Friday, February 27, 2015

News in a Nutshell #16

News here every Friday-Saturday.

Lots of news this week... Llamas on the loose.  Spock died.  Is the dress blue/black or gold/white?

...none of which are educationally based, unless you count the science behind the whole dress debate in which case it works.  I hope numerous science teachers everywhere were using that viral picture as a lesson.

So... not much, however, I did manage to round up a few good ones just for you.







Follow Miss B.'s board Be Resourceful on Pinterest.
Links for tools, ideas, tricks, information and resources to help you teach.


In case you want it all and you want it delivered.  Here it is.





            

Sunday, February 22, 2015

How I Spent My Mid-Winter Break

It's Sunday.  Mid-winter break is over.  Everyone should get mid-winter break because it is fantastic.  It's five glorious days tucked between two weekends during the shortest-yet-longest month of the year, and also the most depressing month because by February you are just ready for spring to show it's blossoming face.

Here's how I spent my days away from school.  I only went to school once.  For only a few hours.  I should probably get there really early tomorrow to be sure I'm prepared to jump back in.

First, I helped some friends paint their living room in their new house.  Painting is so rewarding and refreshing because when it's finished it feels so fresh and clean!

Next, I spent some quality time with my blog, specifically the Websites & Resources tab up above.  I'm pretty excited about it.  I was busy locating and curating a few resources I love.  I expect this will be an ongoing resource for myself...and hopefully others!  Teaching is all about sharing!  Check it out...and let me know what I should be adding!

Then I spent some time enjoying the Puget Sound.  I went kayaking.


Visited Point No Point, the first known lighthouse on the Puget Sound.


Watched cargo ships anchor themselves in the water and wait for union workers to come to an agreement and start unloading ships again.



Visited Chief Seattle's gravesite.


Stood in the Puget Sound water and just generally admired my surroundings.  Love the Pacific Northwest and all it's beauty!


Then, I've had a few unfinished TpT projects taking up space on my computer desktop.  I usually have them ready for my class use, but then drag my feet on the part where I have to prep them for the store.  I was feeling motivated at the beginning of the week to wrap a few of them up.  I prepped a few for my classroom and got them all ready for the RTL store.  A few of them have been sitting around for awhile, so it was nice to get them off my plate!  

Here's a quick share of what I worked on and what's new to the store.

I get super excited when I see my own activity pinned by someone.  My most-pinned and one of my best selling activities is my 100s Grid Art for fractions and decimals.  I l-o-v-e using my SmartBoard center that follows this activity up, so I finally got it all together and up on the RTL store.  So now I have the 100s Grid Art, and the SmartBoard center up separately, but if you want BOTH, I bundled them, too.

(this picture is from before I got my SMARTBoard and was using a Mimio file, but the TpT product is a SMARTBoard Notebook file)
Another one of my favorites is the Retirement Booklet that I have in my store because I love being able to have it on file and ready to pull out at the end of the year.  However, I'm not one for doing the same thing year after year, so I like to have activities on more of a "round", or "spiral", if you will.  So I made another retirement booklet so that I have a few ready at any given moment.

This one is more of a Mad-Libs style (I call them Fill-Ins).  I made it pretty versatile because class personalities can vary from year to year.  I have a page for fill-ins prior to seeing the retirement letter that you can do first and then put your silly answers into the retirement letter page.  Or you could just do the retirement letter page without the first fill-in page so that answers make a little more sense or are a little more personalized.  Or if you have younger kids or students who may need a little extra help picking some words, I have a page with three word selections for each blank to help them out.  It could be done as a class for one letter or individually from each student.  It's up to you.

The cover is also in color or black and white, so you can choose.  This one has been on my mind for awhile so I'm excited that it is together and ready!


THEN (I'm telling you, I was motivated to wrap these up!), I finished a poster set for three sets of commonly misused words to give my kiddos a classroom resource to use.  My goal was that during writing conferring time, I could just point out that a word was used incorrectly and then guide them to these posters to see if they can figure out which word to use for themselves.  I am laminating them today and they will go on my bulletin board tomorrow morning!  Yay!

Again, color and black and white options, in case you're more of a print-it-on-colored-paper person like I am!


I posted a few other things, too... I was productive!

I finished my week of relaxing with a little professional development with on a Saturday.  I got to go hear Georgia Heard, author of Awakening the Heart and Finding the Heart of Non-Fiction (and many more), speak about using non-fiction and poetry to help students become better writers.


