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Showing posts with label science. Show all posts
Showing posts with label science. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 27, 2013

Thankful for time to create new activities and a sale!

It is already Wednesday, and I feel like I have gotten so much accomplished since school was out Friday.

So far, I have...

  • created 3 new foldable/activity sets for our interactive science notebooks
  • created 2 task card sets
  • created 3 holiday think tanks
  • made a Robot Researcher station for my classroom
  • baked the most delicious pumpkin cheesecake snickerdoodles
  • went to the grocery store...twice...
  • saw Santa
  • did all the kids laundry (folded and put away!)
  • did my laundry (folded, but not put away)
  • cleaned the entire playroom...twice...
  • beat LEGO Marvels (I snuck in some video game time!)
  • went to the doctor, dentist, and scheduled the eye doctor (what else are holiday breaks for?
  • painted my toes
I am sure there is more, but I cannot think of it all. Thank goodness my youngest still naps 2-3 hours a day and my 3 year old "rests" during that time. 

We are into Earth Science in our curriculum, so here are our newest activities we are using.









I really don't think I like the cover to the WED foldable. Everytime I look at it, it just makes something in my brain go crooked. What do you think?

Oh, and...................................................



TeachersPayTeachers.com is having a Cyber Monday (and Tuesday) sale! Many authors are putting their stuff up for sale, too, so you could get up to 28% off all sorts of things! My whole store will be 20% off and then the TpT code on top of that will make my whole store 28% off. Have fun shopping!

Have a happy Thanksgiving tomorrow, everyone!

Saturday, November 23, 2013

Thanksgiving Break is here!

I don't know what I am more excited about...having a week off with my kids to play or having a week off from school to create more activities for my classroom kids and Teachers Pay Teachers!

What am I thankful for this year? I am thankful for a healthy, happy family, great friends, a husband who loves me "just the way I am," and a job I love. I am thankful for a place to find and share great teacher ideas, like Teachers Pay Teachers, where I can get wonderful products for my classroom and share ones I have found or made that work great.  I am thankful for a teacher blogger community that supports one another and affirms that we are, indeed, doing the right thing in our classrooms and lives.

We had a Thanksgiving-themed day on Friday for our team (5 teachers), and I think the kids had a lot of fun. We also had career day that morning, along with the last day for kids to finish their math benchmarks, so we were busy.

In science, I had kids create a soil data disk from a soil sample from Plymouth Rock (our playground) with a brad, cardstock and a paper plate where they had to analyze a soil sample for it color, texture, ability to retain water, and it's ability to support life. Then they had to disguise the data disk to hide it from others at the First Thanksgiving. They came out really nice, and the kids had fun analyzing their samples and disguising them.

For career day, my sister, who is an Animal Behavior Analyst, got to come to my class and share with my kids how she uses data and graphs (yea! Real world graphs!) to analyze the behavior of different animals at the zoo to see how they are doing, what they prefer, and their well-being. The kids really loved seeing her presentation and playing her games and activities she prepared. I think she really is a teacher at heart :)

More bonuses, my sister stayed with us for 2 days, played with her niece and nephew while I put together a set of WED task cards, and even went with us to go see Santa. I love my sweet sister so very much! Here are the task cards I made while she was entertaining the little people.


It is a set of 20 task cards following Santa as he travels through the United States delivering presents, noticing landform changes, and getting a little side-tracked along the way. This is one of the things my kids will do the last week of school in December. Click the picture below to get to the cards.



I really hope my students like it as much as they liked Frankenstein's adventure without electricity for Halloween! I love doing themed stuff to help remind my kids that they can always have fun while learning; it does not always have to be an either/or kids of situation.

Stay tuned to see what else I get to create over the break. I am already 3/4 the way done with 2 earth science foldables and have a bunch of other ideas getting ready to roll....

Have a Happy Thanksgiving!



Sunday, October 27, 2013

Depth and Complexity

Just to get my post started (which has been sitting open for 45 minutes now thanks to 2 adorable little ones who want to play with mommy in the ball pit)...


I felt like the day needed an icon to go with it :) Between playing with the kids, breaking up hair pulling fights, trying to clean anything, and the constant question, "When is Aunt Gwenie getting here?" I may never finish this post!

