Wednesday 11 February 2015

Awesome Day, Awesome Learning!

Today was one of those rare days; one of those days that appears ordinary at first glance. No special guests, no crazy activities, not even a library period or a Music class. Just 14 students and their teacher, working hard, learning and encouraging each other. 

But as we gathered for prayer at the end of the day and took a moment to reflect, it was clear; awesome day, awesome learning! 

To begin to document a day in grade 1 would take paragraph upon paragraph, so I'll offer just a few peeks into our "average" little Wednesday. 

We have been working with numbers up to 100, and today we were reviewing skip counting by 10's. Here is the Math Journal problem the students tackled (and conquered!)

Students were encouraged to show their thinking in whatever way suited them, and they rose to the challenge! 


Please look for opportunities to practice skip counting:

  • by 10's to 100
  • by 2's to 20
  • by 5's to 100

We have continued to practice applying reading comprehension strategies in our language lessons. Remember when we first started making text-to-self connections

Last week we focused on making predictions. It is important to make predictions before and during reading. It helps students monitor their understanding of a story, while encouraging them to think ahead. 



We've read several stories, making predictions before and during reading, however today we shook up our prediction mini-lesson! We watched a fun little clip about a pig who sees a cookie jar sitting high on top of the fridge. The cookies are just out of reach! The boys and girls LOVED making predictions about how he might get the cookies!

"I predict he is going to kick it." (the fridge)

"I predict he gets a ladder to get the cookies."

We watched this clip, pausing it to make frequent predictions:




Thank you for sharing your children with me each day. We'll see what tomorrow brings ... never the same day twice!

Prediction poster from the Comprehension Strategy Poster collection made by A Year of Many Firsts.  Prediction mini-page from Kindergarten Boom Boom










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