Sunday, September 9, 2012

Handwriting Without Tears

Unit: Handwriting Without Tears

Main Focus:  fine motor skills, basic understanding of fundamentals of handwriting

Have you heard of HWWT?  (Learn more about it here:  www.hwtears.com)  I love it and we use it at our center.  It really takes off in my classroom, as preschoolers begin "real writing" around that age.  I've done this unit a few times and now that we've had so many recent transitions in and out of the Tank, it's time to start from square one again.

I often wonder how my teachers taught handwriting when I was in preschool (20+ years ago).  I only went for a year and I know my teachers believed in play based learning, but I have no memories of learning to write.  My first writing memory is in kindergarten we had to write and memorize our phone numbers and I wrote the 4 backwards.  I remember writing 4's and R's backwards.

I don't get the opportunity to teach writing numbers, and I'm alright with that.  Teaching uppercase can be challenging enough.  Once the art order comes in, fingers crossed it's sometime this week as we finish up our fire safety unit, I'll feel more prepared.  We already have most of the HWWT materials like the wood pieces, Mat Man, and most of the Roll-A-Dough flash cards.  We usually don't get to the chalk board stuff.  I managed to order some play dough since the play dough we make in class is non-bake and usually ends up too dry or too oily and has to be thrown away by the end of the week.  I also ordered some plastic capital letters that I'm planning on throwing in a sensory table with various sized pieces of pipe cleaners so they can bend them into letters.  The plastic letters will also be used in a water table letter-fishing game.

More fine motor/alphabet activities:

Math:

  • alphabet matching game
  • letter pattern boards
  • small groups to evaluate individual skills
  • tweezer games
Dramatic play:
  • label materials and where things go: STOVE, REFRIGERATOR, TABLE, CHAIR...
Science:
  • make alphabet cookies (practice making either letters or curves and lines with dough)
  • puzzles (including one of an alphabet train!)
  • magnets
Questions:  Do you implement HWWT practices in your class?  What do you think of it?  If not, how do you teach handwriting?  Please share thoughts, ideas, additional activities/variations.  

Learning is the beginning of wealth.  Learning is the beginning of health.  Learning is the beginning of spirituality.  Searching and learning is where the miracle process all begins. -Jim Roth

Friday, September 7, 2012

Fire Fighters to the Rescue

What a week!  The kids LOVED this unit so much that Ms. H and I decided to continue with it through next week as well.  There's so much to talk about and explore.

Good feeling:  Several parents have come up to me and told me how excited their preschooler has been with the unit.  One parent even said her son spent their entire drive home telling her all about what we did in school, told his older brother when they got home, and then told his dad during dinner.  How awesome is that?  Hearing that solidifies that I'm doing my job well.

Who doesn't want their kids to be so engrossed with what's going on at school that they have to tell everyone!  I hope to keep that up with future curriculum.  I'm not sure what Ms. H has planned for next week, but I have a few ideas, if needed, to pull out of my hat.

The BEST day EVER:  I think the highlight of everyone's week was our after circle activity on Thursday.  I wrote in the daily note on Tuesday that we'd have a special Fire Fighter Day on Thursday, which meant that everyone was encouraged to come in wearing fire fighter gear (raincoats, boots, and a hat).  The majority of the class participated and it was fun.  Lucky for us we had enough materials to share for those who forgot/didn't have costumes.  At the start of circle we explained the activity and expectations.
Activity: The circle time rug turned into the fire station.  I drew a quick fire station building on our giant white board.  The Sharks were fire fighters sleeping in the station.  The bell (a maraca) went off to let them know there was a fire we needed to put out.  The fire fighter gear (jackets and hats because they went to sleep in our boots.  Helping put on 15 pairs of boots is very time consuming.) was on chairs with circle time name tags so they could identity their belongings.  The fire truck was made of chairs lined up in a few rows of four and a row of two.  There was one chair in the front for the "fire chief" (a teacher).  I ended up being the fire chief and Ms. H helped take pictures for documentation.  Once everyone was dressed and seated we started up the engine and sang the first stanza of Hurry! Hurry! Drive the Fire Truck! (Lyrics at the end of the post)  Once we arrived at the fire, everyone got out to find and extinguish the fires.  During our camping unit the Sharks painted toilet paper rolls for a camp fire, so Ms. H set up little campfires all around the room.  Each Shark was giving a rhythm stick to use as a hose.  After they sprayed the fire down, they were asked to pick up the fire log and put it back in our giant container.  Once all the fire was cleaned up, they returned to the fire engine and we drove back to the station to undress and retire for the day... and for us it was time to put on sun screen and head outside.  
It was SO much fun.  Everyone took this so seriously and had a ball with it!  I'm trying to think of what I would do differently next time or how I could top it.  I can't really think of anything.  I had so much fun with it as well.  The only thing I can think of would be to have it video taped for parents.  If we had invited parents it would have probably been a huge mess knowing these particular kids and recently have had put on a play where parents were invited.  Don't even get me started on the play... Maybe I'll post about that another time.

