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Tagged with 'classroom'

Teach Botley to Pick-up Litter!

Discover the possibilities Botley brings to your early coding curriculum.  Aligned to CSTA standards, these printable classroom activities will help your little learners discover coding without any screens or apps. Just power on Botley, and you’re ready to go!

Click here to download your botley classroom coding activity

Code botley to pick up litter to teach students about Sequences, Loops, and Conditionals.Share your classroom coding success with us on social media using #Botley!
Teach Botley to Pick-up Litter!
Discover the possibilities Botley brings to your early coding curriculum.  Aligned to CSTA standards, these printable classroom activities will help your little learners discover coding without any screens or apps. Just power on Botley, and you’re ready to go!

Click here to download your botley classroom coding activity

Code botley to pick up litter to teach students about Sequences, Loops, and Conditionals.Share your classroom coding success with us on social media using #Botley!
READ MORE

Help Botley to Explore a Coordinate Grid!

Discover the possibilities Botley brings to your early coding curriculum.  Aligned to CSTA standards, these printable classroom activities will help your little learners discover coding without any screens or apps. Just power on Botley, and you’re ready to go!

Click here to download your botley classroom coding activity

Use Botley to develop programs with sequences and simple loops, to express ideas or address a problem.Share your classroom coding success with us on social media using #Botley!
Help Botley to Explore a Coordinate Grid! Discover the possibilities Botley brings to your early coding curriculum.  Aligned to CSTA standards, these printable classroom activities will help your little learners discover coding without any screens or apps. Just power on Botley, and you’re ready to go!

Click here to download your botley classroom coding activity

Use Botley to develop programs with sequences and simple loops, to express ideas or address a problem.Share your classroom coding success with us on social media using #Botley!
READ MORE

Help Botley Draw Shapes on a Coordinate Grid

Discover the possibilities Botley brings to your early coding curriculum.  Aligned to CSTA standards, these printable classroom activities will help your little learners discover coding without any screens or apps. Just power on Botley, and you’re ready to go!

Click here to download your botley classroom coding activity

Help Botley draw shapes on a coordinate grid. This activity will help teach using sequences and simple loops, to express ideas or address a problem.Share your classroom coding success with us on social media using #Botley!
Help Botley Draw Shapes on a Coordinate Grid Discover the possibilities Botley brings to your early coding curriculum.  Aligned to CSTA standards, these printable classroom activities will help your little learners discover coding without any screens or apps. Just power on Botley, and you’re ready to go!

Click here to download your botley classroom coding activity

Help Botley draw shapes on a coordinate grid. This activity will help teach using sequences and simple loops, to express ideas or address a problem.Share your classroom coding success with us on social media using #Botley!
READ MORE
4 Reasons Playing School is Just as Important as the Real Thing

4 Reasons Playing School is Just as Important as the Real Thing

How often do you find your child lost in their only little world of imaginative play? In our house, it’s a daily occurrence – and since school has started again this Fall, I often find the girls playing school. Pretend play is not only a critical part of early child development, it can also help you learn more about your child and their current school experiences.

4 Things You and Your Child Can Learn Playing School

Have you ever been struggling with a project at work, and you come home and think through it while you go through the motions of your day, maybe even in your dreams? Our kids are no different! While you may ask them how school was and get little more than a word or two response, left to their own imaginative play devices, they may reveal far more about their day.

So the next time they want to play school, you should not only encourage it, but listen up.

You Learn 95% of What We Teach to Others  

Ever heard the saying “We Learn . . . 10% of what we read,  20% of what we hear, 30% of what we see, 50% of what we see and hear, 70% of what we discuss, 80% of what we experience, and 95% of what we teach others.

”It originated from William Glasser, a famous American psychiatrist, who pioneered work in choice therapy and its applications in education. What it means for playing school? If your child can come home and pretend to teach what they’ve learned to their stuffed animals and dolls, they are more likely to master the material.

Last week, my daughter’s preschool class was beginning a year-long alphabet study by reading Chicka Chicka Boom Boom by Bill Martin, Jr. John Archambault. She was playing school, and asked me to write the repetitive refrain from the story on her pretend play school board – she’s a pre-reader, but after I wrote it, she used the pointer to point and read each word on the board!

So instead of doing more math worksheets, or practicing sight words on paper, ask them to teach addition to their favorite play things.

Gain Insight into What’s Happening at School 

How many times have your picked up your child from school with a glum face? You ask, “How was school today?” and get met with a single word response if you’re lucky. You can push the question, but you know it often leads them to shut down even more.

