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Showing posts with label first day of school. Show all posts
Showing posts with label first day of school. Show all posts

Sunday, August 9, 2015

First Day of School Rewind

Oh the first week. It was this week and to say I am exhausted is an understatement. Because you know there is tired and then there is first-week-school-tired! It actually went pretty well today...as well as the first week of Kinder can go, you know...like herding cats...or ...something. It was definitely one of my better first weeks.

So I have been teaching Kindergarten for the past 8 years and have been slowly perfecting my first day lesson plan. My school is half day (8:50-12:10) Kindergarten up until the 2nd trimester. After that we go full day. This makes a perfect little transition time for the kids to get acclimated into school life. It also means I am crunched for time! It stresses me out like you would not believe. The plus side is that I am more organized during this time of the year. It's a different story after November, but ask me about that another time, ha!

Back to lesson plans. I am not sure if this will help anyone but maybe you can glean a few ideas off of it for those of you still *lucky* enough to be on summer break! (I envy you!!)

Here is what my day looks like:


So let me break it down for you:



This is where our parents meet us and after all the students are in the line with their parents in tow, my principal makes some announcements and we are set free. It's kind of a chaotic, hot time but whatevs... I roll with it :) When it is all over, the parents get to come with us to the classrooms.

I let my students into the classroom one at a time. I greet each child with a handshake and a comment or 2 on their new school clothes. I hand this paper to each parent and ask them to complete these steps:

It gives the parents and children a task to complete while I greet the rest of the students and talk to parents. 


Once we've said goodbye to our parents ( I had one itty bitty that didn't want to say goodbye, hence he became my shadow for the rest of the day), I show the students my attention getter and we practice it a few times before they clean up the blocks and come to the carpet. Normally, we will have a carpet routine but the first day is a little different. I take roll and teach them to say "I am here!" when I call their name. This is always the hardest part because I haven't taught them to raise their hand or to stay seated yet, so of course in between calling names I am reminding students not to get up or to let me finish taking roll before they ask me more questions. Which is a perfect time to lead into...




We have a little talk about why we can't all speak at once (it sounds like blah, blah, blah and I can't understand) and I go into the steps. I display the chart with it's steps and we practice a few times. I make a big deal of those who follow directions.

 After going over these rules, I read them a story I wrote about... me! And my family too.  It's an ABC book of my family. They enjoy getting to see the pictures. I created my book using Shutterfly and a free code I got when we went to LegoLand over the Summer (Summer -I miss you!!).





 By this time, I usually have children chomping at the bit, practicing the new skill of raising their hands and asking me if they get to use the pencils, crayons or scissors yet.  To which I reply, "Of course!!"
https://www.teacherspayteachers.com/Product/Name-Writing-Self-Portraits-1926940

I whip out my Name Writing Self Portraits for August. I LOVE these. I have been using these for years (I just revamped them this summer) for name assessment and showing growth. Then at the end of the year, they double as part of the memory book. They are super fun to look back on. Plus I keep them up on the wall all year, I just tack the newest portrait on top, then I can see the growth with just the flip of a page.

Don't they look so good hanging up in my room??? I love it!

For this, my buddy teacher and I helped each other (as we always do, isn't having a good teammate awesome?!). She took all the girls into her room and I took all the boys. We used this time to go over our bathroom expectations. I always tell the kids that there are 3 things they can do in a bathroom: poop, pee and wash their hands. Nothing else. Just saying the words poop and pee gets their attention, it's amazing. We make a little poster of looks like/sounds like for each rule my buddy teacher and I came up with ahead of time. The kids came up with the looks like/sounds like portion. They loved making the sound effects for Do Your Business. Inappropriate? maybe. But definitely necessary! ha!


Before we go to the bathroom, I also show them this quick video of ducks walking in a line behind their Mama to show them what I mean by a line. Then we practice.




 After getting the chance to show off our skills of how to use a school bathroom and walk in a line appropriately, we headed to the playground for snack. While they ate, my buddy teacher and I traded off narrating and using the playground equipment appropriately while they watched us. We probably looked completely ridiculous but we all know we do it. We are Kindergarten teachers, right?! We had also made a powerpoint showing the kinder team using the equipment both correctly and incorrectly, but as most first days go, we ran out of time!!! I did show it the next day though. I will spare you the horribly (I guess funny) pictures we took...well, maybe I will share just one :) Only because we look... the least amount of ridiculous compared to the other pictures, haha! I am the one on the left. My buddy teacher next door is next to me.

 After recess, we brought the kids for a little story time with our favorite bad boy, No David! That little naked butt running down the street becomes every kindergarteners obsession from this day out. Amen?
Anyway, let me backtrack for just a moment. I was fortunate enough to be able to attend the I Teach K conference in Las Vegas over the Summer (AMAZING experience, best PD ever, hands down) and on the last day there, I changed one of my classes to see another presenter. Her name was LeAnna Wolkis-Goldstien. And OMG, she was completely adorable, first off, and her ideas!! Oh such good ideas! That I just had to stay in her class the whole rest of the day. The reason I am telling you about her is that she introduced me to the magic prop bag. This is a cloth bag I sewed together with scrap cloth real quickly one day. I made one for me and one for my buddy teacher.
 Inside I included the book, a broken toy (my daughter found a broken tiara for me), a toy pot and pan with spoon and a happy/sad face.
Before reading the story I *dramatically* introduce my "Magic Story bag".  I pull out the book first and we all gasp. I really ham it up as I peek in the bag (and they are all up on their knees "What is it?! What is it?!") and pull out items one at a time and make guesses as to why that item might be in there. After reading the story we discuss if our guesses were correct. I now use this bag to introduce every story and I have them just eating out of my hands. They cannot get enough! I'll create a post more about this later as it is one of the best teaching tools I've learned.

