To add color to my hallway, I hang some interesting kites from the ceiling. My students’ favorite is the butterfly. I add more in April when we study that unit.
I also decorate my students’ lockers with nametag kites and their squisher kite artwork.
I wrote my favorite kite books on an inexpensive Dollar Store kite and stuck it in the middle of a bulletin board with a blue-papered background. The title: Reading Helps You Soar To Great Heights!
Some crumpled up white tissue paper, helped make the 3-D clouds. Take a picture of each of your students reading a kite book, mount them on multi-colored kites, with yarn tails and staple them around the kite. Easy and instant bulletin board.
As a home-school connection my students create ME kites. Click on the link to view/print the ME-kite letter home. This is a great way to learn more about your students, and a wonderful opportunity for them to share and increase their verbal acuity. Simply cut out a diamond shape on a half sheet of tag board and send it home with the letter.
Instead of the usual recess, I asked for several parent volunteers to walk to the park and they helped the children fly my collection of kites. They had a memorable blast.
One year my semi-professional kite flyer friend Donovan, was available. Hhe came and gave an awesome loop-de-loop demonstration of all his kite tricks.
Afterwards, students ran around with their own decorated plastic grocery bag kites to see how high they could get them.
Simply turn printed grocery sacks inside out and let students decorate with permanent markers and stickers, tie a string on the handles so they can pull it. You can also do the same with a paper lunch bag, but cut a hole in each corner and then insert the string.
I take an entire day or two to do a theme around kites.
Click on the links to check out these fun activity booklets and Unit: My Easy Reader Counting Kite Booklet (With Math Extensions), Go Fly A Kite, (Spatial Directions) My Shapely Kite, (Reviews Shapes) Where Have All The Kites Gone, (subtraction easy reader), My Kite Counting booklet (Math activities) + the big 78-page Kite Unit. One of the things my students enjoy making in the Kite Unit is the slider pictured on the right.
My favorite easy reader is: My Kite booklet because of all the fun extensions. Pictured on the left, is the rhyming word kite. Click on the link to view the entire booklet.
I also like The Shape Of My 3D Kite because it helps review those tough shapes in an interesting and fun way.
I have a Kk is for Kite poster that lists all of the rhyming words.
I also have 5 kite activities in my 133-page Spring Art & Activities Book. One of my students’ favorites is the Japanese watercolor fish kite. Click on the link to view the adorable photographs.
There are also other fun and easy projects that make great March bulletin boards, as you reinforce report card standards and explore some science concepts.
You can do the math extension kite graph with your students, as well as share the kite poems or make the class kite book; view/print the kite activities.
During story time we enjoy the following:
The Emperor and The Kite, Yolen; Kite Flying, Lin; Kite, Packard; Laura’s Secret, Baumgart; Berenstain Bears: We Like Kites, Bear’s Bargain, Asch; Dora and The Rainbow Kite Festival, Ricci.
I hope you got a few ideas to supplement your March is Reading Month plans or kite activities.
May they take you up-up and away to a great day … of reading!
Happy Fat Tuesday!
As we “Read Across America” I wanted to do something a little different and also toss in some geography; so I thought it would be fun to learn about Louisiana and have a Mardi Gras theme day on a Friday.
My students have really enjoyed it in the past. It's another fun thing to do for March is Reading Month and a great way to learn about another state. Here are just a few of the things I did:
I kept it simple, just sending a letter home asking parents to please have their child wear something festive, purple-yellow-and green, or dress as a Mardi Gras-type clown if they wanted to. I also dress up. I've collected quite a few costumes over the years.
My students enjoy seeing me dressed up and it makes story time extra fun. Here I simply appliqued some Mardi Gras fabric cut out's to a black dress, added some gold and purple puffy paint around the edges, donned a feathered boa, a coin necklace, some beads, put on crazy purple, yellow and green socks, and a metallic mask and I was all set!
I have a Happy Mardi Gras note on their desktop with a purple, yellow and green Skittle waiting for them. They get to eat two Skittles and then we use the other one as a manipulative to play “I Spy” the number or letter for our first Table Top lesson. Click on the link to view/print the Mardi Gras note + a blank “I Spy” skill sheet. (You can fill in whatever letters/numbers that you're studying.)
I bought Mardi Gras necklaces at the local party store and the students got to choose which color they wanted. Since Mardi Gras is all about collecting necklaces they got to make an additional one out of dyed macaroni, incorporating a specific ABC-ABC pattern.
Their favorite centers were decorating a mask, using bingo dot markers to make a pattern, and doing a pinch and poke with a golf tee. Click on the link to view/print these Mardi Gras center activities
In the afternoon we played a few games. I tossed purple, green and gold coins all over the floor while they were at lunch. When they came back to the classroom they got to scamper around and find as many as they could and then sort them by color.
The one who found the most coins won a prize. Everyone got to keep 3 coins (one of each color); we identify these colors in Spanish.
We made several different patterns with the coins, counted them by 10’s to 100, and by 1’s in English and Spanish. We counted backwards from 10 to 0 and then "blasted off" to our lockers to put the coins in our backpacks.
Oriental Trading sells quite a few Mardi Gras items as well as your local party store.
As another math extension, they also played a Mardi Gras dice game. Click on the link to view/print the Mardi Gras dice game.
I bought a beanie-type Mardi Gras stuffed Jester and we played “Hot Jester” (Like Hot Potato) passing it around in a circle to music; when the Mardi Gras music stopped, the one holding the Jester was out.
We had our own Mardi Gras parade marching around the room and then down the hall to visit a few of the other preschool and kindergarten classes.
For writing/reading they completed their Mardi Gras page for our class book. Click on the link to view/print a Mardi Gras class book.
For geography/writing/reading everyone cut and glued their Louisiana book. We found Louisiana on the globe and state map and looked at books from the library. If you are a Gold Subscription member and want to make a comparison booklet using your state, drop me an e-mail and I will send you the clip art and pages for your state. Click on the link to view/print a Louisiana state booklet.
For story time I checked out books from the library on Mardi Gras and showed them photos that I printed from the web. Some books I recommend are:
During Show & Share time, we tossed the Mardi Gras jester back and forth. Whoever had the jester got to share what part of Mardi Gras day was their favorite.
The day went faster than usual. I gave everyone a certificate for participating; it seemed that everyone had had a Mardi Gras great time! Click on the link to view/print a Mardi Gras certificate