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One (Kind) Kindergarten

Hello friends! Week seven is all planned and we have communities, asking and answering questions, research writing, describing different types of jobs, finishing our initial alphabet introduction, and counting in different arrangements within seven all up this week!

Reading:
Text suggestions: Clothesline Clues to Jobs People Do, Whose Tools Are These?, Building with Dad, ABC Firefighters, Maybe Something Beautiful: How Art Transformed a Neighborhood

We will continue to work on asking and answering questions before, during, and after reading. This week, I will be assessing student ability to ask and answer questions using a checklist. However, this week we will use our questions to guide research projects about different jobs in the community. I have selected doctors, firefighters, construction workers, and artists for us to study based on student interest.


Asking and answering questions within texts is a hard skill for kindergartners. Differentiate for your non-verbal students by providing them with cards that represent questions and answers. For example, vocabulary cards that have community helpers on them will be helpful if you want students to infer from the text which helper uses the tools.

Writing:
We will use videos, a class guest speaker, and multiple texts in order to guide our research exploring new jobs. Students will use these experiences and sources to create daily writing pieces. I want them to be reflective about where they got their information, so I've added a place for them to circle where they got their information from. You can download these writing pages here.

Mathematics:



We will be counting in different arrangements 0-7: students should be able to count in a circle, line, array, or scatter. Download the quick assessment pictured above by clicking the link. We will continue to link creating number symbols using quick writes such as this Count and write Powerpoint(click to download).


Our math tasks for the week will revolve around a chef planning for a catered event. I have a launch that includes brainstorming ideas about a catered food picture that you can use to prime student's thinking. What types of math does a chef use? What do they need to count?

Step one is pictured above, and is intended to build on student knowledge of counting in different arrangements. Which arrangement will be easiest to count? Which arrangements would seat all seven people? Step two is planning materials, and step three is a counting and representing problem. Have students discuss and represent their thinking at each step! I kept numbers under seven. These tasks are intended to encourage depth and conversation, and are easily edited to suit your student's needs.

Chef Math Tasks

Happy teaching!

xo

Ms. M
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Happy week six of kindergarten! I actually plan these a week ahead of time, so I'm about to head into week five with my little loves. However, planning ahead has me SO excited for what this week will bring...

I have a favorite book when it comes time teach asking and answering questions, and it's Jon Klassen's This is Not My Hat. I love the simple illustrations and the creativity a reader is able to have based on what information they bring to the text. There are three vocabulary words I will pre-teach and highlight throughout the week: stole, notice, and belong.

I actually DON'T read the book the first day I teach questioning, because my students need to practice questioning first in a more familiar context. Asking and answering questions in your second language can be tricky, and many other of my student's first languages have a different structure to questions altogether. The first day, I will introduce the skill with a "mystery bag." Inside I will hide an everyday object, and they will ask questions to determine what is inside!

We will then practice the skill whole group, answering wh questions using the following resource on the SmartBoard: All About School WH Questions

Day two, we will review the skill and fill in the first third of this chart. Just from the title page and picture walk, what questions do we have about this text? I will think-aloud, and record any student questions as well. I will repeat this process for the next two days, as we re-read and create questions during reading and after reading the text.

Students will practice drawing to answer a question about a text--we will start with questions we have rehearsed answering such as "Who are the characters?" and share with a partner before recording our ideas in our journal. We will end the week with drawing to answer the main question of the text--WHAT HAPPENED TO THAT LITTLE FISH? I couldn't be more excited to teach this strategy with this text!

Writing: 
I am going to model one-to-one voice and print correspondence, which is writing production standard in my state. I plan to begin modeling writing with my students whole group. I want to teach each lesson twice: once with teacher modeling, and once with students writing dictated or interactive writing. My two lessons this week are: counting your words before you write, and re-reading what you wrote to make sure you didn't leave anything out. Day one they will see a model and begin to interact with the model, and day two of each lesson cycle they will finish the interactive part and go independently write. My students still require a lot of support and repetition, so I think this slowed gradual-release model will serve them best at this point in the year.

Mathematics:
Number writing! I don't have anything truly mind-blowing here. We will be matching numbers to quantities and doing a ton of handwriting practice so students feel confident in their ability to represent things with a number.

I will be emphasizing that numbers are a huge part of communication--we may even go on a "number walk" in the school to find examples of written numbers!

SEL:

We are on to lesson four of the Choose Love curriculum, which tackles how to deal with difficult feelings such as anger and frustration. The curriculum uses the sweetest video from Sesame Street:


I will be supplementing our SEL curriculum with I Feel Silly! by Jamie Lee Curtis, yoga from Cosmic Kids, and positive affirmations. I have a lot of kids who don't like themselves and have low self-confidence. Our transitions will be used to affirm ourselves and our abilities!


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I am a third-year kindergarten ESL teacher in Nashville, TN. I have multi-lingual ESL students who come from 12 different countries and speak 10 different languages! I want to share the things I create to use with them, and have a space for other ESL teachers to come for resources and ideas.

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