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notes for mom (or dad)
lunchbox love notes

Notes For Mom Or Dad – Because We All Need Them

by Teach Mama November 7, 2012
written by Teach Mama

Ever have one of those days when you need a serious pat on the back? A hug? A gold star?

Ever wish that at the end of the day that you’d get a high-five from anyone for being a half-decent parent?

notes for mom (or dad) -- because we ALL need them

Ever feel like you climbed Mt. Everest because you didn’t want to yell scream or cry when the third bowl of cereal tumbled to the ground before 9am?

Ever feel like a superstar because you singlehandedly squelched a tantrum before it began because YES!! you justsohappened to have an extra pacifier in  your diaper bag, pack of stickers in your purse, or a granola bar in the glove compartment?

Ever just need someone–anyone–to tell you ‘thanks’?

Me too.

So this round of lunchbox love notes aren’t for the lunchboxes.

They’re for the dashboard, the stroller, the bathroom mirror.  Wherever we need ’em.

Here’s the skinny. . .

Notes for Mom (or Dad)–Because We ALL Need ‘Em:

notes for mom (or dad)

Dashboard’s dirty and dusty; note is barely hanging on–but I’ll take it.

And because it’s time.

I’ve kept a ‘Good Job’ note from waaaaay back when on the dashboard of my van for years.  Years.

And before that, a cheap-o doctor’s office sticker stayed on the inside compartment of my double stroller and reminded me ‘You Can Do It!”– whether I was pregnant and hoofin’ it up a hill or trying to keep my tired self sane and smiling.

 

notes for mom (or dad)

Because some days, I need a reminder.

notes for mom (or dad)

I love this girl–Maddy’s best, most beautiful girl–on this note. Because we both got it.

Some days, we need help.  And some days, we need reminders that we’re doing our best, even if our best feels small and insignificant and totally not what we wish it were.

And some days, it doesn’t matter if it’s a cheesy, ugly sticker. Or a ripped and torn post-it note.

Some days, we just need a lift.

So I whipped up some notes for mom (or dad–or anyone!) because we ALL need them.  I know I need them mostly every day of the year.

Throw your email in the box below, and the notes will magically end up in your inbox. YAY!

I’ve printed, cut, and hid these little notes around–some for the kids to see–and some just for me.  I think it’s good for Maddy, Owen, and Cora to see me struggling some days, to see me taking deep breaths to calm down or to talk myself down from a total freakout: You know what? I’m totally losing patience, so I’m heading upstairs for a 5 minute break. I’ll be back when I feel a little more relaxed.

I think it’s good for them to hear me giving myself a positive self-talk–not necessarily as clean or cheesy as our old Stuart Smalley from SNL but more like the subtle reminders that we are doing our best, that we rock, and that we can do this.  Sometimes, I just belt out, Mama said there’d be days like this–there’d be days like this–my mama said. . .

Though lately my struggles are moving from less physical—no more diaper changes, no more strollers or sweaty Baby Bjorns—they’re more emotional.  And sometimes it feels like the emotional stresses of child-rearing are more exhausting than I could have imagined.

notes for mom (or dad)

We all need a little push some days.  Or a smile. Or a nod. Or a reminder that this sometimes difficult and challenging time is fleeting. Or that breathing really helps.  Or that we are superstars and our kids love us even if we feel like there’s no way they could.

What do you do to remind yourself to breathe during difficult times, to stop and appreciate all that you have or that you really can make it through tough days? Let me know in the comments!

Check out a few other posts that may help you develop strong and healthy habits for your family:

  • wait time
  • my day, your day
  • frozen peas
  • kids who rock the kitchen
  • kids who rock the laundry
  • rest time
  • gem jars
  • arm circles
  • noticing kids
  • homework routine

 

fyi: Some of the links in the post above are “affiliate links.” This means if you click on the link and purchase the item, I will receive an affiliate commission. Forever and always I recommend only products or services I use personally and believe will add value to my readers. I am disclosing this in accordance with the Federal Trade Commission’s 16 CFR, Part 255: “Guides Concerning the Use of Endorsements and Testimonials in Advertising.”  For more information, please see teachmama media, llc. disclosure policy. 

