Showing posts with label science. Show all posts
Showing posts with label science. Show all posts

Friday, July 18, 2014

Bubbles, Updates, Decor and a Secret...shh

http://www.teacherspayteachers.com/Product/Bubbles-An-Inquiry-Based-Science-Unit-CCSS-Aligned-Reading-Writing-689613
Finally!  My best selling unit on TpT has received a beautiful makeover! Bubbles! sports an updated cover, fonts and graphics.  It can be redownloaded if you already have it.  If you don't, it is on sale today and Saturday.  Blow on over and grab it now!

http://www.teacherspayteachers.com/Product/Pumpkin-Project-Pumpkin-Growing-Experiment-with-CCSS-writing-activities-Free-338161
Pumpkin Project is also showing off a new cover. The remainder of this product is the same, but seriously, look at that new cover!  Love, love, love.  And it's free.

Driftwood Beach is my first decor set.  It's laid back, beachy style will look great in classrooms with a beach, camping, forest or other relaxed theme.

http://www.teacherspayteachers.com/Product/Driftwood-Beach-Classroom-Decor-Set-Distressed-wood-class-theme-1327275

http://www.teacherspayteachers.com/Product/Driftwood-Beach-Classroom-Decor-Set-Distressed-wood-class-theme-1327275http://www.teacherspayteachers.com/Product/Driftwood-Beach-Classroom-Decor-Set-Distressed-wood-class-theme-1327275
{Alphabet Pennant}

http://www.teacherspayteachers.com/Product/Driftwood-Beach-Classroom-Decor-Set-Distressed-wood-class-theme-1327275http://www.teacherspayteachers.com/Product/Driftwood-Beach-Classroom-Decor-Set-Distressed-wood-class-theme-1327275
 {Number Pennant 0-9}

http://www.teacherspayteachers.com/Product/Driftwood-Beach-Classroom-Decor-Set-Distressed-wood-class-theme-1327275http://www.teacherspayteachers.com/Product/Driftwood-Beach-Classroom-Decor-Set-Distressed-wood-class-theme-1327275http://www.teacherspayteachers.com/Product/Driftwood-Beach-Classroom-Decor-Set-Distressed-wood-class-theme-1327275
 {Schedule cards, number 1-132, Job Chart}

Driftwood Beach also includes Days of the Week signs, Months of the Year signs, behavior charts, table/group/team number signs and several blank signs.

Making decor takes a lot of time, sheesh!  I also have two more themes in the works. They should be available soon.



Want to know a secret?  Next weekend I'll be in my first blog hop!  I'm very excited.  I don't want to give away the juicy details yet, so check back here Friday, July 25 for all the sweet Florida goodness!

Monday, May 19, 2014

We have ACTUAL pumpkins!


Way back in September, we started our 2013 Pumpkin Project. (To quickly catch you up, we grew pumpkin vines in a pumpkin.  It's awesome.  Do it!  Get a big, ol' freebie here!)

The class checked on the regrowth progress while on the way to music last week.  We spotted THREE green pumpkins growing.  Cheers erupted around our little garden.


The watermelons are doing pretty well, too.  Several have little yellow flowers.

Saturday, March 22, 2014

I Didn't Kill the Plants...It's a Miracle

Before break, we started our ever entertaining and enjoyable unit on plants.  This is one of my favorite science topics ever.


While perusing through the W, I found these awesome mini greenhouses from Miracle Gro Kids.  At $1 each I couldn't pass them by.  I got carrots (which we know do not grow on trees), cucumbers, tomatoes, sunflowers and forget-me-nots.


Each group got to set up one greenhouse and I had one to demonstrate.

Everyone had a job: soil dumper, mixer, seed sower and seed coverer.  We set them by a window and...


we had forget-me-nots (and a little mold) popping up!  The next day cucumbers poked through the soil.  By the end of the week everything was growing except the carrots.  Those just started yesterday (about 10 days after we planted them).

I was really worried I would kill these jokers over Spring Break.  Both my parents and my man have beautiful green thumbs.  Mine isn't brown, but more of a wimpy yellow-green.  Ha!


Just before break we also planted watermelons.  I told you, I love planting!  Fingers crossed, these will be ready to eat by the last day of school.  More on that later.

