Monday, February 8, 2016

February 5th Family Letter

February 5, 2016
Dear families,       
          This week we welcomed February with a new approach to calendar.  This month, each child will complete his or her own individual calendar board each day.  This allows for greater student participation now that they are all familiar with our calendar routines, and it helps children continue to build on their excitement as the 100th day of school approaches.  All of the children did a good job using the 100s chart each day to figure out how many more days until our 100th day celebration. 
          This week we learned about Groundhog’s Day.  About half of the class was hoping for six more weeks of winter, and the other half was hoping for an early spring.  All of the children did a wonderful job writing about why they were wishing for either winter or spring.  On Groundhog’s Day, we watched a video clip of Punxsutawney Phil proclaiming that we would have an early spring.  It certainly seemed as though that would be the case…  We had several beautiful days of outdoor recess!  Friday’s snowstorm, however, seems to have cast a shadow of doubt on Phil’s reliability. 
          During the week, I enjoyed reading with children individually.  It was a pleasure to be able to show each child what a “just right” book looked like in the fall compared to what a “just right” book looks like now.  Children noticed that they are reading longer texts, using more strategies when reading, and that they are more independent.  Seeing their faces light up with pride is sure to be one of the best memories from the year. 
          In math, we were busy comparing numbers and adding quantities to twelve.  We played two new games.  To play “top it,” partners flipped over cards and decided which card displayed the larger number.  That partner won both cards during that round.  Many children had played “War” at home, so this was a familiar game, and the children had a blast playing both at math time and during their arrival work time.  To play “roll and record,” children rolled two dice, found their sum, and recorded the addition equation on a graph.  Many children were working on the addition strategy of “counting all.”  To use this strategy, kids counted all of the dots on both dice.  Moving forward, we will help children progress to the “counting on” strategy, in which children touch and say the larger quantity and then touch each dot on the other di while counting up (e.g. “5…6, 7, 8” instead of 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8).  Both of these games are simple and fun to play at home!
          Next week is a quadruple exciting week.  We have Chinese New Year on Monday.  Wednesday is an early release day; only morning monkeys will come to kindergarten in 113.  Then, we will celebrate the 100th Day of School on Wednesday and Thursday.  We will celebrate Valentine’s Day on Friday.  Please be on the look out for notes about all of the special days!  Thank you, in advance, for helping to make all of these celebrations fun and meaningful for the kids.  It is sure to be a great week!
          Best wishes,
          Meg keene and Andrea McCarthy


Books We Read:
·       Double Trouble Groundhog Day, by Bethany Roberts
·       Groundhog’s Special Secret, by Iiris Hiskey Amo
·       Chinese New Year, by Lola Schaefer
·       Bringing in the New Year, by Grace Lin

Handwriting Without Tears
·       Review of Numbers and Letters on Whiteboards
·       Emphasis of “Start at the Top!”

Lively Letters
·       Listening for the middle vowel sound in CVC words (e.g. sun, cat, dog)

Sight Words:
·       Review: in, is, it, go, so, no, we, he, see, the, am, an, can, and, like, my, a, I

Math Lessons
·       4-12 Top It with Number Cards
·       4-13 Number Grid (100s Chart)
·       5-2 Roll and Record Addition
·       5-3 10 Bears on the Bus


Thursday, February 4, 2016

January 29th Family Letter

January 29, 2016
Dear Families,
          This week we read and compared several snowy day stories.  In The Snowy Day and Snow Day!, characters prepared to go outside, adventured through the snow, and returned home to warm up.  Children used these books to make text-to-self connections and as launching points for writing their own mini-books called “My Snowy Day.”  We made text-to-text connections between those two stories and A Silly Snowy Day, in which a turtle snuck out of his home instead of hibernating with her mom and dad.  Children are becoming more confident in comparing characters, setting, problem, solution, and beginning, middle, ending events among stories.  Comparing texts helps readers make more accurate predictions, better understand character motivations and feelings, and, perhaps most importantly, enjoy the stories more deeply. 
          Mrs. Robertson, who works with out Guidance Counselor, visited our room to lead a Second Step lesson this week.  The lesson helped the kindergartners think through how and when they could offer help to a friend.  Later in the week, we read The Biggest Snowman Ever, in which two mice use teamwork to win a snowman building competition.  The children then used teamwork in pairs to make their own puffy paint, which they used to individually paint their own snowmen.  The children did a terrific job negotiating who would be the glue partner and who would be the shaving cream partner to make the paint.  If you would like to make the paint at home, simply mix equal parts liquid glue and shaving cream. 






























          In math, the children expanded on their work from last week to use small components to build a larger whole.  Last week, they explored this concept with pattern blocks and shapes.  This week, they use d unifix cubes to build towers of a given number out of two colors.  This was challenging for the kids at first because they are far more familiar with using the unifix cubes to build patterns.  We worked on “keeping the two color teams together” (instead of making patterns), using the same two colors the whole time, and making sure our towers were all the same height.  The purpose of building the number towers in this way is to deepen the children’s number sense by exploring ways that the number can be broken apart and built.  We worked on identifying all of the possible combinations to make the given numbers; kids were able to keep track by “building a staircase.”  We also practiced naming and writing the equations that matched the various towers. 
          Enjoy your weekend,
          Meg Keene and Andrea McCarthy



Books We Read:
·       The Snowy Day, by Ezra Jack Keats
·       Snow Day!, by Barbara M. Joosse
·       A Silly Snowy Day, by Michael Coleman
·       The Biggest Snowman Ever, by Steven Kroll

Handwriting Without Tears
·       New Letters: G, Q, S

Sight Words:
·       New Words: in, is, it
·       Review: go, so, no, we, he, see, the, am, an, can, and, like, my, a, I

Math Lessons
·       4-8 Building Numbers
·       4-9 Comparing Weight
·       4-10 Comparing Capacity

·       4-11 Counting by 10s