Little One Is Here!

Little One Is Here!
Hi Busy Bees! Here is our 'Babee' Brother Jack! Get it?! We miss you! Love, Lilly Rose and Sophie Pink

Our Class Rules

* We are respectful * We are responsible * We are safe * We follow the GOLDEN RULE *



March 28, 2011

Weekly Update, March 28 - April 1

Welcome Back!

It's great to be back after Spring Break!  I hope everyone had a wonderful week off.  The kids were happy to see their friends and share their adventures!

The 3rd quarter report cards go home in the red folders this Wednesday, March 30.  Parents, please sign the report card envelope and return only the envelope by this Friday, April 1.  Students - if you bring the envelopes back on Thursday you will get 3 bee bucks!  Thank you!

This week in science and guided reading we are learning about desert animals to get ready for our field trip to the Desert Museum next week.  The kids are so excited for the trip!  Today we learned about the characteristics of coyotes.  On Tuesday we will learn about the characteristics of bobcats and how they got their name.  On Wednesday we will learn about gila monsters and why they are unique.  On Thursday we will learn about javelinas and how to differentiate between a javelina and a pig.  On Friday we will review the animals and see a short National Geographic video about the desert.

In writing we are working on a variety of different things, including poetry, stories and brainstorming.  Each day the kids will do their writing and then color a picture of the animal we learned about.  They will have their own book of desert animals at the end of the week!  Today the kids wrote "How To Be A Coyote" poems.  They have made so much progress with their poetry and these were so fun to read!  Tomorrow the kids will write a story about running into a bobcat.  On Wednesday the kids will learn how to do a brainstorm burst and they will do one about a gila monster.  On Thursday the kids will write a "What Am I?" poem about either a coyote, bobcat, gila monster or javelina.  On Friday the kids will use a picture of the desert to guide them in writing a story about the desert at night.

The kids came home with Rainbow Words and they are due tomorrow.  This week in making words we are reviewing the "ay" chunk and looking for "ay" patterns.  We will also look at tricky/silent letters, such as the "j" in javelina.  We will continue to review "not" contractions.

The kids enjoyed our desert centers.  The centers for the week include:
1.  Listening - The kids listened to "The Tortoise and the Hair." They made a paper plate desert tortoise.
2.  Science - The kids made a day and night wheel.  The wheel shows what desert animals are nocturnal and what desert animals are diurnal.
3.  Writing - The kids pretended to be reporters writing for "The Desert Reporter."
4.  Math - The kids made their own gila monster!  They traced and cut their lizard on card stock and then they made a pattern with beans.
5.  Reading - The kids played sight word bingo.

We started (and finished!) a patterning chapter before the break.  The kids have a lot of experience with patterning so we are working on identifying and extending challenging patterns.  After we finish advanced patterning we will begin a chapter on fractions.  We will learn halves, thirds and quarters.  We will use a lot of manipulatives and real life examples to make this challenging concept come alive.


The kids had fun in computers today.  If you'd like to see what they did, click on the blog posting directly below this one, "Computers, 3/28."

Have an A+ week!
Mrs. Johnson

4 comments:

  1. My favorite desert animal is a gila monster.
    I learned that gila monsters have fat in their
    tails.

    ReplyDelete
  2. My favorite desert animal is a bobcat.
    I learnad that bobcats 2 to 8 inches tail.
    and i learnad that thay have point esye.

    ReplyDelete
  3. My favorite desrt animal is a gila monster.I laernd that a gila monster has smol eyes.

    ReplyDelete
  4. My favorite desrt animal is a Gila monste it is my favorite becus it has posn.

    ReplyDelete