Long time no blog, I know.
I’m sorry. I’ve been pretty busy lately. My attention has been snagged by house
buying and cancer curing, so my blogging had to take the sacrifice and be put
on hold for close to a month!
Yes…Rob and I spent Easter
weekend running back and forth to the real estate office signing papers. It’s
now official. 42 days ‘til move in; but who’s counting?
And what’s this about me curing cancer? Well I haven’t actually
cured it, but I’m doing my part! I’ve been running Relay for Life for the past
8 years, but since my dad died of cancer three years ago, I’ve decided
to kick it into high gear and raise as much as I can for my team. I organized
and threw a dance, invited friends and family, hired a Rolling Stones tribute
band, and raised over $4000!
But now that the house
buying and cancer curing has settled down, it’s time to regain focus on what’s
been going on in Grade One.
We finished our units on
heroes, structures, and subtraction, and started super fun units on
communities, pirates, probability, and mapping!
The Grade Ones have to
learn about the local community, so we started off (as I always like starting
off) by brainstorming what we already know.
And we learned about what
our community was like when it was first founded, and discussed the idea that
communities change over time.
Cute story time:
Me: What do you think
Georgina looked like 195 years ago when William Bourchier discovered the area?
Boy: I think everything
was in black and white.
Someone’s seen a few old
movies.
Anyways. The idea of a
community has been the starting point for everything else in the other units. I
can’t take any of the credit for these upcoming amazing ideas. Back when I was
a student teacher, Melissa and Stacia planned this terrific unit on pirates. We
tied in the ideas of community and working together. It was such a fun unit, I
decided to do it again with my own kiddos.
The kids now sit in “pirate
ships” which is essentially three desk groups of six. They have to work as a
community and demonstrate strong teamwork skills. I, of course, am the captain ;)
Pirate books have become
the main texts for our literacy unit.
This week, we have started
looking at character and setting. These are some books we’ve read so far:
There are SO many pirate
adventure stories out there and they’re fantastic. The kids totally love acting
like pirates. Even during morning and afternoon attendance they say, “Arrrgh, Captain Lawrence!” instead of, “Here”.
We all know that pirates
need maps to find their buried treasure. So we’ll be learning all about
positional language and the relative location of objects. At the same time, we’ll
be learning about probability. We’ve had lots of fun with some pirate spinner
games that I created. Click HERE for a free copy.
Finally, we have a wonderful CYW (Child and Youth Worker) at our school who comes in each week to teach my onesies about various life skills. Lately, she’s been teaching them about manners and how to be kind to one another. She read them this hit of a book.
Then they made their own
buckets, where they can leave kind
comments to one another and fill each other’s buckets. What a great way to
build that sense of community.
Well, that’s it from me. I’ll
leave you with a picture of our pirate name flags we made in aaaaarght. I mean,
art.
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