to have happen a certain way; labeling is one of the things I care deeply about, as well as coloring-coding certain things we use all the time, as a means of helping to keep things organized.  Oh, and fonts.  I love them.  I collect them in fact, and usually have one as my “go-to” font for the year.  And yes, I have been known to recreate forms and sheets that people share with me because I have to make them look a certain way.  Hey–everyone has something like that right? But outside of those couple of things, my children are free to make decisions about what and how they learn things, as well as how they demonstrate that learning.  I want my kiddos to have a variety of ways to show what they know; not everyone can best do this with pencil and paper as is typical in many classrooms.  It is common for my students to show their understanding of a concept by building with Legos, using big wooden blocks, drawing a picture, acting it out, recording themselves talking about it, writing a story (or some other kind of explanation) and yes, sometimes by taking a test.  The possibilities are endless, and one of the things I like the best is that sometimes kids come up with ideas that are even better than an option I could have given them.  The point is showing me–as well as their classmates–that they understand what they’re learning.

I appreciate creativity in my life outside of school, as well.  Part of what balances me in my work life is taking the time to “play” and do things that bring out my crafty side.  I like to sew, to design, and to build things.  While I would not say I am particularly gifted in any of those areas, it’s another way to use my brain, and I enjoy seeing the products of my handiwork (and just in case you’re interested, I think I even wrote about it a few years ago on this blog…)

The other thing I was thinking as I was looking at my hand (that sounds really funny, doesn’t it?) is how important my family is to me.  My wedding rings remind me of my fabulous hubby and our amazing kids, and how lucky I am to have them.  I don’t think I would be the teacher I am, actually, without them.  I take so much of them to school with me, and they often help me think through struggles I’m having and help me solve problems (my son is really helping me this year since he was in 1st grade last year, I run a lot of ideas by him before I try them with my Rm. 202 kiddos!).  My husband is a teacher, as well, and I know that while there is a LOT of shop talk at our house, I am so grateful to have a spouse who “gets” what I do.  We have even taught the same grade levels at times, which makes for another layer of fun as we brainstorm classroom ideas together.  I have been thinking lately how much being a mom helps me as a teacher, too.  Don’t get me wrong, you can be a GREAT teacher without being a parent, but for me, there has been another level of understanding since I’ve had kids of my own.  Oh, and now that my kids are in school, I have a much better understanding of what it means to give your baby over to the care of someone else.  I am so blessed that the families I work with let me do that every day.  Believe me–I do my best to do them proud and take good care of their little ones, as I would hope would happen for mine!

It’s funny how just seeing something can spark so many things in your brain.  What image or picture have you been inspired by lately?  What phrase would you say defines your life?  How do you let your creativity rule?  I’d love to hear from you!  Feel free to leave a comment and tell me all about it! 🙂

Cup Stacking Challenge

You may have seen a post floating around Facebook and Pinterest about a STEM Cup Stacking Challenge:

Screen Shot 2014-10-05 at 8.45.16 PM(photo courtesy of corkboardconnections.blogspot.com)

It’s similar to the Marshmallow Challenge that I’ve done several years with my 5th graders: build something really tall with your supplies and your team, using cooperation and problem-solving.  Great idea for any group of kiddos, but I especially love it for littler ones who are just beginning to learn about what it takes to work together, try something and have it fail, then rework the plan to try again.  This activity fits the focus we have on being gritty, as well as having a growth mindset and trying even when things are hard.  And yes, the first time we did it, it was hard. 🙂

Cup Challenge Take 1:

The first time we did this challenge, kiddos had 30 cups, their small group and 12 minutes.  Most thought they were done in about 2 minutes, and most used the same strategy.  Do you see how all the towers look the same?  One thing that also happened during this is talking.  Loud talking.  And much arguing about what to do next.  So when we were finished with this first try, we sat together to talk about it.  We talked about plusses (things that went well) and deltas (things we could change next time):

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They noticed that our list of things to change was REALLY LONG and go busy thinking of ways to do things differently when we tried it again. (When I mentioned that we could do it again, by the way, there were many cheers from the rug!) Working on the floor instead of tables was suggested, as well as not being able to leave your own team’s spot.  We also agreed that they would get one warning about their voices and then any teams that were still loud would have to work the rest of the time in silence.  Oh, and one more change was more time–they got 18 minutes instead of 12 (which was really the original plan anyway, we just ran out of time).

Cup Challenge Take 2:

Check out our chart the second time around.  They were SO EXCITED about how the columns had changed!

