Sunday, August 7, 2011

New Friends, Good Food, GREAT Ideas!

This weekend I had the chance to meet some FABULOUS Dallas area teachers for lunch. I set up a little get together/meet & greet with some of the ladies in the area and I was so excited to pick their brains! I gotta say that Dallas is home to some seriously talented teachers because these ladies had some AMAZING ideas!!! I don’t even wanna know what the other patrons at the restaurant must have been thinkin’ when we all pulled out notebooks, pens, paper, and the ipads. Only teachers, right?!?! HA!!!

crayons

I scored some great ideas about Daily 5. Gotta admit that it’s not my strong suit. LOVE my literacy time, but the Daily 5 structure STRESSES me out {that’s my controlling side talking, of course ;)} Now I’m excited to tackle it again with a whole new perspective on things!! I also got some great ideas about teaching handwriting, sight words, spelling and facilitating group work. Seriously…only a group full of teachers could sit down at a restaurant for 5 hours and talk about NOTHING but school!! Okay, so we gossiped about the Real Housewives, too, but you know what I’m sayin’!!

I’m even more excited to start a new school year now!! Our little group decided that we’re going to make this a monthly or every-other-month type event, so if you’re in the Dallas area and interested in getting on board, let me know!! In the meantime, you really need to stop by these ladies’ blogs, say hello, and see all the great things they have going on in their classrooms!!!

teacherlunch

Left side of the table…

Lisa…an old coworker of mine who doesn’t have a blog, but LOVES to read everyone elses!! HA!! Love her :)

Laura…you can visit HER WEBSITE to learn a little bit more about her & her Kindergarten class. She’s a hoot!

Colleen…you might now her as the blogger behind Patton’s Patch. If you don’t have her on your blogroll, you should! She’s currently hoping to meet her goal on Donor’s Choose, so if you want to donate & help her out, head on over and see what she has goin’ on!!

Janell…she and Nicole are teammates and they came together..absolutely PRECIOUS! Janell doesn’t have a blog, but she had some AWESOME ideas!!

Right side of the table…

ME!

Nicole…the blogger who writes for Flipping For First Grade! Make sure you add her to your blogroll, too!! She has some really great organizational ideas and got me excited to really go all out with Daily 5 this year!

Shanda…the sweet girl who blogs over at 1 is More Fun! Stop by and add her to your reading list, too!! I think Shanda wins the award for the person who drove the farthest :) She also came up with the great idea of meeting at each others’ schools instead of a restaurant! GREAT idea!! I always love seeing what everyone else’s classrooms look like!!

I’m looking forward to doing this again!!! I love my sweet teacher friends :)

