http://www.flickr.com/photos/44148352@N00/318893627
Take a virtual peek into my classrooms! I see each class once a week for one hour. Check here for lesson descriptions, pictures, and project postings.
Sunday, October 24, 2010
Friday, October 22, 2010
Fall Session Week 2
B1-2 Technology:
Our younger students are really doing great with Keyboard Climber, and the olders have started using "home row fingers" with Dance Mat Typing. After keyboarding, we looked at our city of Maryville and our school on Google Maps and each student got to look at their own house and neighborhood with street view-Very exciting! Also a good way to find out who knows their address!
We worked in groups of 4 students. After everyone got to see their house, students enjoyed playing the Trick-or -Treat game (practicing sequencing) and I Spy City (observation skills.)
3-4 Technology:
Students are now working at their own pace to move through the levels of Dance Mat typing. After keyboarding, we worked on a powerpoint of the poem 5 Little Pumpkins, by Cynthia Rylant. We first reviewed how to add slide transitions to each slide. Next, students learned a new skill-custom animation! It was fun making those pumpkins roll out of sight! Some students had enough time to format backgrounds and add extra clip art as well. They did an awesome job-be sure to check them out on portfolio night.
Our younger students are really doing great with Keyboard Climber, and the olders have started using "home row fingers" with Dance Mat Typing. After keyboarding, we looked at our city of Maryville and our school on Google Maps and each student got to look at their own house and neighborhood with street view-Very exciting! Also a good way to find out who knows their address!
We worked in groups of 4 students. After everyone got to see their house, students enjoyed playing the Trick-or -Treat game (practicing sequencing) and I Spy City (observation skills.)
3-4 Technology:
Students are now working at their own pace to move through the levels of Dance Mat typing. After keyboarding, we worked on a powerpoint of the poem 5 Little Pumpkins, by Cynthia Rylant. We first reviewed how to add slide transitions to each slide. Next, students learned a new skill-custom animation! It was fun making those pumpkins roll out of sight! Some students had enough time to format backgrounds and add extra clip art as well. They did an awesome job-be sure to check them out on portfolio night.
Tuesday, October 19, 2010
B1-2 Fall Break Slideshows
As promised, here are our Fall Break pictures we made with Paint and assembled into a Smilebox design. Enjoy!
Free digital slideshow made with Smilebox |
A free digital slideshow by Smilebox |
Picture slideshow personalized with Smilebox |
This digital slideshow made with Smilebox |
This free picture slideshow customized with Smilebox |
Saturday, October 16, 2010
Fall Session Week 1
Hagemann, Judy. falltrees.jpg. November 2007. Pics4Learning. 16 Oct 2010
B1-2 Technology:
Back at school after 3 weeks of Fall Break! For this new session, youngers get to do Keyboard Climber. They had been begging the last few weeks of Summer session to do what the olders had been doing, and now they found it wasn't so easy-that monkey falls if you don't type the letters quickly enough. We talked about frustration and perseverance and the fact that we are just practicing, not trying to be perfect. My olders met in the "clubhouse" for a discussion of Home Row Fingers. They will be starting Dance Mat Typing next week. After keyboarding, everyone went to the computers and used Paint to draw a picture of something that happened over Fall Break. We also used a new tool-the text tool-to write about our break in our pictures. I put the pictures together into a Smilebox presentation which I will post here next week.
3-4 Technology:
Class started with Dance Mat typing and our new computer challenge-comment on the class pet post and suggest a name. Students have a week to comment before we vote. After that, we read a poem by Jack Prelutsky about a mythical creature called a Wumpaloon. Students had to use the details in the poem and add their own to draw a Wumpaloon. Besides practicing moving between documents, mouse control, editing colors, and following written directions in order, this was a great activity to learn some new color words like crimson, teal, lilac, and indigo. After saving their picture, students inserted it into the poem and formatted the words. Here is my Wumpaloon.
B1-2 Technology:
Back at school after 3 weeks of Fall Break! For this new session, youngers get to do Keyboard Climber. They had been begging the last few weeks of Summer session to do what the olders had been doing, and now they found it wasn't so easy-that monkey falls if you don't type the letters quickly enough. We talked about frustration and perseverance and the fact that we are just practicing, not trying to be perfect. My olders met in the "clubhouse" for a discussion of Home Row Fingers. They will be starting Dance Mat Typing next week. After keyboarding, everyone went to the computers and used Paint to draw a picture of something that happened over Fall Break. We also used a new tool-the text tool-to write about our break in our pictures. I put the pictures together into a Smilebox presentation which I will post here next week.
3-4 Technology:
Class started with Dance Mat typing and our new computer challenge-comment on the class pet post and suggest a name. Students have a week to comment before we vote. After that, we read a poem by Jack Prelutsky about a mythical creature called a Wumpaloon. Students had to use the details in the poem and add their own to draw a Wumpaloon. Besides practicing moving between documents, mouse control, editing colors, and following written directions in order, this was a great activity to learn some new color words like crimson, teal, lilac, and indigo. After saving their picture, students inserted it into the poem and formatted the words. Here is my Wumpaloon.
The Wumpaloons by Jack Prelutsky
The Wumpaloons, which never were,
had silver scales and purple fur,
their wings were alabaster white,
their manes as black as anthracite,
their legs were pink and indigo,
with toes of bright pistachio,
their noses were a bottle green,
their antlers tan and tangerine.
The Wumpaloons had crimson lips,
their tails were teal, with flaxen tips,
their lilac eyes were flecked with dots,
as gold as summer apricots,
their necks were lemon, striped with blue
their ears were of a ruby hue.
How nice to think they might occur,
the Wumpaloons, which never were.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)