 Last week I won a giveaway!  Jana Guerra of WeHeart1st has this wonderful Life in the Garden resource.

http://www.teacherspayteachers.com/Product/Life-in-the-Garden-Soil-Seeds-and-Plants-1151435

The students practiced their reading for details and answering questions skills to complete "Parts of a Plant" in their interactive notebooks.  On the opposite side we used the cut and label parts of a plant, but I didn't snap any pictures.

This pack wrote my science lessons for the next 2 weeks!  We will be learn and observing soil, parts of a seed, plant life cycles and much more.  We'll be using Dirt: The Scoop on Soil by Natalie M. Rosinsky, Oh Say Can You Seed? by Bonnie Worth and (my go-to) Seeds! Seeds! Seeds! by Nancy Elizabeth Wallace.  Love me some Buddy Bear.


Don't forget about my TpT sale this weekend!

Wednesday, November 6, 2013

Telescopes

Today we learned about telescopes. How do you engage students in the daytime and without actual telescopes? Why construction paper, the Internet and out imaginations of course!

I put pictures from telescopes on the screen and we looked at them through our paper telescopes.  This was probably one of the must engaging lessons of the year and it took about 2 minutes to prep.  Love it.

Sunday, October 13, 2013

Pumpkin Project 2013

We wrapped up our Pumpkin Unit last week.  I've got more details about it, but can't get time to sit and type a full post.  Hopefully I will be able to do that later this week.  Until then, check out the Instagram posts and pictures here!

Saturday, June 1, 2013

Five for Friday: Mother's Day, Pumpkins, Frogs, Mad Science and Bubbles!


Wow!  May was busy in 27!  I'm linking up with Kacey from Doodle Bugs Teaching for a Five for Friday End of May Recap session.

1. I loved how our Mother's Day gifts turned out!  The kids did a really nice job and were very proud of their gifts.  I combined a few ideas from Pinterest.  First I created a little simile fill-in-the-blank.  We brainstormed ideas and the kids chose what worked best for their mom.  Next, I took pictures of all the kids.  Some just smiled and others made mom a heart.  Then I matted the pictures and simile sheets to construction paper.  Last each student got to choose a piece of scrapbook paper (12" x 12" books were on sale for $2.50 for 12 sheets...perfect!).  They glued the picture and paper onto the scrapbook paper and we were done!  We did the project in two short stints over two days (so I had time print pictures and mat).

{My mom is as pretty as a Barbie.  My mom is as smart as a scientist.  My mom is as sweet as a cupcake.  My mom is as cool as a rock star.  My mom is as kind as a Magic School Bus.}  
I didn't get the last one, but she was confident. ;)

2. Our pumpkin is still growing!  It put out about 6 beautiful flowers a few weeks ago and it is starting to take over the garden box.  The kids love checking on it when we go to the library or Music.  I don't live far from school so I will *try* to keep it watered this summer.  I would absolutely love for the kids to come back in August to see pumpkins growing on the vines.  We're keeping our fingers crossed!

3. During Teacher Appreciation Week I purchased Spring Direct Drawing Activities from Doodle Bugs Teaching.  I want more!  We drew the frogs one day last week and the kids were so engaged.  Everyone tried their best and we made it through the entire project with no tantrums or tears!  Yes, I teach 1st grade, but we can have some emotional issues when frustrated.  All the frogs are so different and have so much character!  I don't recall saying, "Step 7, draw teeth," but I must have because two frogs have prominent teeth.  Hilarious!  All the kids were really proud of their drawing, really took their time and proved they can listen and follow directions. Ha!

4. Last week our school had our annual Mad Science Day.  That day different classes within the grade level switch and teach each other a science project or experiment.  The idea is to get kids involved in science and scientific thinking.  I love Mad Science Day.  It is crazy and exhausting and fun!  A few days before we tested and learned our experiments.  I scoured Pinterest and my favorite blogs for new, fun science experiments and landed at 2nd Grade Shenanigans and the awesomeness that is Hope King.  I would have gladly bought a bird beak unit from her, but I couldn't find one.  I made up my own.

