Tuesday, March 3, 2015

QR Code Sight Word Activity

I LOVE my iPad. One thing I really think is cool is the ability to scan a funny little black and white box and get information!! Yes, a Quick Response code, better known as QR code. A QR Code is a square grid of smaller black and white squares containing encoded data that is designed to be optically scanned, as to provide information about a product or service. Qrafter (Crafter) is a two-dimensional barcode scanner for iPhone, iPad and iPod Touch. Its main purpose is to scan and parse the contents of QR Codes.

(Don't you love it when I talk technical! LOL)

Taken from Kindergarten: Holding Hands and Sticking Together
I came across this sight word activity using QR Codes. They are so easy. The kids love them. And they are a great technology teaching tool to use in your classroom, or even to send home for students to use at home.

Below is the link to a QR Code Sight Word Video Read the Room Packet. It's free and a fun way to review those sight words.

The packet contains:
  • 36 sight word cards, each with a QR code that links to a video to go with that word. Each of the YouTube videos is on ViewPure, so that there are no ads, comments, or distractions.
  • 12 cards with QR codes that link to sight word songs which have lots of sight words. 
  • A recording sheet to use if you want, that you can print front/back to make it easier to manage for the children.
  • Directions for using the sight words.

QR Codes Freebie

Monday, March 2, 2015

Green & Gold Shimmery Playdough

Recipe:

2 1/2 cups flour
1/2 cup salt
3 small packages of Kool Aid drink mix (Lemon-lime)
3 TBSP oil
2 cups boiling water
Lots of gold glitter

Mix together flour, salt, Kool Aid, glitter, and oil.
Add boiling water and mix until the dough is cool enough to touch. (I cooked on low heat until I got the right consistency.)
Knead until smooth.
Store in a Ziploc bag in the fridge!





Friday, February 27, 2015

Sight Word Wordle

Have you ever heard of "Wordle"? A Wordle is used to generate “word clouds” from text that you provide. The clouds give greater prominence to words that appear more frequently in the source text.
This is a great center game to reinforce sight words relevant to your class. 
Taken from The First Grade Parade

The objective of this activity is to have your kids search for sight words.  I keep my Sight Wordles in a plastic sheet protector and have the kids use their Expo markers to highlight the words they find.

You can do this lots of different ways...

* have the kids search for words they KNOW {this would be great for a quick assessment!}

* have the kids search for SPECIFIC words {great for a review!!!}

*have the kids search for words with 2 letters, 3 letters, etc.

* have the kids search for words that rhyme with __________.


The list goes on.... You can print off several at a time for more variety.  You can differentiate by lists.  The possibilities are endless!!!

Go to the link below for complete directions. This link also provides some other sight word center activities. Do you have a sight word center? If not you may want to try these ideas.

Sight Word Wordle

Thursday, February 26, 2015

Meaningful Differences: The 30 million word gap

During our PD session yesterday, Kate and Jamie talked about the importance of oral language for reading success. It made me think of a very interesting research study that was conducted by Todd Risley and Betty Hart called Meaningful Differences (1995).

Betty Hart and Todd Risley studied the usage of language and words in American homes. Their findings establish the absolute importance of children’s early experiences with language. By 48 months children in professional homes have heard on average 45 million words.  In the same period of time, children in welfare homes have heard on average 13 million words. This language and vocabulary disparity has been referred to as “the 32 million word catastrophe.”

They found that the sheer number of words heard varied greatly along socio-economic lines. On average, children from families on welfare were provided half as much experience as children from working class families, and less than a third of the experience given to children from high-income families. In other words, children from families on welfare heard about 616 words per hour, while those from working class families heard around 1,251 words per hour, and those from professional families heard roughly 2,153 words per hour. Thus, children from better financial circumstances had far more language exposure to draw from.  
The number of words addressed to children differs across income groups.



In addition to looking at the number of words exchanged, the researchers also looked at what was being said within these conversations. What they found was that higher-income families provided their children with far more words of praise compared to children from low-income families. Children's vocabulary differs greatly across income groups.Conversely,
children from low-income families were found to endure far more instances of negative reinforcement compared to their peers from higher-income families.  Children from families with professional backgrounds experienced a ratio of six encouragements for every discouragement. For children from working-class families this ratio was two encouragements to one discouragement. Finally, children from families on welfare received on average two discouragements for every encouragement. 