Thursday, August 4, 2011

Math Tubs

Alright ladies {and misters}. Time for a little Math Tub 101. I know I’m not the only teacher who implements tubs into her daily routine, so by no means am I the expert. I get lots of emails asking about how my math tubs are organized and how everything runs, so I thought this little topic deserved it’s own post.
My math tub time lasts about 30 minutes every day. Last year, I only had 16 kids {it’s okay, you can totally roll your eyes at my good luck}. This year, I’ll have a full house {22 babies}, so I know I’ll need to change some things around.
Each week, I had 3 tubs on my math station shelf and then one “tub” was computers…so, 4 rotations for the week. Fridays were a bit different if it was a full week. Instead of having another tub, I had my kids revisit the week’s math tubs. If I noticed my babies having difficulty during their tub time, I would have them revisit that particular challenge :) I also set out math games on Fridays as well so that they could practice basic skills…addition/subtraction, rote counting, patterns, sorting, etc. This year, I’ll probably only have “fun Fridays” once a month, so I’ll keep 4 tubs on the math station shelf and then one rotation will be computers.
In my 3 tubs, I’d set up a variety of activities. I always kept one tub that strictly reinforced addition/subtraction, that way they always had an opportunity to practice for mastery. I’d also have one or two tubs with an activity to reinforce a concept that had been introduced the previous week. So if I introduced money one week, I’d have one or two money tubs the following week {and for several weeks after that}, that way they never saw a new activity for the first time in independent practice. The activities are ALWAYS hands-on. I do like for my kids to show me on paper that they understand the task at hand, so I’ll often include an extension sheet…something for them to do AFTER the hands-on activity. I also like to use random extension sheets throughout the year as portfolio samples…something to document progress {or lack thereof}.
On computers, my kids always have a math task. Sometimes I’ll give them a choice, sometimes I’ll give them a specific activity…just depends on what we’re learning. The activities they choose {or I assign} come from the following websites…
Shepard Software {also really great for SmartBoard!!}, Learning Planet {123 order}, Crickweb, RockHopper, Toad Math, Duck Subtraction, Fun Brain, Arcade Games, Sum Stacker, That’s A Fact, KidPort, and Primary Games
If you know of any other great math related websites, send them my way…PLEASE!!!
Toward the end of the year {after I got my SmartBoard}, I’d make one of my tubs a SmartBoard activity. I LOVED IT!! Talk about easy set-up! HA!! And for those activities, I’d just scour the Smart Exchange until I found something I just LOVED!! Our district also sets up a shared drive where teachers can put their SmartBoard activities and other teachers around the district can use their creations. Loved that, too!!
I also had 4 groups of 4 last year {hence the 4 day rotation}. I organized this with a little math chart like this…
mathtubs1
I have a Hollywood theme in my room, so my picture cards here match the picture cards on the math tubs.
I heterogeneously group my kids, so all different ability levels work together. I group them based on my first couple of weeks of assessment and informal observations {while they’re working on the back to school math tub activities}. This helps me to see what they can do, where they struggle, and who they should {or shouldn’t} be working with :)
Every Monday, I introduce the math tubs for the week during our whole group time. This really turns out to be a lesson in and of itself. I typically have 4-5 math tubs {computer included as one of the “tubs”}…enough to last a week. As I’m introducing the week’s activities, we go through objectives, rules, expectations, and then we role play and practice. That usually takes a good 30 minutes, but it sets us up for the rest of the week and I rarely have anyone who doesn’t know what to do at their tubs {y’know, except for that one sweetie who just can’t pay attention to save his/her life. Bless.their.hearts :)
mathtubsmathtubs2
My kids visited Math Tubs Monday-Thursday…Friday was our revisit/fun Friday day. They only visited 1 tub a day. I like it that way as opposed to a daily rotation because they really have a good amount of time to practice one specific skill before moving on to something else. So…if one group visited the “Star” tub on Monday, they’d visit the “Popcorn” tub on Tuesday and so forth. By Thursday, they’ve had a chance to visit ALL of the tubs for the week. I liked my Revisit/Fun Fridays because it gave the kids who were absent a chance to catch up!!
So a typical week might look like this…
Monday – 8:30-9:00 ~ Intro Math Tubs
Monday-Thursday ~ 9:00-9:30 ~ Math Tubs
Friday ~ 9:00-9:30 ~ Revisit Math Tubs; Math Games & Strategies
MATH TUBS…. (just an idea of what it will look like for me at the beginning of the year)
Star Tub ~ Addition & Subtraction…Gumball Math Puzzles & Extension Sheet
Popcorn Tub ~ Addition…Watermelon Math & Craftivity
Oscar Tub ~ Missing Number Activity & Extension Sheet
Film Reel Tub ~ My Pattern Block Creation craftivity
Computers ~ Shepard Software {basic number sense activities}
Like I mentioned before, I’ll probably have 5 full days of rotations because my class size is going up to 22. I have 6 computers in my classroom for the kids to use, so I’ll want to keep my groups small, between 4-5 kids per group.
I often get emails asking where my math tub activities come from. For the most part, I make them all myself. I’ve tried to upload as many as I can here on the blog. Check on the sidebar and click on “Math Tubs” to find downloadable activities you can use in your room. I also have several Math packets on TpT. My most recent unit…Ready, Set, Learn!…has 15 hands-on math activities I’ll be using at the beginning of the year this year. I try to laminate as much as I can so that I can reuse them from year to year. I also collaborate with my team to see what they’re doing in their tubs and I’ll use some of their activities as well….just depends on the week and the amount of time I have to prepare!
For my babies that just FLY right through their work and finish things quickly, I ALWAYS have a variety of activities on my big math shelf for them to visit. I’ll keep a tub of old tub activities {activities they’ve already visited} on the shelf for them to revisit. LOTS of math games…some of them homemade, some purchased. And I always have a shelf full of manipulatives for them to use as well. As the year progresses, I’ll rotate the math shelf activities so that the kids don’t get bored when they’re finished with their tub work.
mathtubs3mathtubs4
I got my numbered buckets at Ikea {gosh dang, I LOVE that place!!!}. They don’t make/sell them in this style anymore :( They do have numbered buckets, but they’re square/cube and transparent. I think you can get a pack of 3 for $7.99…not too shabby.
So…in a nutshell…that’s how I do math tubs. I hope this was helpful!! If you have ANY questions, leave me a comment and I’ll do my best to clarify!

