Sunday, October 28, 2012



Here is our schedule for this week:

Monday-A Day (Music)  We also have Library.  Parent-Teacher Conferences
Tuesday-B Day (P.E.) Please wear tennis shoes!
Wednesday-C Day (Health & Technology)  Halloween Parade and Party
Thursday-D Day (Art)  Parent-Teacher Conferences
Friday-A Day (Music)

What to know for this week:

This week, we will continue learning about the election and pumpkins.  Parent-Teacher Conferences are on Monday and Thursday nights this week.  Each conference is 15 minutes long.  Please make sure you are on time for your conference since there will most likely be another family scheduled right after you.  I look forward to seeing you all at conferences!

Halloween is on Wednesday.  Students should not wear their costumes to school that day.  They may change into costumes right before the Halloween Parade starts.

Election Day and Fall

Over the past two weeks, we have finished up our unit on Fire Safety and we began learning about the Presidential election as well as Fall.  Our class finished our fire truck craft project.  Students painted fire on white paper and used a variety of shapes to create their fire trucks.  They even had to change some of the shapes!  For example, when we had to make tires for our fire trucks, we had to cut the points off of our black squares to try and turn them into circles!




For the final part of our project, we wrote a sentence using sight words we knew.  Together we stretched out our words and wrote a sentence on the white board.  It said "I see the fire."  I erased the sentence from the board because we should know how to spell these sight words.  The students had to write their sentences independently.  They also had to decided to either use a period or an exclamation point at the end of their sentences.  The final products turned out great!



Buddy Block

Buddy Block was one of our favorite days!  During block time, we were able to spend time with our third grade buddy class.  We walked outside with our buddies and went to Crestwood Park.  We came back to Long and spent some time in the gym with our buddies doing fun movement activities!







Coach Capizzi even wore her cool turkey hat!


Birthdays

Over the past two weeks, we celebrated three birthdays in our class!  Happy birthday to all of our Kindergarten friends who just celebrated their birthdays!





Writing Books

We used our Kindergarten words of the week to create our very own books!  Students made books which were titled, "Look At Me."  On each page, we wrote the sentence "Look at me."  We reviewed that writers use a capital letter at the beginning of a sentence and spaces between their words.  They also use punctuation marks at the end of a sentence.  





Students illustrated their pages showing themselves doing something they have done in real life or something they wish they could do.  When books were completed, authors sat in our reading chair to share their books with the class.  We still have some more friends who will share their books with the class this week.









We even had a friend who wrote his own Halloween book at home and he brought it to class to share with us!



Election Day

With the election fast approaching, we took this opportunity to talk about what an election is and how people vote.  We read the book, "Duck for President" and it helped us learn about how people run for President and how citizens vote to elect a leader.


There are other books we will begin to read this week such as "Grace for President" and "Arthur Meets the President."  Our school had the opportunity to participate in the program called Kids Vote.  Students filled out voter registration cards at home and brought them to school.  We went to the library and people checked our cards and helped us vote for the President on computers.  Then, we received stickers saying that we had just voted.  Your child brought home his/her voter registration card.  You can keep these cards.

In class, we held our own election regarding candy!  Students were asked if they like Skittles or M & M's better.  At first, students sat with either the Skittles or M & M group.  A few people from each group explained why they chose that particular candy as the one they prefer.  A few people were swayed by other people's opinions and changed groups.  We talked about how this happens in real life during elections.

Next, the Skittles and M & M groups were split into subgroups; they had to make posters supporting their candy.





After the posters were completed and hung up, students wrote down their final vote on a slip of paper and turned their ballots in.  When all votes were accounted for, we counted them one-by-one and tallied our votes.  Skittles won!  Although Skittles had the most people in its group as student worked on their posters, that number had decreased.  This told us that some people had changed their minds at the very last minute.  This also happens in real life!

Red Ribbon Week

During Red Ribbon Week, we had a different theme each day (such as hat day, wearing red to school).  Red Ribbon Week promoted the idea of being drug-free.  Our school counselor, Mrs. Maddock, visited our room and talked with us about the difference between good drugs and bad drugs.  There are good drugs that can make you better when you are sick.  There are bad drugs people take that are not healthy for your body.


Mrs. Maddock talked about the importance of being drug-free.  Students were given a red ribbon to wear on their shirts and they signed Mrs. Maddock's banner.  




Germs Can Make You Sick!

'Tis the season for spreading germs.  Nurse Klahs visited our room and talked with our class about how this is a time of year when lots of people get sick.  We get sick from germs, and we watched a short video about different ways that germs can be spread.  

Nurse Klahs told us we need to make sure we wash our hands and use hand sanitizer to help us stay healthy.  It's also important to make sure you cover your cough and cover your sneeze in your elbow.  She even taught us a song we can sing as we wash our hands!


