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Showing posts with label Sight Words. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sight Words. Show all posts

Sunday, March 20, 2016

DON'T Give Up on Writing


How do you feel when you get a hand inked card? How do you feel when you get an e-vite?

 
 Hand inked or crafted cards elicit nostalgia, thrill, anticipation.  Those cards are pieces of art, carefully curated by someone who cares either about you and the guest of honor.

On the other hand, e-vites are convenient, sterile, alerting me to an event that I need to put on my calendar. Excitement for the upcoming event, but I'm not going to print it off and display it on my mantle.

So, why are we forgetting to teach our children penmanship and art? And how to the two processes fit together?

I teach kindergarten. Kindergarteners are 5 and 6 years old and have muscles in their fingers that need to be developed - fine motor skills. Typing or pressing letters on a screen does not help develop these muscles.


They need to hold pencils, pens, crayons, tweezers, sort manipulatives, squeeze and push things. They also need to learn letters. So often we combine working on fine motor skills and learning letters and words. This is penmanship too - practicing tracing, writing, connection the dots to build strength and fine motor skills while learning letters. Our kids are writers then, they have begun to open the doors to written communication. In seemingly simple and rote lessons, our students are becoming communicators. 


Some of our students need extra support in either fine motor skills, learning letters, or both.  Others need communication devices or accommodations in order to be successful communicators.  For the general population of our students, writing leads to communication. We are building writers and communicators from day 1.

Writing and penmanship skills will NEVER go away. Think about that inked card. How will our students be effective communicators, eliciting emotion, joy, and passion through their writing? Will it really all be through keyboard and screen interaction?

It can't.

Handwriting and keyboarding are cognitively different processes. We HAVE to teach our students both. According to Edouard Gentaz, professor of developmental psychology at the University of Geneva, in an article from The Guardian, "Children take several years to master the precise motor exercise," that is needed for writing.  Controlling a writing implement on paper, watching the colors appear on pages of a journal, erasing and trying again, this cannot be replaced. 


There are three vital processes integrated through writing: visual, motor, and cognitive. When we teach our students letters in kindergarten, they see what they write (visual), move an object to form the letter (motor), and remember the shape the letter forms (cognitive).  These processes are further outlines in the Huffington Post article Why Does Writing Make Us Smarter? Working with all three processes helps students remember what they are learning because they are forming it.

Students NEED these experiences. Their brains are being molded from each and every experience they encounter. Writing is KEY and not just for little ones.

In the Scientific American article Don't Take Notes With a Laptop, college students were studied taking notes either writing or typing. The results?  The students, "who wrote out their notes by hand had a stronger conceptual understanding and were more successful in applying and integrating the material than those who took notes with their laptops." Why? Because they were using the same three cognitive processes simultaneously, allowing their brains to make deeper connections to the material. 

Students who write are literally, as we say in our class, "growing their brains." 

Watching my students' pride after creating through writing, painting, and drawing is so joyous. We hang their creations on the wall. We show them off to school staff and parents. This will never become obsolete.


However, we are also responsible for teaching our students how to compute - use iPads and computers to communicate and create. We do this through centers and choice time, always balancing the learning targets and keeping our students' unique needs in mind. Our students will need to be able to do both, let's give them every opportunity we can, placing high value on each and every learning opportunity. 


 
Next time you get that card in the mail, or maybe it is a thank you note, or newspaper clipping from your grandma with her handwriting on it...think.  Think how you still have crafts and papers saved from your childhood that you can sift through with care. Or how my husband turned my Granny's signature into a necklace.  Is writing dead? Of course not. 

Tuesday, April 21, 2015

Making CVC and Sight Word Centers

I don't know about you, by my little ones are ALWAYS needing a new center to keep their engagement high. The more we can play with, the better! I have been using these two centers with some good luck lately and one comes with a FREEBIE!

First up is fishing for sight words!


I picked up this chip/dip bowl at Jewel for $1 (whattt??) and the fishing poles/fish in the Target dollar spot for $3 a set. So for $13 I have a brand new center. And man oh man do the kiddos love it. The video above makes it pretty easy to understand the directions, so I project this Filpagram on the Smart Board when I am introducing the center. Having the visual makes it easy to understand so I let it play through centers. My littles complete this (FREE) response sheet and we are good to go! 

Next up are CVC Boxes.  I also found these in the Target dollar spot for $1 each.  I bought 5, put magnetic letters in each section of the box and use it with my small group for RtI. The other little ones wanted to have a go at them, so it became a regular in the center rotation.


Again, I play this Flipagram for introduction and they are ready to rock! What fun things have you been doing for literacy centers? I would love to get some new ideas!

Tuesday, February 4, 2014

Sight Word Superheros!




We are really rockin' on our sight words and many of us are able to use sight words strung together in sentences to read fluently.  We have 67 words to know by the end of the year so multiple ways of practicing them is important!



