January 15, 2016
Dear Families,
We had a good
week in room 113! We have been busy with
lots of math learning. The children
enjoyed playing “Quick Looks” with tens-frames.
To play this game, each child used a tens frame and counters to build
images that they saw for less than three seconds. After each round, children talked about what
groupings they saw to help them know how to build the number. For example, when the children saw this
tens-frames image, some children saw two groups of four, others saw two
squares, and others saw a filled in tens frame with two spaces in the
middle. This kind of activity and
discussion helps the children develop their understanding of how numbers can be
composed and decomposed (build or taken apart), which develops a strong
foundation for number combinations. In
math this week, children also made number lines from 0 to 9 with tens frames,
practiced graphing as a whole class and individually, and used calculators to
type large numbers with the numerals 0-9.
This week, we used Jan Brett’s The Mitten as a launching pad for our
literacy centers. In this story, winter
animals huddle together in one lost, squishy mitten until a little mouse makes
a bear sneeze, and all of the animals go flying. In Reading Response, the children wrote about
what animals they would like to share the mitten with. We challenged the children to expand on their
thinking by including a “because” phrase.
We have been working on this orally and in writing. At art center, the children made symmetrical
puffy paint mittens. Our poem this week
was about colorful mittens.
This week we
also learned about Martin Luther King, Jr.
We read a non-fiction book and a Scholastic News, each focusing on Dr.
King’s beliefs that all people should have access to equal rights no matter
what they look like. From there, the
children thought about ways that they could make the world a better place. We listened to the song “With My Own Two
Hands,” and the children stamped hearts with their own two hands. All of the children wrote about ways that
they can make the world a better place.
My hope is that the kindergarteners took away the lesson that Dr. King
made the world a better place by helping to make it more fair, and that the
kindergarteners can make the world a better place too.
Next week is
a short week. Everyone will be home on
Monday for MLK Day. On Tuesday, children
will be home while teachers have a full day of professional development. We’ll look forward to seeing the children on
Wednesday. Next week, as we study
community helpers, we will continue to learn about people who make the world a
better place.
Best wishes,
Meg Keene and
Andrea McCarthy
Books We Read:
·
The Mitten,
by Jan Brett
·
The Hat, by
Jan Brett
·
The Jacket
I Wear in the Snow, by Shirley Neitzel
·
Martin
Luther King, Jr. Day, by Rebecca Rissman
Lively Letters:
·
Tracking / Tapping and Sliding Sounds – words
with “King E”
Handwriting Without Tears
·
Introducing Curved Letters: C and O
Sight Words:
·
New: go, so, no
·
Review: we, he, see, the, am, an, can, and,
like, my, a, I