Check out a few other posts that may help you develop strong and healthy habits for your family:

  • wait time
  • my day, your day
  • frozen peas
  • kids who rock the kitchen
  • kids who rock the laundry
  • rest time
  • gem jars
  • arm circles
  • noticing kids
  • homework routine

 

fyi: Some of the links in the post above are “affiliate links.” This means if you click on the link and purchase the item, I will receive an affiliate commission. Forever and always I recommend only products or services I use personally and believe will add value to my readers. I am disclosing this in accordance with the Federal Trade Commission’s 16 CFR, Part 255: “Guides Concerning the Use of Endorsements and Testimonials in Advertising.”  For more information, please see teachmama media, llc. disclosure policy. 

November 7, 2012 9 comments
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5 ways to use halloween candy cover
halloweenholidays

5 Cool Ways To Use Halloween Candy (Other Than Eat All It Immediately)

by Teach Mama November 4, 2012
written by Teach Mama

We all want to eat our kids’ Halloween candy.

At least I do.

But we can’t.

So here are 5 cool ways to use Halloween candy–other than eating it all immediately which is sometimes what I feel like doing.

And when we play with, sort, mash, soak, paint with, or save the Halloween candy, the whole world is more sunny.

Here’s the skinny. . .

5 Cool Ways to Use Halloween Candy (Other Than Eat It All Immediately):

 

5 cool ways to use halloween candy (other than eat all it immediately)

 

1. Make a Candy Countdown.  Put some egg cartons to use and let the kids choose their favorites so they can grab a dessert for their lunchbox or after dinner for a few days.

2.  Paint with it.  Seriously. It’s fun–and it’s a great way for your kids to take a look at how ink, coloring, and dyes are used in food.

3.  Perform some seriously cool science experiments on it.   It’s more exciting than you think–and it’s worth doing every single year. Guaranteed if you do, your kiddos will get something new from it each and every time.

5 cool ways to use halloween candy (other than eat all it immediately)

4. Save it for holiday cookies.  We always set aside a bunch of Halloween candy to use for our Fancy Pretzels, cookies, and gingerbread houses.

5.  Play some games with it.  Halloween candy is perfect for sneaky math games like sorting, counting, and more—who knew Halloween candy could provide so much learning fun?!  It really is okay to play with your food!

Don’t forget that it’s also cool to give it away–sell it back to your dentist if she runs a Buy-Back program like ours, send it overseas to our military, or give it to someone you think might really want–or need it.

These are just a few ways that we use our–I mean, the kids‘–Halloween candy for learning, fun, and for other great uses.   Three cheers for Halloween candy!

 

How about a few more?

  • Sneaky fun learning with halloween candy
  • candy experiments (part 1)
  • candy experiments (playing with color)
  • chocolate math
November 4, 2012 1 comment
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hidden pictures lunchbox notes
family lifelunchbox love notes

Hidden Pictures: Lunchbox Notes

by Teach Mama November 1, 2012
written by Teach Mama

Halloween is over, so our joke notes are pushed to the wayside.

Our wordless riddles are taking a break, and the troops are ready for someserious lunchtime fun before the holidays hit.

When I asked Maddy, Owen, and Cora what they were up for as far as their next lunchbox notes are concerned, I got a lot of:

  • games!
  • candy! (huh?)
  • some fun quizzes!
  • put a pencil in the bag!
  • hidden pictures!
  • YES! notes where we find hidden things!
  • oh YEAH! like in Highlights and High Five!

Lucky for us, I had just spent a great deal of time with my friends over at Highlights and High Five this month, so I got the ‘go-ahead’ to create just that–Hidden Pictures® Lunchbox Notes for my three favorite people in the whole wide world.

These lunchbox love notes totally rock the house.

They make me–and the kids–really, really happy.

Here’s the skinny . . .

  • Hidden Pictures– Lunchbox Notes: I think, for us, our Hidden Pictures® Lunchbox Notes takes the lunchtime love to a whole new level.

hidden pictures lunchbox notes

These lunchbox love notes stemmed from my kids’ love of . . . Hidden Pictures®!

These guys are simple but fun. And yes, I’m a sucker for a good ole lunchbox note, so maybe I’m a bit biased.

But I think taking something my kids enjoy and turning it into a little lunchtime hug is . . . well, satisfying.  Maybe it gives them a tiny bit of quiet time they have to themselves as they unpack their food.   Maybe it’s a conversation starter with a pal at the lunch table.