If you back off, and let them play freely when you get home, you can often learn exactly what’s going on at school without even asking. Whether they are playing school, or re-enacting dialogue with princesses or stuffed animals, you might just hear what’s bothering them. Or if nothing is bothering them, you can often discover what they are learning about, who they are playing with, who’s being reprimanded by the teacher, and more.

I recommend letting them play as independently as possible, and revisiting what you learn with them when you have quiet 1-on-1 time. I find the best time to really get them talking is just before bed, after stories, when you are tucking your child in for the night.

Role Playing Develops Social and Emotional Skills 

When your child is playing school (or engaged in any form of pretend or imaginative play), you will often hear them replaying dialogue they observe in the world around them. Maybe they are re-enacting scenes from their favorite show, or replaying what happened at school that day.

Practicing the exchange of dialogue and re-enacting events are an amazing way to help your child develop social and emotional skills they will use for the rest of their life. Role playing during imaginative play is also a great tool for you as a parent to help guide your child when they are struggling with feelings, or even after they have behaved inappropriately.

If they have had an argument with a sibling or a friend at school, or even with you, when they are calmer, you can recreate the situation and offer up words, phrases and alternative actions they can use the next time the situation arises.

Discover Your Child’s Passions

Want to find out what your child is really into? Leave them to their own imaginative devices. When they are playing school, see what lessons they choose to teach. Are they reading books to their stuffed animals? What books do they gravitate towards?

When they are playing school, do they re-teach science experiments or math lessons? The areas they choose to explore voluntarily are likely the subjects they enjoy most. Be sure to encourage those passions… but also take note of the areas they often avoid. This may be an indication of subject areas they struggle with, and may need your help to develop in those areas.

____________________________

So the next time you happen upon your kids ‘playing school’, be sure to sit back, let them play and catch the conversation. Not only are they having fun, they are cementing their learning while offering you valuable insights into the part of their day you don’t often get to see firsthand.Grab your own self-storing Pretend & Play School set here. For more great play ideas for kids, check out my Imaginative Play and Kids Activities boards on Pinterest.

4 Reasons Playing School is Just as Important as the Real Thing

How often do you find your child lost in their only little world of imaginative play? In our house, it’s a daily occurrence – and since school has started again this Fall, I often find the girls playing school. Pretend play is not only a critical part of early child development, it can also help you learn more about your child and their current school experiences.

4 Things You and Your Child Can Learn Playing School

Have you ever been struggling with a project at work, and you come home and think through it while you go through the motions of your day, maybe even in your dreams? Our kids are no different! While you may ask them how school was and get little more than a word or two response, left to their own imaginative play devices, they may reveal far more about their day.

So the next time they want to play school, you should not only encourage it, but listen up.

You Learn 95% of What We Teach to Others  

Ever heard the saying “We Learn . . . 10% of what we read,  20% of what we hear, 30% of what we see, 50% of what we see and hear, 70% of what we discuss, 80% of what we experience, and 95% of what we teach others.

”It originated from William Glasser, a famous American psychiatrist, who pioneered work in choice therapy and its applications in education. What it means for playing school? If your child can come home and pretend to teach what they’ve learned to their stuffed animals and dolls, they are more likely to master the material.

Last week, my daughter’s preschool class was beginning a year-long alphabet study by reading Chicka Chicka Boom Boom by Bill Martin, Jr. John Archambault. She was playing school, and asked me to write the repetitive refrain from the story on her pretend play school board – she’s a pre-reader, but after I wrote it, she used the pointer to point and read each word on the board!

So instead of doing more math worksheets, or practicing sight words on paper, ask them to teach addition to their favorite play things.

Gain Insight into What’s Happening at School 

How many times have your picked up your child from school with a glum face? You ask, “How was school today?” and get met with a single word response if you’re lucky. You can push the question, but you know it often leads them to shut down even more.

If you back off, and let them play freely when you get home, you can often learn exactly what’s going on at school without even asking. Whether they are playing school, or re-enacting dialogue with princesses or stuffed animals, you might just hear what’s bothering them. Or if nothing is bothering them, you can often discover what they are learning about, who they are playing with, who’s being reprimanded by the teacher, and more.

I recommend letting them play as independently as possible, and revisiting what you learn with them when you have quiet 1-on-1 time. I find the best time to really get them talking is just before bed, after stories, when you are tucking your child in for the night.

Role Playing Develops Social and Emotional Skills 

When your child is playing school (or engaged in any form of pretend or imaginative play), you will often hear them replaying dialogue they observe in the world around them. Maybe they are re-enacting scenes from their favorite show, or replaying what happened at school that day.

Practicing the exchange of dialogue and re-enacting events are an amazing way to help your child develop social and emotional skills they will use for the rest of their life. Role playing during imaginative play is also a great tool for you as a parent to help guide your child when they are struggling with feelings, or even after they have behaved inappropriately.

