Tuesday, November 23, 2010

Join us for lunch!


The cafeteria will be holding it's annual Winter Meal (Turkey with all the fixings) on Thursday, December 9th (at our regular lunch time--10:45). If you would like to join us, please send in the yellow reservation form (or e-mail me) by December 2. Please let me know how many adults and children (NOT including your kindergartner) will be eating. Lunches are $3.00. (Do not send money--you pay at the door). Vegetarian plates (macaroni and cheese) are available.

Mmmm...Pancakes!

The PTA will be holding its annual Pancake Breakfast with Santa on Saturday, December 11 from 8:00-11:-00 am in the cafeteria. There will be pancakes from IHOP, sausage from Rudy's and Ugly Mug Coffee. And of course, Santa will be there!

Tickets are $6 per person (or $5 in advance). I hope to see you there!

Brown Santa Toy Drive

We will be collecting toys for the Brown Santa Toy Drive from now until December 11th. We will be collecting toys for children aged newborn to 18 years old. The toys will be distributed throughout Williamson County. Your children can drop off the toys in the box outside our room.

A Thankful Bunch of Kids!

As we were getting ready to leave for the Thanksgiving Holiday, I asked the kids what they were thankful for. I think their answers are really sweet--clearly their families hold a special place in their hearts! I promise, I did not force them to give those answers! They did it completely on their own. I hope you enjoy their responses as much as I did!

  • I'm thankful for Thanksgiving and the turkey and my mommy and daddy. AB

  • I'm thankful for my mom and dad and my brother and my sister. IQ

  • I'm thankful for turkey and the bus and fish. RT

  • I'm thankful for my home and my momma and my daddy and my sisters--no brothers! LB
  • I'm thankful for my sister, my uncles, and flag football in March. BA
  • I'm thankful for my parents, my sister and my baby brother, and my grandparents. BC

  • I'm thankful for my mommy and my daddy and my sister and everything! CP

  • I'm thankful for my mom, my dad. my baby sister and my toys. JL

  • I'm thankful for hugs and kisses and my toys and my bike. AR

  • I'm thankful for my mom and daddy and my mom and sister and my family. HM
  • I'm thankful for Ms. Warner, Mommy, Daddy, my baby sister, and turkey! AH

  • I'm thankful for Ms. Luong, my toys and Ms. Zhang, Mommy, Daddy, my sister and my friends. NA

  • I'm thankful for my mommy and my daddy, my toys, my DS, and Ms. Warner. GM

  • I'm thankful for Ms. Warner, my momma, da-da, grandma and grandpa and turkey! TM

  • I'm thankful for my mommy, and my daddy, my baby and Ms. Warner. AM*

  • I'm thankful for Ms. Warner, LOVE, my mom, and my dad and my brother. AM+

  • I'm thankful for my mom, and my dad, my parents and my sister. JM

  • I'm thankful for my doctor and Ms. Luong, Ms. Zhang, my friends and my mom and dad and my sister. AK

  • I'm thankful for my rabbit, my brother and my sister, my mom and dad, my friends. JT
  • I'm thankful for my dog Charlie, my dog Sally, too, my mommy and daddy and friends! AS

And Ms. Warner is so thankful to have such a funny, bright and caring class. Have a great Holiday Weekend and I will see you on Monday!

Wednesday, November 10, 2010

Reviewing Our Expectations

Hallway Expectations

1. Keep our feet on the yellow or gray line.

2. Keep a quiet mouth (no talking or silly noises).

3. Use our walking feet. Use quiet feet (no stomping).

4. Keep your hands by your sides or behind your back (do not touch the walls, artwork or your friends).
5. Stop at all the horse-shoe stops.

Tuesday, November 9, 2010

Check it out...

Glasses are cool.

Monday, November 8, 2010

Books We Love!

Last week, we read several different versions of Goldilocks and the Three Bears.

Goldilocks and the Three Bears by James Marshall

Goldilocks and the Three Bears by Carolyn Buehner

Somebody and the Three Blairs by Marilyn Tolhurst

Here are a couple of other versions you might want to check out from the library!
Goldie and the Three Bears by Diana Stanley
Dusty Locks and the Three Bears by Susan Lowell

This Week in Kindergarten

Here are a few things we will be learning this week...

Reading
We are reading folktales and fairy tales. This week we are focusing on different versions of The Three Little Pigs. We are focusing on the characters and what happens in the beginning, middle and end. We will also talk about how the stories are the same and how they are different.
Sight Words: is, it, in

Word Family: -ug

Writing
We are working on writing longer stories (at least 2 sentences) with more details.

Math
We are still learning about 3-D Shapes. We are also learning how graphs can help us organize information.

Science
We are learning what people, animals and plants do during the fall.

Send Us Your Pull-Tabs


The school is collecting pull-tabs from the top of cans to raise money for the Shriner's Hospital in Houston. So find a safe place to collect them, and when you have some, send them in for a good cause!

Friday, November 5, 2010

We Want Your Pictures!