Maybe it’s ignored or thrown to the bottom of the bag.

hidden pictures lunchbox notes

From the magazine. . .

hidden pictures lunchbox notes

. . . to the lunchbox. Love it.

But I feel better just knowing it’s there.  Just in case Maddy, Owen, or Cora is having a tough day and they need a reminder that they’re loved and that their mama’s thinking about them.hidden pictures lunchbox notes

So Hidden Pictures® Lunchbox Notes it was–and is–for my kiddos for the next few weeks.

Love. Them.

And knowing that Cora’s working on mastering some tough Kindergarten sight words, I tried to use the same few phrases on each card:

  • Look for the . . .
  • Can you see the. . .
  • Find the. . .

Though she might not be able to read the words that identify the objects she needs to find, I did put the word in bold so that if she couldn’t read the word, she could at least search the picture for a hidden object and then go back to the word to try to figure it out.

And I also know that Owen’s in her lunch period and he usually sits across the aisle from her, so he can always read it if need be.  And knowing the two of them, he very well may read them to her every other day.

I created three pages of notes with 5-6 messages on each page.  Each note has a wee bit of space on the side so I could write a short little message.

Here’s the document if you care to download them for your own little ones’ lunchboxes:

hidden pictures: lunchbox notes for kids | teachmama.com


And that’s it–just a quick little note for lunchboxes–or any time.  Maybe they’d even work thrown in your purse or diaperbag for those unplanned waits in the car pickup line, doctor’s office, or grocery store checkout.

Either way, Happy hidden picture-hunting!

 

fyi: Huge and happy thanks to my friends at Highlights for permission to use pieces of their Hidden Pictures® puzzles in our lunchbox love notes.  These puzzles actually came from a Hidden Pictures® Magazine–the entire thing filled with the pictures we love! Take $5 Off a 1 Year Highlights for Children Subscription!

Save $5 on Highlights Magazine
If you want the real-deal Hidden Pictures® (which I’m sure you do!) be sure to visit the Highlights website, where you can grab your favorite kiddo a subscription to the Highlights Magazine, High Five Magazine, or any of their other fab, just-for-kids periodicals, including the Hidden Pictures® ones!

 

Want a look at all of our lunchbox looooove notes? Here they are:

  • Wordless Riddles lunchbox notes
  • Halloween Jokes lunchbox notes
  • Hidden Pictures lunchbox notes
  • Disney Fun Fact lunchbox notes
  • Fun Fact lunchbox notes
  • Budgie Fun Fact lunchbox notes
  • Happy, Happy Day lunchbox notes
  • Homemade lunchbox notes
  • Parent Notes for lunchbox or anywhere
  • Holiday Fun Fact lunchbox notes
  • More Holiday lunchbox notes
  • Valentine’s Day Knock-Knock joke lunchbox notes
  • St. Patty’s Day Joke lunchbox notes
  • Springtime lunchbox love notes
  • Super-Sweet lunchbox love notes

hidden pictures lunchbox notes

fyi: Some of the links in the post above are “affiliate links.” This means if you click on the link and purchase the item, I will receive an affiliate commission. Forever and always I recommend only products or services I use personally and believe will add value to my readers. I am disclosing this in accordance with the Federal Trade Commission’s 16 CFR, Part 255: “Guides Concerning the Use of Endorsements and Testimonials in Advertising.”  For more information, please see teachmama media, llc. disclosure policy. 

November 1, 2012 16 comments
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morning evening schedule 2 cover
organizationparenting

Morning and Evening Reminders For Kids: Easy Reader Style

by Teach Mama October 3, 2012
written by Teach Mama

Every day is a little bit different in our house—and everyone’s house.

But deep down, we all thrive on consistency, on patterns, on schedules.

I’ve always been a big fan of implementing a daily schedule for kids, even when parents are home and kids arent yet in school, incorporating some sort of routine is good for the soul.

When Maddy, Owen, and Cora were younger—actually up through this past summer, even, we scheduled a necessary ‘rest time’ into our day.  More for Cora, who at 5 years old still needed 30 minutes or an hour to herself, our rest time after swim practice and lunch (but before we headed back out to play) was an eagerly anticipated part of our day.

For kids and mom.

