Showing posts with label math. Show all posts
Showing posts with label math. Show all posts

Monday, December 8, 2014

Autumn at Seedlings Nursery School

I am pretty sure my New Year's Resolution should be 'Blog More Frequently', but I've never been all that great at sticking to my resolutions.  I will, however, endeavor to try my best. :)

Since I'm a couple of months behind, here's just a quick glance at what we've been doing here at Seedlings.

The Phoenix Zoo brought a wonderful Zoo to You program to Seedlings and we got a chance to see a few colorful creatures up close!  It was an amazing experience for the kiddos and I plan to have the Zoo back again next year!

 
In October, we worked quite a bit on measurement with the help of our handy measuring tools.
We even had a HUGE ruler on the floor so we could measure ourselves!!

Our outdoor area got a bit of a revamp....it's not much....but the kids love it!!

We took a closer look at plant life with our Root-Vue Farm.  Despite my best efforts, our garden never really bloomed, but we did get a chance to see some roots forming.  I think I should just stick to growing beans in a baggie. :)  We documented our observations in our Science Journals, though, which always makes the children feel very official and scientific.

In November, plenty of our old favorites returned.  You can see them HERE and HERE.
We also did some popcorn transferring - check out my beautiful multicolored popcorn!  It tastes delicious too!!
And we had some Native American and English Settler small world play.
If you'd like to know where this idea came from and see it executed in a much more artistic and beautifully photographed way, check HERE.  The original idea used water beads and lots of wonderfully detailed elements, but I needed my table to last a few weeks, so water beads were replaced with blue sand for 'water' and I kept it quite simple.

More Seedlings fun coming soon!




Sunday, March 2, 2014

More March Montessori-Inspired Fun

It's March again here at Seedlings and it's time to share a few more fun activities we have lined up for the month.

Here is a look at the invitations that were offered to the children last year.

I've brought back a few of last year's activities, with a few small changes and additions:


Our book selections include a few Dr. Seuss favorites as well as some theme-related choices.

The shamrock and penny counting activity is back - this was a huge hit last year!

Our Peter Rabbit floor puzzle is also back, along with a fun rainbow puzzle donated by a parent earlier this year.

Our Montessori-Inspired Sound Bottles are also making a comeback.  Monkey was thrilled to see these returned to the classroom and he immediately taught Bear how to use them!

Bear is finally old enough to understand when I ask him not to put everything in his mouth (though he still tries), so I've added a fun St. Patrick's Day transfer activity to the classroom.  I found a few shamrock necklaces at the Dollar Tree and cut them apart so the tiny shamrocks could be transferred from bowl to bowl with either the tiny spoon or the tweezers.  The mirror trays in the room help to add some variety and, if we're lucky, some reflections that may even lead us into discussions and activities on light and rainbows!

Last, but not least, I've added these little color-mixing gnome families to our block area.  I'm interested to see how these are used over the next few weeks.

March happens to be my favorite month for lesson-planning.  Something about shamrocks and rainbows and fairies and St. Patrick's Day fun brings out the kid in me.  Incidentally, March will also be my last month teaching before my new little Seedling arrives and I take a few weeks off to recover and get to know the little one.

More spring and summer activities coming soon!




Friday, February 7, 2014

Play-Based Math All Year


Contrary to popular belief, there are many ways to provide opportunities for math exploration in preschool that are far more effective than the ubiquitous worksheets we find in many mainstream preschools and the vast majority of kindergartens.  Children are hands-on learners and math is full of abstract concepts that simply can not be grasped by staring at a flat piece of paper or by memorizing pages and pages of math facts.

Here is a look at a small sampling of math activities that have been offered to Seedlings students:

Marshmallow snowmen.  Draw happy little faces on a few large marshmallows and give a kid some tongs and what's he learning?  Not only an awesome fine-motor activity, but one-to-one correspondence!  One happy snowman per muffin cup.  Or expand: Three in the top row, three in the bottom row, how many all together?  Turn the pan the other way and you have three rows of two!  Now we're doing sets, with preschoolers!

February pattern matching for Valentine's day.  I have no idea where I found these cards, but there is a similar version in the 'File Folder Games' section at Preschool Printables, which is a great site for finding lots of ideas, many of which are free!

More Valentine's Day fun with a hand-made number game.  Count the appropriate number of beads and place them on the felt hearts.  There are a zillion ways to expand on this activity: Which has the most? Which has the least? Comparing numbers, larger, smaller, evens, odds, adding, subtracting, etc.

I can't take credit for this one.  This is actually my basket of traced hearts for the kiddos to cut out as needed and a bunch of homemade crayons.  This little guy thought it would be fun to put a crayon on each heart - more one-to-one correspondence - child-directed!

March counting activity with pennies.  Just like the February hearts, but with the added element of money, so now we're talking cents!  Have older kiddos?  Turn it into a money lesson!

Here's a fun one for Easter time - hide the flowers in the eggs.  One flower per egg - or maybe not - who has more?  How many will fit?  Let's make patterns with eggs or flowers or, heck, eggs AND flowers!

Need to make something?  Play dough, other sensory material?  Make it with the children.  Cooking is the best hands-on math activity.  If you mess up and it doesn't come out quite right, even better,  ADD something else until it's fixed.

I found some Easter erasers at the Dollar Tree and made a sorting activity.  Match the shapes and count or make patterns or a whole host of other applications.