In other news, I’m extending my little 20% TpT sale through Saturday. I swore I’d get my newest unit up before the sale was over, but I was having technical difficulties :) I figured out that my file was TOO dang big! {Gosh darn}, so I had to make some adjustments and size it down. Unfortunately, I had to take out some of the activities and first day/first week certificates, but that just means that you guys get them for free! I’ll be uploading what I couldn’t fit into the packet onto the blog in the next few days.
Here’s a little sample of the newest addition….
Slide1
Graphics courtesy of Scrappin' Doodles
It’s 109 pages…75 pages of printable activities. There are 15 hands-on math activities and 10 hands-on literacy activities. I also included 3 math assessment sheets & 4 literacy assessment sheets. You can read the product description for more details if you’re interested. These are activities that I used in my Kindergarten classroom at the end of the year and they were PERFECT for the beginning of first grade, too!! Great for reinforcement and practice. I’d also keep them on my math/literacy shelves throughout the year for the kids to revisit. And…just so you know…it’s full of LOTS of color which isn’t really wonderful for our printers. Don’t forget that you can always print any document you have in “grayscale”. That’s what I started doing when our color printers went kaput…I’d just print grayscale onto bright and colorful cardstock :) Not as flashy, but it gets the job done! HA!
I’m giving away 3 of my Ready, Set, Learn! units to the first three people that can correctly guess my favorite kind of school supply for teachers :)
In the meantime, my 20% off sale is extended through Saturday and you can enter the code B1T1S for an extra 10% off of your purchase :)

Sunday, July 31, 2011

Get Your Shop On!

Calling all good-deal-lovin’ teachers…
All products in my little shop will be 20% off from August 1st-4th. To get an additional 10% off the sale {for a total of 30%}, enter the code B1T1S during checkout.
TpT
Graphics courtesy of Scrappin' Doodles

And for those of you that have asked, I’ll be adding a new back to school unit to my shop in the next couple of days…before the sale is over! My new unit will include first day/first week certificates, beginning of year assessment sheets, hands on math center activities & extension sheets, and hands-on literacy center/word work/writing activities and extension sheets. I’m hoping to have it added tonight or tomorrow, but I’m having technical difficulties at the moment :)

Monday, July 25, 2011

Happy Birthday To Me!

birthday

Hey sweet friends! I’m just stopping by real quick to say HI!! Yes…today is my birthday and my boys {all 3 of them} are doing a really great job of keeping me spoiled {aka: giving me the whole day to myself :)} Another year younger…LOVE IT!! I swear I feel like people must look at me when I’m out with my boys and think, “She’s WAY too young to have kids.” Sadly, I’m sure that’s not the case. Case in point: I spent the better part of my morning plucking gray hairs from my 32-year-old head. Eeeks.