If they have had an argument with a sibling or a friend at school, or even with you, when they are calmer, you can recreate the situation and offer up words, phrases and alternative actions they can use the next time the situation arises.

Discover Your Child’s Passions

Want to find out what your child is really into? Leave them to their own imaginative devices. When they are playing school, see what lessons they choose to teach. Are they reading books to their stuffed animals? What books do they gravitate towards?

When they are playing school, do they re-teach science experiments or math lessons? The areas they choose to explore voluntarily are likely the subjects they enjoy most. Be sure to encourage those passions… but also take note of the areas they often avoid. This may be an indication of subject areas they struggle with, and may need your help to develop in those areas.

____________________________

So the next time you happen upon your kids ‘playing school’, be sure to sit back, let them play and catch the conversation. Not only are they having fun, they are cementing their learning while offering you valuable insights into the part of their day you don’t often get to see firsthand.Grab your own self-storing Pretend & Play School set here. For more great play ideas for kids, check out my Imaginative Play and Kids Activities boards on Pinterest.

READ MORE

Teachers Tips: Back to School for Preschool and Pre-K

As every parent knows, transitioning to a school schedule after the summer vacation ends, can be a challenge for many young children. They have a new routine, new teachers to get to know, and new classmates in their preschool or Kindergarten class.
As teachers, we have developed a few tricks to making the back to school transition easier for kids in our classroom. First and foremost we know that maintaining confidence and feeling successful helps kids transition to a new year at school. At school, children should start the year reviewing concepts that they are familiar with and be encouraged to share their knowledge about all the things they already know in order to boost their self-esteem.  This is why in our Pre-Kindergarten class, we start the year with a unit on colors and a unit on families. All children know at least their primary colors, and they all know the members of their immediate family. Starting with units that students are comfortable with and knowledgeable about, allows them to easily express their knowledge with their teachers and peers. The results of this transition are felt all year, we know that maximizing the trust and success our students feel in these early days translates into a greater willingness to take risks when learning new concepts later in the year.

Parents always ask us…..what should I be doing at home?  Here’s what we say:

Preschooler playing

  • Bring on the open play toys: blocks, play dough, and dress up clothes allow kids to play without feeling like there is a right or wrong way to express themselves.
 
  • Smile, listen and have a chat: encourage your child with positive feedback as they play, will maintain a feeling of success. Listening to your child as they play, will allow you to get a glimpse into how they are handling their transition to school.  Talk with them after playtime to ask how they are feeling.
 
  • Set up a daily routine: Set expectations by making a daily routine – you can even make a daily chart so kids know what time they wake up, eat and what they have to do (get their backpack) to get out the door to go to school!
   Learning is where we play:
10 Easy Organization Tips for Back to School!
Smarts & Crafts: 3 Fall Themed Crafts for Preschoolers
Dollars & Sense! Teaching Kids Skills That Pay the Bills 
Share this post      
Teachers Tips: Back to School for Preschool and Pre-K
As every parent knows, transitioning to a school schedule after the summer vacation ends, can be a challenge for many young children. They have a new routine, new teachers to get to know, and new classmates in their preschool or Kindergarten class.
As teachers, we have developed a few tricks to making the back to school transition easier for kids in our classroom. First and foremost we know that maintaining confidence and feeling successful helps kids transition to a new year at school. At school, children should start the year reviewing concepts that they are familiar with and be encouraged to share their knowledge about all the things they already know in order to boost their self-esteem.  This is why in our Pre-Kindergarten class, we start the year with a unit on colors and a unit on families. All children know at least their primary colors, and they all know the members of their immediate family. Starting with units that students are comfortable with and knowledgeable about, allows them to easily express their knowledge with their teachers and peers. The results of this transition are felt all year, we know that maximizing the trust and success our students feel in these early days translates into a greater willingness to take risks when learning new concepts later in the year.

Parents always ask us…..what should I be doing at home?  Here’s what we say:

Preschooler playing

  • Bring on the open play toys: blocks, play dough, and dress up clothes allow kids to play without feeling like there is a right or wrong way to express themselves.
 
  • Smile, listen and have a chat: encourage your child with positive feedback as they play, will maintain a feeling of success. Listening to your child as they play, will allow you to get a glimpse into how they are handling their transition to school.  Talk with them after playtime to ask how they are feeling.
 