Here's our counting tray for May.  Butterflies with numerals and the appropriate amount of dots along with some flower-shaped buttons to keep it festive, fun and seasonal!  Even though the children have the opportunity to explore a counting activity each month and each activity is almost exactly the same as far as skills go, changing it out monthly keeps them interested and learning.

Another sorting, matching, counting opportunity.  These plastic 'jewels' are also different geometric shapes, adding another complex math skill to the mix.  And I love tongs, in case you hadn't noticed! :)

Tangrams are a class favorite!  These are a set from Melissa and Doug.  Use them with the accompanying boards for shape matching and discussions or just let the kiddos create their own pictures, patterns and designs.

Another one I can't take credit for.  Blocks, plain old blocks.  Sorting is a fundamental preschool skill and can be done in a variety of ways.  This little one went with sorting by shape with the added bonus of a balance lesson.

In September, we do lots of apple activities.  This one is a favorite.  Sort the pom-pom apples (made a bit more difficult with the addition of tweezers) into the correct bowl.  Counting, patterning, adding, etc can all be part of this activity as well.

If you are really stuck for ideas, the easiest thing to do is just give the kiddos a set of numbers.  These are magnetic numbers and letters that also happen to include plus, minus and equals signs if you are really inclined to teach math facts.  I'm not really inclined to do so, and the children play as desired.  You can see some sorting happening on the board if you look close enough.

If you don't have any sensory materials you need to make, pop into the kitchen and make some actual food.  Here we are, back to cooking, and he's really making sure we have the right amount of cereal for our special snack.  At Seedlings, we bake fresh bread every week and make other cooking projects that require class participation and measurement twice per month.

Unifix Cubes are probably something you recognize from when you were in school.  If you want to do some directed teaching, these even come with a handy booklet of activities, but I like watching the magic unfold on its own.  This little one spent quite a bit of time building one tower and then holding the two towers next to each other to see which was taller.  Then she'd add cubes to the shorter tower to make them equal and begin the process again by adding to the first tower.  She talked herself through the whole process using words like 'taller', 'shorter', 'the same'; naming colors and counting.


And there you have it, a full year's worth of math activities for preschoolers - and again, this is just a SMALL sampling of what can be done just by using what's already around your home.

Many years ago when I was just starting to see Early Childhood Education as a career, I was sent by my boss (who also happened to be my Mom) to a conference to hear a woman I'd never heard of talk about preschoolers and play.  Only later did I come to realize that I'd spent the entire day with one of the most influential people in the Early Childhood Education field: Bev Bos.  I still have, and refer to often, the amazing manual I received that day full of ideas, activities and articles, but this quote stuck with me and has guided me in the way I approach creating activities for my students from that day forward:

"If it hasn't been in the hand...and in the body...it can't be in the brain!" -Bev Bos








Sunday, June 2, 2013

What We're Up to in June

Summer Camp is here which means we clear the classroom of an overabundance of activities and keep things simple with one or two themes for the whole month.  This month, one of our themes is Pirate Adventures!!  This is my first year doing a pirate theme and I'm super-excited.

I started off with a sensory bin:

Starting with a cloud dough base (8c. flour to 1c. oil), I added necklaces and coins (Dollar Tree) as well as some other things I had around the house: shells, cork boats, beach-themed play dough tools and a treasure chest from our Cariboo Island game.
I'd like to point out that about three seconds after this bin entered the classroom, my son dug his hands in and it will probably never look like this again - so feast your eyes! 


Keeping with the pirate theme, our writing salt this month is actually fine craft sand and I've made it kind of a treasure map invitation by adding gems and tongs for 'digging' treasures.  This is such an open-ended invitation, I can't wait to see what the children create!


I've set up another writing invitation with a white board, markers, felt for erasing and handy pirate-related word cards that I found at Homeschool Creations.  She has some seriously awesome free printables, so if you haven't been there, you should go.....like now.....I'll wait.


Last up and not very pirate-related at all, our opening and closing activity inspired by the Dollar Tree that you can read all about here.




Sunday, April 28, 2013

What We're Up to in May



Here is what we have in the classroom this month:

Our writing salt is back! This time lavender colored and scented.  My son (aka the beta tester) was using it right after it went into the classroom and I could hear him scratching away....then a big sniff.....and "Ahhhhh, this smells soooooooo good!"

Butterfly and Flower Counting Game
I used laminated butterfly shapes that were name tags last year and wrote the numbers in permanent marker with little dots.  I put 1-5 on one side and 6-10 on the other so there weren't too many materials to work with.  I also added tongs in case the children feel inclined to use them.

Our geranium-scented play dough from last month has held up really well.  I think because we spent quite a bit of time outside, but now the weather is getting hot and we'll be back indoors, so we're giving it another try.  I've just replaced the egg cookie cutter with a butterfly.

Our bug sensory bin is always loads of fun!  Shredded paper, plastic bugs, trees and rocks and some tree blocks, made by my big brother, to bring in some nature.

Butterfly Pattern Match Game
I printed these butterflies from Preschool Printables.  They're meant to be a file folder game, but they work wonderfully on the light table.  Laminated and ready to match!

Our sewing basket has been refreshed again this month.  I've added smaller versions of the flower buttons used the Butterfly and Flower Counting Game to replace our regular buttons.  I also found a fancy flower pin cushion to keep our tapestry needle for button-sewing safe and sound.

I made this little felted bee last year along with the felted turtles pictured below.  The idea for these happy little fellows came from my curriculum purchased from Little Acorn Learning.  I love adding little Waldorf-Inspired elements into the classroom when I can find the time to make them.







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