But during the school year, our mornings and evenings need some sort of schedule.  Otherwise, I sound like a broken record and the kids start seriously tuning me out.

And because I have two readers and one emerging reader, I decided to create a little reminders for my kids–easy-reader style so that everyone can decode on their own.

Here’s the skinny. . .

  • Morning and Evening Reminders for Kids– Easy-Reader Style: They’re easy-reader style only because they have words and a related image alongside, not because they include only easy-reader words.

These are simply ‘Good Morning!’ and ‘Good Evening’ signs that the kids flip back and forth to remind them of what they need to do each morning and night.

morning and evening reminders for kids: easy reader style

Morning reminders. . .

morning and evening reminders for kids: easy reader style

. . . and Evening Reminders help teach my kiddos what they need to do at the beginning and end of the day.

I’m trying my best to give them more freedom–more independence and autonomy over their days–and I think that this gives them what they need to do and allows them the wiggle room to do it on their own.

Do we have a little incentive to get them through this list? Absolutely. If they do all of these things without me having to remind them for a few days in a row, it’s a gem in the Gem Jar.   If they need constant reminding, we’ll take one out.

Simple as that.

Want to download the Morning and Evening Reminders for Kids for your own hizzouse? 

Here it is: teachmama morning evening questions 2.0

(If you choose to share it–and we hope you do!–please link to this post instead of the attachment page! Thank you!)

morning and evening reminders for kids | teachmama.com

 

morning and evening reminders for kids | teachmama.com

teachmama morning evening questions 2.0

And that’s it–just a quickie little trick to throw in your back pocket–and to (hopefully!) save your voice from yelling and prodding and gently reminding. . .

Any other suggestions? Please let me know what works–or has worked–for you! I’m always willing to learn how to make this crazy parenting gig a little more softer for my old bones!

October 3, 2012 8 comments
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play the recorder
fine arts

How To Play ‘Mary Had A Little Lamb’ On The Recorder (Or Try To, At Least)

by Teach Mama September 25, 2012
written by Teach Mama

We tried.

Maybe a bit too hard–or maybe not hard enough–depending on how you look at it.

But we have been rockin’ the ole recorder over here for a few weeks, trying our darndest to be musical and to catch a wee tune.

When the kids play, I mean really play, they sound good.

To themselves.

And I remember that feeling quite vividly: being young and wishful and banging out what I though was a serious masterpiece as I tickled the ivories on our piano at home. To me, it sounded like a work of art, like the angels had taken over my hands and that I was sharing my gift with the world–or at least my family.

And neighbors.

But now, as a parent and watching my 0wn three littles do the very same thing, I can only wonder how my mom managed to hold onto her sanity with four girls pounding those keys like there was no tomorrow, playing Heart and Soul, Chopsticks, and our own creations.

So when I was just about ready to throw in the white flag, I decided to switch things around a bit.

Here’s the skinny. . .

How to Play “Mary Had a Little Lamb” on the Recorder (or try to, at least. . . ):

Instead of fighting the kids’ urges to play their own little diddy every other minute, I gave them a little bit of a focus.

Don’t get me wrong–they did a whole lot of free play, solo creative music writing, walking around the house and yard and bedroom playing their songs for hours on end.

But when I felt like I needed to rein in the talent, I did some research, pulled together my own (pathetic) recorder-playing abilities, and jumped on the opportunity to sneak in a little learning into my kiddos’ little recorder-playing careers.   I thought it would be helpful for the kids to learn a familiar song on the instrument, so we started with teaching them how to play Mary Had a Little Lamb on the recorder.

It wasn’t easy, and we’re still trying.

I shared the total how-to’s over at the Melissa & Doug blog, on the Rockin’ Out With the Recorder piece. Please check it out for a close-up on the notes and a little bit more about why the recorder is a darn good stepping stone instrument for kids.

