Hanging Around In Primary: teacher tips
Showing posts with label teacher tips. Show all posts
Showing posts with label teacher tips. Show all posts
How to Teach Word Families in a Few EASY Steps
Looking for a fresh way to teach word families that actually sticks with your students?
You're not alone.
When taught strategically, word families offer a powerful way to build decoding fluency and strengthen phonics instruction. Word families have always been a go-to for building early reading skills, but how we teach and display them might need a little update.
As more classrooms shift toward Science of Reading-informed practices, it’s time to reframe how we teach word families. We can integrate routines that are interactive, engaging, and grounded in research-based instruction. Here's exactly how I teach word families using a hands-on approach that actually sticks.
Engaging Patterning Activities for First Grade: No Worksheets Needed
Tired of using the same old patterning worksheets year after year?
If you're looking for a more engaging way to teach patterns in your primary classroom, you're in the right place. Worksheets can get the job done, but often leave kids disengaged and don't always reflect true understanding. Let's explore more meaningful and active ways to teach patterning in first grade or even Kindergarten. Activities that are fun, interactive, and rooted in real-world exploration.
Why You Need to Teach Sound Segmentation and the Best Way To Do It
Phonemic awareness is one of the most important skills you will teach your students. It is the ability to identify and manipulate individual sounds in words, a key component of the science of reading.
One specific aspect of phonemic awareness is sound segmentation: the ability to break words down into their individual sounds, or phonemes. This post will explore the science behind sound segmentation and how you can teach sound segmentation effectively in your classroom.
How to Build a Christmas Writing Center That Motivates Reluctant Writers
The holidays are just around the corner, and your classroom is probably getting a little hectic. One of the easiest ways to keep kids focused and excited about writing in December is by using a Christmas writing center. Over the years, I’ve found that this simple shift not only streamlines my writing block but also boosts my students’ motivation, especially those reluctant writers who suddenly can’t wait to pick up a pencil.
Want the Most Joyful Start to Every School Day? Try Morning Tubs!
Have you heard about Morning Tubs? How you start the day often sets the tone for the rest of your day. I've recently changed my thinking, begun to embrace a more relaxed, soft start to the day, and transitioned to using morning tubs or soft-start bins in my first-grade classroom. It's definitely made the start of the day more joyful for my students and me!
Looking for hands-on math ideas? Check out this complete guide: Hands-On Math Activities for Primary Students
Read on to find out what the beginning of the day looks like with my first graders and how it got them excited about learning.
Read on to find out what the beginning of the day looks like with my first graders and how it got them excited about learning.
In my classroom, we are now starting most days with Morning Tubs.
Cheap Flexible Seating Ideas that Will Help You Get Started
Flexible Seating. You have probably heard about it or seen it while scrolling through Instagram and seeing all those beautiful alternative seating options. You are probably also thinking, "OMG, I can't afford THAT!", just like I was. Well, you CAN start with flexible seating options in your classroom right away without a lot of money invested. I am sharing how you can get started and 5 cheap, flexible seating options that you can try.
3 Tips to Ensure a Smooth Transition after a School Break
5 Cheap & Easy Ways to Make the End of the School Year Memorable
It's the end of the school year. You're tired, and you don't have money to spend on a big end-of-year celebration. All is not lost! Pick your head up off your cluttered desk and read on to find 5 cheap and easy ways that will give your students a memorable end of the year and won't cost you a fortune.
I went looking for ideas, and Pinterest bombarded me with countdowns galore - with balloons, paper chains and more. I am more of a last-week-of-school activities teacher or a last-day-of-school activities teacher. What about you?
Honest Advice for Teachers
This is an open letter to those teachers who, like myself, have been teaching for a while and can see the end of their career coming.
Dear Teachers,
I am here to share with you my insight after teaching for 22 years. Perhaps you feel the same way as I do or perhaps you have a ways to go in your career. Either way, I hope you gain something from this letter and leave a little more inspired and comfortable in your own teaching.
You have been teaching long enough to see trends come and go and then come back again. What is new to some you recognize as a re-packaging of something that was "new" earlier in your career. This is your opportunity to step up and share your knowledge and let people learn from your experiences. Resist the temptation to point out that this trend, whatever it may be, is old news. Take the lead.
You have been teaching long enough to also know that you don't need to jump on the bandwagon of every new thing that comes down the line. You have experience on your side and "know" what works for kids. If there is a choice, pick and choose what you know will work best for kids and quietly leave it at that.
You have been teaching long enough that you can see that retirement date in the not so distant future. For me it is under 10 years now. I have 22 years of teaching under my belt. I believe that is quite an accomplishment. As each new year dawns I hope you feel the same excitement of setting up your room and preparing for a new group of students. I hope you continue to love coming to work each day and teaching and learning with your students. You are at a point in your career when you can see the end but you are enjoying the ride until you get there. Embrace the journey!
Click on any of the links below to visit the blog post about each of these other teachers. Chances are you'll be in one of these shoes sooner than you realize!