Kids love to share pictures of all the fun things they do at home. It builds their confidence and builds community in our classroom as a whole! So, if you take pictures of fun things your child does, please e-mail them to me in an attachment. Examples include pictures of parties, holiday activities (you probably have some cute Halloween and Diwali pictures!) or vacations. As a bonus, it gives children ideas of topics to write about in their journals.

For example...here is one of our friends making a Halloween pumpkin...

And here is his really great journal entry about it...


So get busy taking those pictures and send them to me! Thanks!

Books...Lots and Lots of books!

Did you find all of those little books at the bottom of your child's backpack? Please get them out and start reading every night! Make sure your child points to each word as they read. Ask them to find specific words ("Show me the word go.") or letters ("Do you see the letter B on this page?") And have them retell the story with as many details as possible (I know these are very simple stories, but so are the stories we read in the reading assessments, and almost all of the kids had trouble retelling those, which is a requirement for moving to the next reading level!)

Making Words

We are making words! Every week, we learn a different word family, or spelling pattern. We use letter cards and put them together in different ways to make different words.

Here is the -og word family. Look for these cards to come home this week and practice making words at home. Some will have pictures...

Some might not have pictures. Some words are challenging, like words that have consonant blends (i.e. cl). Some might be good vocabulary words (we talked a lot this week about what a clog is!)

Please keep these cards in a safe place and practice making and reading words often with your kids!

Making Shapes

As part of our Shapes unit, we used pattern blocks to see what shapes we could make out of other shapes. We made squares, hexagons, and triangles...
rectangles and trapezoids...
giant rectangles and rhombuses...
But no matter how hard we tried (and we really tried!), we could not make a circle. See if your kids can explain why...

Shape Robots

We had a lot of fun using all the 2-dimensional shapes we learned about to create robots!

Shapes, Shapes, Shapes...

We are learning about 2-dimensional and 3-dimensional geometric figures (that’s shapes to me and you!) Children should be able to name the shapes, and describe them by their attributes. They should be able to find examples in the real world and compare and contrast 2 or more shapes. For example, they should be able to tell me that a square and a triangle are the same because they both have straight sides, but they are different because a square has 4 sides and a triangle only has 3. Below, I have listed the different shapes we are learning about and some things they should know about each. I don’t expect them to memorize every detail about every shape, but I do expect them to be able to talk about them and use some math language.

2-Dimensional Shapes are FLAT like a PANCAKE!

Rectangle

  • 4 sides
  • 4 corners
  • Straight sides

Square
  • 4 sides
  • 4 corners
  • Straight sides
  • A "special" kind of rectangle--all 4 sides are equal length!

Triangle

  • 3 sides
  • 3 corners
  • Straight sides
Rhombus
  • 4 sides
  • 4 corners
  • Straight sides
  • Looks like a square with the corners pulled tight.
  • You may know it as a "diamond"
Trapezoid
  • 4 sides
  • 4 corners
  • Straight sides
  • Looks like a triangle with the top cut off
  • Has diagonal lines
Hexagon
  • 6 sides
  • 6 corners
  • Straight sides
Circle
  • Zero sides
  • Zero corners
  • A curved line that is closed
Oval
  • Zero sides
  • Zero corners
  • A curved line that is closed
  • Looks like an egg

3-Dimensional Shapes have heighth, width and depth (in kindergarten talk--they "come out at you, like a 3-D movie). They are NOT flat like a pancake!

Cube

  • 6 square faces
  • Will slide, but not roll

Sphere

  • Round like a ball
  • No faces or corners
  • Will roll


Cone

  • Circle base
  • point at the top
  • Will roll around in a circle


Pyramid

  • Square or triangle base
  • Triangle faces
  • point at the top
  • Will slide, but not roll

Cylinder

  • 2 circle bases
  • Can roll and slide

Rectangular Prism

  • 6 rectangular (can be square) faces
  • Can slide, but not roll
  • Prisms can be rectangular, square, triangular, even hexagonal!

We are learning the following TEKS when we learn about shapes:

K.8 Geometry and spatial reasoning. The student uses attributes to determine how objects are alike and different.
K.8A Describe and identify an object by its attributes using informal language.
K.8B Compare two objects based on their attributes.
K.8C Sort a variety of objects including two- and three-dimensional geometric figures according to their attributes and describe how the objects are sorted.

K.9 Geometry and spatial reasoning.
The student recognizes attributes of two- and three-dimensional geometric figures.
K.9A Describe and compare the attributes of real-life objects such as balls, boxes, cans and cones or models of three-dimensional geometric figures.
K.9B: Recognize shapes in real-life three-dimensional geometric figures or models of three-dimensional geometric figures.
K.9C Describe, identify, and compare circles, triangles, rectangles and squares (a special type of rectangle).

We Love Our Reading Buddies!

Everyother Friday, we get together with our Reading Buddies from Mrs. McNair's 3rd-grade class.
They read to us...
And we read to them...
And we all have fun!