Learning is....
Planting a seed in our brain... learning to water, nurture and grow it.... so we can live on the fruit of our learning and plant more seeds.

Showing posts with label Classroom Ideas. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Classroom Ideas. Show all posts

Friday, 23 March 2018

Setting up my class for 2018 - Big Learnings!!

One of the things I've missed out on since the NZ Teachers page started on Facebook was sharing photos of my class set up at the start of the year with others because I had stepped out of teaching to do relieving, study and other work for a while.

This year I have had a big challenge.  I am teaching Year 2/3, a combination that is new to me.  I have also been setting up in a prefab that has not seen life as a functioning classroom for a few years.  I thought I would knock this out of the park.  But it has set me some hurdles to overcome and taught me a valuable lesson.

This is the state it presented itself to me in the second week of January when I popped in to move my gear from Room 5 to Room 7:


You may note the PMP equipment in the room.  This is what the room has been used for for several years.  However, due to two other classes being renovated from term one, this gear will be in storage for a while.

This area has been of particular concern to me:


You will note the state of the hessian on the wall and the wall behind peaking through in places.  That was always going to be a challenge.  The whiteboard was also in a hideous state with marks on it and bits stuck to the board.

In other posts I've talked about making friends with the caretaker and how this relationship can be very valuable.  Well it has paid off, because we worked together in the last week of January to get the majority of the PMP gear out of my class and over to Room 10 where all and sundry are stored.  Then we brought over a few pieces of furniture from Room 10 to Room 7; some drawers on wheels and a bookshelf.  The caretaker had already kindly put two teacher stations in my room another teacher did not want rather than pull the ones out of Room 10.

He then tackled the problem of the whiteboard with thinners.  He had all the bits off the board that were stuck on and now it is as good as new.


I had also been to my lock up and got a car load of resources and put them in the classroom.

Then I began to pull off the hideous brown hessian from the walls to reveal more hideous brown hessian and a tacky 1990s attempt at painting the hideous brown hessian yellow.  You can also see that when they replaced the old blackboard for a whiteboard they have left some rather hard board there.


But as I pulled down the hessian, I struck a problem.  A winner electrician had put several crucial fittings over the top of the stapled on hideous brown hessian.  So I had to stop that project.  I had to call in my very tall brother who is an electrician who can remedy this situation for me.  It required a level of greasing and teared faced emojis via text message that may haunt me.


Sadly my classroom is so old school it does not have a heat pump.  Last summer the last two classes were fitted with heat pumps and the fans were culled.  But it seems this one escaped the cull.  It is now my new best friend.


Behind it is a rather old school heating system.  I am going to have fun figuring out how to work that.  Does it still work?  The former DP says it does.

The days leading up to school starting were in the middle of a heat wave.  With the temperature topping 29-31oC outside, you can kind of imagine the temperature inside the prefab.  Sweat was literally pouring off me like a waterfall and I was going through frozen water like there was no tomorrow.  My new best friend, the fan, just couldn't cut the mustard.  And I was achieving nothing at all!!

My big learning curve has been:  I can not do everything!  I know, it surprised me too.  I particularly do not cope well it seems when there is a heap of stuff in the room that will not be needed in my room and which should be elsewhere.

Sad to say there was a communication:action breakdown, and I had a bit of a mental crisis over it.  Luckily, at times like these, this is when your fellow staff members come to the rescue.  One person recognised I had hit the wall over the unwanted equipment and went to get help.  Within half an hour the unwanted equipment was removed from my room and a few tables, a shelf and a tote tray trolley appeared.  The tables and tote tray trolley are very important because the new ones ordered for Room 7 had not arrived yet.

Anyhow, my brother, the electrician came and he fixed up a few electrical fittings so we could take off the remainder of the hideous brown hessian, fixed a shelf to the wall and installed the data projector for me (which was also a big help to the principal who was run off his feet!).

I then nipped into David's Emporium, got 10m of lime green eco cloth for $25 and a lovely off-cut of a light blue and white cotton Pacific material, and then I came back to attempt to reinvigorate the room.  At nine o'clock the night before school this was pretty much what my class looked like - except for the wall between the whiteboard and the shelf was 90% covered.



The principal set up a sound system for me and then kicked me out for the night.  😉

I have to say I was a little heart broken and disappointed.  I felt the room was not inviting.  I felt the most disorganised I had ever been.  Children and parents came into the room the next morning and it looked terrible.  It was a massive teacher fail in my opinion.  But the parents and children were very kind.

Every day over the next few weeks I have worked to make it a more inviting space and make it feel like a proper classroom.

But I had no tables and chairs for the students.  Over the first week we worked in a very flexible learning environment moving from one end of the carpet to the other.  Then I arrived at school on the 5th of February to find a delivery from a neighbouring school of temporary furniture.  The children and I were stoked because it meant we had tables to work on.


I was also very keen to get some children's work up, so I went in on Waitangi day and turned one wall into a writing display, as you can see below.


However, my area below never looks that tidy and I am working on ways to fix this problem.