In honor of my 32ndbirthday…and still feeling like I’m a carefree twentysomething… I’m throwing a little sale in my TpT shop for TWO HOURS ONLY. The sale starts now and ends at 6:30 p.m. {Central Standard Time}. Everything in my shop is on sale for $2!!! {for two hours only!}

Saturday, July 23, 2011

Math Time {The Breakdown}

Last year, we had our Math block first thing in the morning. I don’t know about y’all, but I LOVE Math in the morning! First thing’s first…the kids arrive around 7:55…announcements usually roll about 8:00…and then we’re on to Calendar/Number of the Day/Whole Group Lesson/Math Tubs. I’m gonna try and break it down for ya as best I can!

Around 8(ish) I bring the kids to my carpet/white board area. All of our calendar activities are done on the SmartBoard. Several of y’all asked if I would mind sharing my SmartBoard calendar, but let me be clear…I did NOT create this!!! I still have NO clue how to create activities in Smart Notebook, so it’s still a work in progress. I got this calendar activity off the Smart Exchange. You can find it HERE.

We go through the Calendar relatively quickly…anywhere between 15-30 minutes depending on the time of the year…especially once the kids get the hang of the routine. I have the kids bring their binders to the carpet…along with a pencil…and they fill in the info as we go…that way EVERYONE has a job to do! While some kids are helping me with the SmartBoard, the others are writing in their binders. At the beginning of the year, this takes quite a while because we’re still trying to establish a routine and they’re still trying to learn my expectations. As the year progresses, it goes faster and faster! I just kind of adjust as needed :)

After Calendar…around 8:30ish {give or take a few minutes}…the kids head back to their desks {where they store their binders} and then we start on the whole group lesson of the day. I usually try to have a 15-20 minute lesson and then a 10-15 minute reinforcement type activity…maybe a graph, math journaling, extension sheet, etc…just depends on the activity. Sometimes my kids even use this time to work in small groups based on the objective that was taught. Whatever I can plan & implement that reinforces the lesson.

On Mondays, I introduce the math tubs for the week during our whole group time. This really turns out to be a lesson in and of itself. I typically have 4-5 math tubs {computer included as one of the “tubs”}…enough to last a week. As I’m introducing the week’s activities, we go through objectives, rules, expectations, and then we role play and practice. That usually takes a good 30 minutes, but it sets us up for the rest of the week and I rarely have anyone who doesn’t know what to do at their tubs {y’know, except for that one sweetie who just can’t pay attention to save his/her life. Bless.their.hearts :)}

From about 9-9:30, my babies are independently working at their math tubs and I’m doing a lot of informal observation/conferencing/one-on-one intervention. I don’t have a math teacher table and y’all…I love it. The freedom of time really allows me to meet with those babies who desperately need me and it gives me time to make observations I wouldn’t normally be able to otherwise.

So here’s how the time works out…

8:00-8:30 {give or take a few minutes} – Calendar/Number of the Day {Calendar Companion activities}

8:30-9:00 – Whole Group Lesson & Activity {Mondays…introduce math tubs for the week}

9:00-9:30 – Math Tubs for the kids; conferencing/informal observations/assessments/one-on-one intervention for me

I’ll be back tomorrow with a detailed explanation of my math tubs and some printables :)

Thursday, July 21, 2011

{Math} Calendar Companion, An Edited {K} download, and a Meet-up

First things first. I uploaded the WRONG version of my Kindergarten “What is My Child Learning?!” printable. Dang. Thanks for catching that, ladies! Click on the pic to download the edited copy. {Sorry about that!}
What is My Child Learning in Kindergarten
Next up, for the Dallas friends that said y’all were interested in a little end of summer/back to school type lunch, please email me at thefirstgradeparade@gmail.com. I will be sending you details this coming week!! Can’t wait!
Now for the good stuff. I get lots of emails about math and how it all goes down in my classroom. I know I’m probably the odd man out, but I LOVE teaching math. After 9 years of teaching, I think I’ve *finally* got a system that I absolutely LOVE and it makes teaching math so much fun! Considering I absolutely used to DETEST the subject, I’d say that my admission of geekiness says a lot! I’ll be posting a lot of details about my math block and tub stuff in the next few days, so check back incase you’re interested.
One of my favorite things about teaching math is calendar time. Say what?! I know, I know. The time of the day when the Earth stands still. It can really D-R-A-G on, for sure. However, I actually enjoy it…especially at the beginning of the year. Right after morning announcements, we move right into our daily calendar routine. After that, we start our “Number of the Day”. I combined the best of both worlds for a more organized way to spend our time. Say hello to my Calendar Companion…
Slide1
Graphics courtesy of Scrappin' Doodles