Questions for readers:  Have you ever been a part of an activity that you might have enjoyed slightly more than your children?  Any other fun fire safety related activities that are a big hit in preschool you'd like to share?

Today was good.  Today was fun.  Tomorrow is another one.  -Dr. Seuss

Friday, August 31, 2012

Flash! It's Over

Photography came and went with the rest of our summer program.  If it were up to me, I would love a do-over week.  If I had been better prepared and was able to plan successfully, I think the unit would have been amazing.  Unfortunately aspects of the job that are out of my control took force and battles were lost.

What I wish had happened:  I wanted to make a lot of activities for the Sharks to use in various centers. Such as:

  • Photograph memory game
  • Puppet show pieces (photographs of either animals or community helpers) using popsicle sticks and laminated pictures
  • Cardboard cameras made by the kids (tracing a circle, cutting it out, gluing it on as the lens and the same thing but a rectangle for the flash and viewfinder)
  • Tissue box cameras (I think I described these in a previous post)
  • Holding an art show showcasing the pictures they took with disposable cameras and inviting parents to come (like an art gallery opening)
What really happened:  We were given four disposable cameras on Monday, but that was Ms. H's day off and then I got sick and wasn't able to make it in.  I had no official plans written up for the day and I have no idea what the sub ended up doing.  (I did, however, ask her to continue last week's unit on forest creatures.)  Tuesday we were supposed to go on a picnic field trip, but due to weather conditions that was cancelled.  We did get to finally introduce the photography unit and I switched out the library shelf to contain books about art and books with photograph pictures.  During circle they learned the new vocabulary (flash, lens, viewfinder, clicker) and seemed to really enjoy it.  I showed them the cameras and set ground rules.  Because there were only four cameras, but lots of friends, we wrote down names in groups on each camera so three to four friends could use each camera.  I specifically did that so for the art show we could display the photos with the groups of children to make it a little more special.  For instance:  Child A, B, and C were on Camera 1.  At the show we'd have pictures of Child A, B, and C below a showcase of photos from Camera 1 to show ownership of the photos.  The rest of the week's curriculum went down the drain after that.  I was asked to be out of the classroom because of numbers and staffing conflicts and my little Sharks ate way too many Crazy Flakes for breakfast... Every.  Single.  Day.  By Thursday all the cameras had been used up.  My day off is Friday, so I wrote up a plan for Ms. H to follow for curriculum for then.  I was hoping for the Sharks to use the cameras as toys in dramatic play or at the science center and for Ms. H to take pictures of them for documentation purposes because we hadn't gotten around to it previously.  I also asked on Thursday to get the pictures developed for the art show, but was told it wasn't happening.  Today I got a text from Ms. H around noon saying she was sent home early because of numbers.  So I'm not sure yet what got accomplished.  I'm hoping at the very least preschool had fun and the pictures get developed.

We must accept finite disappointment, but never lose infinite hope. -Martin Luther King Jr.

Monday, August 27, 2012

Toilet Learning

We have just under 20 Sharks swimming in the tank.  About half of them are in diapers/pull ups during the day (either full time or just for nap).  I can't stand it!  This is my personal least favorite part of the job.  Don't get me wrong, I understand the significance and importance of toilet learning, but as a preschool teacher I have fun elsewhere in the class.  One of my friends is 3.3 (years.months) and is a twin.  She went through diapers/pull ups/underwear and was trained several times.  Over the past few weeks, for the safety of the rest of the class, she's back in pull ups full time.  Now we can barely get her to even pee on the toilet.  She is very bright and knows what she's doing.  She started out just pooping in her pants and saying, "It was an accident.  Accidents happen," and then smiling really big... Now she won't tell us that she's done anything, doesn't let anyone know she needs to go, and we've been having to put creme on her since she's getting red now.  As a teacher, and I know her parents feel the same way, it's very VERY frustrating to have a child regress in toilet learning.  They've talked to their pediatrician and I've been working closely with the office to figure out different strategies and techniques to try, but we've exhausted them.  We were given the green light to start from scratch.  Back to square one.  Starting line.  Seed in the dirt... 