Every week the walls have evolved.  At the end of the third week I had some stories and pictures, which are pictured below, about best friends that evolved from our poem of the week and the fact one of the students was leaving our school and community to move up north.  I photographed each picture and we made a card with photos of the pictures for the boy to take with him as well as a whole class photo.


My maps keep moving about the room depending on what I am doing with a space.


In the fourth week of term our new tables arrived from Furnware along with a shelf.  The children and I love the bright colours and how it has changed the dynamic of the room again.



And when a pay week swung around I was back off to David's Emporium to get the wires for displaying artwork.  I had primed the class up to grease up our caretaker with cheesy smiles, fluttering eyelids and a mega amount of pleases.  He told them only if they did fabulous artwork (which we will soon have some to go up).


With all these changes, I was digging through my boxes of teaching stuff and pulling out what I needed when I rediscovered it.  The children and I have been looking at the weather each day and these weather cards from Green Grubs are awesome as they are in te reo Maori and English.


Our school wide theme this term is Turangawaewae and this is still an area that is underdevelopment.  But one of the cool things we have used to explore ourselves is the Birthday Graph from Twinkl which is really bright and cherry and I've also used some of their resources around Waitangi Day, presenting our class treaty and some back to school writing.


It is so good to get my things out and use them and some of these are staples in my class like the De Bono Thinking Hats and some te reo resources I got years ago from a church group who came to my school when I was down in the King Country to sell to us.


And yes, that is a visual time table from Sparklebox, but I think it has been the best one I've come across.


The black and white writing is a piece about ourselves from Twinkl and the coloured writing is a response to a poem of the week about a pet banana.




And still my area is a mess!  😞


Last year I started the hearts to catch people in acts of kindness.... and I've instituted it into this class too so they can be recognised and celebrated for it.


And the maps have moved again....


I finally unpacked the big plastic containers the other week and found this wonderful lot of vobcabulary which fits in with our Turangawaewae theme.  We will have some kids looking into these words.


And in the meantime our new tote trays also arrived which was also very exciting.  Every child has a fabulous name tag with their Class Dojo icon on it.

But I still faced a massive issue in that we created traffic jams whenever they went to get their books and they couldn't fit everything in their tote trays.  So I reached out to the NZ Primary Teachers Facebook community and they came back with some solutions that would work for us.

I went to Mitre 10 Mega and purchased a number of buckets for the princely sum of $2.78 for putting books in and each bucket is labelled with the appropriate name of the books that should be in them.  I also purchased two other boxes for pencil cases.  This has proved a game changer in time management and storage issues.


This last week or so we have been putting up our work on the wires so the caretaker knows that we can follow through on a promise.  We do have an issue with slumpage, so he and I will be problem solving that over the next few weeks.  Below you can see our finished holiday stories and pictures.




These are the pictures we have drawn in response to the Gavin Bishop Readaloud being done by many Year 1-3 classes throughout New Zealand.  We read the books Rats, The Three Little Pigs, The Horror of Hickory Bay and two stories from the compliation Taming the Sun Maui and the Sun and Kahu and the Taniwha.



I really felt this display needed a title.  Last year I used a lot of different lettering I downloaded from a website called Instant Display, so I pulled out one of each and used it to create this title.  It is also where I got the title for my Turangawaewae wall from.



I am working on a display area for accumulating our hearts under the Super Acts of Kindness By Us I am promoting.  I've got the area started, but I still have a bit more work to do on it.  This area is a work in progress.  I got the bunting tassels on sale at The Warehouse the other weekend.


So the room is beginning to look more like I want it to.  Our routines are not fully in place yet.  I'm going mad on Twinkl sourcing appropriate resources for this age group as most of my stuff works best at Year 4 up.  But that is another blog post.

Essentially my big learning curve has been that having the support of others helps me make the room the best it can be. This is not a solo effort - and now the students are producing writing and artworks it looks even more amazing and feels like the classroom it should be.

Sunday, 17 December 2017

What I have to show for nine weeks for being a New Entrant teacher.

Last Saturday I went to school and put up the last of the children's artwork that I had not yet had a chance to put up.  Sounds strange.... with it being the last week of school and all.... but I only had this class for nine weeks and I wanted to see eight weeks of work on full display before I took it all down in Week 9 to send it home and turn the children's bedrooms into mini art galleries.

Firstly, standing at my desk, I did a panoramic shot of my class.  I had also scrubbed the tables clean of PVA glue, so they are gleaming.


B is for bear and B is for bee.  I'm so proud of the work we did in the first week.


D is for dinosaur.  I got this off Pinterest and was a good one for following instructions and getting things glued on accurately.  Originally we were going to do dragons... but then my cousin, Susan, a long time NE teacher and now RTLit said (after I had done S) not to focus on words that start with blends.


D is for dabbing dots on d.  Another inspired by Pinterest and it got the children using a paint brush in a different way.



N is for numbers.  Another simple idea I got from Pinterest.  It also helps children put numbers in order and practice their gluing skills.  While the examples I saw on Pinterest used capital letters, I focused on teaching the students lower case letters.