In simple terms, kids start kindergarten at vastly different language levels, thus impacting their reading success. So the question becomes ... What can we do to bridge the vocabulary gap of our students? 

With something to think about this is Mrs. Morris reminding you to be ...

To read more about Hart & Risley's study go to the links below.

Wednesday, February 25, 2015

St. Patrick's Day Bingo

I love Bingo games!! They reinforce so many skills - visual discrimination, listening skills, counting, vocabulary, and playing games with rules.

Below is a link to a free printable for a St. Patrick's Day Bingo game. You could play it during small group to build vocabulary. Or you could place in a center for partners to play (social skills - games with rules).

St. Patrick's Day Bingo

Monday, February 23, 2015

Kinetic Sight Word Activity… With a Beach Ball

Fun Sight Word Activity

This will be one of your students' favorite games.  It is a simple game with lots of learning potential.

Materials:
Taken from Kids Activities Blog
A Beach Ball
A Permanent Marker
Room to gently toss a ball to each other.

Ideas on learning with a sight words ball:
  • If your students are already reading, have them read the words on the color they catch.
  • If your students are not yet reading, have them point to a word and you tell them what it is before they toss the ball.
  • If your students know all the words, have them create a sentence with as many words as they can from the color they picked.


You can also use with letters - identify letter, letter sound, etc.

Thanks Jen Hollon for sharing!

Thursday, February 19, 2015

More Pie

I don't know about you but some days I feel like there is just NOT enough of me to go around. Wife, mother, grandmother, daughter, sister, friend, colleague, leader, supervisor, teacher, etc. The list goes on and on. I was reading this blog and came across this article and it really spoke to me. It reminds me of what my grandmother use to tell me. She would say, "Honey as long as you can look at yourself in the mirror at the end of the day and know you did the best you could that's all you can do." I never really thought about my time as a pie. Hope you enjoy this as much as I did.

More Pie

Recently, I was reading a post about what a teacher wished she had more of (I can’t find the post or else I’d link to it) – things like more time, more resources, more to help with student achievement.
 As I was reading, of course, I was nodding my head in agreement, but I also kept thinking, what I really wish I had more of, was simply, me.
I am very lucky.  I have an amazing student teacher this year, a loving foster grandmother, and a paraprofessional who works in my room for many hours each day, but even with all those adults, and I’ve worked with no other adults in the room, so I know how what it’s like to be all alone, I still sometimes wish there was more me to go around.
The analogy I use is a pie – simply because pies are always used as analogies and I love pie.  Apple pie, cherry pie, most any pie will do, but I digress.  I’m the pie and however many students I have is the number of slices. Of course, some kids get bigger slices than others, but everyone gets a piece. 
Some days there may be one or two that get almost half my pie and the others share the rest… as my sprouts have heard over and over, ‘fair isn’t equal’ – especially when dealing with pie. No matter how I slice and dice it, I always wish the pie was bigger. Sure more books, iPads, and math manipulatives would be great, but more of me is what they really want.
As much as I’ve thought about it, I’ve yet to discover a way to clone myself. Perhaps someday, there will be ten of me in my classroom, two or three Mr. Halperns sitting at each table smiling, laughing, tying shoes, zipping coats, applying bandaids, reading one on one, and just being me.  It might seem a little creepy, but I think my students would love it.
Of course, this isn’t going to happen anytime soon.  So I try my best to make sure each child gets a little of my attention each day.  Have I had a conversation with everyone?  Did they get a hug or pat on the back from me yet today?  There are five kids who need shoes tied, one with a bloody finger, another vomiting on the floor, and two boys wrestling on the floor – I need to handle all these situations with clarity, ease, and love in the next two minutes before the principal arrives for my observation… and somehow I do.
They say wizards and magic aren’t real, but anyone who works with small children knows:

We are the music makers,
And we are the dreamers of dreams,
Wandering by lone sea-breakers,
And sitting by desolate streams;—
World-losers and world-forsakers,
On whom the pale moon gleams:
Yet we are the movers and shakers
Of the world for ever, it seems.


As much as I’d love to give a little more of me, I have to remind myself, and I do so daily, I’m already giving all of me and that’s all anybody can strive to do.

Taken from Look at My Happy Rainbow