We used tweezers to pick out rice from dirt like a mockingbird, used a pasta scoop to catch Froot Loop fish like a pelican and used tongs to catch flying popcorn insects like a sparrow.  To even it up to 4 centers I added a computer station where the kids watch a YouTube video of a local type of bird using it's beak.  They watched mockingbirds, cardinals, robins, ospreys, pelicans and hummingbirds.  It was very fun and very easy (on me).  The kids did a phenomenal job explaining the centers and how the utensils represented different bird beaks.  I will definitely do this again!

5. Finally, our bubble bulletin board with the super cute bubble brains craft.  This craft is part of my Bubbles unit.  The kids still yell out every time they see bubbles.  I love it.  The students wrote their favorite bubble fact on the bigger gray bubbles.  I'll be sad to see this bulletin board taken down.  But not too sad, because we only have 4 1/2 more days of school!  Wahoo!

Sunday, May 12, 2013

Bombastic Bubbles and a Giveaway!


May is crazy.  Every weekday (and most weekends) of my calendar is booked with something.  Week of the Arts, Field Day, statewide testing and a Scholastic warehouse book sale top this week's agenda. I've been wanting to add more information and pictures from my Bubbles unit but couldn't find the time last week.

Bubbles! is a super fun, amazingly engaging, inquiry based science unit centered around soap bubbles.  We focused on questioning, making observations and informational writing.

 
{Creating our KWL chart and our finished version}
We had a lot of background knowledge about bubbles, but creating questions was difficult.  Many students just restated things they knew.  We worked on creating questions throughout the unit.  They got much better at it.  Yea!

 
 {How to Blow Bubbles}
Our first experiment was to learn how to blow the best bubbles.  Although our state science standards do not require first graders to use the scientific method, I did introduce them to it because creating questions or "want to know" topics was difficult for most of my students.  For this first lesson, I gave each student a mini bottle of bubbles.  They were 6 for $1 in the wedding section of Dollar Tree.  They were perfect for learning to blow bubbles.  We also learned that if you shake the bubble solution, you can't blow bubbles with foam...because foam is little bubbles.  No one made that mistake again.

 {Testing bubble solutions}
I used a lot of information from this blog post.  Talk about love!  We tested 5 different solutions: dish soap (experts say Joy and Dawn are best, plain soap, not additives and not antibacterial...and use distilled water), dish soap + corn syrup, + glycerin, + molasses, and + sugar.  I found a bucket of 27 bubble wands in the toy section of Wal*Mart.  Steve Spangler says plastic pipettes are simple, cheap bubble blowers.  I found this out too late, couldn't find them locally, but found 100 for about $6 on Amazon.  Maybe next year.  For this experiment I made sure all the wands had circles to blow through as to not taint upcoming experiments.

 I poured a little solution (one at a time) into plastic plates, one plate per group. (The center photo on the bottom row shows what each group had on their desks after all 5 solutions were tested.  Each plate has a different mixture.  Then we tested the solution and recorded our observations.  For our observations we looked for amount of bubbles (none, a few or a lot) and size of the bubbles.  I encouraged kids to also note other observations.  We learned that the solution of corn syrup or glycerin makes bubbles very strong.  So strong they bounce!  Also, the bubbles landed on dry objects and didn't pop.  What?!?

We agreed on a signal to stop testing, "Wands down, hands up!"  I set a timer and let kids share and experiment for 2 minutes.  It was enough time to get a good feel for the solution and try a couple ideas that popped into their heads, but not too long to get crazy.  After each test we talked about the bubbles each solution made, recorded our observations and made an opinion on the quality (happy face, straight face or sad face).

During this experiment some kids really let their inner scientist loose!  It happened all through the unit, but especially in this lesson.  Kids that don't like anything, like this.  Kids that never volunteered information were dying to share cool stuff they observed. My little heart grew three sizes that day.

We turned our observation notes into an opinion writing piece about the best bubbles solution.

 {Unpopable Bubbles!}
How do you follow up a bonanza of bubble solutions?  Why, with unpopable bubbles of course!  We used one of the best solutions distilled water, dish soap and glycerin, plastic plates and drinking straws.  This was a general bubble fun day.  Anything they could think of and try was fair game, as long as they shared interesting things with the group.  We learned that bubbles have flat sides where they touch, you can blow a really big bubble, or a bunch of little ones and if the straw is wet, you can reinsert it in the bubble and make it bigger.  They also learned that if they blew a bubble inside the bubble the new bubble would move outside the bubble.  