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What a change that happened when kiddos reflected on what worked–and what didn’t–and then planned how to redo the challenge in a different way.  I’m excited to see all of the many things they learned here, and how those lessons touched so many subjects at one time! Way to go, Rm. 202 kids! 🙂

Brain Breaks Rock!

I have posted already about how we’re movers and shakers in Rm. 202, and we are learning how to control our bodies.  We’re learning how to figure out what we need to be good listeners and thinkers.   So in order to do that, we’re taking short breaks to recharge our brains and use our energy in a positive way.

Here are some breaks we’ve been using (thanks Mrs. Morgan for sharing this one!):

We really like #3.  Excited to try #1, too!  Well, really they all look good. :)

We really like #3. Excited to try #1, too! Well, really they all look good. 🙂

Earlier this week, Mrs. Raeber (Nate’s mom) shared another site with brain breaks, too (from a blog called Minds in Bloom), so we’ve tried some of those out as well.  She reminded me that we already do dance party and today we played Find it Fast, where kiddos have to find something around the room that is a certain color.

ANOTHER resource (wow–I’ve got a lot of smart people sharing smart things with me lately!) came from Mrs. Appelbaum (remember how she also shared her book David’s Drawings with us?  Genius!): GoNoodle.com.   I think this is probably our favorite one.  It’s really just a collection of short videos that you can watch that help lead you through an activity–some are fast and crazy (like Run Like Kitty where you really just run in place for 2 minutes really fast!) and many are more like yoga, where a funny monkey-man named Maximo (who has an AWESOME accent) helps you move your body in a more controlled way.

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I’m pretty sure we did this silly one in the morning after we had done some heavy-duty thinking with Mrs. Berger. It’s called The Funky Chicken.

A little later in the morning--again when we'd been sitting for a while--we chose to do this one where Maximo lead us through "Surfer Dude."

A little later in the morning–again when we’d been sitting for a while–we chose to do this one where Maximo lead us through “Surfer Dude.”

I’m loving the difference I can see in their ability to concentrate and think (not just sit still) after they’ve moved a bit.  I think perhaps the perfect example from today of our movement breaks working well for a learner came when a little friend was asked to play a math game and was instead bouncing around the floor.  Earlier this week I put window clings up near our trampoline (sorry, I forgot to take a picture!) that have numbers 1-10, with the intent that kiddos could bounce and tap or count or whatnot with them as they were moving.  I sent my friend to the trampoline and asked her to bounce to 20 (which was the topic of the game she was trying to play) and tap the pictures as she did it.  She wasn’t over there long, but after her 20 bounces, she was much calmer and played the rest of her game in such a focused way!  YAY! 🙂

I’m excited to continue to try new things, and celebrate how they help my friends become better learners.  It’s really so rewarding when you can help a kiddo figure out how to be the best version of themselves–we’re getting there!

Teachers: How do you use brain breaks in your classroom?  Parents: What are your kiddos saying about our movement breaks?  Share your stories!! 🙂

Moving and Grooving: Trampoline

In the post I wrote about the First Days of First Grade–Part 1, I mentioned that we’ve been doing a lot to help our bodies learn how to move appropriately, as well as to keep our brains alert for learning.  In that post I shared about our dance parties (which are still going strong and are a TON of fun!), and this time it’s our trampoline.

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Ok, so looks just a boring trampoline in the corner.  But really it’s a learning tool.  Let me explain…

So I can’t really take any credit for the idea of the trampoline or the placement of the trampoline, or even the plan for how to use the trampoline–just for being the one to buy the actual trampoline. 🙂  The idea of moving has been one I’ve heard about for a while, and when I knew I was coming to first grade, I knew I needed a way for kids to do that easily.  Our OT, Mrs. Wilson, has made suggestions of rocking chairs (which will be one of my next additions!), trampolines, bungee cords on chairs and all sorts of creative things for years.  It wasn’t until now, though, that those supports really fit my students.  My friend, Mrs. Dale, has been VERY helpful to me, too; she had a trampoline last year and could help me think through things like where it should go, who should use it, when they should use it, etc.

Let me back up a little bit and explain some rationale.  The big idea of even having the jumping space is for friends who have lots of energy that they need to get rid of in a positive way.  There are just some kiddos (historically boys) who need to move and shake more than others.  Kiddos that are wiggly and might just need to bounce while they listen or bounce while they read or bounce just to bounce!  I’ve heard stories of a friend in Mrs. Dale’s class who is directed to use the trampoline when he feels like his body needs to move and he does so during whole group conversations.  He even raises his hand while he’s on there–proof that he’s really listening!