~An Open Letter to a New Teacher
~An Open Letter to the Teacher in the Prime of her Career
~An Open Letter to a Teacher in a Rut
~Open Letter to the Retired Teacher
How to Engage Your Students During Guided Reading Instruction
Guided reading is an essential part of your reading time. However, it is usually a small chunk of time each day, so you need to make the most of it and engage your students during guided reading. So how do you do that? I will share with you 3 things you should have at your guided reading table to make your time run smoothly and help keep your students engaged during guided reading instruction.
What is at my Guided Reading Table?
1. Tools to teach decoding strategies
First grade readers are decoders in their purest form. They have learned that to read, they need to sound words out. Once they have learned their letter sounds, they are good to go, or so they think. If you ask a first grader how to solve an unknown word, they will say “sound it out” every time. We need to teach them that there are lots of other ways to figure out tricky words.
I do this by introducing them to the decoding strategies and the stuffed animals that go with each. I created a set of Decoding Strategies Posters with animals to teach each strategy. They are immediately hooked when the stuffed animals come down to the reading table as I model how to use a strategy. For instance, when I introduce Stretchy Snake, we actually take turns coiling him up and stretching him out as we stretch out words.
However, it is not practical to keep Stretchy Snake there at all times, so I created a few student tools to go with the posters on the wall behind our guided reading table. When working on a particular strategy, I give students the decoding wand with the character on it. Click on any of the pictures below to get a closer look at the resource.
This acts as a reference to try that strategy when they come to an unknown word. Later on, students can use a bookmark, which includes all the strategies, when they are more confident readers and have learned some strategies to try when decoding.
I teach the decoding strategies in approximately the same order every year ~ Eagle Eye, Stretchy Snake, Chunky Monkey, Lips the Fish, Skippy Frog, Flippy the Dolphin and lastly, Tryin' Lion.
2. Tools to teach reading comprehension
When it comes to teaching comprehension skills, I have a confession to make. Many times I struggled to figure out what exactly to ask my students or how to word it. We do not use a particular reading series, so I glean resources from many places.
Identifying key comprehension questions for text was sometimes a bit difficult. That is why I decided to make myself a go-to resource for any non-fiction text that covered all the different comprehension strategies that I teach. Enter Comprehension Checks! These question cards are placed on a ring, and I keep them at my guided reading table and another set at our carpet area to use during shared reading.
The Comprehension Checks are colour-coded and organized by reading strategy. There are multiple questions for each strategy. On each card, you will find the question and then “look fors” – what you might expect your students to say or think to answer the question. This extra information makes the cards more teacher-friendly.
We are about to start our unit on story elements – Character/Setting/Problem/Solution. The Analyzing Text and Demonstrating Understanding cards will be close at hand during my guided and shared reading lessons. Here is a closer look at a Making Connections card:
I hope you have found some new resources to make your guided reading time more effective and help engage your students during guided reading instruction.
Take a moment to pin this post so you can come back to it.
Until next time,
3. Tools to teach phonemic awareness
This tool isn't necessarily aimed at teaching during guided reading, but it is an essential precursor to teaching reading. In first grade, at the beginning of the year, not all of your students will be ready for a traditional guided reading group. Instead, they need to develop foundational phonemic awareness skills to begin to decode and read the text. In this case, teachers do not need to provide their students with books and questions, but they need to be armed with word lists and lots of them.
I always start the year with at least a couple of groups who need to start here, and I wanted to keep them engaged too during their instruction. I created a set of word lists to practice whatever phonemic awareness skill I was working on. I pull out the colour-coded sets and have several different word lists for each skill, so I wasn't trying to generate word lists on the fly. We have all done that!
I hope you have found some new resources to make your guided reading time more effective and help engage your students during guided reading instruction.
Take a moment to pin this post so you can come back to it.
Until next time,
Celebrating Halloween in the Classroom? Keep it Simple!
My best advice is to KEEP IT SIMPLE!
In my experience in First Grade, it is best to celebrate within your predictable routine. We already know our children are beside themselves with excitement. By enjoying fun Halloween activities in the regular structure of the day, your students get to celebrate, but things are less likely to slip over the edge into chaos!
A Literacy Center perfect for the week before Hallowe'en!
The week of or before Halloween, I intentionally choose word wall words with the "oo" sound so I can review the two sounds these letters make. I use this quick little activity in my centers for the week. Just sign up below to grab the FREEBIE!Next up, some Halloween Art, with a bit of math thrown in!
Who doesn't love to do Halloween Art projects! We created paint chip Frankenstein's using green paint chips from the hardware store! The students love this one, so I will do this craft every year. This is a great low-cost craft that really showcases each student's creativity.All you need is:
- Paint chips from the paint store. I have used 3 and 4 colour paint chips.
- Scrap paper is used to make the eyes, teeth, and bolts.
- A sharpie to add stitches.
A fun math activity we did as a tie-in was to count the "stitches" on Frankenstein's face to see how many he had. Before making the stitches, we talked about how stitches look like tally marks to 5. After finishing, they skipped counted the stitches to see how many Frankenstein had.
I have several Halloween books that pair perfectly with this craft. One of my favourites is:
And finally, a Halloween Math Freebie for good measure!