 {Bubbles inside bubbles and holding a bubble}
We watched a video of how to touch a bubble without popping it.  Then we tried it!  The kids also blew a bubble, caught it on the wand, then used the straw to blow a bubble inside that bubble.  They liked watching the inside bubble get absorbed by the wand bubble making it bigger.  

Once they blew bubbles and caught them in their (wet) wands, someone tried to catch 2 bubbles, but guess what.  They could make the bubbles bounce off each other and a new game was invented!

 Of course it wasn't all fun and games.  We had to do real scientist work...like writing papers about our experiment results.  The students ended up with a great informational book about bubbles which included a how to, the opinion piece and several information pieces about their bubble knowledge.

For an amazing workshop I attended the presenters taught us about text mapping.  It is when a book is copied into scroll form so students can see all the pieces at a glance (or walk across the classroom).  We marked it all up with Common Core goodness-text features, vocabulary, questions and answers, etc.

{Bubble Brains: a craftivity for bulletin board display}
We finished up our unit with a craft.  Each student made him or herself into a bubble blower and wrote a fact on a construction paper bubble.  I wrapped the bubble in plastic food wrap to make it shiny, then hung all the bubbles and bubble brainiac on our bulletin board.  I didn't get a picture, but I'll try to add one soon.

Bubbles! was by far the BEST unit I've taught.  The kids were genuinely engaged in learning how to be a good, questioning, experimenting, communicating scientist!  They devoured the non-fiction and fiction books about bubbles.  Every day they asked if we were doing another experiment.  So many of them told me about conversations they had with friends, siblings and their parents about bubbles.  Are you kidding me?  These kids were loving science and I love it right back!

Bubbles! is a great end-of-the-year set of activities for kids.  They can show off their science, reading and writing skills while still learning, work together and have fun!

OK, if you've made it to the end of this crazy-long post leave a comment to be entered to win your own copy of the unit!  Get 3 entries by:
  1. Leave a comment (easy-peasy)
  2. Follow my TpT store or this blog (leave a comment to let me know you did it)
  3. Post about the giveaway (blog, Facebook, Twitter, whatever...either copy to web address or just tell me you did it...I trust you.)
I'll randomly select a winner Friday afternoon!

Sunday, May 5, 2013

Bubbles! An Inquiry Based Informational Reading and Writing Unit



I just uploaded my newest unit and it is by far my favorite thing we've done all year!  I created it for a set of workshops I attended.  My students LOVED doing the bubble experiments, reading informational text, expository, informational and opinion writing.  I have a lot more to post about this unit, but wanted to get this up now.
It's a great unit for end-of-the-year learning fun!

Sunday, April 7, 2013

Five for Friday {April 5...or 7, whatever}

It sure was a busy week for only having 3 days with students!

 1.  We came back from Spring Break with a field trip to a local university's Eco-hike.  Great field trip!  We had beautiful weather and wonderful park rangers.  Before, during and after the trip I used several resources from K Almaraz's The COMPLETE Field Trip Companion.  It was so helpful!  I use several of her fun and creative products.

 2.  This week we read The Scarecrow's Hat by Ken Brown.  To understand how authors use text and illustrations to create characters I used a sheet from Common Core Reading: Comprehension Strategy Sheets for K-2 Fiction Standards by Jen Jones.  I cannot recommend this product enough.  I can barely wait for her to finish the Information Reading standards sheets. The Scarecrow's Hat is a good book for character development, cause and effect, sequence of events and making predictions.  It's one of my favorite books in our Text Talk program.

3.  I'm working on new literacy centers for the week after next.  Here's a sneak peak of the craft.

4. A guilty pleasure is back!  I love watching The Voice.  I got hooked the first season and just can't shake it.  Love the blind auditions, love the battle rounds, love the coaches.  Love, love, love!  Shakira is an awesome coaching edition.  Usher epitomizes the "too cool for school" attitude.  Blake Shelton is hilarious.  Oh, yes, Adam Levine is delicious.  My favorite audition so far this season is Midas Whale.

 5.  Earlier this week I had my post-observation conference with the assistant principal.  It went well and I am OK with the results.  Of course there is room for improvement.  My kids are respectful to me but not to each other.  Anyone have tips for promoting more harmonious student interactions?