So I have been constantly looking at my classes and students this year to find a way to motivate and engage them. They have needed more in these areas than any group I have had before. One of the things I had purchased this summer was a set of Depth and Complexity Science Task Cards from TpT. I loved them! I could not wait to use them in my classroom this year. Well, here we are at the end of October, and i just got a chance to use them. I knew before we could use them, I would have to go over what the cards meant, the different icons and so on. 

Well, a friend emailed me this news story Friday about a small town using reflection to help their city get more sunlight, and I thought this was a great chance to get started with depth and complexity. 



 Depth and Complexity (developed by Dr. Sandra Kaplan) is a way to integrate higher level thinking skills into every day learning. It is geared towards GT studies, but I think it has a purpose for all students.I loved that there were so many ways for students to show they understood the material. My first impression of depth and complexity was that it had to be based on a reading selection. Now that we used it, and I researched more this weekend, I can see its use on just specific topics that we are learning. I found lots of great resources that all sparked ides. There are a bunch on Teachers Pay Teacher and at JTaylorEducation.com, and you will start to see some pop up in my TpT store soon, as well. In the meantime, if you get a chance, take a look at Depth and Complexity and see if it is something that would benefit your kids. 

If you want to start using Depth and Complexity, I recommend these resources to get started.

Icons:
Activities from TpT: http://www.teacherspayteachers.com/Browse/Search:depth+and+complexity/Page:1
How do I use it? http://www.sracs.org/media/assets/Depth_Complexity_Icon_Chart.pdfhttp://kc3rd.pbworks.com/f/GATE-ICONS-final.pdf

On another note, I posted some new physical science interactive notebook foldables and activities. I hope you find them useful!




FYI: I was able to write the last 85% of this post because Aunt Gwenie and Grandma did indeed get here. Thank goodness for them :)



Saturday, September 21, 2013

A Peek at My Week #5

Welcome to another week of 5th grade science! I am linking up again for another Peek at My Week with Mrs. Laffin's Laughings.


This week, we are wrapping up physical properties with a little review from all the properties we covered over the last 4 weeks.

Monday:
WU Seeing Science Structures Understanding Models
Physical Properties Foldable and Mini Lab

This is a review of physical properties using the 5 senses to describe an item. It is new in my store.





Tuesday:
WU Seeing Science Structures Understanding Models
The Orange's Secret AIMS Activity

Wednesday:
WU Seeing Science Structures Understanding Models
Matter and Energy Test
The Orange Secret Conclusion

Thursday:
WU Seeing Science Structures Understanding Models
Review test

Friday:
WU Seeing Science Structures Understanding Models
Assign Superhero Project
Warm Up Wrap Up
Bill Nye Magnetism

Students love the superhero project every year. They get to design a superhero or use one that has already been created and show what they know about matter, force and energy by applying it to their superpowers. They make trading cards, too, that they get to trade after everyone has presented their superheroes. It is a lot of fun.


Enjoy your week!

Saturday, September 14, 2013

A Peek at My Week #4

I am linking up with Jennifer again at Mrs. Laffin's Laughings for A Peek at My Week.



This week we are getting further into properties of matter by looking at density, mixtures, and solutions.

Monday:
Warm Up from Seeing Science Structures: Using Tools to Investigate Matter
Mixtures and Solutions Notes
Mini Mixtures Lab

Tuesday:
Warm Up from Seeing Science Structures: Using Tools to Investigate Matter
Solutes and Solvents Lab

Wednesday:
Warm Up from Seeing Science Structures: Using Tools to Investigate Matter
Solutions Sort

Thursday:
Warm Up from Seeing Science Structures: Using Tools to Investigate Matter
Density Notes with BrainPOP Buoyancy
Coke vs. Diet Coke
Density Tube

Friday:
Warm Up from Seeing Science Structures: Using Tools to Investigate Matter
Bill Nye Buoyancy
Warm Up Wrap Up

Don't forget to enter for your chance to win a tear's worth of weekly newsletters here!


Sunday, September 8, 2013

A Peek at My Week #3

It's time for another Peek at My Week with Mrs. Laffin's Laughings!

We have covered safety and tools and graphing, so now we are ready to put it all together and start Physical Properties and the Scientific Method!


