Halloween Party FREEBIE: Tuesday Teacher Tips


Have you been making plans for your Halloween party?  If you're lucky, you have a room-mom that is doing all of the hard work for you.  One year, there was a glitch and I somehow ended up without a room-mom.  So, there wasn't anyone to plan my holiday parties.  At first, I was stressed about it.  After a little brainstorming,  I decided to structure the party like my small group block of time.  It turned out to be one of my easiest years - party wise.  

My students were organized in their reading groups and rotated to the following activities:

Teacher's Table:  Halloween BINGO

Table #1:  Snack and drink box - it works best if you keep it simple. Suggestions:  juice box and a bag of popcorn.

Table #2:  Make a jack 'o lantern using attribute blocks.  There is a printable for students that finish early.




Carpet:  Play hot pumpkin which is played the same way as hot potato only you play it with a small pumpkin.  Play seasonal music.  I chose one person from each group to be in charge of playing the music the first time.  After the first round, the winner was in charge of the music.


Looking for more tips?  Check out my October and November Pinterest boards.  Click on the picture below.



Fern has a few tips to share with you, too.  Be sure to hop over to her blog!




Each week, Fern and I will share a teacher tip. We love to read teacher blogs and the latest teacher idea books and hope you do, too!  Stop by Fern's blog and my blog each week for our latest tips.  We hope you will share your ideas, too.  

The winner from last week's post is:


Each week we will choose one person who shared a tip about the topic of this week's post on our blog who will get a $10 shopping trip.  We will announce the winner on the following Tuesday's post.  

Do you have a tip about Halloween parties to share?  Be sure to include your email so I can contact you if you're the winner of the $10 shopping trip. You must leave your email address in order to win.

Looking for more ideas?  Click on the pictures below.












Sources to make my blog post graphics can be found HERE. Click HERE to read my blog's disclosure statement.
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Tips for Talkative Class


Is this the year that you got the chatty class?  No matter what you try, they talk ALL-OF-THE-TIME!  When you go home, do you want complete silence?  No, t.v., no music, no noise of any type because your ears are worn out. When you are teaching a lesson, each student feels like you are speaking directly to him or her, so each student has a comment to add to your lesson.  While you don't want to temper their enthusiasm, your students do need to learn how to work and function within a group (class).  

By this time of the year, you have probably used several different methods to solve this problem such as role playing and rewarding positive behaviors.  Are you ready to try something that is a little less traditional and lets you integrate behavior management with your language arts lessons?  I have written  before about integrating behavior management with your academic lesson.  Click HERE to read it.  If you follow my blog, you know I am a big believer in integrating lessons.  It not only saves times when you have a hectic schedule, it also helps your students make connections.  

A reader's theater lesson is a good strategy to use when you have a class full of Chatty Cathy's.  Do you remember that doll?


A play script shows very clearly in black and white whose turn it is to speak.  A play is practiced over and over which is the type of practice that these talkative students need.  Not only are your students' fluency improving, they are practicing taking turns and only speaking when it is their turn to speak.  They are learning self control.  You will see some of this self-control begin to transfer over to your other lessons with some of your students.  For other students, you may need to begin your lessons with a quick reminder about "just like when we are performing plays, we take turns when we speak during lessons.  When I am teaching, it is my turn to talk and your turn to be audience and listen."

Other times, you have a group of students that follow the rules except during certain times of the year, like the week of Halloween.  With all of the excitement of the holiday, students are chatty and off-task.  This is the perfect time to plan a Reader's Theater lesson for reading.  

This past week, I added two lessons that would be perfect for this time of the year. 
  • Magic School Bus:  Going Batty:  This is not Halloween themed which is great when your school does not allow Halloween lessons. Or it can be used with your mammal unit or any time of the year.
  • There was an Old Lady Who Swallowed a Bat:  This script is based on this book.  I added to the story to give the characters dialogue for the script. Have your students compare the book to the script to see if they can find all of the differences.



