Ready....set.....go! AIMS is right around the corner! This marvelous group is ready for serious business! They had a great time making their own video to show they were ready for AIMS baby!
Saturday, April 12, 2014
Friday, April 11, 2014
Japan in 4th Grade
Welcome to Japan!
This winter was we had Around the World Day at our school. After reading, Sadako and the Thousand Paper Cranes it was an easy choice of what country the students wanted to learn about. Here is a link but please read to enjoy the activities! :)
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From: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Sadako_and_the_thousand_paper_cranes_00.jpg |
We started out by decorating our own Kimonos as we learned about the traditional dress of the Japanese. In the story Sadako receives a Kimono from her mother as a gift while in the hospital, it was a good connection to the story for the kids.
The Japanese fan was our next creation! After watching a beautiful fan dance of a women in her kimono we started making fans. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-NJhVZtNFDw I used decorative Japanese style card stock on one side and the other side was up to the kids to decorate. They loved coming up with their design, many kids asked if they could look up images online. This happened to be the day and time my principal popped in with our state representative and a couple other adults! Always fun!
After spending some time shopping around different craft stores I came up with a few more ideas. One was the Japanese Cherry Blossom. I brought one into the classroom from the craft store to hang in our room. Thank goodness my mom was there to help me organize this painting project. We went step by step....first the kids had brown to paint the branch then each student was given red and white and they made their own hue of pink. They practiced on the newspaper first!
We tried to do a little something everyday for two weeks. The dolls and blossoms were more time consuming projects than others, but I tied to do something little each day. Daily the kids came in wondering what we were going to add to our portfolio page of Japan.
First we learned where Japan
was geographically. We colored the map and labeled the capital, Tokyo and city,
Hiroshima. In the story we read it took place in Hiroshima where the main
problem arises due to the historical bombs being dropped.
Then I gave each of them a
flag make out of card stock and red sticky dots. We added the flag to the
portfolio and wrote what it resembles. The red circle represents the red
sun and the white resembles the white fields.
The currency of Japan is Yen, I printed it in color, glued and labeled onto the portfolio sheets.
The Great Wave was next. We labeled the famous painting: "The Great Wave off Kanagawa." Then we talked about and labeled the important symbolization in this famous painting to Japan. Mt. Fuji, the boats with people that are used to transport the fish within the heavy waves that are about to break.
After studying the painting this naturally took us to Tsunamis in Japan. This man-made utube caused some good conversations
Next we learned how to write numbers in Japanese
and how to make Organmi by folding special paper to make a paper cup.
Our last exciting moment was
having our own feast. I had a parent come in and she explained all of the
different traditions as well as mannerisms of how Japanese eat properly. Starting out with the tea, someone else
must pour yours first. Then we
tried teriyaki chicken and sushi. Each
child had there own set up chopsticks and some slightly picked it up, some
tried real hard and others just were not there yet. It was a fun day of learning about another culture.
Check this out the video made with the app 'Puppet' to see more pictures of the kids in the classroom!
I'm Speaking at ISTE 2014

I am really looking forward to showing and sharing ideas for kids to make creative book reviews to share with their friends!
Tuesday, November 5, 2013
Croaking!
Croaking novel summaries and making QR codes is coming right along! Today's focus was reading summaries fluently in the 30 second time period and croaking the summary on the app Croakit. After practicing and recording the students had to navigate the iPad to listen to their recordings, save it and then send the link off. In the next lesson the kids will be using the link to make a QR code. One step at a time! I pushed a few kids that could follow the steps and they were able to create and send me the image of the QR Code! Yay! In the next mini lesson everyone will be on board. :)
My favorite part of the day was listening to students coach each other, "The word is An-tarc-ti-ca, try it!" She broke apart the works by syllables for her partner then she said Antarctica 2-3 times, they decided she was ready to record. It was a loud room of sharing until recording time, over half the kids went out side in different areas to illuminate distractions or extra noise.
