The mediocre teacher tells. The good teacher explains. The superior teacher demonstrates. The great teacher inspires. ~William Arthur Ward
Sunday, June 21, 2009
Kool-Aid Play Dough
Kool-Aid® Play Dough
1 cup flour
1 tablespoon vegetable oil
1 package unsweetened Kool-Aid
1/4 cup salt
2 tablespoons cream of tartar
1 cup water
Mix flour, salt, cream of tartar and Kool-Aid® in a medium pot. Add water and oil. Stir over medium heat 3 to 5 minutes. When mixture forms a ball in pot, remove. Knead until smooth. Put in a plastic bag and refrigerate.
Thursday, June 18, 2009
A Funeral for "Dead" Words
To encourage more interesting written work from my students, I came up with a list of words that were too commonly used in their writing (like, stupid, boring, fun, hate, said, and funny) and pronounced these words "dead."
They were extremely resistant to this activity at first, but it didn't take long before they started chuckling at the synonyms they were finding. It was not unusual for statements like "That's a dim-witted idea!" to be heard in our classroom after that.
Wednesday, June 17, 2009
Race the Iditarod!
We also included the previous year's Iditarod winner, Jeff King, to the race to see if we could beat him to the finish line; we checked his progress daily via the official Iditarod web site. To familiarize the kids with Jeff King, I made a poster with photos and descriptions of him and his dogs (kids at this age love anything having to do with animals!). I also had the kids write a paragraph about themselves and made a poster of our team too! We included their name, age, height, hobbies, and favorite books.
I love to teach thematically - and my school at the time gave teachers the freedom to do so as long as we covered the state standards - so I worked in as many activities as I could that were Iditarod themed. I did read-alouds about famous sled dogs (Akiak and Togo), we made "Gorp" (a trail mix that mushers eat on the trail), studied the various breeds of sled dogs and wrote about our own fictional sled dog teams, and read and wrote Iditarod poems.
The kids came up with some fantastic acrostic poems using the word IDITAROD. I showed them a few samples that had been written by other kids, we did one together as a class, and then each student wrote one of his or her own. By that time they were experts on the race and Iditarod vocabulary, so it all came together rather easily. I was really pleased with the results - here are a few:
IDITAROD by B.D.
I think it is the best race ever
Dogs do tricks
I hope we win the money
Togo is the best dog ever
Akiak is a sled dog
Race Jeff King to the finish
On the trail
Do you think we will win?
IDITAROD by K.R.
I love the Iditarod
Dogs are cool to me
I think that Jeff King is cool
The class is reading to beat Jeff King
Are people clapping?
Race is hard
Or we are helping
Does he win all the time?
They really loved every minute of this unit, as did I. Not all students finished the race, but I gave them a small prize for every checkpoint they reached (bookmarks, stickers, pencils etc.) and made a big deal of their personal achievements!
For teachers:
Official Iditarod Site for Teachers
ABC's of the Iditarod
Education World - Iditarod Lesson Planning
Reading A-Z: The Jr. Iditarod (Level U)
Interactive Unit Study: Iditarod 2007
Sunday, June 14, 2009
O Canada!
Each day during our literacy block, we focused on a topic about Canada (food, clothes, housing, animals, etc.) and the kids would look through the books and tell me what they saw - I wrote the info on butcher paper to record what we'd learned. We later used the brochures from the tourist bureau to cut out pictures and glue them on the appropriate posters.
These are just a sampling of about 10-12 different posters we made. For some subjects, such as animals, major cities, famous Canadians, etc., there weren't pictures in the tourist brochures that we could cut out, so I used the lists we compiled while looking through library books and printed out pictures from the internet that the kids were able to glue on.
Overall, I LOVED World Tour. It was overwhelming at first - just the thought of trying to fit it in with all the other things we had to do each day caused me some worry - but it turned out to be such a great experience for the kids and for me! I would jump at the chance to do it again!