I'm not a toddler teacher.  It is the last place before school aged kids that you would find me working.  With all these preschoolers in diapers it's beginning to feel like I'm leading a toddler class.  I give major props to those hard working, dedicated educators that can handle the needs of tots.  You are amazing!  

Here's what I've been doing with my back-to-basics friend: 
  • Put in pull up right at drop off (She wants to wear underwear to school.)
  • Once to twice an hour send her to the bathroom
  • If she pees/poops in her pull up, she gets undressed and wipes herself before getting wiped by a teacher, then redresses herself
  • Given lots of praise when she does anything in the toilet, tells a teacher she needs or has already gone to the bathroom
  • Lots of talking about why we should be going potty on the toilet and not in the pull up

Any more/different ideas, suggestions, tricks of the toilet learning trade to share?  Anything and everything is much appreciated!

Sunday, August 26, 2012

Wave for Change

Quick note:  I came across this on youtube.  It's from Neutrogena.  With each view of the following clip, Neutrogena will donate a dollar to education charities in the US.  How awesome is that?  You can either click the following youtube link or head over to Neutrogena on Facbeook and find it there.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HgyTxL7Ca7A

Every every view can help make a difference!  Watch it, send it to friends, put it on your Facebook and help!

Say Cheese!

Unit:  Photography

Ideas:  We're getting a few disposable cameras for the kids to use throughout the week.  I'm super excited about the finished product, but the only tricky thing is to keep track of each child's photos.  I'm still working on an efficient way to do this.  Tomorrow's we'll spend circle time talking about the parts of a camera.  I wonder if any of them know anything about it since most parents use their cell phones... That should be interesting.  They'll be learning the basics because we've had so many transitions lately (another one starting tomorrow) and now our class often feels like an older toddler class.  Hopefully everyone will be able to take away something valuable by the end of the week.  We'll only be focusing on a few terms:  lens, flash, viewfinder, and clicker.  What's a clicker?  Clicker is what we'll be calling the shutter release.  We'll mention that term, but four new words is as much as most of these kids will be able to handle at this point.  We'll also be making our own cameras out of tissue boxes and toilet paper rolls, but that involves A LOT of prep work.  I was going to cut a toilet paper roll in half, stick it in the tissue box and somehow secure it, then cover the box in butcher paper so it's a completely blank canvas for my Sharks.  I need to check my supplies to find something fun for the clicker.  

Field trip:  I'm hoping Tuesday goes well.  Field trips can be stressful.  (We can only go if one more parent signs up to chaperone.)  Luckily we have a 1:2 parent:child ratio and Ms. H and I aren't considered chaperones.  We're just in charge of leading and supervising.  This is the first brown bag picnic I've ever been a part of as a teacher.  I'm a bit on the paranoid side because a child with severe allergies recently transitioned into my class.  I've worked with several children with severe allergies before, but I never had to leave a center for a meal where parents are likely to pack foods a child is allergic to.  The office has sent e-mails regarding this issue to all parents so I'd be nice if everyone will be respectful of allergies, but I know there will be at least one person to pack something on the allergy list.

Allergies:  Speaking of my new friend with severe allergies.... I've completely lost my mind of this!  I've always been cautious of checking labels of my foods before brining it in for my lunch, but now I'm asking Ms. H if she's read her labels and making sure we both wash our hands ALL THE TIME.  We already wash hands frequently thanks to preschoolers being preschoolers and putting hands/toys in their mouths, hands going down the pants and/or in their nose...  It makes you think if you were that germy as a three year old, right?  I still like to think I never went treasure hunting in my nose and I only put food and drink in my mouth.  Parents have been slacking about washing hands first thing in the morning and so have teachers about reminding them to do so.  Now with our new friend we are cracking down on it.  I write it on our white board (located right outside the classroom by our entrance), we write it in our daily notes everyday, and we verbally invite them to the sink after a few seconds of being in the classroom.  I did have a parent come up to me and ask me if her child could eat a cereal bar quickly.  The ingredients weren't listed on the package so I suggested she have her son eat it outside of the classroom and then wash his hands again.  She agreed and understood where I was coming from and followed through.  I love when parents do that!  Our number one priority is the safety of the children.  I think sometimes parents either forget or don't realize all the things a teacher does during the day.