These plays can be performed live or as a puppet show.  In the picture above, I attached the stage prop that comes with this packet to a file folder and then made a slit in it so the stick puppets could fit in slit.  You can set this up as a center, too.


There are a variety of props that come with this packet.


There are name necklaces that students can wear for live performances.  There are frames that students can draw their character for puppet performance.  Colorful stick puppets are included for the Old Lady script (see picture above).


There are extension activities included for each script.  In the picture above is the one for the Magic School Bus:  Going Batty play.  Students will make a beginning, middle, end mini book.


There are two printables for interactive journals that are extensions for the Old Lady play.  One is about characters and the other is a vocabulary - dictionary skills lesson.


For the Old Lady play there are 7 parts plus a narrator or chorus.  


There are 13 parts for the Magic School Bus play.  If you have a class with 26 students or more, you could divide your class in half and have both perform this play.  One group could perform this live and other perform it as a puppet show.


Reader's theater is also a good way to help your students grow as writers.  Put yours class in small groups or with a partner and let them write a script about a favorite book. 


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Sources to make my blog post graphics can be found HERE. Click HERE to read my blog's disclosure statement.
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Become a playwriter: improve writing and reading fluency


Do your students love it when they see you pull out a Reader's Theater script?  It is the one time when your students don't mind reading the same thing multiple times.  These scripts are a great way to improve students' fluency skills. 

Students love these scripts because they are based on books that are familiar to them.  Have you ever thought about having your students be the playwriter?  Why not let Reader's Theater help your students grow as readers AND writers!

I just added a new free packet to my store that included some printables to get you started.


You can either let your students write the script by themselves, with a partner, or small group.  There is a template for the script that should make it a little easier.  I recommend having your students outline the dialogue boxes with a marker.  Use different color for each character.

There are printables and suggestions for the performance.  There are frames if you want your students to make popsicle stick puppets or frames to write the names for character necklaces.


Your students can announce the title of the play on the sign above.


There are signs to announce different acts in case you have industrious writers.  I hope your students enjoy being a playwriter!

Click HERE to download this freebie.




Freebie Fridays






Sources to make my blog post graphics can be found HERE. Click HERE to read my blog's disclosure statement.
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Having fun when you can't celebrate Halloween at school!

Do you teach at a school that has a policy against using Halloween activities? I've taught in a variety of schools with a wide variety of policy about this holiday. At some schools we could use Halloween activities as long as we didn't include anything scary like witches. Other schools we could use about any type of activity except for students wearing costumes. At one of my former schools, Halloween was a big event. Students went home at lunch and changed into their costume. Many parents took the day off of work. When students returned after lunch, it was time to get ready for our school-wide parade. Students paraded down the hall of the school and around the block of the school. When we returned to our classroom, our room moms had the room decorated for a Halloween party.

At one of my schools, we were not allowed to incorporate any holiday into our lessons. The district felt like this was the most sensitive thing to do when you teach students from a variety of cultures. We could use seasonal topics like scarecrows or pumpkins but the pumpkins couldn't be a jack 'o lantern. I had mixed feelings about this policy.

This policy sounds good when you read the policy as it is written on paper. But, when you are in the trenches teaching little people, it doesn't work quite as simple as that. Children, even those from cultures and faiths that may not celebrate Halloween, hear holiday music when they are at stores, see their neighbor's house that is decorated, and hear their friends talking about what they are going to be for Halloween at recess. I found most of my students were excited about Halloween.

After a little brainstorming, I found a compromise that seemed to make everyone happy. Listed below are topics that I've taught in October that followed the policy, and aren't Halloween-ish, yet allowed my students to have fun.

Social Studies: Community Helpers Unit - Let your students dress up as their favorite community helper. Be very clear with your students that you do not consider a ghost, witch, or vampire as a future career for them.