Monday:
Seeing Science Structures Think Sheet Models
Scientific Method (6 Flap Fold)
Penny Drop Lab

Tuesday:
Seeing Science Structures Think Sheet Models
Changes in Matter (TpT States of Matter Flipbook from Lita Lita)
Temperature Mini Lab ( modified from Free Matter Notebook Activity from The Science Penguin)

Wednesday:
Seeing Science Structures Think Sheet Models
Mass and Volume Foldable (TpT Mass and Volume Foldable from my store)
Mass and Volume Lab (TpT Mass and Volume Lab from my store)

Thursday:
Seeing Science Structures Think Sheet Models
Length Foldable
Length Mini Lab (TpT Graphing Lab from my store)

Friday:
Seeing Science Structures Think Sheet Models
Bill Nye Measurement and video response
Warm Up Wrap Up

I am trying to add the links for these items, but Teachers Pay Teachers is having some kind of meltdown at the moment :) I will add them as soon as I can. In the meantime, I added in parentheses where on TPT you can find them in case you can get to the website before I can!

Have a great week teaching science!

Check back this week for some looks at our science notebooks and our new anchor charts!


Monday, August 26, 2013

First Day and Room Reveal


Today was the first day of school, and it went pretty well. I got all my signs and decorations up. I am so excited for students to get to use them! 

I have 120 kids in 4 science classes. My teammates are awesome teachers and people. I am very blessed :)

My room:

Verb wall
 
Absent board

Help wall

Scientific method

Word wall (cabinet)

Early finishers and think tanks board

Non-fiction text structures


First day activity

Did I mention I love teaching?

Sunday, August 18, 2013

How to get Parents to Get Supplies for your Lab

I know it is late, and I am about to go to bed, but I wanted to post this freebie that took my 30 minutes to write and 7 hours to complete (bless the children). This is a tip on how to get parents to help supply your classroom from the start. We do this in the science lab every year, and even do it again once we have Open House later in the year. Just make sure you give the kids some type of reward for bringing in extra supplies. We have a ticket system at our school, so each item brought in is worth 1 ticket. Click the picture to get the how to.



Enjoy and goodnight!

Tuesday, July 30, 2013

Fun way to set up partners

In science, we use partners almost daily. Kids get tired of the same old same old partners. I know a lot of people have used Clock Buddies (me included) and other ways, but here is just another way to do it.

iPartners Journal Pages (click on the picture to get it)





Students use the symbols to partner up with another person. They write their names on each other's boxes with the same symbol. They only have 6 to fill out, then...they glue them in their journals! They cannot lose it unless they (heaven forbid!) lose their journals. When you are ready for new partners, do it again and add this new page to their journals.

When you are ready to partner up, just say, "Find your Recycle partner." I also like to color and laminate the large cards for each symbol. Then I can have it on the board and the students know to find their partner when they come to class without me saying anything. Then we are ready to go! Its just a fun way to do the same thing we have been doing.

Monday, July 29, 2013

Monday Made It - Door Sign

I am joining the Monday Made It Linky from 4th Grade Frolics today. Click on the picture below to join!


Every teacher needs a cute sign above their door in the hallway. I don't know how many of our sweet kids check above the door to make sure they are in the right place before entering EVERY day. Since I changed from safari to robots, I had to change my door sign to match, too.


This was pretty easy and quick(ish) to make. I made it Saturday while the kids were napping. I took a piece of cardboard from one of the many Amazon.com boxes lying around and covered it in some robot fabric I found at Wal-Mart. I like using fabric or fadeless paper for my walls because they last longer and stay bright. I made sure I had enough to wrap around all the edges. On the back, it is folded over, attached with permanent double-sided tape, then hot glued. 

For the front, I found foam glitter letters at Wal-Mart (let's just save time and tell you everything was found at Wal-Mart) and glitter foam sheets. I hot glued the letters to the fabric, to make sure they would stay, and then I drew and cut out gears from the glitter foam sheets to match the colors in the robots. This was the most time consuming part. If you know me, you know the gears had to be perfect. I traced two different sized circles from each color and then I had to divide the circles into 12 even pieces. The back of the foam sheets was paper, so it was easy to draw on. This is where I am thankful for my Trig class from way back when (and you said you would never need it! Ha!). Then I drew a small line on each of the 12 lines and connected every other line with a curved one, like this:



Cut out the circle and on the bold lines. Each line is 30 degrees apart. I cut them out and hot glued them in place.