Here’s a close look at our rendition of the actual song, Mary Had a Little Lamb, for the recorder:

playing the recorder

 

Bring on the music! Here are some of our favorite ways to bring music into our home:

Check out a few other posts that may help you develop strong and healthy habits for your family:

  • wait time
  • my day, your day
  • frozen peas
  • kids who rock the kitchen
  • kids who rock the laundry
  • rest time
  • gem jars
  • arm circles
  • noticing kids
  • homework routine

 

fyi: Some of the links in the post above are “affiliate links.” This means if you click on the link and purchase the item, I will receive an affiliate commission. Forever and always I recommend only products or services I use personally and believe will add value to my readers. I am disclosing this in accordance with the Federal Trade Commission’s 16 CFR, Part 255: “Guides Concerning the Use of Endorsements and Testimonials in Advertising.”  For more information, please see teachmama media, llc. disclosure policy. 

September 25, 2012 2 comments
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special kindergarten lunchbox love note
family lifeschool

Our Super-special Kindergarten Lunchbox Love Notes

by Teach Mama August 27, 2012
written by Teach Mama

One of my first, most distinct happy, happy memories was when I was six years old.

I was eating my very first lunch out of my very first lunchbox, in my first-ever time in the cafeteria, on my very first day of first grade.

And I don’t remember much from that lunch aside from the fact that the most beautiful, most amazing, most fancy and  most special hair comb that I had ever seen in my life was in my very own lunchbox. 

I remember feeling nervous and excited and worried.  I pulled it out of my lunchbox.  The comb was a translucent pink, and hanging from it were three or four incredibly delicate, soft, small feathers.  And there were beads–white and pink beads.  They all hung from a pinkish leather string, all attached to the comb.

I loved it.

I remember reading the simple card from my mom–I think it was an index card–that said something simple, nothing that I remember verbatim but something that conveyed to me that my mom was thinking of me–and that she loved me very much.

I’ll never forget it.

I had the comb for years and years and years and years and every time I saw it, I thought of that day–that day when I felt so grown up and proud, yet so small and sad, at the same time.

Perhaps that’s why I’m all lunchbox-note crazy, but I just know for a fact that the way that note and that very simple gift made me feel I wanted to share with others–especially my own little loves.

Here’s the skinny. . .

  • Our Super-Special Kindergarten Lunchbox Love Notes: So yes, I’ve always done my best to send Maddy, Owen, and Cora off to school with some sort of lunchbox love note, but when each of the kids headed off to the wild world of Kindergarten, I sent them with a little something extra special.

 

kindergarten love note necklace

For Maddy, it was a fancy ribbon barrette.  

I’m sure I was thinking of the one my mom gave me.

For Owen, it was a small license plate with his name on it.

He loves seeing his name on things.

For Cora, it was a simple necklace on a long pink chain.  She isn’t always up for things in her hair–but jewelry?  She’ll take it just about any day.

 

kindergarten love note necklace

 

And really, along with a very simple, easy-to-read happy first day note, that’s what I put in my new Kindergartner’s lunchboxes.

It’s not about giving the kids gifts–it’s about a little surprise to celebrate this big and exciting step.  And to let them know I’m thinking of them.

That’s it–just a little, under the radar tradition for our family–our super-special Kindergarten lunchbox love notes–started by my most amazing, totally incredible, always thoughtful, and absolutely fabulous mom.

Here’s to hoping I can do a half as good of a job raising Maddy, Owen, and Cora as my mama did my sisters and me.

August 27, 2012 8 comments
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beautiful backpack butterflies
crafts

Beautiful Backpack Butterflies

by Teach Mama August 22, 2012
written by Teach Mama

One of the things we love to do as a Back-to-School tradition is to find some cool way of blinging out the kids’ backpacks.

Especially before the big Kindergarten year, I feel like sending kids’ off to school with a little somethin’ special on their backpacks is fun, special, and comforting.

When Maddy went off to the wilds of Kindergarten, we made super-cute Happy First-Day Flowers.  Felt flower pins for her first-day backpack bling.

When the O-Man went off to Kindergarten, we rocked out some customized Shrinky-Dinks for his backpack bling.

And now this year, before Cora heads off to the wonderful world of elementary school, we did some serious blinging.  Because, well. . . my girl loves her some sparkle, jewels, and shine.

With the help of a birthday craft kit from one of her very best buddies, we spent last evening making some butterflies. It wasn’t difficult in the least–it was a quick, fun way of spending time with the girls while Owen was at soccer–we chatted, laughed, and got a little glitter-gluey.

Here’s the skinny. . .

  • Beautiful Backpack Butterflies: It was a simple Rose Art Craft set (feel free to check it out below and hook a mama up with her Amazon Affiliate links, thank you!).