SCIENCE


  • Mammal: bats 
  • Arachnids: spiders 
  • Birds: owl 
  • Nocturnal animals
  • Phases of the moon
  • Life cycle of pumpkin
MATH
  • Pumpkin measurement unit
READING & SOCIAL STUDIES
  • Author study - dress up as your favorite book character
  • Community helpers - dress up as a community helper

Do you have any ideas to share of how you incorporate non-Halloween activities? I would love to hear them!


I made a FREEBIE for you. Click HERE to download it.

Looking for more tips? Check out my October Pinterest board. Click on the picture below.


Fern has a few tips to share with you, too. Be sure to hop over to her blog!

Looking for more ideas? Click on the pictures below.
An InLinkz Link-up


















Sources to make my blog post graphics can be found HERE. Click HERE to read my blog's disclosure statement.



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Halloween Party Tips


Do you enjoy parties?  How about class parties?  Through the years, I have had great class parties and some that were a little on the crazy side.  Here are a couple of ideas that we did at my parties that were fun and less hectic.


One year I discovered the book, The Hallo-Wiener by Dav Pilkey.    This is such a great story!  I thought it would be fun to serve hallo-wieners at our party.  It ended up being a hit with my students and parents.  Parents loved it because the kids didn't go home all hyped-up on sugar from the party.

We cooked the wieners in a crockpot.  We put the wieners in the crockpot standing up which I think might have helped us fit more in it.  I asked for condiments that were bottles to make it easy and less messy.


This is a inexpensive snack to serve.  I have so many donations that I put extras in the teachers' lounge for the custodians.

Supplies needed:
-Wieners
-Hotdog buns
-Condiments (ketchup, mustard, relish)
-Potato chips
-Juice box or water bottles
-Crock pot(s)
-Power strip / extension cord
-Tongs
-Paper plates
-Napkins
-Handsanitizer
-Small cooler to put wieners in if you don't have a refrigerator nearby.


By the time of the party, kids are excited and the last thing they want to do is sit and be quiet.  One of my go-to activities is to play hot potato.  Only the potato is a seasonal object.  Target Dollar Spot is a great place to find a small plastic seasonal object. 


 Right now there are some little plastic pumpkins and spiders that would be perfect for this.  Have your students sit in a circle on the floor.  Give one student the seasonal shape.  Begin playing seasonal music.  Students pass the pumpkin or spider or whatever shape you have to the person next to the them.  When the music stops, the student that is holding the shape is "out".  That student now moves out of the circle.  This continues until there is only one person left who is the winner.  This game gets your students moving and they have to be quiet so they can hear the music.  It is a win-win!

Looking for some seasonal music?  Here are a few choices:
-Monster Mash
-The Addams Family
-Ghostbusters
-The Witch Doctor


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Math Facts: Addition


I always consider it a compliment when I get a request from one of my buyers.  This past week, one of my buyers asked if I could do a math facts version of my Bubble Gum program.  She was using my Bubble Gum Sight Word (editable) program and thought this would be a good way to strengthen her students' math facts.  

With a little tweaking here and there, I now have a Bubble Gum (editable) Math Facts - Addition program.  This is the same format as the sight word and Popcorn Letter Sounds program.  If you are already doing those programs, your parents and students are already trained and ready to go!


There are two different versions so you can differentiate.  
  • Set #1 - addition facts 0-5
  • Set #2 - addition facts 0-10
This is the form that is put in the students' Bubble Gum folder.  Students are encouraged to learn at least one row of math facts per week.  Of course, they can learn more.

******Please note:  If you have a student with A.D.D./A.D.H.D., I would recommend that you use the math facts 0-5 version because it has fewer problems on the page.  It will be less overwhelming to your student.  The quiz that goes with that version is half a page and has half the amount of problems.  Once your students has learned all of the 0-5 facts, he or she can begin the other version beginning at the facts 6.  By this time, he or she will be familiar with the program and hopefully won't be as easily overwhelmed.

