Thursday, February 26, 2009
Tuesday, February 24, 2009
reusable mazes!
I printed them from here and here.
Our printer is black and white,
so I cut off any pictures that were on the maze
and used stickers instead.
FYI, the caterpillar is trying to get to spring
and the ladybug is trying to get to the flowers.
After gluing them to construction paper,
I ran them through the laminator.
Reusable mazes! Hooray!
a dry erase marker and an eraser.
Of course, both were major points of interest!

Saturday, February 21, 2009
busy hands
purpose: coordination and control of movement, indirect prep for reading, writing, & math
age: the child in this photo is 4, but a 3-year-old with strong fine motor skills could do it, too
control of error: dropping the beads
purpose: to count to 100 with numerals (abstract), I usually present this lesson to children who have already been counting to 100 in a concrete way (for example, counting the 100 bead chain), this lesson also provides an opportunity for the child to see numeric patterns
age: the child in this picture is 5-years-old
control of error: the child uses the 100 board control to check her work
materials: the moveable alphabet, a lined board (homemade)
purpose: the child practices building, reading, and writing high frequency words that are not pronounced phonemically (for example, is, has, the, are)
age: the child in this photo is 5-years-old
control of error: teacher or control card
purpose: This lesson provides practice in the association of quantities and symbols 1-9. I present this lesson to children who are able to make 1-1 correspondence when counting, and have mastered the numeral rods, sandpaper numerals, and the spindle box. The child must be able to lay the numeral cards out in the correct sequence, and then count out the corresponding quantities of stars. This activity also requires organization!
age: the child in this photo is 4-years-old
control of error: too many stars left over (or not enough) in the end, in the photos, this lesson is being done on a table (happens here sometimes), but is much nicer on a rug with lots of room
materials: the pink tower and the broad stair
purpose: this is a lesson extension, children are able to discover similarities and differences between the two materials
age: the child in this photo is 4-years-old
control of error: none... maybe visual disharmony
materials: metal insets - check them out at Nienhius here, paper cut in 5x5 inch squares, pencil holder, long, sharp colored pencils
purpose: This lesson is the first official writing lesson. The child must have the coordination and control to use a pencil to do this lesson. The metal insets have both an inset and a frame. The child learns to trace the frame first. When presenting the lesson, I carefully model picking up the pencil with my non-writing hand and positioning it in my writing hand. Also, the metal insets are supposed to mirror the shapes of the letters, so keep that in mind while you trace. :)
age: the child in this picture is 3-years-old
control of error: the frame may slip and the pencil may waver, resulting in visual disharmony of the outline

Friday, February 20, 2009
the alphabet story
"Teach the alphabetic principle before you teach the alphabet.
Before beginning formal instruction in letter-sounds, show the child how to use her phonemic awareness to identify an alphabet letter by its sound when the letter is linked with an object or picture. Because the child now understands the alphabetic principle (that letters and speech sounds map onto each other), she is prepared to understand, identify, learn and remember the 26 alphabet letter-sounds."
-Randall Klein, reading specialist & Montessori teacher
I am a huge fan of Randall Klein, and his reading program. Our school's language curriculum is largely based on his materials and ideas. If you ever get a chance to listen to him speak, you'll leave feeling not only wiser, but truly inspired and ready to teach your child to read. The way he explains language development is straightforward, with an emphasis on quick, fun games you can play with your little one basically anywhere. Visit Randall here.Here's how we tell the alphabet story:
**singing the letter sounds to the tune of "up on a housetop"
a-a-apple, b-b-bird, c-c-cat, d-d-door, e-e-elephant
f-f-fish, g-g-girl, h-h-house, i-i-igloo, j-j-jet, k-k-kite,
lll-lamp, m-m-moon, n-n-nest, o-o-octopus, p-p-pig
q-q-queen, rrr-rainbow, s-s-sun, t-t-turtle, u-u-umbrella
v-violin, w-w-watch, x-marks the spot, y-y-yo-yo so much fun
z-z-zebra he really can run, we just sang our alphabet song,
next time won't you sing along?
For continuity in the beginning, we always associate the same pictures/objects with the letters (for example, "a" is always an apple). As the child becomes more familiar with letters, it's second-nature to associate them with other things that begin with the same sounds.