My favorite part of the day was listening to students coach each other, "The word is An-tarc-ti-ca, try it!" She broke apart the works by syllables for her partner then she said Antarctica 2-3 times, they decided she was ready to record. It was a loud room of sharing until recording time, over half the kids went out side in different areas to illuminate distractions or extra noise.
Partner Practice with timing and focus on reading fluently. Her example 1 below. |
Mini lesson was on what good readers sound like to read fluently. This is the rubric I will use to score them this time around, thank you Kagan! |
Final time to summarize on Croak it. |
Example 1: Ms. Frisby and the Rats of NIMH
Example 2: The Hobbit http://croak.eu/1aZHKZQ
Saturday, November 2, 2013
Record it, link it, share it! Teach your students how to make QR codes!
Super excited that the 4th graders are starting to create their book trailers this week. They first practiced their timing and voice fluency then recorded on the app Croakit! Now it is time to turn them into QR codes.
Background research says that the best practices of learning
are when the responsibilities and ideas are placed on the student, and the
teacher is the guide on the side.
This project requires students to facilitate their own learning and
develop independence in their thinking and application of knowledge, through the use of technology and literacy.
In this project the first lesson is how to write a 30 second
book review. Secondly, the students will learn how to use a recording device and an app
such as Croak.it to record and create a link. Third, they will learn how copy and paste a link to email to themselves for review of the recording. Finally,
the students will learn how to use a QR code
generator to copy and paste their link to generate and print the code. The students will then
showcase their work on a book jacket, on the wall, send to friend locally or
globally, or place on their student blog.
So far students have learned how to write a opinion book summary, voice record focusing on fluency and email their croak it to a friend and myself. The next step will be the same process but they will be making their own QR codes!
So far students have learned how to write a opinion book summary, voice record focusing on fluency and email their croak it to a friend and myself. The next step will be the same process but they will be making their own QR codes!
Rehearsing to make the 30 second cut! |
Friday, July 12, 2013
ISTE 2013
Going to the ISTE 2013 was a fabulous experience and hopefully we will get the opportunity to go back one day soon. I am so amazed with what technology offers our kids, which is such an advancement from what I had as a
child. I heard so many innovative
ideas that my brain is still over flowing. I am just starting to sort them out.
The organizers were phenomenal- they were inspiring, kind,
and so passionate about kids learning in new creative ways. Two people
that stood out to me that I couldn’t help but ask to personalize my book with a
signature and get a picture with were two innovative science teachers, Jon
Bergmann and Aaron Sams. These two
are the founders of the ‘Flipped Classroom’ methodology.
It was an exciting moment meeting Moby, a unique friend to us all. Kids love him! He keeps ideas so simple
and real! Group photo time!
There are so many people I can talk about that I truly
enjoyed. I feel like I just
blinked my eye at what was offered here.
Leslie Fisher, Hall Davidson and Grey Tang were just a few of the
sessions I went to that I could write about. So many more classes and opportunities going on at the same time. AMAZING LEADERS in technology education!
One of my big takeaways was was the idea of promoting curiosity in children. Every child is
curious about something. We need
to give them the opportunity to combine their creativity with their curiosity. Engineering ideas though kids! Bored students….YUCK! Kids deserve to
be enlightened and excited. It stems from that excitement and knowledge that they become passionate from their own
curiosity and learning.
My goal this year is to spend more time guiding kids and
giving them opportunities to create and make learning their own with their ideas through the content.
In all, ISTE 2013 was an amazing experience. I am very thankful
that I was asked to help deliver Creighton School District's iAchieve presentation and given the opportunity present with my own district
leaders. I am thankful both of them provided this unique opportunity to my sister and I both.
San Antonio was a unique city to check out while we debriefed, shared or gathered our new ideas and drew conclusions with good friends.
This was a special treat! |
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Blogging begins....! |
The River Walk had lots of great tastes and we learned all about the history of San Antonio on this little cruise. |
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My dear sister and I had lots of quality time learning together, one passion we both love most! |
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Took a tour of the Historic Alamo. |
Enjoying the evening view from our hotel! |
Sunday, June 23, 2013
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