Sometimes you will hear that you should raise the bar high or students won't achieve. So, instead of having a goal of learning 3 facts a week you should set the goal of 6, 8, 10 or more facts per week.  I found that when I give students attainable goals like learning 3 facts per week, my students' confidence blooms.  As their confidence grows, they are more willing to take risk.  That is when they make great gains academically.


There are two sets of quizzes to match the different versions that the students are studying.  To add a little fun, give your students a gumball or sixlet which looks like a gumball but is chocolate when they ace their test.  I found this gumball machine at Hobby Lobby.  It is only 5 inches tall.  It was in the birthday party favors section.  It cost less than $2.00.


There are small flashcards that is the perfect size for small hands.  Give your students a copy so they can have their own flashcards to study at home.

I recommend copying them on different colors and putting them on rings.  You now have them ready to go for memory games which is fun for inside recess, a quick math center or use them for flashcard races.


In the picture is a couple of the printables included.  Use these to set up a math center.  I found the pumpkin ice trays at Dollar Tree.  They make perfect ten-frames. The bouncy balls are from Dollar Tree, too.  Don't they look like gumballs?  These are the perfect addition for a Bubble Gum Addition Center - yes, pun intended!


Don't have a trip to Dollar Tree planned in your future?  No problem, there are colorful ten-frames and black and white ones, too included with this packet.


These opened-ended pages can be put in a page protector so you have a paper-saver math center.  Students can use dominoes, playing cards, dice, or spinners to make their own problems.  There is also a black and white version of these pages included.


There are several different colorful and black and white spinners included.


Chart your students' progress with the charts included.  These forms and many of the forms in this packets EDITABLE in Powerpoint.  Please see the product overview on TPT to see which forms are included in the editable file.


Click HERE to see the Preview File.

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Sources to make my blog post graphics can be found HERE. Click HERE to read my blog's disclosure statement.
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Parent-teacher Conference Tips & FREEBIES


Parent-teacher conferences are an important part of teaching.  The week of conferences is one of the most exhausting of the year.  I often found that after all of the meetings were over, my parents and students were more engaged.  It felt like we were working as a team.  Even though I communicated with my parents through all the usual methods like newsletters and phone calls before we met, the face-to-face meeting is always best!

The disadvantage of meeting with all of your parents at one time is having a limited amount of time to talk to parents.  I have found that it helps if you send home a note like the one below before the conference.  It serves as a reminder and helps the parents organize their thoughts.  It also helps you prepare for your meeting.  There is nothing worse than being blindsided when you are talking a parent.

On the actual day of conferences, I hang a note like the one below on my door.  I have found this to be the best way to keep me on schedule.  Parents who are waiting are never sure whether they should knock or not.  With this note, you are giving them permission.  It also reminds parents that your time is limited and you are doing your best to stay on schedule.



I put a student desk outside my door with a basket of candy and digital clock.  I keep another digital clock next to me on the table where I meet with parents.  Different people set their clocks to a t.v. news programs or computer site which means clocks aren't synchronized.  Having these two clocks keeps everyone happy!

Click HERE to download these free conference printables.

Looking for more tips?  Check out my October Pinterest board.  Click on the picture below.



Fern has a few tips to share with you, too.  Be sure to hop over to her blog!




Each week, Fern and I will share a teacher tip. We love to read teacher blogs and the latest teacher idea books and hope you do, too!  Stop by Fern's blog and my blog each week for our latest tips.  We hope you will share your ideas, too.  

Each week we will choose one person who shared a tip on our blog who will get a $10 shopping trip.  We will announce the winner on the following Tuesday's post.  


Our winner last week is Nicole.  Congratulations Nicole!

Do you have a parent-teacher conference tip to share?  Be sure to include your email so I can contact you if you're the winner of the $10 shopping trip. You must leave your email address in order to win.

Looking for more ideas?  Click on the pictures below.






Sources to make my blog post graphics can be found HERE. Click HERE to read my blog's disclosure statement.
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