Here we are pretending to wash our hands while we sing our song with Nurse Klahs.



Counting Candy Corn

In math, we got to count candy corn!  Every student was given a handful of candy corn.  Then, everyone had to count how many pieces of candy they had.  Students were then asked if they each had an even or odd number of candy.  To figure this out, they put the candy in groups of two.  If anyone had one piece of candy corn leftover, they had an odd number of candy corn.  



A student said she had 15 pieces of candy corn and could put it into groups of three.  She had a smart thought that maybe every odd number of candy corn could be broken up into groups of three since three is an odd number.  We tried it with 19 pieces of candy corn and we were not able to split it into equal groups of three.  We discovered that even though a number may be odd (such as 19), it doesn't mean that it can be split into groups of any other odd number (such as groups of 3).  





Next, everyone took their candy corn and split them into one group of ten and then leftover ones.  Splitting our candy into a group of tens and a group of ones would help us with adding and taking away.  We talked about how groups of tens and ones could help us write our numbers in the teens.  For example, if I had 18 pieces of candy corn, I split my candy into one group of 10, and one group of 8.  The one in the number 18 means one group of ten.  The eight in eighteen means I have eight pieces leftover.  I could not make another group of ten with these leftover pieces of candy corn and they were called the "ones group."



Sunday, October 14, 2012


Here is our schedule for this week:

Monday-D Day (Art)  We also have Library.
Tuesday-A Day (Music)
Wednesday-B Day (P.E) Challenge Course in P.E.
Thursday-C Day (Health & Technology)
Friday-Buddy Block Day- Early Dismissal at 11:50

What to know for this week:

This week, we will finish up Fire Safety and we will begin our theme "Our Nation Votes."  This will tie in with  Kids Voting on October 22.

On Friday, it will be a Hat Day Half Day.  Students are invited to wear a hat to school if they would like.  We will be dismissed at 11:50 on Friday, and parent pick-up will begin at 11:40.  It's hard to believe, but our first quarter ends on Friday.  This year is flying by!

Fire Safety

This week, we learned all about fire safety and what to do in case of an emergency.  We read lots and lots of books on fire safety and we even got to take home a fire safety workbook.  On Tuesday, we got a visit from the Crestwood Fire Department.


The firefighters talked to the kindergarten students about how smoke alarms warn us if there is a fire and it is so important to make sure the batteries in our smoke alarms are working.



The firefighters told us that if there is ever a fire at our own homes, our families need an escape plan to get out safely.  It's a good idea to have at least two ways out in an emergency!


There were actually two fire trucks at Long on Tuesday.  One truck on the blacktop and one in the front of the building.  If the firefighters were called to an emergency, some of them would leave on the fire truck in front of Long and go to the emergency.  About ten minutes into their talk, the firefighters got a call to go to an emergency.  Some of the firefighters had to leave, but some stayed and let us get on the other fire truck!

Students rotated to the different parts of the fire truck.  We got to explore the back of the truck where some of the firefighters sit.











We sat in the front seat and pretended to drive the truck!















We even got to turn on the fire hose and spray it!



















We listened to a song that helped us remember what to do in case of an emergency.  We learned how to dial 9-1-1.  The song also gave us examples of emergencies that we would call 911 for help. Click on this link to hear the song.  911! (fire safety song for kids) 

At center time, we had a center called "Firefighter Fred."  We had to help Firefighter Fred figure out different ways he could wear his firefighter uniform.  He had a yellow hat and jacket, a red hat and jacket, and a black hat and jacket.  He could even mix and match his uniforms.  After we dressed Firefighter Fred in his uniform, we recorded the combinations by coloring them on a sheet of paper.




We started an art project this week that we will continue next week.  We started by mixing red and yellow paint on a white sheet of construction paper (it turned orange!) to make a fire background.  Next, we made firetrucks out of construction paper.  We write a sentence about our picture and combine all of the parts.


This week, we learned that if our clothes catch on fire, we need to stop, drop, and roll.  
1.  Stop and do not run!  If you are on fire and you run, you will increase the amount of oxygen the fire is getting and it will get worse.  Also, do not blow on the flames for the same reason.  
2.  Drop to the ground and cover your face with your hands.  Your hands will protect your face from the flames and protect you from inhaling smoke.
3.  Roll around on the ground while keeping your face covered.
4.  After the fire is out, have an adult run cool water.  Soak your burns in the cool water and call 911 right away!
We practiced stop, drop, and roll so we would be prepared in an emergency!

Mrs. Fink's uncle is the Captain of the Ferguson Fire Department.  On Monday, we will write him a letter telling him what we learned about fire safety and we will have the opportunity to ask him questions!