 Now it is time for using glue and scissors for the first time! Eek! I am VERY explicit with my rules for scissors and glue. I created a powerpoint that showed me using those tools right and wrong. They thought it was great. And it works!






 (just an example, not the whole PowerPoint)
 Then I print out the pictures of me and we sort them on a anchor chart and keep them up all year. This way I can refer to it all year long when I spot someone who forgot the rules.


After we have gone over that, I let them practice by creating the snack calendar. Each month, we create this calendar as a keepsake of art work that children's parents can delightfully hang up and at the same time it gives the parents an easy way to keep track of what is going on in the classroom and when they need to bring snack for the class. I didn't get a picture of this one, dang it! Next time!


It's finally the end of the day!!! I take the last 20 minutes of the day to introduce them to dismissal procedures, where their cubbie is, things like that.

So, that's my day...what I got done at least.I had a craftivity for No David that we didn't get to until Thursday! We all know we over plan that first week because so much time is spent getting them to just stay put, stop tapping you (my pet peeve!) and to teach procedures. I felt really good that my class was heading in the right direction by Thursday and I am super excited to see them again tomorrow! I have fun week planned for them. I would like to give you a peek at my week but Mommy duties have been calling my name. I have been trying to ignore them, but they are as persistent as Kindergarteners.


Friday, July 17, 2015

First Day Idea - Telling Your Students About You

I have always believed that you can be more scared of the unknown than anything else. This definitely rings true for our new little friends coming into Kindergarten. They have no idea what to expect, they don't really know what their teacher is going to be like, or for our non-preschoolers. what a teacher even is, all they know is Mommy and Daddy won't be there and it might be hard. All of that is more than little scary. And then there is us, the teachers, all a little scared of what the year might bring. Especially the first day. I agonize and worry about my first impression to the parents and kids. Will I have a runner? Or how many criers? How many students will I have to peel off the parents’ legs? How many potty accidents? How many times will I answer “When is it time to go home?”. How long will it feel like I am herding cats before I have them trained to stay... there. Stay where ever it is that they need to be...centers... their seat...the carpet. ahhh! My heart is starting to race just thinking about it. So. Many. Things. I am not alone in this right??? I can never sleep before the first day of school thinking about all of these things. Anyway... I am getting a little carried away here!
So, what I really meant to talk about was the children and what can be a very stressful day for them with all their worries about the unknown. I came up with a couple of things I do to alleviate their anxiety so at least one of us is more relaxed and EXCITED about the first day J My ideas aren’t ground breaking or even new stuff but they are just something I do that works for me. Maybe it might work for others too.

ABC’s About Me
A few years ago, a friend of mine gave a code for a free 8x8 photo book from Shutterfly. My kids were 3 and 4 years old at the time and I saw an idea on Pinterest to make them an ABC book of their current life. So I did. It said things like "A is for Allison, B is Beach camping, etc... and it included pictures of us and things we did, and places we've been. It turned out so cute and they love it! I read it to them as a bedtime story often. When it came for school to start up I thought it would be a perfect little story to read to my new little Kinder babies to tell them about me, my kids, my pets, my husband and the things we like to do together. My students loved it just as much and would ask me to read it to them several times during the year. As they got to know me, and the people I talked about most, it was something of a novelty to the kids to connect these names to faces. Or stories I’ve told them about my family to the events in the pictures. This is the first book I made:



Create your own custom photo books at Shutterfly.com.


Last year, when I brought out the book on the first day, I realized that it was severely outdated. My kids were 3 and 4 years old in the pictures (they are now 7 and 8 years old), the pets we have now were not in our family back then, and there are more family events I can include now that we’ve done them with our few years older children. So this year, I got my hands on another free code when we went to LegoLand in May. I finally just finished our new and updated ABC book. They take a bit of time to make, but in the end, so worth it. Plus it’s a family keepsake that serves 2 purposes . I will show you my new updated version when it arrives on Tuesday. Follow me on Instagram @SmartCookiesInKinder

Letter Home
I never had a teacher send me a letter but my siblings did. I knew I wanted to be a teacher back then and when they received a letter in the mail from their teachers, I thought it was the coolest thing. I tucked that little idea way in my head for future teacher use. It took a few years of teaching to get my hands on an address roster before school began but eventually someone let me have it. I now write a letter every year that looks like this:








 I just edit a few things and change out the pictures to updated ones. When Kinder orientation comes (Meet The Teacher), many students bring the letter with them and are so excited to share with me that their favorite color is pink like me or they love the Dodgers too! They tell me about their pets or their brothers and sisters and they are the oldest child like me. Right away I have broken down that barrier of the unknown, because now, they know me. They know I am a Mommy and that Mommies are nice. They know I like kids, and sports. Then when the first day of school rolls around, they are excited to come back and see me. I haven’t had criers or runners since I started doing this...maybe about 5 years ago... Though I still stress over the possibility of having one.
Is there anything you do to help your students cope with first day nerves and get to know you? Please share!