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Friday, June 24, 2016

It's Day 2 of my Birthday Sale-ebration!


If you haven't joined the party yet at my TPT store, I hope you'll stop by today.  This is day 2 of the 3 day sale-ebration for my birthday. Everything in my store is just 99₵; only bundles are excluded.  That means...


When I blew out the candles on my birthday cake, my wish was that I could get my products in your hands.  I hope that wish comes true.

 


Thursday, June 23, 2016

It's Here!


The wait is over!  It's here; MY BIRTHDAY.


Please help me celebrate!




Minutes are worth more than money. Spend them wisely. 
~Thomas P. Murphy

Wednesday, June 22, 2016

Hang On!



Tomorrow is the day!


He lives long that lives well; and time misspent is not lived but lost.              
              ~Thomas Fuller

Tuesday, June 21, 2016

It's Worth the Wait!



Just 2 more days.

It's worth the wait.



Your greatest resource is your time. 
                                                       ~Brian Tracy

Monday, June 20, 2016

It's Coming!!!



...in 3 days.

But you'll get no spoiler alerts from me.  All I'll say is that you don't want to miss it!



In time, things will fall right in place.

Wednesday, June 8, 2016

The Farming Life


I live in the midwest. Farming is huge here. We may not have beautiful beaches or majestic mountains, but the heartland provides it's own beauty. Every spring, I am thrilled to see the fields return to green and marvel at the growth rate of the corn that's just been planted. I'm a born and raised city girl, but most of my extended family lives the farm life. So I speak with a clear understanding when I say that life is not easy! But it is necessary. And we should thank a farmer 3 times a day for the bounty their work has created.

I have a fun, farm story my father used to tell. Dad was a professor of animal science at the Univ. of IL for over 4 decades.  At some point in the 1960s, he helped to create the Farm-in-the-Zoo displays at Lincoln Park Zoo in Chicago.  In the dairy barn, the display showed how milk from the milking machines was pumped up through glass pipes on its journey to the collection tank.  When a group of Chicago teachers and students ventured in, one teacher asked Dad, in all earnestness, when the color was added to the milk.  You see, the glass pipes were being flushed with water at the time!


Having a fondness for the farm, I take pleasure in teaching my kiddos about it.  If you, too, incorporate lessons about farming, you may be interested in some of the farm centers and units I have created.  You can find them here.

Among those materials is the following center: 


In keeping with a farm animals theme, Ducks in a Row Literacy Center provides practice with letter sounds and phonological awareness.






Get your Ducks in a Row!


The greatest gift you can give to someone is your time.

Sunday, May 22, 2016

It's About Time for Memorial Day!

It's about time, teachers, for Memorial Day!




As the school year winds down, you probably are not interested in deep, intricate lessons, but still want to pay homage to this solemn holiday. So, here's a quick and easy poetry lesson, along with some teaching possibilities that you may wish to share with your students:


And, here are some possibilities for teaching with it:


[This poem and its possibilities are part of Poetry Possibilities - Spring Edition. It is now available in my TPT store for 50% off.]  

Here's a quick, albeit somewhat messy, craftivity for Memorial Day:

Patriotic Chalk Art:



This is one of my all time favorite crafts and is a hit with the kiddos. The piece above actually reflects 2 methods of making the chalk rubbings. One uses the shape pattern and rubs out from the edges; the other uses the scrap or negative of the shape with rubbings going in toward the center.

For the bell images above, provide cardboard patterns for the shapes. Ask your students to trace the pattern on construction paper (color doesn't matter). Insist that they trace the pattern onto another piece of paper because if they all try to rub chalk on the pattern, you will endure many complaints about purple symbols. Each child should use his/her own shape.  

After cutting the shape out, students should generously rub blue or red chalk around the edges of the shape. They MUST do this on what I call a "dirty" sheet, which is actually paper reclaimed from the recycling box. It is essential that they rub the chalk on while on the dirty sheet, then move to the chosen construction paper background. Demonstrate holding the shape securely with one hand while pushing the chalk out onto the background paper with 1 finger (hence the messy part). You can make this project as easy or challenging as you like by making a single shape on the background or using multiple shapes and colors all on the same background, perhaps creating complex patterns.

The negative version of this craft works much the same way. After cutting out the shape, the student should tape the scraps together (see lower left corner) and then rub the chalk around the edges of the missing shape. Again, this step must be done on a dirty sheet. Then, holding the negative steady with one hand, have the children rub the chalk toward the center on their background paper.  

Clean up absolutely requires lots of soapy hand washing in order to prevent chalk smudges everywhere, and especially on their clothes.  

These patterns can be cut out of cardstock or heavier cardboard. You should insist that the students not put chalk on your templates. Who wants to have to remake the patterns year after year????





You may also like these patriotic products: