From Dinosaurs to the Stop Game

Today was one of those ‘moments’ in teaching, the ones that turn something small into something big.  It was a simple question, yet it opened a whole new world for children.

It happened like this…

Every day we have the ‘Question of the Day’ posted for children when they arrive in the classroom.  The question is written on the easel, and there are two trays alongside- one for ‘yes’ and one for ‘no’.  Children find their name on a big craft stick and place it on the ‘yes’ or the ‘no’ tray.  Today’s question was, “Do dinosaurs still live?”

After snack we tally the votes.  This is terrific, because children watch as we mark the tally votes- four lines and a cross line.  That’s five.  They’re now able to recognize five without counting the lines.  That’s subitizing.

We tallied the votes, 10 ‘no’ and 4 ‘yes’.  That prompted a discussion, and we asked ‘Alexa’ if dinosaurs still lived.  She told us they were extinct.  A child asked, “What is extinct?”

Ah, the magic question that can open doors into many wonders.

I paused, because I know children learn by hands-on; they need to see, feel, and touch.  Instead of Googling ‘extinct’ or asking ‘Alexa’, I did something far better.  I pulled out the dictionary.


It’s large, it’s heavy.  This was exciting.  The first thing we did was look at the end pages.  There were red marks all along.  Once we opened the dictionary we learned the red marks were the alphabet.  The dictionary is in alphabetical order!  This was big news, and we spent time going through the pages, following the alphabet.

This is better than the latest and greatest video game.  It is ‘real’.  And we had just started.

We slowly went through the pages to find ‘E’.  We found extinct.  Yes, it means they are no longer living.  Children wanted to see more and ask questions.  Of course they did!  This dictionary had some pictures, so that made it even more exciting.  I gave each child an opportunity to tell us a word, and we could look it up.  This was not easy, instead they wanted to discover words.

Discover words.  Yes!  

We played ‘The Stop Game’.  I fan the pages of the dictionary until the children yell “Stop!”  Then we open that page and discover the wonder of the words.  This was so much fun!  Yelling “Stop” and uncovering something new is very exciting.  It’s learning on steroids.

We stopped at L and learned about a lighthouse.  We stopped at U and learned about underwater vehicles.  Then we stopped at M, and there was Mount Rushmore.  Children remember this from our Big Book Atlas.  Recently two children in our class visited Washington DC and saw statues of presidents, the same ones on Mount Rushmore.  When I asked children if they knew the image of Mount Rushmore, they did… but nobody recalled the name.  Finally one of the youngest children enthusiastically said, “Washington!”

Bravo!  He made the connection.  That’s learning.  Today children felt the same excitement and discovery of going to Disney – and it was all in a dictionary.

Jennie

Posted in Early Education, Inspiration, Learning About the World, School, Teaching young children | Tagged , , , , , | 86 Comments

Motherhood through the ages

bluebird of bitterness's avatarbluebird of bitterness

Jonah’s mother: “That’s a nice story. Now tell me where you’ve really been for the last three days.”

Mrs. Columbus: “I don’t care what you discovered — you still could have written!”

Mrs. Angelo: “Michael, why can’t you paint on walls, like other children? Do you have any idea how hard it is to get that stuff off the ceiling?”

Mona Lisa’s mother: “After all the money your father and I spent on braces, that’s the biggest smile you can give us?”

Mrs. Bonaparte: “All right, if you aren’t hiding your report card inside your jacket, take your hand out of there and show me.”

Mrs. Revere: “I don’t care where you think you have to go, young man. Midnight is past your curfew!”

Mrs. Washington: “The next time I catch you throwing money across the Potomac, you can kiss your allowance goodbye!”

Mrs. Lincoln: “Again with the stovepipe hat?…

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Mother’s Day

Look what bloomed just in time for Mother’s Day.

A mother’s love is the sun for growing, the moon for dreaming, and the stars for guiding the way. ~ Barbara Loots~

Happy Mother’s Day.

Jennie

Posted in Expressing words and feelings, Giving thanks, Inspiration, Love, Nature, Quotes, wonder | Tagged , | 47 Comments

Pen-Pal Cards Arrived!

Our new Pen-Pals in Michigan
720 miles and 12 hours away
sent us cards.
They arrived today!

Included was a wonderful letter to the Aqua Roomers.
We learned they are the MAC class – Multi Age Class (very cool.)
There were Eric Carle cut-outs for children.
We are VERY excited, and making a Pen-Pal wall.

There’s more to this…. writing cards and letters is becoming a thing of the past.  While technology is taking that over, children are still the same as they have always been, generation after generation.  They need hands-on, from touching and exploring everything in nature, to writing and drawing for new friends.  Hands-on experiences are the most meaningful for children.  Learning ‘clicks’ and the heart swells.  Win-Win.

Thank you, Beth@I didn’t have my glasses on….
You understand.  You ‘get it’, and I’m so glad our students have connected.

Jennie

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Today’s Quote

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A Visit to The Eric Carle Museum

Just when I thought I might not discover something new, my recent visit to the Eric Carle Museum proved me very wrong.  Everything I experienced and saw was very new.  Lucky me!

The main event was the museum’s annual Barbara Ellerman Research Library (BERL) lecture.  This year’s presenter was Wendell Minor.  This is what is said about Minor:

“With roots in the images of the American Midwest and in classic American book illustration created by N.C. Wyeth, Winslow Homer and Edward Hopper, Minor has brought the art of twentieth-century illustrators into the twenty-first century.”
~Anita Silvey, author and editor~

Wow!  I was excited!

