Here, There and Everywhere!
This was a full week--- making up activities from a missed snow day last Thursday, studying our breathing and lung power, working on our auction project, celebrating Dr. Seuss's birthday by wearing our pajamas and making scrambled eggs... Can you believe that we did even more than that?
Take a peek into our week!
Afterward, we formed our conclusions, then took a big breath and talked again about how our lungs work: What things are similar between the balloon and our lungs (they inflate with invisible gas), and how are they different? (lungs don't need vinegar and baking soda to do their job! , they send the oxygen to all parts of our bodies.) We have also talked about keeping our lungs healthy for our whole lives long through making healthy choices for our bodies.
One member of our class went to the doctor this week and explained the respiratory system using the terminology we have been using: trachea, bronchi, lungs, finishing with "and the alveoli pass the oxygen to the blood, and the blood takes the oxygen to all the cells everywhere in your body!" The entire medical staff was astonished...
and so pleased!
and so pleased!
The development of mathematical thinking is ongoing throughout the classroom. Inspired by the mazes we have been doing, a collaboration began among several children to develop a maze for the small wooden cars to go through...
Sweet and stable success!
The abacus makes it so much easier to keep track of tens and count to high numbers!
Translucent, colorful geometric shapes are enhanced at the light table. We love combining them to make new and different shapes, as well as creating designs, patterns and pictures.
We are learning to dial the telephone... What is your phone number?
Pressing the numeral buttons in order, and the seeming randomness of every phone number, makes the task even more challenging!





Pressing the numeral buttons in order, and the seeming randomness of every phone number, makes the task even more challenging!
Studies show that musical training increases a child's mathematical reasoning skills... What a fun way to "feel" the math!
We worked on our auction project, putting our beautiful handprints on the flattened lampshades of the three-tiered lamp. Thank you for your patient help, Nathan!






A friend began orally reading "Hop on Pop," and several classmates gathered around to listen and help with the rhyming!
We love to crack eggs, then beat them with an eggbeater or a wire whisk.
When asked why they thought that was, the children discussed what might be happening. Several recalled the experiment earlier in the week. "It's the air making the bubbles..." someone exclaimed. Another child added, "The one [eggbeater] that you turn makes more air go into the eggs." A third child confidently chimed in, "And more air makes more bubbles!" Wow, we were impressed by this spiraling transfer of discovery and knowledge from one experiment to another!
We'll link this sensory discovery to math by making "Color Equations."
Red + Blue = Purple
Blue + Yellow = Green
Yellow + Red = Orange
We wore our pajamas to school for Dr. Seuss's birthday.
We made scrambled eggs... We know that Step #1 is ALWAYS washing our hands...
(and we do love bubbles!)
Each child used both the whisk and the eggbeater, trading places at the table. Several children observed that the eggs were "more bubbly" when they used the eggbeater.
1 comment:
Every child should have these experiences! The process of play!
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