Kindergarten

The Poetry of Bugs!

This week in the library, Kindergarten explored the poetry of bugs. Using Insect Soup

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by Barry Louis Polisar as our touchstone text, we shared some lively and humorous verses about our favorite and most icky bugs: lice, ticks, chiggers, roaches and ants. With vibrant illustrations by David Clark, this book provides an introduction to the rhyme and rhythm of short verse. Students then created their own insect scenes using stickers and pages from retired National Geographic magazines which inspired their own icky oral narratives. The students especially enjoyed telling each other their bug stories.
We concluded with book browsing and checkout. Happy Reading!

By |2013-08-01T09:33:41-04:00October 17th, 2012|

News from Kindergarten 10-12-12

The last couple of weeks have been wonderful.  Fall is truly here:  we’ve been learning poems that talk about different aspects of the season, we’ve read many books about it, then brainstormed a long list with our own ideas and wrote our own book of the season.  We’ve also begun a unit on the human body.  Our initial focus is learning about our own skeletons and the names of some of the major bones.  We have a favorite skeleton puzzle in the classroom – when completed, it is just the exact height of our kindergartners.  How perfect!

This week saw kindergarten and Grade 1 having their first “mixer” together.  The classes combined for Choice Time.  Throughout the year these mixers will change focus – math, stories, or special projects.  Julie and I look forward to crafting different experiences for our students work and play together as well as strengthening the bonds between K and Grade 1.  We went to the beautiful first grade classroom this time, but we will alternate throughout the year.  Based on today’s first mixer, we’re off to a great start!

Grandparent’s Day last week was wonderful.  The children loved showing their classroom to their grandparents and special friends, and our visitors loved the chance to see their grandchildren in action.  The class’ recitation of poems (ones that they chose earlier in the week) was animated (and adorable), and all enjoyed making heart necklaces together.  We welcome our grandparents back anytime!

Starting our hike

Fun and smiles…

 

 

 

 

 

 

Mountain Day was another high point.  This class loved it!!  I didn’t hear a single complaint either going up OR coming down the mountain.  There were many new activities this year and they were quite popular.  Although the weather was a bit chilly, the children seemed fine (there were a few cold teachers, though!)  Go kindergarten – what a great group of hikers!

Four tired, but happy, hikers!

And four more!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

We had our second birthday this week – Gabrielle turned six on Oct. 10  Her mom and dad were both able to join us for her birthday celebration.  Elizabeth read a Batman book that Gabi had chosen from home (this class is very fond of superheroes, who often appear in their outside play), and after lunch we shared delicious brownies together.  Thank you Elizabeth and Paul, for helping to make Gabrielle’s birthday such a special one!

Upcoming events:

Saturday, Oct. 13 – BCD Campus Community Work Day, 9-4

Thursday, Oct. 18- Trip to Ioka Valley Farm, 9:15-12:30

Wednesday, Oct. 31 – Halloween – PS/LS parade and class party.  More information will be coming soon.  When planning costumes, please remember no weapons, masks, or frightening costumes.

Have a great weekend!

Andrea

By |2016-10-25T15:04:06-04:00October 12th, 2012|

Kindergarten Dives Into the Animal World with Leo Leonni

Captivating young people with his brilliant collages, four-time Caldecott Honor Book winner Leo Lionni artfully weaves animal stories with human relationships. Today in the library, we read three of Lionni’s works: Swimmy, Fish is Fish and Matthew’s Dream. Told from the animal’s point of view, these stories center around friendships, hopes and dreams–all themes that connect directly to the BCD social curriculum and goals of Responsive Classroom. We concluded with book browsing and checkout. Happy Reading!

By |2013-08-01T09:34:16-04:00October 2nd, 2012|

Kindergarten News 9-27-12

We’ve had a wonderful two weeks!  Here are a few photos, showing the class in action:

Fun at the easel

 

Master puzzlers!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

And some other highlights:

In math, we created out first bar graph, tasting red, yellow and green apples to see which was the class favorite (rather surprising to me, the tart green Granny Smiths won!)  The children enjoyed tasting and voting, and then learning how to read a graph.  The lesson was enhanced by the vocabulary words that the children added to describe how the different apples tasted, felt, smelled and sounded.  The completed graph is hanging on the bulletin board – come and take a look!

And when we returned from our long weekend, we discovered that all four of our butterflies had hatched!  As part of our observational study of their life cycle, the children used the butterflies themselves as live models, painting what they saw.  We kept the butterflies overnight, feeding them a sugar syrup, and releasing them the next day.  Have they made it to Mexico yet?  Too bad they can’t send us a postcard!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

We’ve been working hard at creating out classroom rooms.  Our final rules arise out of many discussions about how to create a class where all of our hopes and dreams come true this year.  The children came up with 18 excellent rules which slowly get crystallized into a three, broader rules that cover an individual’s behavior, our relationship to each other, and our relationship to our world.  This year, the specific rules are:

1. Make good choices.

2. Be gentle with each other.

3. Take good care of our stuff.

The process of creating rules is a lengthy one, but truly gives the children a feeling of ownership in their kindergarten community, as well as their responsibilities to help maintain it.  Next week I will write the rules on a poster, everyone will sign them, and they then get posted in the classroom.

Along with the entire school, we all had fun at at yesterday’s assembly, which brought three musicians from Albany to teach different folk dances.  The class did well at following instructions and copying different dance steps, and it was great fun to be part of 200 dancers!

We enjoyed our first Lunch Bunch last week, sharing homemade Mac’n’Cheese (the Barefoot Contessa version, no less – yum!), chicken and apple sausages, and sliced apples and honey.  Special thanks to the McDonnell and Boyd families for such a wonderful meal.  The class really enjoyed it.

We ended this week with a birthday celebration for Elias!  Elias was joined in the classroom by his mom, his dad, little brother Jasper, and sixth-grade sister Aidan.  Elias had chosen a book from home for his parents to read, and we all had fun listening to Chipmunk in Hollow Tree Lane.  The class then read a book of birthday wishes to Elias that they had written earlier in the week.  After lunch, we all shared delicious chocolate cupcakes.  A big thank you to Elias’ family for making his school birthday such a special one!

It was great to see so many of you at Back-to-School Night last Thursday, and to go over the program in a little more depth.  As always, I’m available to answer your questions and concerns, so please don’t hesitate to ask.

Andrea

 

 

By |2016-10-25T15:04:11-04:00September 29th, 2012|
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