Thursday, October 31, 2013

Our Idiom Costumes - Wishing You All a Very Happy Halloween

Happy Halloween from My Class to You!

Can You Guess Our Idioms?


Here's a list to match with the pictures below:

Bite the Bullet
A Shot in the Dark
I'm on Cloud Nine
Queen Bee
Ivy League
Hold Your Horses
It's Raining Cats and Dogs


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Wednesday, October 30, 2013

Design a Mask - Halloween Creativity

Halloween Idea #5 - Design a Mask

Why not give students a blank template, bring out all of the craft supplies, and let the creativity roll?  There really isn't much advanced planning on the part of the teacher, just let them at it!  I got some unadorned masks at a craft supply store at very inexpensive prices after Halloween last year, and I just put them away in the cupboard.  

The students were so excited when I brought them out, along with all of the various craft supplies.  You know, things like sequins, buttons, pom poms, tissue paper, straws, toothpicks, Popsicle sticks, etc.  They couldn't believe their good fortune when I gave no instructions beyond "Be Creative!"  I couldn't believe the quality of some of their work!

As teachers, we spend too much time controlling every little aspect of a project to insure quality work.  This was just plain, old-fashioned fun!  And look what they did!








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Tuesday, October 29, 2013

Help the Police Arrest This Witch and Save Halloween For Children Everywhere!

Halloween Idea #4:  Criminal Witch Listening Activity

Police Sketch Artists Needed
Throughout the year, I work hard on my students' listening skills.  It is so frustrating how they can be looking right at you, but their minds can be somewhere else!  I know we all deal with this in our classrooms.  So whenever I can, I have my students participate in an activity that requires only their listening skills.  This is one of those activities.

I give my students a worksheet that has boxes for specific descriptions, such as eyes, ears, hair, etc.  Then I read them a story that I have written about a rogue witch that is somehow making it so there will be no trick-or-treating if she is not stopped.  There is a child witness that gives a rambling description of the witch, and the students need to listen carefully and take notes on their worksheet.  They are police sketch artists, and they must create a composite sketch of this witch so she can be arrested and stopped.  I have included arrest photos of four other witches - but the witness insists that none of these are the witch in question here.

The description is fanciful and fun, and the student drawings come out just wonderfully!  They make a great bulletin board!  After they have created their sketches, there is a follow-up writing activity that goes along with it. 

This is one of my favorite Halloween activities, and it is one that I have put together as a product in my Teachers Pay Teachers store.  If you like what you see, you can check it out.




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Monday, October 28, 2013

Halloween Idea #3: Measuring, Art, and Halloween

Halloween Idea #3:  Halloween Art

Even when I do art with my students, I try to make sure that I there is an educational component to it. This activity requires careful measurement.


Students will need an 8 1/2 by 11 piece of blank computer paper.  With a ruler, students will measure and mark one inch intervals down both sides of the paper, then they will lightly draw lines across the paper at these one inch intervals.  This will give them straight lines to work with, insuring that there rows are consistent.

I always start by brainstorming Halloween symbols with my class.
Here's a list for you:  Witch's hat, witch's boots, witch's broom, witch's face, witch's cauldron, spider, spider's web, black cat, frankenstein, other monsters, goblins, ghosts, full moon, moon crescent, candy, candy corns, trick or treating bag, skulls, bones, vampires, vampire's fangs, werewolves, pumpkin, Jack-o-Lanterns, haunted house, eye balls, snakes, etc.

Once the students have a list of symbols to work with they need to decide what they will use for each of the letters of  H A L L O W E E N.  For the H, sometimes students use witch's brooms, others use bones, etc.  For the A, the candy corn and the witch's hat are popular.  What you really want is each student's creativity.  Before you let them work on their actual art paper, have them design each letter so they know exactly what they are doing.  You may even want them to color each letter before they begin, because it is important that every H looks the same, every A looks the same, etc.

When they begin to work on their actual piece of art, they should use the lines to make sure that every letter is the same height.  They will draw their symbols for each letter going across their paper from left to right (all the way to the right edge).  They begin the second row wherever they left off at the end of the first row.  They don't start over at the beginning of the word.  Some students will even put half a letter at the end of the first line, and the other half of the letter at the beginning of the second line - (this is more advanced thinking.)

I have my students make all of their pencil letters first, from left to right and top to bottom.  Once the page is filled in, I have them color all of the H's the same, then go back and color all of the A's the same, and so on.  These come out great and make a very attractive bulletin board.

Here are some samples mounted for my bulletin board:





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Sunday, October 27, 2013

Halloween Fun With Our Little Friends - Pumpkin Surprise!

