It will be a great day!
Learning through music and creativity in the early childhood and kindergarten classroom
Thursday, October 2, 2014
Sunday, March 23, 2014
Kindergarten Round Up
Welcome Class of 2027!
Wow! It is time to welcome a new group of young learners to kindergarten. Why we, "Round them UP" I am not sure, but just at the winter turns to spring, it happens every year; Kindergarten Round Up.
Current Kindergartners love the idea that they will be first graders when this new class of young ones fills their classrooms. |
A photo opportunity and a welcome to our community. We can't wait to meet you class of 2027! |
Thursday, March 13, 2014
Magically, Musically, Connected: Go See Peter and the Star Catcher, please!
Last night, was a unexpected school night out. I landed tickets to Peter and the Star Catcher, and took my almost ten-year-old daughter with me.
I had no expectations. Frankly, I just wanted to be entertained and have an evening where nothing was expected of me. Selfish? A little, maybe.
Act I was a romp on two different pirate ships. A dark tone with awesome use of lighting to build the feel of being held captive. The ensemble of 11 (10 men, 1 woman) was never still, moving flawlessly between characters. They used thick rope bent in different shapes to convey small spaces, movement of water, a boxing ring. Clearly a show you could see again and again and never catch it all.
Act I introduces us to a no-named 13 teen-year-old boy, with budding leadership skills. He meets a girl named Molly, similarly inclined but bossy and together they try to keep a trunk of precious "star stuff" away from some slimy pirates.
Act II finds the cast now on an island where wild things are happening. The colors are vivid and bold. The movements are tamed and focused. Some are inevitably beginning to grow-up, while others choose not to.
http://minneapolis.broadway.com |
http://minneapolis.broadway.com |
http://minneapolis.broadway.com |
The feelings conveyed draw you in to a time way, way back when tucked snugly in your own childhood bed listening to a bedtime story. Light airy, heavy if you wanted it to be. Think about it or don't. Simply beautiful.
At intermission while avoiding bathroom lines (Do that many people really have to pee?), I happened to open the PlayBill and casually read the cast names. Four lines down one was very familiar to me. I knew he was an actor, but hadn't seen him in years. He was my leading man in Guys and Dolls, and it was the first leading role for both of us growing up in Kalamazoo, Michigan. Could it be the same Nathan Hosner? The Who's Who, led me to believe that yes, this was him. From the balcony in the first glimpse of ACT II I confirmed with I giddiness, that yes this was him!
What a magical thing to have our paths cross again all these years later just by chance, and even in the theater.
Mr. Hosner meets my daughter |
Nathan, as he goes by now was Nate when we were kids is a classically trained actor who graduated from the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art. Even with the bushy beard, I knew right away. He was tremendous in his many roles in the show accent and all! Marvelous really, twenty years later still so many of the same nuances as when we were in 10th and 11th grade, but now a true professional.
Following the performance, there was a post show dialogue with the cast. About a 100 or so gathered down in the first rows. As four of the cast members introduced themselves and rattled off their hometowns, I couldn't help but call out a cheer to Kalamazoo, and shout out my name in the process as Nate took his turn. My daughter was mortified! He hopped down and we visited, took a few photos, talked about the fabulous show. I told him of my continued connections with music and the arts, now as the teacher.
It hit me, sitting surrounded by high school drama clubs with their chaperone's waiting in the aisles, just how important it is to follow our own artistic journey.
Here they were, with bated breath waiting to hear my childhood pal tell them what to do if they too, wanted to be an actor.
I was there when he was one of them. And you thought just the show was magical?
Congratulations, Nathan! You'll always be Nate, to me.
Sunday, March 9, 2014
The light bulb moment of reading!
It happened! She turned five in early November, and has been bemoaning that she is not a reader for at least three years. Yes, that is pretty much since she was speaking in complete sentences. I suppose that is what happens when you have a big sister and you want to do everything she can do.
Suddenly, in the process of working on this early childhood music CD with my friend Dave, it all has come together. She can read!
I wrote a song inspired by her, "I can't read!" complaints. It is called, I Wanna' Read. It is the ode to the small child surrounded by print, in book, signs, cereal and needing to know right now what they all say.
The song goes on to teach the concept of sound blends to help children feel successful applying their knowledge of sounds to blending together similar words. We would call these CVC words, consonant, vowel, consonant words. Of course, we don't live in a CVC only world, but all in time.
Even though I experienced these magic moments with my oldest daughter, and then in my classroom many times over the past 14 years, something about the timing of this young reader gets me at the core.
The world is opening up to her, and not just books, signs and cereal. Putting it all together and connecting to life in print is such a milestone.
What a lucky little girl, and what a lucky mom I am, to get to watch it all unfold.
Suddenly, in the process of working on this early childhood music CD with my friend Dave, it all has come together. She can read!
I wrote a song inspired by her, "I can't read!" complaints. It is called, I Wanna' Read. It is the ode to the small child surrounded by print, in book, signs, cereal and needing to know right now what they all say.
The song goes on to teach the concept of sound blends to help children feel successful applying their knowledge of sounds to blending together similar words. We would call these CVC words, consonant, vowel, consonant words. Of course, we don't live in a CVC only world, but all in time.