Now, I had some questions–like “How do I keep everyone from being on it all day?”  and “How do I know who should really use it?”  And you know what, I actually knew the answer when she said it–“kids will know and will let you know and you just need to trust them.”

So…after Mrs. Dale and I thought it through last week, I was finally ready to unveil the Rm. 202 trampoline.  But don’t let me fool you–they’ve know it was there for weeks.  It was just propped up against the wall behind the easel and not available to them.  Until now. 🙂

Our first day it was open during choice time.  Kids made a line, they had a timer and helped each other manage whose turn was next.  And they just jumped.  And jumped.  And jumped.  I think that first day 7-8 friends went through the line.

IMG_3155Hopefully in a short time the novelty will wear off, and those that really need it will be able to use it when they need to get their bodies ready for learning.  I don’t have any success stories to share yet (well except that it’s fun!), but I know that I will.  Right now our trampoline sits next to a blank black wall and a plain window, but there plans for those spaces as well.  Ideas rolling around are for ways to incorporate cross-body movements with jumping; kids could tap letters, practice spelling word wall words as they tap the letters on the window, count or spell out loud as they bounce each number or letter…the possibilities are endless really. 🙂

Surprising the things you see in a primary classroom these days, huh?  Trampolines, Legos and wooden blocks are just as important on the school supply list as pencils, erasers and scissors. 🙂

First Days!–Part 4: Choice Time!

If you haven’t yet, be sure to check out the first three parts of this story here, here and here. 🙂

For those of you who have been on this first grade journey with us, I thank you for hanging on and coming back to read all the bits and pieces I’m sharing!  For those of you who are new, welcome!

Let me start this one with a picture I found (and then shared!) from Edutopia last week:

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Here’s another one–from Mr. Rogers:

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As I said when I shared this photo, I TRULY believe this to be true.  And honestly, I’m not sure that it’s just for kids.  Adults need to remember to take time out to play, too, but that’s a conversation for another time and place.  The point here is that I find play, free-time, independent discovery and curiosity to be crucial to the development and learning of kiddos.  And so because of that, we have choice time in our first grade classroom.  To some of you that’s a surprise, and believe me, it was to some of my kiddos, too!  I guess they were expecting first grade to be a vast departure from the “fun” they had in kindergarten, but in my mind we’re going to be doing some of the very same things, just at a different level.  And play is definitely one of the most important ways we will learn this year. 🙂

Our first few tries at choice time were very structured and we signed up for where we would spend our time.  As we’ve learned how to do it, and have become more familiar with the choices, they’ve gotten more freedom with deciding on their own where to play.  For now they’re only allowed to make one choice per day, though, and so they have to be really thoughtful about what that choice will be.

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See the sign-up sheet? Most of the time our groups end up being 3-4 kiddos each. One choice that is full everyday is LEGOS! I am so thankful to the families that donated these to us–we’ve used them for our learning everyday of first grade so far, and I see them being a VERY important tool for us all year!

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From the first minute that some kiddos stepped foot in our room (on Open House night!), these big blocks have been a hit. This is another learning tool that I couldn’t imagine being without. It’s also another one that some of my friends were surprised to see.

Not only the boys like big blocks, though!  Kylie and Makayla were two of the first to sign up.  Notice that they did choose to play separately, though. :)

Not only the boys like big blocks, though! Kylie and Makayla were two of the first to sign up. Notice that they did choose to play separately, though. 🙂

One of my favorite things is to see how kiddos' brains work while they are building.  For some reason when I look at blocks (including Legos), I see "square" things like houses, cars and buildings.  I love how others see more organic things in those blocks.  Kylie made a flower here. :)

One of my favorite things is to see how kiddos’ brains work while they are building. For some reason when I look at blocks (including Legos), I see “square” things like houses, cars and buildings. I love how others see more organic things in those blocks. Kylie made a flower here. 🙂

 

Lincoln Logs have been a popular choice (gotta love garage sales!) for everyone in our class!  Choice time is also snack time in Rm. 202.

Lincoln Logs have been a popular choice (gotta love garage sales!) for everyone in our class! Choice time is also snack time in Rm. 202.

Big books are always fun!  At quiet time AND at choice time!

Big books are always fun! At quiet time AND at choice time!

Do you have any stories about using choice time and/or play in your first grade classroom?  If you’re a parent, what are your kiddos saying about this time of our day?  I’d love to hear your thoughts!! 🙂