Showing posts with label #educational freebies. Show all posts
Showing posts with label #educational freebies. Show all posts

Monday, December 23, 2013

Days 8, 9, 10, 11, and 12 -- Whew, Who Knew This Would Be So Hard?

Wow, who knew blogging every day for 12 days straight would be such a challenge?  I thought "Piece of cake.  I can do this.  Whip out a little post.  Add a picture or two.  Easy."  But after a while, all the posts started sounding the same, and I got bored with it myself, so I could only imagine what you all were thinking. Something along the lines of, "Yeah, not reading that post."

So, in the interest of my sanity (as I STILL have shopping and wrapping to do) and your interest level, I'm calling Uncle on my daily posts (as my blogging buddy, Chalk One Up for the Teacher did a few days ago) and posting my last five 50% off items now.  They will stay up until the sometime after Christmas.  I would love to say until X time on X date, but I just don't work that way.  When I get to it, sometime after Christmas, they will go back to full price.

My day 8 item, which I never blogged about, is my Spanish bundle.

Great deal @ 50% off = $3.25

Next up is my day 9 item is January Roll and Cover Games with Mike the Moose.  
50% = $1.50
Mike the Moose really has nothing to do with these games, other than being the clipart I used.  I just liked the way "Mike the Moose" sounded. What's the plus, you might be asking?  Well, these games are differentiated for addition and subtraction to 10 and to 18, and also for 10 more and 10 less.  But that's not the plus.  The plus is that after the items have been rolled and colored, the kids have to write a number sentence to match the number on the item!  Brilliant, right?  Click on the picture below and you can download a free sample of the game to see what I mean.
Look at that face.  I had to work Mike the Moose into the title.

Okay, day 10 item is next.
@50% off = $2.35
This resource includes a lesson plan for introducing transitional words and graphic organizers for pre-writing.  It also includes the personal word wall booklet "How Do I Spell?" for students to keep at their desk for easy reference.  After introducing and practicing using transitional words in whole group writing, there are paragraph puzzles for the children to unscramble and glue down in sequential order to create a paragraph.

Day 11!
I know we're not even done with Advent yet, but you know how quickly the next church season sneaks up on us!  Before you know it, Mardi Gras and then the beginning of Lent will be here.  
Use this to help your children understand that Lent is more than "giving up candy."  Why do we make sacrifices during Lent?  Is these anything else we can do during Lent to get closer to Jesus?  Use this resource to explore the answers to these questions.

And finally Day 12!
Free!  If you stuck with this post this long, you deserve a reward!

You can find any of these items by clicking on the cover of the item.

Wishing you and your families the love, joy, peace, and happiness of this holiday season.  Let go of the stress and focus on the miracles!



Thursday, December 12, 2013

Randall Reindeer Finally Shows Up!

Hello, friends!  Well, I have always sort of marched to my own little drummer -- at least that is what my parents always said.  "Oh, you know Lesley.  She marches to her own little drummer."  I never really thought that was true.

But when it comes to that elf that appears every year around this time, well, yeah, I'm not marching to that drumbeat.  Not that I hold it against anyone who does.  I love the idea.  I think it's adorable and cute and gives the kids something fun to remember years from now.  My daughter still talks about all the classroom elves she's had over the years.  (4th grade now = no elf on the classroom shelf this year)  And I do want my kids to have fond memories of first grade.  But I was not giving in to the crass commercialism of the elf at 25 bucks for the kit.  'Cause I'm sort of cheap like that.

Enter a trip to World of Values last year.  As I  nosed through the store, stocking up on clothespins, googly eyes, and red pompoms to make reindeer, (you can revisit that post by clicking {here}), I wandered into the book aisle, and there I saw, in all its only $6.00 glory, Randall the Reindeer.
Oh, yeah!  Now we're talkin'!  I snapped up that little guy right quick, and he's been a classroom Christmas tradition since. (If doing it one year makes it a tradition?)  This was perfect.  Same basic concept as the elf, but none of the competition.

No, well my elf did this at home.  Or my elf did that at home.  Randall is a whole, unique ball game with no comparison, so whatever I choose to do with him in the classroom is original and fun!

He arrives around mid-December (when I dig out the December box) and stays until the last day before Christmas break.  He arrives in the classroom with a gift for the class.
This year he brought Charades for Kids.

From now until break, he will leave a naughty or nice behavior report for each child at least once.  Randall is very observant, and his reports will be specific, like, "You moved over on the riser yesterday so Lucas would have room for his feet." If he leaves a nice report, he also leaves a candy cane for the child. If he leaves a naughty report, no candy cane. So far, he has not had to leave a naughty report, but you never know...

He doesn't get up to the same mischief as the elf does.  His job is to hide where no one can find him so he can send a report back to Santa about each child's behavior.  He starts off with easy hiding places, but it will get progressively harder for the kids to find him.  When I left school today, he was hiding behind the schedule cards with just his eye peeking out.
He might get up to some mischief over the weekend.  It is pretty boring sitting alone in the classroom over the weekend.  Or maybe he'll bake us up some cookies.  Healthy ones, of course.  Or who knows. 

This year, he will bring my kiddos this Randall Report Journal where they can journal about where they found him and who got a behavior report and what they would like to see Randall do in the classroom.  You can click on the picture below to download your own Randall Report Journal -- yes, I even made a cover for all of you who have an elf.  


 Do you have any ideas for Randall?  Leave a comment below and let me know what Randall should get up to in the next 6 days.

 
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