Even though I experienced these magic moments with my oldest daughter, and then in my classroom many times over the past 14 years, something about the timing of this young reader gets me at the core.
The world is opening up to her, and not just books, signs and cereal. Putting it all together and connecting to life in print is such a milestone.
What a lucky little girl, and what a lucky mom I am, to get to watch it all unfold.
Congratulations, my littlest one! You are a reader now! |
Thursday, February 13, 2014
Getting Ready for the BIG day
Mailboxes ready and waiting to be filled with Kindergarten valentine cards. |
These cans were not destined for the recycling. |
Let's just say today in my classroom, that excitement. . . wow. Is that what I experienced today? Sigh. It was tough. We've all had those days when no matter what, the children in our lives just take things a different directions. Not my best day in the classroom, but I am ready to regroup and head back to celebrate with them tomorrow.
For several years I have been rescuing large tin cans from our school cafeteria recycling. I use them for lots of things; drums, teaching about cylinders, as a base for paper maché projects, containers for sorting, storage of art and other supplies.
As I climb in our recycling bin, our head custodian has moved beyond asking me, "Why?" Now he generally favors, " You're up to something again, aren't you?" I smile and invite him down to the room to see the transformation from can of peaches to said creation.
Most recently the cans became valentine mailboxes.
Our school uses a special can opener that leaves no sharp edges. The kids rinsed and washed them out (though they were already quite clean), then dried them off.
They were given a large piece of paper with a heart glued in the middle. They were to build around it then I would tape it onto the can and then cut out the middle of the heart.
Students worked in small groups |
Some kids laid out their work, while others charged a head with an internal plan guided purely by the amount of glue they used. |
This is after we cleaned up. |
Fruit cocktail, anyone? |
Some have taken on a happy clown like appearance. Others look a little like they might bite. I suppose half the fun will be delivering the valentine cards past the friendly fangs! |
They can easily be carried home in a backpack or in the proud arms of a student who will no doubt, spend the rest of the weekend admiring the contents! |
Tomorrow is sure to be a memorable day for all! I can't wait!
Wednesday, February 5, 2014
Introducing. . .The Reader Eater
Wood Cookie no more. . . Meet, The Reader Eater! |
This fall, a colleague gave my classroom this awesome, "wood cookie" when he spoke to the entire kindergarten during a unit of study about materials. It has been sitting in my classroom since then.
Kids have sanded it with sandpaper, attempted to count the rings, (with varying final totals,) picked at the bark a bit and used it a base for various crayon rubbings.
I knew there was more lying in wait, I had yet to figure it out.
A deliciously literate snack |
Before he met his destiny, just a regular "wood cookie" |
Recently, as I caught it in my glance for the 217 time, I saw it with eyes, a nose, and an eagerly waiting mouth, open for a snack.
But, what would my students feed it?
Garbage, recycled paper, stray mittens? Nope, sight words of course.
They could feed The Reader Eater, sight words on a spoon, but only the words they could successfully.
They'd have to practice reading until they could fluently read all of the words. Once they had mastered the 50 they need to know by the end of the year they could hunt for words in magazines. They could bring in different environmental print from home or around the school.
In Minnesota sports words like hockey and baseball are big, Go Twins!
How about color words, numbers, Spanish words, feelings?
Please, someone stop me.
Poor Reader Eater, is going to get sick!
Sure enough, it is a hit! Kids are bringing in all kinds of words for the Reader Eater, to snack on. They are having so much feeding him with their successes that I am certain they don't even realize how much they are learning. Oh, yeah!
Tuesday, February 4, 2014
Good Old Fashioned Cut and Paste
My all time favorite valentine candy has to be conversation hearts.
Not the chalky ones that have been sitting in the box all year and leave a film on the roof of your mouth. The softer style with a little edge of creaminess and a note of postage stamp flavoring; preferably the larger sized hearts. Yum, I really do enjoy them and buy them on clearance after February 14th to do "projects" with.
By that I mean, envisioning hot gluing them to a cute picture frame or shellacking them on top of some little treasure box. In actuality, consuming them all in
mass, one night and living to regret it.
Inspired by the vocabulary on my favorite candy, I set out with my 24 students to make our own set of conversations hearts. First we brain stormed a list of kindness words. I wrote them on chart paper for later reference. Then we practiced folding the paper in half, finding the spine side and making the top part of a two on the paper.
After a good handful cut the wrong side and ended up with two pieces looking nothing like a heart, the majority started to catch on. Better yet, those that were struggling were helped by their classmates.
Hooray… kindness in action!
I love it when I see that happen naturally.
Then, I let them loose on a stack of magazines. Despite the fact that only two kids got very distracted by an old copy of National Geographic (you know my favorite candy, now here is my favorite magazine), half an hour later, all 24 students had three hearts to share.
Bummer, "K" you almost made it. Though you do look quite cute!
This hug is like that sideways/backward hug we teacher get from behind and we don't know which student is giving it until we turn around.
Hey. . . kind of looks like someone found the word friend and just cut it apart.
Clever, albeit only loosely following the directions.
Very sneaky and smart little kindergartners I have this year!
Grab some paper, and magazines, and whip up an utterly delicious literacy activity.
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