Cyber Monday Teachers Pay Teachers Sale

I'm linking up with a group of fun bloggers and awesome teachers for the HUGE Cyber Monday and Bonus Tuesday Sale you won't want to miss!

A big thanks to Michelle for sharing this cute graphic! Click on the picture to visit my store!

I've got a few new holiday items I've recently added to my KIDSRCUTE shop that you may want to check out!



These are some of my best sellers that will also be on sale! 


 These daily schedule posters come in two designs. I also have a brights on black version that I made for my classroom decor and a matching neon decor set with bunting, labels, desk plates and more!





If you're looking for an adorable and unique gift idea for Mom this Mother's Day, this project is among my best sellers. Hop on over to read the feedback left!


I created this as a companion to use in my classroom to reinforce Daily 5 Cafe Strategies. It addresses all kinds of Common Core Standards and can be used during guided reading or whole group instruction with any story!


I've noticed that many once free to use fonts now require an additional commercial use license fee. You can grab up a few of mine at the same low price of $2-$2.50 each. There are some freebies too!




There are so many great shops also participating in the sale, so be sure to check them out too!


Cooking Corn Soup and Grape Salad!

Today we imagined we were pilgrim children, cooking soup over the fire!It was our corn soup feast complete with butter we "churned" and enjoyed on cornbread muffins.

 My recipe for corn soup does not come with any exact measurements, I just make it to taste. The children help add the goodies to the crock pot, take turns stirring and feel like little chefs. We imagine we are pilgrim people, discussing as we cook the fact that pilgrim children had many chores that included cooking and churning butter and talk about what they may have really eaten on a daily basis. Every child contributed something for our mini-feast. 

Here's what I use in the corn soup:

chicken broth
canned corn
long grain wild rice
fresh spinach leaves
browned sirloin
onion
salt and pepper

It's so easy and smells so good!




To churn butter you need a few large baby food jars. Pour heavy whipping cream in and add some salt. Place it in a baggie (in case it does leak) and pass it around. The kids take turns shaking the jar until it solidifies. I check on it occasionally. Each jar usually makes its way around the room once before it is ready.




We are going to spread our butter on the corn bread muffins! 






Surprisingly, the kids devour the soup and usually are begging for seconds~ spinach and all! That's a butter mustache!

While my little pilgrim children feasted, partners performed the Thanksgiving Poems they had been working on. The students were excited to use the microphone!




I just finished a new poetry unit I plan to start when December rolls around. Once again, I am going to make the most of the children's excitement for the holiday and work in some great fluency practice with our poetry binders.  Click on the first picture to see it at my shop!





Wishing all of you lots of fun with family and friends this Thanksgiving and a restful break from school! 

Here's a yummy recipe that you can quickly throw together! It's great as a side or additional dessert for those that don't care for pumpkin pie. It's my mom's famous grape salad! It's a big hit at any party!




3 pounds of assorted grapes (you could use any fruit combo)
8 oz. cream cheese softened
1 container of sour cream
1/2 cup sugar
1/2 cup chopped walnuts (it's yummy without nuts too)
1 cup brown sugar

blend cream cheese, sour cream and 1/2 cup of sugar
fold in grapes
spread in 9x13 dish
combine walnuts and brown sugar
sprinkle over grape mixture
serve or refrigerate
Enjoy!


Turkeys and Projects 101 for Little Ones

Our turkeys are finished and hung from the ceiling clips! Here's the reveal! 


Next year, I think I might use a variety of patterns in scrapbook paper for the feathers. Polka dots, stripes, plaids...all in fall colors!

I'm sure we've all had those students who glue things upside down and backward, or cut too far inside the lines. It can be disappointing and frustrating when so much work is done to prepare a cute project! Maybe you can get a few pointers here to help a student teacher or a messy project maker!

My high school cadet talked the students through this craft as her first "lesson". These are the pointers I gave her. This is common sense to most experienced teachers but not to someone who is just starting out! We decided for her first project to do this whole-group.

Projects 101 for Little Ones

Prep what you can in advance and organize pieces into piles or prebag pieces as a kit. Demonstrate and always have an example so the students have a point of reference. Bigger is better! Love the Smartboard for this!