I have (with the help of a very, very wonderful colleague) developed sight words kits to work with at home and in school. When playing sight word games there are a few important things to remember:

1. Make it quick! 10-15 minutes per day - it should be exciting, not a chore.
2. Practice everyday, try something new each day to keep it exciting.
3. Always start with a flash card review. Have your child sort his/her words into "Ones I know" and "Ones I do not know."


Alrighty...let's get started....

Easy peasy sentence strips. Just match the clothespin words to the sentence strip words and read! 

 Get a little silly! Put one of your child's flash cards in the front pocket of this crown.  If you wear it, your child has to say the word five times (use stickers to keep track) before the word is changed.  OR - if your child wears the crown, you can give him, or her clues to what the word is, until it is guess - its hours of effortless fun! ;o)

 Roll playdoh into a snake shape and then divide it up to form into the letters of a sight word. You can also use this to make word family words!

 Who doesn't LOVE playing with toy cars? 

Attach a sight word to the top of your car, and park that word in its parking space.  This is a fun way to match words! If your child cannot say the word after he/she park it, it goes back into the bag to try again!


So I definitely can't take credit for all these activities - Mrs. Borst from first grade uses these sight words kits with her kiddos, and I was so impressed I thought that they would work for us too!

I am going to send sight words kits home with some of the kids this week. Each kit is a little different and we will take turns bringing them home.  Have fun with these activities! Remember to make them quick and if your child is getting bored, move on!

Have fun!

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Wednesday, December 4, 2013

Center Update!

We are ROCKIN' centers!

This week, we are working on CVCs, sight word recognition, computers, make it - write it, and positional words. 

I was so proud today when a little guy came over with this...


Last week, we used these same cards to write the CVC words with a marker and the week before I introduced them during our morning routine. Now we are taking those skills and expanding to stamping the words. AND HE DID IT!! Whoo! I was so pumped I showed the whole class!

and then this happened....

I know, it says /l/ /i/ /n/. Which in kinder is lion. This little one didn't know her letters in September and now LOOK! Man, I am just so amazed by little brains. 

It's the little things.... :o)

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Tuesday, October 22, 2013

Reading Centers and Reading Buddies

I know this is a little late, but here is a reading center activity that we did a few weeks ago during fire safety week.  The kids had a blast putting their letter sounds together to make words!

 We put our vowels (red magnet letters) on the side of the tray and then used our consonants to make CVC words. It was so fun exploring sounds with the kids and seeing their faces when they made silly words. :o)



And here are our 4th grade reading buddies working on us with a pumpkin project this week! While we prepared to go to the farm and pick our pumpkins, we discussed how pumpkins grew from seeds.  We read Scholastic News about pumpkins, watched a short clip about growing pumpkins.


The kids then worked together to make a chain of the pumpkin growth cycle - so fun!


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Thursday, February 7, 2013

Happy Thursday! Today, I thought I would post a sight word video from the YouTube channel "Have Fun Teaching." We watch These videos THroughou THe week as we learn our sigth words.  I chose "THe" because we are learning THe "TH" sound and its THursday!

THursday - THe - TH

....all THis freezing rain must be making me loopy....

Well, here ya go!





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Thursday, January 24, 2013

Well, it worked. Our class has been doing everything we can think of to get it to snow.  We have written about snow, we have drawn snow, and yesterday, we had a snow ball fight!!

And then it snowed outside!

How did we have a snowball fight before it was snowing? Let. me. tell. you.



It was a sight word snowball fight.  The kids each got 5 pieces of white paper and a marker.  Then I went around whispering "secret" sight words to each child. After the words were written and they checked their spelling on the word wall, I checked for spelling. Then we crumpled! We crumpled each paper and got ready for the sight word snowball fight. Girls on one side, boys on the other (only because this was a visible and quick way to sort the kids). After a review of the rules - the snowballs flew! The kids got to throw one, then read one to me.  At the end, each child picked 5 snowballs to bring to his/her seat and read.

Then...

They got back up and had a snowball fight against me! We repeated the ending part, and each child read more words. It was a fun, quick way for the kids to practice their sight words.

Thanks to Katie Mense from Little Warriors for the idea: Snowball Fight! She had some great response sheets to go along with it, but I thought that we would run a practice round first!


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Thursday, January 10, 2013

Here are some sight word flash cards to use at home.  You can cut them in half and tape them to a toilet paper rolls to make "sight word rolls"



 or cut them into flash cards and keep them in a baggy for easy practice. Enjoy!

Sight Word Flash Cards

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Friday, January 4, 2013

Last post for today ~ Here are some of the sight word pages that we have developed as a grade level (however most are mine) if you would like additional pages to practice at home.

Sight Word Pages

Disclaimer: I will be using some of these in class, but not all.  You also need to have the font ABC Print for it to work.  I am working on converting these all to PDF files, but I am not there yet! Eeee

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