T is for turkey.  Again this was an activity to teach the children gluing on and spacial awareness.  T is for tree.  It is important to give the students the opportunity to draw what they see for themselves.  T is for taniwha.  T is for tui.  For these two communal activities we were learning to "colour inside the fence" with crayons and then use long brush strokes to dye the picture.  Some students needed to be taught how to not keep stroking in the same place.



T is for tiger.  We made the tigers from paper plates and I got them to paint both sides as I envisaged them hanging.  We looked at a picture of a tiger when we put it all together and used white crayon before we glued on the black stripes.  We used white wool for the whiskers.

S is for snake.  We started off with the ideas of putting a pattern on the snake.... but these kids weren't very good at colouring patterns that repeat with crayon.... it was a bit above them.  And then we used dye.  I cut out the snakes and glued them on coloured paper and cut them out again.  Then I cut different coloured shapes and after we had done some patterning with beads on thread, and other materials, the children had more of an idea on patterning and were able to make a two colour/shape pattern and glue it on the back of their snake.



S is for sheep.  An idea inspired by a former colleague in 2014, Kimberley, when she was a BT.  Finally found an opportunity to use it.  Two learnings from this: don't make your sheep so big because you use so many cotton wool balls; this would be a better activity when teaching blends - sh.  Thanks for that tip Susan!


S is for strawberry.  We looked at and discussed the strawberries before we drew the strawberries and then we ate them.  Again, this would be a better activity for str.  S is for sweetcorn.  I bought the sweetcorn for our class garden.  We discussed what it looked like and then we drew it.  Again... sw probably would be best for this activity.


This is an idea I got off Pinterest in 2014.  So I made it for my new class in term three 2014.  I did not use all of the cards this time.  I went for a few to keep it simple.


A is for ambulance.  We were visiting by Daniel from St Johns in Week 1 and the following week we were doing the letter A, the short one.  A is for apple  So I made a study of apples.  I purchased five different varieties of apple for us to discuss, examine, draw and colour.  I love their apples.  Then I had also found an awsome apple in an a activity on Pinterest.

G is for garden.  For this one I wanted to introduce the children to using scissors themselves.  So I drew a whole pile of flowers in pencil, gave one of each colour to the students and asked them to cut it out.  I cut out the yellow centre, stalks and leaves, but this gave the flowers a more individual look.  I first got them to draw a flower garden on blue paper using crayon to give this depth.  Then we glued the flowers over the top.



G is for goose.  Another cool as idea I got off Pinterest.... but I was up to after 2:00am cutting out 144 feathers and sorting them into twelve individual snaplock bags so each child would have a variety of colours.  My original intent was to also discuss the various textures of the paper.  But we had some difficulty doing this as two of my special needs students were somewhat distracting.  As you can see we had a variety of individuality in how the feathers were stuck on.




M is for mouse.  Another inspired by Pinterest and getting the students to glue on and be aware of space.  The original Pin uses a capital M so I adapted it to a lower case m.


 N is for nest.  This inspiration came from a staffroom discussion.  So I found some simple birds on Google images, printed them out, gave the children water colour paints to paint their birds and then we went off looking for things in the school grounds to make nests with.  A bit of PVA glue and waahlaa, we have a nest for our birds.



This was delightful to see as we went off to collect nest materials....


D is for dog.  This was our Art & Craft day focus.  We put together all the skills we had been learning for the term:  crayon and dye, long brush strokes for both paint and dye, gluing on, cutting out (they cut out their spots for their dogs).








M is for me.  On the first day of school for the term, I tried to get them to draw a picture of themselves in crayon.  It was a failure.  But later in the term I decided to try again.  So here they are in crayon with dye.



M is for monster.  This activity was all about getting the children to cut out their own shapes.  I was trying to teach them some tricks like folding the paper in half and how to draw the shape before cutting.  I also was trying to teach them how to hold the big side and cut off the small side.  All those things we take for granted when cutting.



L is for lemon.  We had already drank lemonade and sucked on lollipops, so I brought in a lemon off our tree and we looked at it and discussed it before cutting it in half, sniffing it and drawing it.  Later I squeezed it out and we tasted the juice.  Lots of good oral language and very impressive detail of the features of the lemon.



P is for pig.  Paper plates were my inspiration for this.  We painted our pigs pink.  I cut out ears and noses for them to paint too.  We glued on the ears and under the nose is a thick piece of corrogated cardboard to make the nose "stand out" from the face.  White and brown circles for the eyes along with black buttons, and the nose is finished off with two pink buttons for the nostrils.


This is the teachery stuff at the front of the classroom: thinking hats, months of the year and days of the week, colours, visual timetable, the calendar, number of the day and all that.


We made a Christmas tree.


These were our Super Acts of Kindness.  On the last day we took them all down, sorted them and sent them home.


These are the toys I purchased for the play based aspect of my class....




And from the outside of my class, I photographed the plants we have grown this term for the children to take home.  We grew a sunflower plant each and the seed tray has four pea plants and a basil and corriander plant.... that's if all the seeds germinated!



We took regular photos to record the growth of our plants.



This is our class garden.  We planted a tomato plant, marigolds, basil, peas and sweetcorn.  The mint and gladiolus were already in place.


I am so proud of what we achieved in our short time together.  I learnt a lot.  I hope they learned a lot too!!