Review gluing and cutting techniques every time. Chant~ JUST A DOT, NOT A LOT! Too much glue can ruin an otherwise perfect project! Where there is a choice, glue sticks win!

DELEGATE responsibilities like passing out pieces (YOU GET WHAT YOU GET AND YOU DON'T THROW A FIT) and collecting scraps to students or parent helpers so the teacher can attend to the class! You can also have students form an assembly line at a station to pick up the pieces.


Give directions one piece at a time and glue together in small steps. For multiple things to glue~PLAN IT OUT, then check before allowing students to proceed with glue.


HANDS ON HEAD for the next direction! That way the students are focused, not fiddling. Here's one little guy modeling our signal. ROUND THINGS ROLL so stand up the glue stick!



Notice the SCRAP BALL on the corner of the desk. We wait until finished to recycle all scraps at once. This keeps pieces from falling on the floor and getting lost in a big pile. I am trying to teach the students to keep their work area organized. This also helps to keep traffic to a minimum.


SLOW and SMOOTH is the phrase I use in my turtle voice, as a reminder when cutting. Some are so excited, that they speed through and end up with jagged pieces that are too small. I do not make a habit of handing out extras for oopsies instead, I encourage good listening and following directions, so that mistakes can be avoided. That's real life! You don't always get a redo!



DIRTY SIDE DOWN is the next rule before gluing. Most of these patterns have a black line from the copy machine.


NAME ON THE BACK SO YOU GET IT BACK! Always the last step when making a project. It's easier for the students to know what the back is when the project is finished! 

Love your project and know you did your best!


Flash Freebie Font!


I doodled on my iPad making a new font. I like this one because it is an easy to read, light font that will be great for my classroom newsletters and for worksheets.

Hope you like it!





Memory Lane, My Hey Girl and an Update

I just took a little stroll through memory lane as I browsed through some old posts at my First Grade Gallery blog about Thanksgiving. I sure did have lots of fun with my firsties last year! You might enjoy reading some of them and seeing pictures of our Native American Shields and our Thanksgiving feast and play! 

I'm not sure what it is~ Common Core overload, a new grade level, having a student teacher or a combo of all of the above, but it just seems that we have not done as much of the creative stuff yet this year. Are you feeling it too? 

Last year, I created this Smartboard Holidays Around the World file for my little firsties. Kids have a hard time grasping what it is like in other parts of the world, so with this activity, I have taken them on a virtual tour with a series of video and website links. I even learned some new and interesting things!

 I just updated it for use this year and added some new cute! You can see it at my shop. If you already purchased it, be sure to grab the update!


We have started our unit on life long ago and are reading some nonfiction texts from our leveled library about Pilgrims. These have been perfect for nonfiction text features and the kids are really getting into it!


We are also reading Little House in the Big Woods. Talk about memories! I think that was my favorite book in second grade! I used to love Little House on the Prairie on TV too!  Am I dating myself by saying that? I had a big crush on Pa! :) 



I think I'll write a Hey Girl on this photo! Maybe you've seen some of my Pins... How does this sound?

Hey Girl, I noticed how well you implemented the Common Core while integrating a social studies lesson and nonfiction text features. 
Way to go, half-pint! :)

Especially around Thanksgiving time, it's good to remember how hard life must of been for people long ago. It makes you appreciate and be grateful for the little things! 

Turkey Maps, Science Stations and Giveaway Winners

Teachers wear many hats these days. I am currently the school improvement co-chair in the area of writing. One strategy we are using  is graphic organizers for prewriting. A while back I attended training on Thinking Maps which was wonderful. What I like about the maps is they can be used in all content areas. The down side is that they need some "cute". I've been making my own organizers of all kinds in various themes for this purpose. Here is a set to be used with our unit on life long ago and Thanksgiving. Click on the picture to see them at my shop!




There are lots of them in the pack so it will take us through the rest of the month and get us through until Thanksgiving break!