I took lots of notes, and I left with some good stuff to work on and bring to my "family of writers".

Ready to see those kiddos again tomorrow and start doing some fresh new learning!



            

Friday, February 20, 2015

News in a Nutshell #15 {formerly Finally Friday}

I haven't done a Finally Friday since....December.  It's not that there hasn't been educational news (hahahahahaha)...or that I haven't located any good articles (see my Twitter page...not to mention the amount of articles I email myself with the best of intentions).  I just got...behind.  Catching up on old news isn't exactly news anymore.  

But, if you're visited here often, then you've probably noticed that I'm slooooooowwwwly making changes my little teacher education corner.  Dusting the cobwebs out of the corners and just generally updating.  So in doing that I decided to resurrect the Finally Friday news (because I rather enjoy reading and sharing education news articles and it makes my inner nerd so happy) but cleverly disguise it as "News in a Nutshell" so that I can start fresh.  News here every Friday-Saturday. 

Thanks for stopping by and happy reading!  


The Atlantic

Forbes

New York Times

Mashable



Links for tools, ideas, tricks, information and resources to help you teach.


In case you want it all and you want it delivered.  Here it is.





            

Wednesday, February 18, 2015

Let's Talk About the Money, Money, Money

Financial literacy is a pretty big deal, yet we don't really tackle it as a topic in schools.  Some high schools (maybe some middle schools?) do offer a basic finance class.  Not many people have experience learning about real world finances until they are in the real world.

The thing is... we are in the real world all the time.  Why not have kids learn some important financial tools young and then grow with them?

We do money word problems in school.  We add and subtract decimals.  There are some financial concepts that are being taught there, but I'm not usually teaching about money.  We teach economics and how money works on a large scale.  Students make and sell products and learn about supply and demand.  But what do we teach them about their money?

I like to offer parents some resources through our class website to put a friendly little bug in their ear to talk about money with their kids.  Some parents don't need that kind of reminder.  Some do.  I like to have my classroom website set up as a resource for both parents and students, because sometimes a teacher's job is to share resources with parents as well!

I found a great new resources that fills an otherwise empty niche as far as education goes for elementary-middle school kids, and I got a tiny bit excited (free resources do that to me...)!  Time for Kids just came out with a new monthly magazine all about financial literacy for kids.  It gets kids thinking about money.  Spending, saving, and lots of other things where money is important.  It's a really cool little resource.  They've provided a fourth grade level magazine, but also the same magazine for 5-6th graders, which is another awesome component!  I think it comes with a Time for Kids subscription, so if your class has that, then you may have seen it already!  The cool thing is, though, that the digital issues are up on their website totally free!

The monthly magazine is called Your $ and it just started in January 2015, so there are only two editions out so far.  Complete with teacher guides for each level if you use it in class!

In my quest to find some great resources, I gathered a few and put them here.  I've also added the teacher resources to my Social Studies page under the Websites/Resources tab up above.  Dive in!


$$$ Resources for Parents:




$$$ Teacher Resources for Kids/Students:


You have hit the economics vocabulary motherload here, download and print right now!


$$$ Just for Kids:





            

Monday, February 16, 2015

Happy Birthday, Washington!

Happy President's Day!  


There I am hanging out with some presidential friends.

Hopefully you aren't working today.  Yes?  Maybe you're having a birthday party for Mr. Washington today?  Just another reason to have cake, and maybe some Taft-y.  Perhaps give yourself students a little President's Day Quiz when you return.

I'm not going to beat around the Bush.  There are a lot of Cool(idge) resources available for teachers out on the internet.  Don't Polk fun at it, this is pretty serious business.

If you need to Fillmore time in class, and are feeling extra patriotic, the History Channel has some great presidential resources, plus videos and articles.  We shouldn't take these resources for Grant-ed.  They are very cool! 


The Presidential Libraries are also pretty great and provide lots of educational information.  The National Archives even provides historical digital documents and other great teacher resources, so it's worth a glance!  If you think you can't afFord it, don't worry-  these online resources are totally free!

Do your students know the presidents?  Here's a word search to help sneak some president names into their knowledge base.  

I came up with all of these puns Obama self, but I can't think of any more (and let's be real, they aren't great) so I guess it's time to move on with my day.