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Tuesday, March 27, 2012

Donorschoose.org

Donorschoose.org is a great way for public school teachers to get materials needed for their classroom.

Donorschoose.org

Tuesday, March 13, 2012

"Canvas" Wall

I found this idea on (of course) Pinterest, the original post is from here.  There are no directions on the web page, but pretty much duh when you think about it.

You will need:
Fabric
Hot Glue Gun
Scissors
White Paint
Paint Brush
Boxes

You may or may not need the paint.  Most of my boxes were different colors and my fabric background was white and see through,  so if you need to paint the boxes do that first.  

I had pieces of fabric scraps left over from a quilt (place mates/table runner and hot pot pad) my grandma made for us.  I decided to use these because I like having the fabric follow through the house.  I also purchased a large (1/4 of a yard) for the bigger box.  In the photos below you will notice that all the boxes are one fabric, I (okay, my grandma) is going to sew some of the pieces together to fit the boxes.  

You will need show box tops of different sizes, or I used boxes that were about the height of a show box to (such as a jello box, sports candy can box VS gift box to) If you want large art you can use pizza boxes.

After painting the boxes (if needed) fit the fabric to each box.  Cut the fabric so it hangs into the box lid and glue. 

The corners were a little tricky, I did them different on each box. 

Once you are done arrange them on the floor in the way you want them on the wall.  I used thumb tacks to put them in.  I had one that got a little warped from the paint and wouldn't stay on the thumb tack.  I put 'glue dots' onto the thumb tacks and attached the box top on the tacks.


I didn't finish, but I really don't like things laying around so figured I would start it.

Thursday, March 8, 2012

Kitchen

The kitchen renovation will (hopefully) be done during Spring Break....this week, right now YEEEES.  It's about time.  We worked on painting the upper cabinets last night when we realized we painted a door that really needed to be stained....oops.  Looks like that is going to be the LAST one done.

Monday, March 5, 2012

Cool Down Bottle

This bottle works miracles.  I have 3 students I can use this for, but have only had to use it with one of them.  This student was upset about something, my aid just handed it to him and it was like someone switched a flip.  The student was so calm they were able to join the group within 5 minutes.  The only problem is this child became obsessed with it.  So we turned it from being a "Cool Down Bottle" to a "Reward Bottle" for this child.  This student knows that they have to be a big kindergartner and if so when we come back from breakfast the student gets 2 shakes.  If the student completes all their work and walks in line and eats like a big kindergartner with no meltdowns.  The student gets it after eating lunch.  The same applies for going home.  We also use it during assemblies to keep this student still and quiet.  This works for us because the student needs to be doing something in order to be paying attention.  This bottle has worked so well we have one in almost all the rooms of the school and the Emergency Backpack.  In the classroom we have a big one, everywhere else is a mini version.  The point of this bottle is it is very calming (for adults to) the glitter takes about 2-5 min to drop from the top to the bottom; it clears your mind.  I keep one on my desk for "those kinda days."

What you need:
~A bottle
~Glitter Glue
~Water
~Food coloring
~Craft Glitter
~Elmer's Glue Gel

I didn't use the mixture I found because....it didn't work.  It is a trial and error thing.  First fill the bottle with water, not to the top you need room to shake.  Next squeeze in the glitter glue, you want enough to make the water "thicker" so the glitter drops slowly.  I closed it and would shake it to see what happened.  Also, when you put the glitter glue in the bottle it will clump together, after a lot of shakes it will break apart.  Next, put in a little food coloring, you still want to be able to see in it!  Last put in the craft glitter, this just depends on how glittery you want it.  Once you do this put the top on and see how slowly it drops, if it is fast add some Elmer's Glue Gel (the blue stuff) if you use the white glue it will get cloudy.  Most people used peanut butter jars, I decided to use a Pepsi bottle.  Not the 2 litter but not the small ones, I am not sure the size because I don't drink it....it's Jordan.  The Pepsi bottle is water tight nothing will leak out.  I have also hot glued the tops on the little ones, but was able to get the big bottle tops on so tight I can't get them off.  The student that uses it has never tried to remove the top either.

Our school is on a 4 day work week, so we are off Fri, Sat, and Sun.  When the glitter and glitter glue sits for a while it sticks to the bottom.  I would suggest giving it a shake at the beginning and/or end of the day if it wasn't used.  Obviously over weekends and breaks you can't, I am hoping that after some time the glue won't make the glitter stick to the bottom!