I do think it was the first time we used a set like this, and I was impressed–it was really so cute. So simple but totally fun for the girls.

backpack butterflies

 Maddy works on symmetry in her butterfly wings. . .

backpack butterflies

. . . and we tried our best!

The butterflies were already assembled so all the girls had to do was to add some glittery sparkle and sequins to the wings!  There were three butterflies in the kit, a blue, yellow, and green one, and Cora generously gave Maddy the blue one to design.  Cora designed the green and yellow with a little help from me.

We chatted a little about symmetry–nothing crazy but just about part of what makes butterflies so beautiful is that their wings are the same on both sides.  We talked about how to create symmetry and that it’s not always easy.

backpack butterflies

Butterflies are glitter-gluey. . .

backpack butterflies

. . . and ready to get a little bling!

It was fun!

After a while, when the butterflies were super-sparkly and fancy, we let them dry.

And then we tried them out on Cora’s brand-new backpack!

backpack butterflies

Soooo beautiful. So faaaaa-ncy!

backpack butterflies

Talk about super-cute backpack butterflies!

 

And that’s it–a fun, simple back-to-school activity that can be used just about any time of the year!

Huuuge thanks to Cora’s little buddy for gifting her this set for her big #5 birthday, and huuuuge thanks to Land’s End for gifting me this awesome backpack for Cora’s Kindergarten year! I received the backpack and several other Land’s End goodies I look forward to sharing at a Land’s End Back-to-School event during BlogHer in NYC.  This is an unsponsored post; I was not asked to write about these items, but I chose to because they’re just that awesome. Affiliate links are included below:

August 22, 2012 5 comments
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3 hands on Math games
computationmath

3 Quick, Hands-On, Totally Cool Math Games

by Teach Mama August 20, 2012
written by Teach Mama

Every summer, our school hands out summer packets – worksheets upon worksheets with ways that parents can continue the learning all summer long.

And among the worksheets are ideas that incorporate learning in everyday activities for both reading and math.  I have to admit, I (gulp!) actually like these packets, but I also have to admit (gulp!) that I don’t force the kids to do every single page.

If there’s a concept that Maddy or Owen don’t understand, we skip it.

If there’s an activity that’s too involved or complicated, we skim through it.

If there’s something on the calendar that just won’t fly with my kids, we do something different.

I feel okay doing this because the point–I believe–is to keep kids engaged, to get their brains moving, and to remind them of the concepts they learned the previous year. So we do what we can.

But this summer, Maddy’s packet had a ton of really awesome, hands-on, totally cool math games from a site that I am grateful to have discovered.  These games are quick, and they are smart.

We’ve played them more than I expected, and even Owen got into the fun once or twice.

Here’s the skinny. . .

  • 3 Quick, Hands-On, Totally Cool Math Games: Though there are more than three in the packet–and dozens and dozens on the site, these are among our faves.

Along with Magic Triangles, which I shared a few days ago, the games we liked the most were quick and hands-on. And who doesn’t like quick in the summertime, right?

magic triangle math

Magic Triangles was a fave

1. 11 More — The premise of 11 More is simple: adding 11 to the number rolled on a die. Players each choose a color counter and take turns rolling a die.  They calculate the total of the number rolled plus 11.

And then the player places a counter on the corresponding number on the ‘board’.  The first player to have four counters in a row (horizontally, vertically, or diagonally) is the winner!

11 more math game

We used gems as our counters. . .

11 more math game

. . . and though I tried hard. . .

11 more math game

. . . Maddy beat me several times.

———————————————————————

2.  Count by 5’s –again, a very simple game.  But there’s something that kids love about flipping cards, taking turns, and trying to win.  In this game, players simply take turns flipping a card from the top of the deck and figuring out where on the board it ‘fits’.

We played that the first person to complete a row was the winner, but we played it pretty loosely.

count by fives game

We flipped. . .

count by fives game

. . . counted by 5’s. . .

count by fives game

. . . and completed rows!

———————————————————————

3.  Magic Star Puzzle— The Magic Star Puzzle was the toughest of the games Maddy played.

The object is to position the counters marked 1-12 in the star so that each row of four numbers has a sum of 26. Sounds easy–but it required a lot of thought!

magic star puzzle

Magic Star Puzzle was a challenge!