Voila! A nice, big, colorful above-the-door-sign (batman pajama legs not included)!

I cannot wait to show you next Mondays Made It. I am almost finished, but need a few more kid naps to get it done :)


Thursday, July 18, 2013

Kiwi Crate Love!

So one of my teacher friends was looking for something to do for her sweet grandkids while they visited over the summer. She found this website, Kiwi Crate, that sends you a box once a month of activities to do for kids 3-8ish. I thought, why not? My daughter (3 years) loves crafts, and most of these are science based.

We are only 2 crates in, and we are having a blast!

The crate comes with just about everything you need inside for 2-3 activities. This month was Wonders of Water.


Each activity book has instructions on how to do the activity, plus ways to extend the craft you made, and links to more crafts you can do in the same category or with that activity you just did. This time, we get to make a sailboat (learning about force and wind power), make water colored animals (learning about mixing colors, and 2 science experiments, drops on a penny (surface tension) and clay boats (buoyancy). Each activity book has links to Kiwi's website for more on that topic.

We do these one activity at a time. Day one is one activity book's basic craft. Then we extend it after we make  it. Then stop. The next time we do something we go online and check out the extras for that activity book. When we finish those, we do another book. Each activity book can last us a week or more with the creating and extending. My daughter gets so excited about the science part (my little scientist!) that she has all sorts of questions and "esperiments" she wants to do for each one.

Have more than one kid? They have add on packs of supplies for siblings. You get the crate, but it has double the consumables so each kid has plenty. Check out the crate at Kiwi Crate!

I am just so happy we found something already put together for us to do that is fun and educational. As soon as we get through this crate, I will post about our experience with water! I try and make most things we do an educational experience from learning our alphabet while placing sugar decorations on a cake to turning our giant TV box into a rocket ship and blasting to the moon. Just so you know, almost half the nerdy things we do are my daughter's idea :)

Friday, June 28, 2013

Getting some work done

The kids are at grandma's for the weekend, the husband is sleeping, and I have time! I am laminating all of my task card sets, new room signs, and anything else that was sitting in my "to laminate" folder.

 There was sooo much. Now I just need to cut them apart, cut the holes, and put them on rings (thanks Teaching with a Mountain View for the great idea). These are my favorite task cards made by The Science Penguin. She is a teacher in Texas who creates amazing things that actually match the TEKS standards since ours don't exactly align with the common core. I have purchased so many of her products from Teachers Pay Teachers. Usually when my earnings from them come in, I turn right around and use it on the things I wanted from The Science Penguin store. If you haven't checked it out, I highly suggest you do. 

Now, what else can I do with all this time? Maybe I will make some new clip art or some more think tanks...

Thursday, June 20, 2013

Science at the Zoo

We went to the zoo today, and the children's zoo has this really cool nature exchange where kids bring in rocks, plants, and shells they found and exchange them for other items in the store. My sweet daughter, only 3 and so observant, went in with her homemade nature collection box with 6 things: a blade of grass, a yellow flower, a rock, a stick, a green leaf, and a brown leaf a buggy chomped (all her descriptions). These were just things she found on our land. Well, she has to explain to the nature exchange guy where they came from and what she knew about them to get store points to swap for other nature. Her items were not that impressive, but the answers she gave to his questions impressed him enough to give her 200 points, way more than I thought she would get!

She used her points to get 8 rocks and 2 shells that matched so they could go together. What a great idea! She was so into touching everything and choosing the perfect items for her rock collection at home. Her favorite was a rock that looked like a heart. We loved this interactive part of the zoo. She even counted all 10 pieces as she placed them in her bag. I am such a proud momma of my smart little girl and so happy there are places like this that recognize children's curiosity in nature. 



Monday, June 17, 2013

Are you on board with Think Tanks?

Our district recently implemented Think Tanks. I had heard that name been tossed around all year, and once I finally found out what it was, I was hooked!