Sunday, March 4, 2012

Crayons

I found this idea on Pinterest (of course) to make crayons with pieces of old crayons and LOVED the idea.  But, I don't have any kids and I would have to make a lot for my classroom so I thought what a great thing to put at the kids table for the wedding.  I will just have the venue put a paper table "cloth" down and the kids can color all over it like in some restaurants.  I was thinking of also putting aquarium themed, since we are getting married at the aquarium, coloring pages for the kids.  I had to use tips from a bunch of different websites and do a lot of trial and error.  So I am just going to tell you what worked for me.  As a teacher I have TONS of little pieces of crayons in my classroom and I have asked the other teachers for help.  If you don't have access to crayons like I do, you can ask local restaurants to save you broken pieces of crayons.  Make sure all the paper is off, I peeled almost all of mine with the help of some eager kindergartners, but there is a much easier way.  Put all the crayons in water and after a few minutes the paper will just start unraveling.  Make sure they are in small pieces, most people said under an inch, but lets be honest, I have a life I refuse to spend my day slicing up crayons and chasing after the pieces that fly across the kitchen.  I used a silicone mold that I got in the dollar section of target and put cooking spray on the inside of the molds.  I am not sure if that is 100% necessary but used it because some sites said to do it and others didn't say if they used it.  I just sprayed the bottom not the sides so it is probably not a big deal.  I cooked it at 300 for 15 minutes.  I did check mine half way through because I filled the molds but after they crayons melted down they were only about half way full.  At that time I added more crayon pieces and kept cooking it.  The time just depends on when the crayons are melted, it could take longer it could take less them.


It takes about an hour for them to cool, but me being the inpatient person I am, that was tooooooo long.  So I decided to put them in the fridge, once they set up, about 20 min, just turn the mold inside out and they are done.  Once mine were out of the mold they were still warm and a little soft so I put them back in the fridge.  I like having them all one color, like crayons are, but I did do a few that were multi colored.  And some of my solid ones are semi multi colored.  When doing the multi colored ones you want to make sure there aren't to many of the same color together.  What I did was put all my colors in a row and took one from each pile till it was filled.  I also put the small pieces of crayon where I thought they would show best.  I only had 2 light blue so I made sure they were on the edge of the mold so it could be seen and used.  When doing the multi colored ones you will also want to make sure you have smaller pieces.  When you cut them do it on cardboard so you don't have crayon in your cutting board.


Another thing I did in the second batch was put tinfoil under the mold, that way if some spills it will be easy clean up.

Thursday, March 1, 2012

This was my December/January bulletin board.  I don't ever leave these up for 2 months but it takes A LOT of work by teacher/student/aid.  Also, we are not is school for most of December so it wasn't enjoyed for very long. 

 I use dark blue for the background and white cut to look like snow drifts.  I had a parent use her Cricket! to make the snowflakes and words (and laminate so they will last for now 3 years).  The tree is made with the students hand prints, I have 35 kids and each made 3 handprints.  I wish I had more because it was a short tree, but it still looked good.  I also used different shades of green to give it depth, pick one shade to use for most of it and the rest just here and there.  I added little red bows for December ONLY.  The snowman is rolled white strips of paper, like a paper chain but NOT connected.  Last I decorated the snowman accordingly. 

 For December we had Rudolph the Red Nose Reindeer handprints.  The face is their palm and they draw eyes and a mouth, we used glitter glue for the nose.  I added a bow for the girls to wear in their antlers which were stapled onto the board so they stayed tied.  

For December and January the kids used their feet to make snowmen.  I wish I had a close-up of these, but I will do my best to explain.  I used light blue because it reminds me of ice and white paint on the bottom of their feet.  Have them sit in a chair paint their foot and have a bucket of water for them to turn and dip their foot in and clean off.  We had them do the cleaning on their own from 3-6 year olds, remember they can take a bath at home....it doesn't need to be perfectly clean.  They dry their foot with a towel on the carpet while you start the next kid.  I cut out my snowman feet because I wanted it done my way, with blue showing around the edge.  The students put on 3 black dots (hole punch) for buttons.  5 black dots for the mouth and 2 for the eyes (small hole punch) and a carrot nose.  All of these things I had ready for them, I also traced a hat and they cut it out.  I didn't add arms or a scarf because that would have been a lot of extra work and to be honest they looked really cute without it.  The kids made these snowmen on shirts which have arms and a scarf.

When January came I took off the red bows off the tree and Rudolph the Red Nose Reindeer.  In the writing center the kids made their own snowflakes and then wrote a story about snow.  They loved making snowflakes; most of them have never done it before.  Surprisingly for never doing it before none of them cut the fold off!!  I don't have a photo of January, but you just put the snowflakes where the reindeer were.

The Cat in the Hat Self-portrait

This was going to be my ONLY Dr. Seuss activity, and we ended up having a Seuss FILLED day....which I love.  I wanted to do something with The Cat in the Hat's hat but wasn't sure what.  I wanted it to be fun for the kids and also relevent, I thought word families, but wasn't in love with the idea.  The pre-school teacher at our school has her class do self-portraits about once a month and this was around the time she completed hers.  I was in the room when she was putting them away and it hit me....they can do a self-portrait of Cat in the Hat.  I am sorry, I don't remember where I got the hat templet from but with a little searching (and I mean little) you will be able to find one.  They did their hat a few days  ago at the end of another activity and today we watched the Green Eggs and Ham sing along movie and did our self-portrait.  I put a school picture of them in the corner to get the compairisen of how they really look to how they drew what they looked like.  The kids also were supposed to draw a bow tie.