And that’s it–just 3 quick, hands-on, totally cool math games that kept the kids’ brains and hands moving during the summer months.  What I love about these games is that they can be used any time of the year–for math centers, for math supplemental help, for tutoring, you name it!

Let the math fun begin!

fyi: Huge, huge, huge thanks to our school and fabulous teachers for putting together these awesome packets.  And thank you thank you thank you for introducing me to an incredible site, K-5 Math Teaching Resources–a simple site packed with really great resources for children. I am truly in awe!  If you want to find the games mentioned above, head to the 2nd Grade Number Activities.

August 20, 2012 20 comments
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Magic Triangle Math Cover Photo
computationmath

Magic Triangles: Hands-On Math Game

by Teach Mama August 8, 2012
written by Teach Mama

It’s been crazy busy over here for the past few days, with visiting family in the Keystone State, attending BlogHer in NYC, and then spending some more time with family.

But after the wash was done, the suitcases away, Hermie back and settled in her new terrarium, and the kids and I slowly re-adjusted to our new summer schedule without swim and dive, the fun began.

Summer math and reading packets from school.  Yes, we’ve dented them for sure, but there is a bunch more waiting for us–the pages that Maddy and Owen skipped because they needed more help, more explanation, and a wee bit more support.

So that’s what we’ve been doing.

Not every day, all day–don’t get me wrong.

But in the morning, after chores and after a bit of reading and lazying around, we’ve hit the packets.

One activity, though, really caught my eye.  Maddy, who’s rocking and rolling onto grade three (I still cannot believe it even as I type it!), has a section in her math packet of hands-on math learning activities.  I love it.  It’s perfect for her because she needs hands-on, and she needs practice with the basics.

And who doesn’t love a few good math games?

Here’s the skinny. . .

  • Magic Triangles — Hands-on Math Game: The premise of Magic Triangles is really simple.

Using an equilateral triangle with three empty circles on each side, children move around numbers 1-6 (written on small pieces of paper) until the sum of each side matches the sums of the other sides.

Super easy, right? Not so much.

magic triangle math game

Maddy’s Magic Triangle is set up and ready to go. . . now just to figure out that Magic Sum!

This activity had Maddy moving numbers and moving them again and then moving them again until she got it.  And when she mastered it? She was elated.

We used supplies that were close at hand, but you could really just use a white board or paper if that’s all you have. I like the hands-on element–the moving the numbers around, holding the triangle, and really being able to feel the game in your hands.  But it can be a great game to play with pencil and paper as you wait for a table in a restaurant, too.

 

magic triangle math game

Owen tried his hand at the Magic Triangle Math Game–but he was stumped.

But the first thing he did the next morning? Try his hand at the Magic Triangle until he figured it out!

We cut an equilateral triangle from a piece of cardboard, and then we stuck three blue circles on each side.  Maddy wanted to use sticky notes for the numbers, so she wrote numbers 1-6 on small orange stickies.  And then she started thinking and didn’t stop until she figured it out.

We didn’t record solutions (gulp!), and we didn’t try to find multiple solutions. Perhaps we’ll give that a ‘go’ today. And I won’t tell you what the ‘Magic Sum’ is so that it’s not ruined for you, so have fun with it!

And that’s it–just a fun, hands-on math game that disguises learning (and serious math practice and critical thinking!) in the name of fun and games.  Right up our alley!

I’m looking forward to trying the other hands-on math games in Maddy’s summer packet, so huge thanks to her amazing grade three team and to Math Teaching Resources where a number of these activities originated.

August 8, 2012 9 comments
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olympic torch game
outdoor learning

Olympic Torch Game For Kids

by Teach Mama August 1, 2012
written by Teach Mama

 

Have you been busy keeping up with the Olympics? Sure, they have only just begun, but if your kids are anything like mine, they’ve been hit with the Olympic FEVER!

Who knew that this world event would be so much fun–even watching from thousands of miles away?

No matter what sport is your family’s favorite, most everyone seems to be intrigued by the Olympic Torch Relay. Though we were driving back from the beach so we couldn’t see it live, we watched it with the kids several times, and they were in awe.