I use some organizers as a whole group mini-lesson on the document cam following an informational text read aloud. Some are brainstorming sheets for various How-To writing pieces, some are great for word work during Daily 5 and others get the kids sequencing and comparing and contrasting with a high interest topic. I take full advantage of the excitement for the holidays with my little ones! I hope you will find something like this useful in your classroom too!

On another note~

My student teacher did her first hands-on science station rotation with the class today. She was nervous as to how it would go. It was fantastic! We discussed every possible problem that might occur with management ahead of time and ways to be proactive to be sure everything ran smoothly. I just love that kind of thing and wish there was more time in our day for investigations. My first job in our district was an elementary science specialist. Some days I really miss it! I loved how the children worked together, solved problems and had meaningful discussions like little scientists!

Some things that helped the activity go well were well thought out groups, spreading the stations far apart, clear expectations for turn taking and assigning one child to be the recorder for the group rather than everyone dragging materials around the room. Later all of the data was shared by the recorder and the students wrote it on their own recording sheet. A hand towel at the sink and float table was a great idea too!

Here are a few pics of our stations for properties of matter:




We chose just four simple items to have at each station and had the children record their data in the chart. We described properties like color, shape, size, mass, hardness, texture and the favorite of the class-whether it sinks or floats!

Here's what her chart looked like:


Today I was a proud mentor! 

Thanks for staying with me for all of this and thanks to everyone who played along in the 100 followers giveaway! I'm so THANKFUL to have all of you in my corner through this adventure of blogging in my ever so busy world! Your comments and all you have shared keep me energized! The winners are~

#166 Tanja
#583 Andrea
#520 Leea

Congratulations! Your gift certificates are on their way! Have fun spending them! :)







Thankful for Smartboard!

Last year, my first graders absolutely loved anything thematic on the Smartboard! I just gave my Thanksgiving activity a makeover using all new Thistle Girl graphics which I adore. I love my Smartboard, but it takes patience to create in Smart Notebook!It's tedious clicking, cutting and locking and cloning and centering... Those of you that have started creating in Smart Notebook, know what I mean!  I worked on this 25 page file for HOURS over the last few days but I am happy with the makeover so it's all worth it!   My favorite page is the turkey trot subtraction where the turkeys slide off the screen when touched!  I am THANKFUL that it's finally finished! One thing crossed of the TPT to-do list! You can click on the picture to see it at my shop!




My little firsties had a hard time reaching the board especially in the beginning of the year. I brought in a step stool for them. I also have a variety of long sparkle wands and finger pointers for the kiddos to use. For easy to reach areas, a tennis ball is the best tool of all! It keeps dirty fingers off the board and objects slide around easily! Then, when you like, you can put the tennis ball in the wash! Genius! I no longer allow fingers on the board. When the board does get dirty, use blue Windex and a microfiber cloth to clean it.

Here's a great link for Smartboard lessons for anything you may ever want! This site is amazing!
http://staffweb.srk12.org/sears_l/smartboard_resources.htm

Too much computer time tonight. Seeing double here! Have a happy Monday. Hope it will be the start of another great week! My student teacher assumes full responsibility this week. It's so hard to let go. I'm going to get into some unit planning projects for the team and just try not to miss being with my kiddies too much!







Another Fun Freebie Font!

Happy Saturday! Hope you've got some fun planned for this weekend. 
I made another font to share. Hope you like it! Click on the picture to download it at my TPT store~it's a freebie!


Yes, I am always in a rush! :) Gotta get back to the 25 things on my weekend to-do list! One extra hour will be very nice! Have a super day!

Thanksgiving Poems

Happy November Everyone!

I've been working on a new pack of Thanksgiving poems for my kiddos to begin working on. Last year, at our Thanksgiving feast, we performed some of these and they were a huge hit with the parents! Some poems are easy, while some are more challenging for your top readers. My favorites are the poems by Jack Prelutsky. I found the cutest black and white graphics to use on these. I am thankful for line art! :) My class just loves to color their poems! Click on the first picture to see it at my shop!




There are lots of poems in this pack so I figured I'd better start working on them next week. The way time has flown by in October, Turkey Day will be here before we know it! 

Counting down the days until I announce the giveaway winners! Hope you are one of the lucky three!





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