End of summer:  This is the last week of the summer program and I don't think I'm going to miss it too much.  I'll miss summer, don't get me wrong about that, but not the summer program.  There's a control factor we have to give up during summer because things are planned that teachers aren't involved in, like general unit ideas that last two weeks, field trips, special days, water play... That's something that I personally have to figure out how to handle and deal with because I find comfort in the freedom of doing what I want when it comes to activities, special days, and themes (while working with my co, of course.)  Lucky for me I have an awesome co in Ms. H.  She's so green to this that she's comfortable with following.  I still have to push her quite a bit because I want her to feel like my equal and not my side-kick.  I'm hoping that with the start of the school year I'll learn to give up some control and Ms. H will learn to take more of it.  As much as I love being looked to as a lead teacher, that's not what I am.  It's exhausting doing the work.  I don't know if it's pride, copious amounts of stubbornness, or what, but it's challenging to give up the slightest amount of control to anyone else, but I need to do it.  And the start of a new school year is more than the perfect time to do it!

Upcoming themes:  For the past couple of weeks the Sharks have been talking non-stop about fire drills, fire fighters, and fire trucks.  So we've decided to do a unit on it!  I told the office about it and asked if they could try to get a real fire fighter to come in and talk to us.  We tried this last year, but never heard back from them.  I'm hoping it'll work out this year.  How cool would that be?  I've been pressing Ms. H for ideas and she suggested Italy.  She'll be working on that unit.  

If you don't like something, change it.  If you can't change it, change your attitude.  -Maya Angelou

Tuesday, August 21, 2012

Just Wingin' It

I went into work today with my head still foggy from a four day weekend.  Today was Ms. H's day off and she only briefly filled me in on today's plan which I read via online message at the crack of dawn this morning.  Due to staffing complications (a now daily occurrence) the day started out a bit scrambled for everyone.  My memory is terrible and our internet is the same, I decided to pull rabbits out of my hat.  Since we've kept the same books in our library from our camping unit (books about camping and forest animals) I decided to pick out a book we haven't read at circle time to create some kind of theme for the rest of the day.

Book:  The Kissing Hand.  I read that book and after two or three pages I would stop and we'd copy the page or talk about the animals we saw in the pictures.  At the end of the book we practiced making kissing hands for ourselves.  I was fairly surprised at how well my Sharks were sitting, listening, and actively participating in circle.  We really only had one friend who couldn't quiet follow along and it was his second day of transition into preschool!  Glad they brought their listening ears to school...even if it only lasted for circle time.

I LOVE CLAY:  I couldn't for the life of me think of a related after circle activity, but I want to see how my non-verbal/extra physical Shark would experiment with clay.  So I had that on the art table and other centers open.  I had taken classes about art for young children and a training or two related to SPED techniques and never doubted when I was told natural clay can do wonders for non verbal children.  I was so happy to be able to watch this Shark quietly tear apart small pieces of clay, poke it with forks and knives, push his hands into it.  He sat and sat and sat!  This particular Shark is ALWAYS on the go, ALWAYS touching his friends, ALWAYS busy.  Today he said the entire time centers were open after circle until clean up time at the art table.  Now I know what to try when he gets handsy during the day.  Hopefully tomorrow I can remember to set aside a small amount of clay just for him.

Next week:  Our unit for next week is photography.  I was able to get a little bit of planning in today for it, but it's never enough!  I was thinking of asking to get a disposable camera for each child in my class, but at $5 a pop, that's never going to happen.  Maybe I can ask to get 5 and share them.  I did try on my thinking cap and thought that maybe we could create our own pretend cameras with tissue boxes and toilet paper rolls... still working that one out though.  I do have a few other ideas for activities, but not nearly enough to fill up a curriculum sheet.

Positive:  Good thing about this next unit is that it's the last unit of our summer program which in turn means teachers finally get to have 100% control over themes/units!

A dream you dream alone is only a dream.  A dream you dream together is reality. -John Lennon