  • Set up a daily routine: Set expectations by making a daily routine – you can even make a daily chart so kids know what time they wake up, eat and what they have to do (get their backpack) to get out the door to go to school!
   Learning is where we play:
10 Easy Organization Tips for Back to School!
Smarts & Crafts: 3 Fall Themed Crafts for Preschoolers
Dollars & Sense! Teaching Kids Skills That Pay the Bills 
Share this post      
READ MORE

Teacher Tips: How To Prevent The Summer Slide

If you’re a teacher, you probably already know all about the summer slide. And you know that, next year, when school is back, you might have to spend up to a month re-teaching kids the skills that got drained from their brains while they were out having fun in the sun.
Good news… you can help! Next year, follow these simple tips to help your students—with a bit of help from their moms and dads—stop the summer slide before it ever happens.

Make a summer reading list

Studies have shown that reading comprehension is one of the main skills that kids lose progress in during the summer. Encourage them to read at least half an hour a day, and give them a list of suggested books they can either read on their own, or with the help of mom and dad.

Keep ‘em writing!

For students that have already picked up early writing skills, encourage them to make another student their pen pal. Sending letters, postcards, or even emails (with parental supervision) all summer long will help them keep their ELL skills sharp.

Send them off with printables  

Educational printables are a great way to make summer learning fun. Especially for kids grades 3 and under, printable sheets that feel like play are ideal for helping them practice counting, letters, critical thinking, and so much more.

Help parents put together a plan

Moms and dads are the #1 resource in stopping summer brain drain. Before school lets out, print out handy articles, like this one, that explain what parents can to keep their little ones learning. Then, ask them to set up a learning schedule that carries their kids through the summer. Children respond well to structure, and parents can gamify the schedule to help children feel a growing sense of achievement as they “level” up.

Encourage new hobbies

One of the most frequently mentioned piece of advice for stopping the summer slide is encouraging little ones to pick up a new hobby. Almost anything can help instill a love of learning, from star gazing with a new telescope, to going on scavenger hunts in the park or backyard to encourage curiosity about natural sciences.  Mention this to parents before school lets out!
Remember, the summer slide is real, and it can really set kids back. Research has shown that summer brain drain can result in:
  • A loss of 1-3 months of academic progress, especially in math and spelling
  • Up to an entire month spent re-teaching previously learned academic skills
  • A cumulative gap in progress that builds each school year, helping to contribute to a measurable difference in groups of students by the time of high school graduation
Teachers, you can win the battle against brain drain! Prepare your students, and their parents, to keep the learning going all summer long. We’re here to help… keep checking the Learning Resources blog all month long for more ideas and inspiration on beating the summer slide.
Teacher Tips: How To Prevent The Summer Slide
If you’re a teacher, you probably already know all about the summer slide. And you know that, next year, when school is back, you might have to spend up to a month re-teaching kids the skills that got drained from their brains while they were out having fun in the sun.
Good news… you can help! Next year, follow these simple tips to help your students—with a bit of help from their moms and dads—stop the summer slide before it ever happens.

Make a summer reading list

Studies have shown that reading comprehension is one of the main skills that kids lose progress in during the summer. Encourage them to read at least half an hour a day, and give them a list of suggested books they can either read on their own, or with the help of mom and dad.

Keep ‘em writing!

For students that have already picked up early writing skills, encourage them to make another student their pen pal. Sending letters, postcards, or even emails (with parental supervision) all summer long will help them keep their ELL skills sharp.

Send them off with printables  

Educational printables are a great way to make summer learning fun. Especially for kids grades 3 and under, printable sheets that feel like play are ideal for helping them practice counting, letters, critical thinking, and so much more.

Help parents put together a plan

Moms and dads are the #1 resource in stopping summer brain drain. Before school lets out, print out handy articles, like this one, that explain what parents can to keep their little ones learning. Then, ask them to set up a learning schedule that carries their kids through the summer. Children respond well to structure, and parents can gamify the schedule to help children feel a growing sense of achievement as they “level” up.

Encourage new hobbies

One of the most frequently mentioned piece of advice for stopping the summer slide is encouraging little ones to pick up a new hobby. Almost anything can help instill a love of learning, from star gazing with a new telescope, to going on scavenger hunts in the park or backyard to encourage curiosity about natural sciences.  Mention this to parents before school lets out!
Remember, the summer slide is real, and it can really set kids back. Research has shown that summer brain drain can result in:
  • A loss of 1-3 months of academic progress, especially in math and spelling
  • Up to an entire month spent re-teaching previously learned academic skills
  • A cumulative gap in progress that builds each school year, helping to contribute to a measurable difference in groups of students by the time of high school graduation
Teachers, you can win the battle against brain drain! Prepare your students, and their parents, to keep the learning going all summer long. We’re here to help… keep checking the Learning Resources blog all month long for more ideas and inspiration on beating the summer slide.
READ MORE