The Calendar Companion is organized to supplement your daily calendar routine.
Each of my kids’ have a math journal {spiral notebook} and a math notebook. The math notebook houses all the calendar companion printables and the math journal…
it looks a little something like this…
mathnotebook1
Each of my firsties get a binder…one that’s big enough to hold papers and their spiral notebooks {journals}. Each binder needs 3 clear sheet protectors {you can get for super cheapie at Wal Mart} and 4 dividers {also super cheapie at Wal Mart. I assemble my kids binders with quick reference sheets in the clear sheet protectors and those go in the front of the binder. Here are just a couple…
mathnotebook2
Right after those 3 pages, I set up all the dividers…Number of the Day, Math Talk, Weather Graphs, and fill-in Calendars. Journals are placed at the back of the binder.
mathnotebook8
I love, love, LOVE Number of the Day! It covers everything we go over during our calendar routine. At the beginning of the year, we start out doing it together and by the end of the year, they’re all working independently! It’s awesome to have an entire school year’s worth of work to see how much the kids progress and how much their thinking changes and grows. I LOVE IT!!!! The Number of the Day is a printable that contains space to write the Date & digital date; yesterday was/today is/tomorrow will be; number word, tallies, pattern, even/odd, time {analog & digital}, money, place value, expanded notation, greater than/less than, and number sentences. {Although I know that our firsties aren’t expected to correctly spell and write the days of the week, there’s NO reason they shouldn’t be able to…especially when it’s plastered all over our rooms! And it’s awesome to see how much they retain when they’re constantly writing the date & days on a daily basis. I also think they should absolutely be able to spell the number words…most of them, anyway…so that’s always been a little focus point for my kids as well. }
The binder also includes a little framework for word problems. Sometimes the kids just work better when the format is organized!
There’s a section for “Math Talk” which is really just math vocab. I like for my kids to write the word and then show a visual representation of it to make a connection between the word & the meaning. They keep these words in their binders throughout the year and use it as a reference if needed.
We also work on weather graphs every month. I have weather watchers/meteorologists who peek out our window and give us a daily weather report. We chart the weather on a class graph and then the kids fill it in on their own graphs as well. At the end of the month, we complete a monthly weather report indicating the number of days that were sunny/rainy/cloudy/snowy/sleety. The kids also get to make observations on patterns in our graph.
No calendar time is complete without a calendar, so each binder gets 12 fill-in calendars, one for each month of the year. At the beginning of every month, we fill in the calendar and then talk about the number of days in the month. They ALWAYS use their calendars for reference. These really came in handy when I got my SmartBoard!! Since I do our calendar routine on the SmartBoard, I don’t have one in the classroom…so the kids would always refer to their own when they needed it. LOVE!!!
I can’t say enough about our math notebooks…I just LOVE them! I love that the framework is so organized and really keeps the kids on task instead of aimlessly doodling in their journals {which is what I found a lot of my sweet babies doing from time to time}. They still use their math journals, but not for number of the day anymore.
CalendarCompanionPreview
Graphics courtesy of Scrappin' Doodles

If you’re interested in starting a math notebook in your classroom, you can check out my Calendar Companion on TpT! The first 3 comments will get a copy mailed directly to your inbox :) Just make sure to leave your email address, too!!

Wednesday, July 20, 2011

Dallas Area Peeps…Are You Interested?!

Dallas gals…and guys {if you’re out there}…just wanted to put some feelers out there to see if you guys would be interested in a little meet-up of sorts. I’m thinking about hosting a little end of summer/back to school lunch(ish) type get-together. Would any of y’all be interested?! I’m thinking food, chatting, door prizes…something like that. Just wanted to see if there was any interest so that I can plan the details. Let me know!!

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