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Monday, January 4, 2021

ACTIVITIES for THE MITTEN

 

Do you share any version of THE MITTEN with your students?  I like to share all the versions I can find; then compare them.  My students love to create a graph showing which book is their favorite.

Then we compare the animals:

  • Are the same animals in each version?
  • How many animals are in each story?
  • Do the same animals look different in each book?
  • etc.
Compare and contrast the mitten:
  • What color and material is the mitten?
  • How was the mitten lost?
  • What happened to the mitten at the end of the story?
  • etc.

Evaluate the illustrations, in general:

  • Note the pattern of the colors in Tresselt's book.
  • Explain personification as it applies to Tresselt's illustrations (clothing).
  • Draw attention to the Brett illustrations that foreshadow the next animal to appear.
  • Lead your students to understand that Aylesworth's animals all point to their toes and describe them as "cold as ice."
  • etc.

Comparing the animals from each version readily leads to a Venn diagram:

Naturally, you could use pictures of the animals instead of the words, if you are working with pre-readers.

Teach your students to sing and act out THE MITTEN song.  I took the verbs from Jan Brett's book.  They are easy to act out.  However, you can certainly substitute the verbs with more familiar ones or verbs your students suggest.  For example, I love "The badger barged inside,"  because of the alliteration and the action absolutely describes the aggressive nature of a badger.
Naturally, you may amend the song to reflect the animals from the book you read or declared as the class favorite.

I like to immerse my class in all things mitten, so for the week we are studying this folktale, I provide a plethora of materials with the mitten theme.

This is a thematic unit with printables, literacy centers, and math centers.



This bulletin board display is awesome as a math center, anchor activity, sponge activity, enrichment, and/or fast finishers' challenge.



Math centers include:
 
















Literacy Centers include:









This critical thinking product is a perennial favorite.




I've created a bundle of all of these products.  When you buy the bundle, you save 20%.  That's a lot of mitten learning for 1 great price.


I hope you enjoy your mitten time!





Wednesday, October 14, 2020

It's About Time, Teachers, for the Election!

Have you gathered your resources for teaching about the election?  You may be interested in these:

Election Hink Pinks, et al. task cards are perfect for working on vocabulary associated with elections, presidents, and civics.  The terms can be sophisitcated, suggesting that upper elementary and middle school students are the prime audience.  

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Encourage research with these Presidential Trivia Task Cards.  Your upper elementary students will uncover interesting and fun facts about presidents and the presidency.


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Patriotic Squares are differentiated, critical thinking activities that can be employed in any elementary classroom.  While not specifically related to elections, they are patriotic.  Oh, and they are such a fun way to build up to Sudoku!

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SCRATTLE is a FREE differentiated, math & literacy, learning center activity. As in Scrabble™, students use a set of letters to create words. They then calculate each word’s score using the letter values. Finally, they engage a friend in a battle wherein they compare their scores using >, <, and =.  Like Patriotic Squares, this fun product is patriotic; not specifically related to the election.  Math skills required range from simple addition  to mixed operations. Thus, SCRATTLE can be used in 1st to 6th grades.


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RED, WHITE, & BLUE COMPOUND WORDS literacy center is not election related.  It is patriotic in nature and thus, may be appropriate to primary classrooms during the election season.


All of these resources, except the Election Hink Pinks, et al., are appropriate for any patriotic holiday (Veterans Day, Presidents Day, Memorial Day, Indepence Day) and thus can be used throughout the year(s).

Enjoy the resources and remember to vote!





Monday, October 12, 2020

 


It's that pumpkin time of year...

Like so many of you, I'm relishing this special time.  So armed with my pumpkin spice latte, I'd like to share some pumpkin ideas for your classroom.
First up is a FREEBIE! Create a pumpkin bulletin board with How Many Ways? Math Challenge - Fall EditionThis is a fun, open ended, critical thinking math challenge that covers a bulletin board for a month or more. Use it as an anchor activity, math center, sponge activity, or a challenge for fast finishers.  Similar to Boggle(TM), your learners seek to arrive at a target number in many different ways.  It may be easily adapted to any elementary grade level and provides differentiation within a single classroom.

Another pumpkin activity is Pumpkinoes, a math center that is differentiated to use in any elementary classroom.  This domino style activity exercises counting & cardinality, composing & decomposing numbers, even & odd numbers, greater than & less than, basic operations, and Higher Order Thinking Skills (HOTS).

Pumpkin Squares is another differentiated, critical thinking activity that can be used in any elementary classroom.  The tasks progress in difficulty while honing the deductive reasoning necessary to eventually solve a Sudoku puzzle. 

Jazzy Jack-o'-Lanterns is another FREEBIE.  It challenges your students' creativity and is intended to be used as an enrichment activity that is completed at home.


I hope you enjoy your pumpkin time.






















Monday, August 3, 2020

BACK TO SCHOOL SALE!

It's about time, teachers, for TPT's BACK TO SCHOOL sale.

 
When you use the code BTS20, you will get 25% off everything in my store on 8/4 & 8/5.  My store will continue to be on sale on 8/6.  Everything will be 20% off on that day.



Happy shopping!


Saturday, July 25, 2020

POETRY - MY PASSION!

POETRY - MY PASSION!  

If you follow my blog, you know that I'm passionate about poetry.  I love writing instructional poetry and I love teaching WITH poetry.  Teaching WITH poetry does not mean specifically teaching "poetry," as in figurative language, iambic pentameter, sonnets, etc.  While I do teach those things when appropriate, I use poetry to teach reading skills, science, math, social studies, and a whole lot more.  To that end, I have a line of products called POETRY POSSIBILITIES.

I find it rewarding to take a poem and parse it for all the lessons hiding inside it.  Here's a sample to illustrate what POETRY POSSIBILITIES are all about --



Are you skeptical about teaching math with poems?  Check out this poem from Back to School Poetry Possibilities and its potential math lessons:

Many of the possibilities are completely adaptable to distance learning.

POETRY POSSIBILITIES are well received by teachers.  
I'm confident you'll like them, too!




Tuesday, June 23, 2020

BIRTHDAY BASH SALE!!

Help me celebrate my birthday!
I'm throwing a BIRTHDAY BASH in which a set of products will be 1/2 price for 1 day. Come back each day to see what has been featured.
Today's special is CLASSROOM DECOR. More than 100 products are 50% off today. Check it out!