Minor has illustrated over two thousand book jackets of many famous authors, including David McCullough, James Michener, Harper Lee, and Mary Higgins Clark.  I knew these books and their jackets.  I hadn’t realized he was such a prolific artist.  Do you recognize these award winning books:

His fifty-year career includes illustrating many children’s books.  He has a strong love for nature and a reverence for the natural world- just what young children need to see in his illustrations.  I discovered a jewel!

My preschool class absolutely loves the book.  Did you know that the ruby-throated hummingbird migrates to Mexico every year?  I did not know that.  The trip is dangerous, many hummingbirds do not survive.  Children understood.

Children were on the edge of their seat throughout the book.  We learned hummingbird facts and we pulled out our Big Book Atlas to trace the long journey.

Minor brilliantly illustrated “America the Beautiful.”  Yes, I had to have this book, too.  I sang it to the children, and stopped at every glorious illustration on each page to truly see America, through the eyes of a visionary artist.

Children were excited to see this illustration,
as we’re reading “Little House on the Prairie.”

With my two treasured books in hand, and my mind full of what I had learned at the lecture, I toured the current exhibits.  Ed Emberley was featured!  My children loved his books growing up.  Many of his illustrations were done from woodcuts.  It was fascinating to see the original woodcut and the print itself.  The one of Paul Bunyan was life size!  Do you recognize these illustrations from “Green Says Go?”

Another exhibit was the modern art of Nura Woodson Ulreich, a woman far ahead of her time.  Her children’s picture books were mostly from the 40’s and early 50’s, and the illustrations are stunning.  I can’t put my finger on it, but there is something very familiar here from my childhood:

Of course no visit would be complete without seeing Eric Carle’s art.  His collection on display at the museum often has a theme, so every visit has something new and exciting.  At the very end, this is what I saw:

Another of Eric Carle’s many stars.  This one made me stop and look for a long time.  Yes, I had a lump in my throat.  People need art the way they need sunshine and food.  Art fills the heart.  Mine was full.

There is always something new at The Carle!

Jennie

P.S. Their bookshop has the best of the best books, new and old. It is far better than B&N.  I have always found high quality books.  The museum also has a full library.  By the desk, right inside the doorway, is a collection of the newest books.  They also have the full collection of every Caldecott award winning book.  In 2018 they were all displayed on a timeline, and I videoed the books:

I bet you recognize some of these books!  I still read many of these books to children.  Once a good book, always a good book.

I would be remiss if I didn’t give a big shout out to the museum’s art studio.  Children can drop in with their parents and create art.  Yes!  It’s a full studio packed with materials and inspirational ideas.  It’s very popular.  I am always inspired.

Posted in America, art, Author interview, Book Review, children's books, Early Education, Eric Carle, geography, Inspiration, Learning About the World, museums, Nature, patriotism, picture books, reading aloud, Teaching young children, wonder | Tagged , , , , | 75 Comments

A Picture Says a Thousand Words

A child in my class is greeting George Washington.
Yes, a picture says a thousand words.

Jennie

Posted in America, Early Education, history, Inspiration, patriotism, wonder, young children | Tagged , , | 47 Comments

Stop and Smell the Roses, Jennie

This past week  was very busy.  It was school vacation week, so we we rolled up our sleeves to start on yard work.  Spring arrives late in New England.  Of course we had a delightful day driving to a lovely old town in New Hampshire, and I had a wonderful day at the Eric Carle Museum (blog post coming).  I finally stopped to look around.  Finally.  Mother nature gives us art every day.  Some of that art is short lived.

These beauties won’t be here long.  Thank goodness I stopped to look and smell the roses.  Life is short.  Look around and see the beauty.

Jennie

Posted in Expressing words and feelings, Mother Nature, Nature, wonder | Tagged , , | 59 Comments

Daily Quip

quiall's avatarButterfly Sand

Any investment in our children is a victory for the future.

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Children Around the World – Sending Cards

In April we celebrate Children Around the World.
We started with our Big Book Atlas.
Then we studied the world, talking about children everywhere.
Look at our arms – we are all different, yet much the same.

We made cards to send to children like us.
Oh, we made many, many cards.
And, children still wanted to make more.
Decorating the outside of the card was fun!
Knowing these cards were going to children around the world
made their artwork on the outside of the cards special.

Children wrote words.  They started with
“HELLO FROM (NAME)”
They wanted to write more words.
Next they wrote,
“HELLO FROM GROTON MASSACHUSETTS”
Writing Massachusetts is really hard to do!
Some children wanted to write even more,
adding their own “I LOVE YOU.”

Why is this important?
Making a card to send to someone is
all hands-on, creative, no technology needed,
and most importantly it spreads a heartfelt message.

We mailed our cards to Ritu’s preschool class
in the United Kingdom
But I Smile Anyway…
and to Beth’s Pre-K class in Michigan
I didn’t have my glasses on….

Am I bringing back writing cards and letters
and connecting people the way they should be connected?
You bet I am!

Jennie

Posted in art, Early Education, Expressing words and feelings, Family, geography, Inspiration, Learning About the World, preschool, Teaching young children | Tagged , | 90 Comments