September 29-October 3
September 29-October 3
September 29-October 3
it at home either then it will not help. I also try to have the students do the alphabet by having
each student say a letter starting with A and so on. I know the ones that still need help with
letters so I need to make sure I do this during center time as well.
In Math, I did the measuring of how tall the students were with apples. I did the activity
during center time because it would have been better in small groups. The students enjoyed this
activity because it amazed them that they were 17 apples tall. It is an interactive activity as well
as something that is exciting to them. I did small guided reading groups during center time as
well. I did questions like where is the title? Can you point to the title? I also read to the
students and then had them to repeat it back to me. It is mostly memorization but I think that
should be the first step to reading. I did forget that morning to do math journal and I told my
teacher and she was like that is fine because sometimes that will happen so it is no big deal. I did
do it after related arts so it was good timing to do it.
October 2, 2014
Today I did the lesson for life cycle of an apple because the students think that apples
magically appear in the grocery store. I did a guided reading lesson of a booklet called I See an
Apple which has the life cycle of an apple. At first I would read the sentence on each page and
as each page went to a new step in the life cycle, I would have the students come up and
physically do the life cycle of an apple. After I explained each step, I did a review of having the
students do a thumbs up and down of what I wanted them to know like which one is the apple?
The idea came to my mind when I was driving to school that morning. I remember doing
something similar in science pedagogy and I thought it would be more meaningful to the
students if I had them act out the life cycle. The acting out was not part of the lesson plan.
I also did parts of an apple by using a real apple. Again it was not part of the lesson plan
to use a real apple. But I think using a an actual apple would be more meaningful cause they can
see it and look at their own apples and know the parts. After that, the students had do a
worksheet which did not work for them. They had seen the words leaf, stem, and seeds before
but not skin or flesh so it was not easy for them to put the right word in the right box. I would
have used an anchor chart and I would have had the students tell me altogether what the parts
were rather than them trying to read the new words they have not seen before. I did try to write
them on the board but since I did not have a picture of it already up there, it was difficult for
them.
In math, we had a taste test of green, yellow, and red apples. We had di-cut apples of
each. Before we did the experience, I asked them to make a prediction of which apple they think
would like before tasting it. I then asked them which apple would have more votes. After they
did the taste testing, each student had to whisper in my ear which apple they liked best and were
given that color apple. As they put their apples under our chart, I had them count how many
apples in each column and put the total at the bottom. I tried a concept that they were not ready
which is one less or one more. Most students picked the yellow apples and green and red were
tied. It was a great math lesson and it tied the unit together as well. I thought it was a good idea
to have the students predict because they do need to know how to make a prediction.
We also met for an ELA planning meeting for the unit of farm animals. I was able to
contribute my idea for the Old MacDonald book and the song. I suggested that the students
compare and contrast both the book and the song because they probably mentioned animals that
may or may not have been in either one or the other. Ms. Glace and Ms. South were like that is
perfect! Girl, you are good! It was great that my idea was getting added to the lesson plan for that
week.
October 3, 2014
Today was the last day for unit of apples and the five senses. We did another game of
alphabet bingo and the students love this game. It makes them think hard about each of the
letters. It also shows what they know and what they do not know. I did one round of showing
them the letter and then two rounds of not showing them. While the students were at Guidance,
Ms. South and I got books together for the unit next week and the week after that. I already had
the farm books out and the big books used for the ELA lessons. I already had the work for next
week ready and put in the correct folders for each day.
I read the big book of Apples when the students came back. I did a review of the life
cycle as well as the parts of an apple. It was great to see that they remembered those things from
yesterday and it was great to see that my impromptu lessons worked. For math, we did an anchor
of the number 6. Ms. South observed me for that lesson. I had the students show me six fingers. I
had them get their white boards out to write the number six. I also asked to write six in tally
marks which did not work as well as I would have liked them to. It made me realize we do need
to work on that. I also had them to represent six in their tens frame by drawing it. For some, they
did well but for some they did not. I should have done an example of both the tally marks and the
tens frame. After that, the students did their worksheet of an anchor chart of the number 6.
At the end of the day, the students brought their own apple from home and we had the
students use their five senses for their apples. I asked them to use words that would describe their
apples while eating them and one said Delicious which is a good word for a kindergartner. I
believe the whole week went well for the students and very tasty for them.
I had a great first week of full time teaching and I cannot wait to see what the next four
weeks are going to hold for me. I am so excited to teach about fall and the other seasons.