My students are the BIG kids at our K-6 school.  Once a month we get together with our little friends (kindergarteners) to complete an activity together.  My students benefit from this because they get to be the leaders, they need to help and guide their little friend.  The kindergarteners benefit from this, because they get one-on-one support with an activity that would be too difficult for them to do alone.
In short, everyone wins!

Well, it's October and time for Halloween.  As promised, I am sharing an idea each day this week - fun and educational Halloween activities.

Halloween Idea #2:  Pumpkin Surprise

This is a really fun activity for younger students, generally a teacher does one in front of the entire class, but by making this an activity for our Big Friends/Little Friends get-together, each kindergartener goes home with his/her own Jack-o-Lantern pumpkin.

What you will need:
Each big friend needs a large piece of orange construction paper, scissors (they could tear it with their fingers instead) and a copy of the story.

What they will do:
The big friend will tell the story of the mouse and the clubhouse to his/her little friend, as the story is told the big friend will cut or tear the paper to fit the story.

The Mouse and the Clubhouse Story:

(Start with an orange piece of construction paper, folded in half with the fold on the bottom)
“There once was a little mouse scurrying about in the forest one Halloween day when he found a huge, enormous piece of cheese!  He decided this gigantic piece of cheese would be perfect for a clubhouse, but first he would need to round the top a little, to make it look more like a house.  He also decided that it would be a good idea to have a balcony off the side of the clubhouse, because what good is a clubhouse without a lookout?”  The mouse nibbled and chewed, and nibbled and chewed.  ”Funny tasting cheese” thought Mouse.

(Cut or tear the top corners off of the paper, make sure you leave a step – the balcony – off to one side of the paper at the fold)



Mouse stood back to look at his clubhouse.  “Very good,” he thought, “but I need a door so I can go inside.”   So, the mouse nibbled a door just his size.  He nibbled and chewed, and nibbled and chewed.  ”Funny tasting cheese” thought Mouse.

 (Cut or tear a triangle or an oval for the door – make this small like the mouse.  This should be in the middle of the fold)



 Mouse stood back to look at his clubhouse.  “Very good,” he thought, “but I need a door for my best friend to come inside.  My friend is much taller than me, and he has a long curvy tail.”  You see, mouse’s best friend was cat.  I know, most people think that cats chase mice and eat them, but the truth is that they are best friends.  True, the cat does chase the mouse, but that is just because it is their favorite game!  The cat would never really hurt his friend the mouse!  “I need a taller door with room for cat’s long curvy tail,” thought the mouse.  So he nibbled and chewed, and nibbled and chewed.  “Funny tasting cheese,” thought the Mouse.

 (Cut or tear a tall, skinny door with a curve at the top curving toward the mouse’s door.  Make sure you do this on the side that is farthest from the balcony.)



 Mouse stood back to look at his clubhouse.  “Very good,” he thought, and he went inside.  “Oh no!  It is much too dark in here!”  So mouse decided that he would make a window to let in the light.  “I need my window to be up where it can let the sunlight in,” thought the mouse.  So he nibbled and chewed, and nibbled and chewed.  “Funny tasting cheese,” thought the Mouse.

(Poke your scissors through, and cut a circle or other shape.  You can have your little friend suggest the shape for the window)



 Finally the clubhouse was ready!  Mouse ran to get his friend cat to see their new clubhouse.  But while mouse was gone a big, scary Halloween wind blew through the forest!  It made all of those creaky, creepy Halloween sounds as it blew through the leaves and branches of the forest.  (Make scary wind sounds) It blew the clubhouse so hard that it tipped over.  When mouse and cat came racing back to the clubhouse, they realized that it wasn’t really a piece of cheese at all…It was a pumpkin, and Mouse had carved it into a Jack-o-Lantern!  “No wonder that cheese tasted so funny!”  said Mouse!

(Open up the folded orange paper, and show your little friend the Jack-o-Lantern that you made!)


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Trick or Treat...Teaching Figurative Language with Halloween

Reinforce the concept of idioms by having students dress up for Halloween as an Idiom!



Ah, Figurative Language... similes may be easy enough to teach, but those metaphors and idioms can be tough!  So often our students take what they read literally, when the meaning is actually figurative - this has a huge impact on reading comprehension.

In my 5th/6th grade combo class, I start the year off with figurative language, and don't let up all year. To this end, I use quotes in my classroom in which I have my students determine whether the quote has a literal meaning or a figurative meaning.  If it is figurative they have to tell me what type of figurative language it is and what the symbolism is.  This is tough early in the year, but the students start to see the connections and it gets easier as the year goes on.