In math, we will use my Halloween patterning center this week to revisit patterning. As a special thank you for stopping by, you can grab this Math Center FREEBIE to use with your students. Students will look at each card, determine if it shows a pattern, and then place it on the sorting mat. I have also included a recording sheet so students can record their work as they go. Click on the picture to grab it.
The Best Way to Attach Name Tags to Student Desks
What is the best way to attach name tags?
Let’s talk about something that quietly drives every elementary teacher a little bit nuts: student name tags that won’t stay put.
I laminate the name tags and attach them to the desk with heavy tape. The name tag looks great until that "one" student starts picking at the tape, and everyone else notices. Before you know it, everyone's name tag falls off their desk. Teacher nightmare!!!
I have tried ALL.THE.WAYS to attach my name tags:
- double-sided tape
- packing tape
- sticky tack
None of these methods has lasted long term. The kids picked at them, or the custodians had issues with them.
I finally found a foolproof, time-saving, and reusable method to attach my name tags to desks that:
- Kept them on all year
- Made it easy for me to make desk switches without having to peel off a name tag
- Don't get destroyed by little fingers picking!
My answer is Velcro dots or strips!
- Print and laminate your name tags.
- Stick the Velcro to the back (tip: put both pieces together so that when you turn the name tag over, the piece for the desk will be perfectly aligned).
- Press down to ensure it sticks, and you are golden!
Now you have name tags that stay put, can be swapped in seconds and don't leave a residue on the desk.
You might be wondering:
Did students play with them? YES, they're kids after all. However, the novelty wore off quickly.
Did the custodial staff have an issue with them? NO, they liked that they could be removed to clean under them. I often took them off once a week and put them in the center basket so the table would get cleaned underneath.
Do you know something else that drove me crazy?
Getting a student mid-year and not having a name tag for them!!!
We've all run out of supplies like this and know the frustration. To compound that, our teacher supply store closed, so I created my name tags out of necessity. I designed exactly what I wanted and am so much happier with it.
NO more commercial nametags! It's only custom nametags from now on!
Some of the perks of a digital file name tag:
- When a name tag looks worn, you can easily print a new one.
- Do you often get a new student mid-year? No problem! Just print out a name tag for the student.
- Write your students' names or type them into the editable file.
Check out all of my Editable Student Name Tags or Name Plates HERE!
So if you’re tired of peeling tape, wasted tags, and sticky desk battles, Velcro + editable, digital name tags might just be your new favourite teacher hack.
Got your own trick for attaching name tags to desks? Drop it in the comments!
Until next time,
3 Simple Classroom Management Tips You Can Try Tomorrow
Are you looking for tips to classroom management tips? I have 3 simple tips for you that you can implement in your classroom tomorrow. Read on to find out how to simplify your line ups, move more quietly through the halls and get your class to work as a team. I am linking up with Mrs. McClain over at Buzzing with Mrs. McClain for her monthly You Oughta Know blog hop. Other bloggers and I will be sharing things that you “oughta know” for your classroom.
I don't know about you but some years my first graders return and they seem to have grown up so much over the two weeks. Some years however, I feel like I am back at square 1. I want to share with you some of my management tricks to help them get back on track.
First off we often struggle at line up time - too many kids, too small an area (although I have a huge area this year, go figure!). There is always arguing about who lines up where as well. This year I whipped out my silhouette cutting machine and some vinyl and created girl/boy line up spots. They work like a dream! The kids just find a girl or boy circle to stand or, if they have the job of line leader, caboose, or door holders, they go to those special circles. NO more fighting about spots in the line. I have heard a lot about Sit Spots and I expect that they would work too.
We struggle with moving through the hall quietly too. This year I rarely have to take them to other places in the school but our French teacher takes them to her French room or the gym every day. She loves this program.
This is available as a FREEBIE in my TPT store. You can find it by clicking {HERE}.
My final tip today is all about getting the kids working together for a common reward. I use Behavior Bingo in my room. I use a clip chart for individual students but wanted a system to reward the whole class for appropriate behaviour.
The month of December is so crazy that this little program takes a back seat, so I pull it out fresh in January. We review the ways we can work together to earn BINGO numbers. The idea is that when the students are all following our classroom rules or expectations the class would earn a bingo number.
Some ways they earn numbers are making their way to the carpet quickly and quietly, getting started quickly on a task or getting a class compliment, to name a few. On a good day we may earn 2 or 3 BINGO numbers. We are now entering Week 3 post holidays and our BINGO board is filling up more slowly than I would like it. If you would like to give this a try it is available in my TPT store, you can find it {HERE}.
Some ways they earn numbers are making their way to the carpet quickly and quietly, getting started quickly on a task or getting a class compliment, to name a few. On a good day we may earn 2 or 3 BINGO numbers. We are now entering Week 3 post holidays and our BINGO board is filling up more slowly than I would like it. If you would like to give this a try it is available in my TPT store, you can find it {HERE}.
What are your favourite management tips for getting kids back into routine after the holidays. I would love to hear from you with a comment below. Now take a moment and hop to another blog to learn about something that you "oughta know"
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