We have a 50 minute block built in to our schedule for small group intervention every day. I sit at a table in my classroom and work with 2-6 kids in a small group on a specific topic we have been working on that they are struggling with. While this is going on, I may have anywhere between 15-24 kids still in my room who need something meaningful to work on for that hour, not just a worksheet or study hall.

Enter Think Tanks!

The students not in small groups will work on a 4 day project that centers around a reading selection (book, article, how to manual, problem, whatever you have or want), asks them to recall information (usually in a graphic organizer), and then they get to create a meaningful product and extend on it, like write a song, then make a music video, or create a story then present it as part of the 6 o'clock newscast. All of it centers around a reading selection that focuses on the standard you want them to focus on. Do you want them to extend on rock formation? Read a book on rock formation, illustrate the process in a sequence graphic organizer, create 3D models of sedimentary rock formation then turn that into an advertisement for different uses of sedimentary rocks! Presto chango - a meaningful project that student can do in small 2-4 people groups INDEPENDENT of the teacher (since you are busy with your own small group).

The think tanks work like so. We have 50 minutes for 5 days.

Day 1: Read and Recall. Students read a book of your choice, one of a variety you have selected for them (leveled, perhaps?), or a section from a book. I have modeled most of my latest ones after books from the Let's Read Science Series. It is at a good level for most of my kids and I find the information factual to what we learn at this level.




They are reading aloud together, or to themselves, based on how many copies you have of each book. Then they each complete the graphic organizer or questions. You can dictate if this should be together or alone.

Day 2-4: Create and Extend. Students now get to create a physical product. It could be a craftivity (oh, Pintrest!), write a story/play/poem/commercial/advertisement/brochure or whatever else it may be. Again, they can produce one per group or each group member make one. It's up to you! Then they take that product and extend on it. This could be another product, it could be a presentation, or it could be something using technology (if you have that available).

Day 5: Evaluate It! We don't have small groups on Fridays, but we still have the time (this is so our reading/ESL/SPED/Math specialists can go through their data). Instead, students present what they learned and created, especially if they were making a music video, newscast, tv show, commercial, technology presentation, etc.,.... They can get rewards for putting as much into it as possible, or they can redo what they did not quite put as much effort as they could have while those who did play games to the side.

I have my Think Tanks in folders these containers for easy organization.



All the materials they need are inside the container, so I needed one that was big enough to put papers, books, and supplies. Since it takes one week to do one think tank, and I can easily divide 15-24 kids into 6 or less groups of 4, I only need 6 every six weeks. The kids can easily rotate them themselves each week. I will have one of the incentive posters on the wall with each think tank on it and the kids names so they can keep track of which ones they do. It is that simple!

Are you using think tanks at your school? How do you like them?


Wednesday, June 12, 2013

Teachers have it easy because they have summers off...



The end of the year is here! Now is the time to catch up on sleep, be lazy about the house, and do nothing. Yeah, right! Really, it will be a summer filled with new ideas, creating, creating, creating, collaborating with my new team and my science department, redesigning my classroom, revamping what didn't work last year, making what I want for this upcoming year, and maybe making a pie or two in between.

I loved my experiences from the past year. I got to teach a 5th grade GT (32/35 labeled GT) math class, a 5th grade Dyslexic/SPED/504 (27/29 labeled at risk for one reason or another) math class, the same two groups for 5th grade science, and a random 6th grade science class in between. On top of all those preps, I am science lead for my school, on the discipline committee, on the reward and incentive committee, on the benchmark writing team for the district, the CBA writing team for the district, curriculum update team for the district, planned a science fair (with two amazing science divas!), planned and held Space Night for our school community, got nominated for teacher of the year (second year in a row, and lost both years to AMAZING teachers), and I did not have any children. That last one was a surprise to many! I like being busy, and I like helping anyone who needs it. I have a hard time saying no to others, but it helps me get more accomplished and see what others do to contribute to our students' education that I might not normally get to see. I got to team teach with one of my best friends, and that made every day even better!
Next year, I will get to co-teach with my friend every day, only teach 5th grade science, and still do all the rest. I might even start a girls STEM club after school. . .

It is reassuring to know that I am not alone in the craziness that is called teaching. There are so many teachers out there in the same boat, and I am proud to share the title of teacher with you. Now, who needs a nap?