I know, this sounds kind of dry and boring, but really it isn't!  I like to keep my classroom fun and engaging, so I work hard at finding interesting quotes to stimulate good conversation.  I also take any other opportunity throughout the year to enhance these skills in a fun way.  Halloween is a perfect example of this...

Yes, it's that time of year again, where your students come to school in their costumes and act like the monsters and aliens that they are dressed up as!  The sugar high doesn't help either!  Not my favorite day as a teacher!  It is hard to maintain a structured learning environment when the students are off in the world of costumes, candy, witches, and goblins!  So why not use it?  All week, I will be posting some of my favorite Halloween activities that are both educational and engaging.

Idea #1:  Idiom Costume

I encourage my students to dress up as an idiom of their choice.  I use my classroom incentive (moolah) to reward the students for their participation.  For this activity, they need to dress up as the literal meaning of their chosen idiom, and then tell the class their idiom, explain their costume and the figurative meaning (what does it really mean.)  I always dress up as an idiom as well!

Last year, I dressed up as the idiom "Smarty Pants."  I bought a package of smarty candies and safety pinned them to the front of my pants.  The kids loved it!  This year I'm thinking of dressing as the idiom, "I'm all ears."


I know that one of my students tells me that she is going to dress as the idiom, "On cloud nine."  She is planning on wearing a white tutu to represent the cloud, and a blue top that says, "I'm on cloud nine!"

Another student tells me that he is going to dress as the idiom, "Dressed to kill."  He is going to wear a tuxedo with some fake blood on it.

Ready for some other ideas?  How about some of these...












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Sunday, October 20, 2013

Conference Week - Time for Student Goal Setting

Ahhh...it's that time of year again - Parent Teacher Conferences.  I actually enjoy the change of pace, and it is generally a pleasure talking to my students, one on one, with their parents.  The hard part is - Student Goals!  How do you get your students to create meaningful, realistic goals that are measurable?   Of course, the parents are always willing to chime in, but if you let them do too much, then they aren't the student's goals!

This has always been a dilemma for me, that is until I found the book Inch and Miles.  Teaching my students the building blocks that make up the Pyramid of Success has made all the difference in the world!


I must admit, it did take me over a month to go through these building blocks, one at a time - insuring that my students understood each one.  To do this, we made pocket books, with Character Trait Charts and Eye/Ear Charts.  It was slow going, but these abstract concepts became concrete for my students.


Although this took quite a bit of class time, I found that my students and I really benefited from these activities.  Their participation in group work was very focused and effective.  We had a common language for the times that I needed to redirect a student.  I simply needed to say something like "Are you using Self-Control right now?" to refocus a student!  But the best part is the goal setting!!!

I have never had it so easy to guide students to create appropriate goals!  At the end of the book, I gave my students a chart to evaluate their own strengths and weaknesses with regards to the building blocks.  We revisited them one at a time - discussing what a strength in this area might look like and what kinds of things could be done to improve in this particular area.  The students were required to choose a minimum of three areas for growth.  They also needed to put an example for the areas that they identified as a strength - what do you do that shows you are strong in this building block?

These charts are transferring easily to well written, student-driven goals!  I couldn't be more pleased!  I am so impressed by my student's work that I quickly putting together a Teachers Pay Teachers' product for all of you.  


Be sure to check out my store and look for this product if you are interested in leading your students to effective, student-driven goal setting as well!

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Saturday, October 5, 2013

So Much Learning....SOOO Much Fun!!!!

Having students build their own Continent Twister games was one of my favorite activities from last year - and believe it or not, it was even better this year!  Students eagerly search in their social studies books for maps and information required to create their game boards.  It is so amazing listening to their discussions, as they debate placement of a continent using terms like Eastern Hemisphere and Prime Meridian!  It is easy to tell that meaningful learning is taking place - yet the enthusiasm level is at an all time high!






I found that deadlines were a necessity, because the students easily got bogged down in some of the details.  But with a little guidance, their game boards came along nicely and then they had to create their rules and their methods for playing the games.  This requires real life problem solving!  There were some frustrations, but the students worked them out and came up with wonderfully unique solutions to their problems!

On Thursday, each group presented their game to the class - explaining their maps, their way of playing, and their rules....and then.....WE PLAYED THEM!!!



Look at those happy faces!!!

If you want to try this with your class, check out my Teachers Pay Teachers store.  I put it all together for you at a really inexpensive price!  Enjoy!!!!






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