We laughed about our own version of the Olympic Torch Relay that we held here in our own back yard a few weeks back, and though ours was a far cry from the amazing London version, I really do think it helped prepare Maddy, Owen, and Cora a teeny, tiny bit for what they watched on the screen.

It’s about activating schema, right? Getting those brains ready to learn!

Head over to the Melissa & Doug to get the skinny, where I wrote about our own, super-simple, totally fun backyard adaptation of the famous Olympic Torch relay in a silly Olympic Torch Game we created.

The kids even perfected the ‘torch kiss’ and the lighting of the cauldron, though I have to admit, the 2012 cauldron lighting is something I never could have imagined. . .

Check it out: Olympic Torch Game

And happy 2012 Olympics!

August 1, 2012 3 comments
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how to get kids to stop, observe and write
creative writingwriting

getting kids to stop, observe and write

by Teach Mama July 22, 2012
written by Teach Mama

 

Our Everyday Journal cards have proven to be a really incredible—and sneaky—way of getting the kids focused and thinking in a way that I’m not sure they’d be willing to do otherwise.

There’s something exciting about choosing a card, about having the topic be a surprise, and about being willing and open to trying something totally new.   And  Maddy, Owen, and Cora have each slowly discovered their favorite areas of focus with the cards—photo inspiration, nature inspiration, poem inspiration, techy inspiration, and artsy inspiration.

But one of our first topics involved nothing other than finding peace and quiet, and still it remains one of their top activities.

Here’s the skinny. . .

  • Getting Kids to Stop, Observe, and Write: The prompt was simple.  All it said was

Go outside and find a quiet spot.

Pick one thing that you can see and describe it the best way you know how—how does it feel, smell, taste, sound, and look?

I said, Sounds simple, doesn’t it? So you’re going to find a quiet spot—all to yourself—and then what are you going to do?

Maddy jumped in: Looks like we’re just going to sit in a spot that we choose and pick something to write about—like everything about it.

Right, I said. You’re going to use your five senses to write about what that thing looks like, how it feels, how it smells, how it tastes—if it’s safe to taste it!—and how it sounds. Cool?

Like if I were going to sit here and observe this one blade of grass, I would write something like, ‘I am green, long like a string bean, but flat.  I’m thick at the bottom and get skinnier to a point at the top.  I have tiny lines on each side of me.  I am dancing gently in the wind, moving side to side.  I’m quiet—I don’t make a sound.’  I smell fresh and crisp right after I’m cut or picked, but I don’t have a smell if I’m left alone. And how does it feel?

how to get kids to stop, observe and write

We began with a challenge–having our kids stop, observe, and write–and it got their creative juices flowin!

Some are soft and others are pokey, said Owen.

You’re right.  Very true.  But for this journal we’re picking just one—and I know it’s hard—but one object to write about. So look at this piece of grass (I pointed to the grass by our feet) and tell me how it feels.

It’s soft and bendy when you walk on it but still a little pokey at the top, he said.

Okay, so I’d write something like, ‘I’m mostly very soft and smooth and bendy when stepped on but have a gentle pokey top.’

Then for taste? Hmmmm.  How does a piece of grass taste? I asked.

It can taste grassy, said Cora.

You’re right. It tastes like grass—let’s try one. Anyone want to try to eat a piece of grass?

No one did—which surprised me—so we left that part go.how to get kids to stop, observe and write

Cora worked on her letters in her workbook–to her insistence–and that was cool with me.

So let me read what we have, and we can make sure we have all of the pieces before you go and do your own observation writing, okay? Listen closely for all of the senses—how it looks, feels, sounds, tastes, and smells–you think you have anything we should add, let me know.

I read it, and they said it sounded great and could they please please please go do theirs now?

So they did.  Off they ran to find a quiet spot in the yard to stop, observe, and write.

And though this activity was a bit above Cora’s abilities, she did want to take her letter-writing practice book out to a quiet place in the yard to practice writing her letters.  I suggested she go out and choose one object to draw—but she said she wanted to write.  And really, since this summer and it’s all about fun with some learning stuck in, I let her go for it.

Maddy and Owen took longer than I thought, but they didn’t write a whole lot—another reason that modeling is so totally important.  Once they shared their pieces, we talked about whether or not they included all of the five senses, and both kids did not. So they re-read what we wrote together, went back to their spots, found their object, and did a bit of revising.

 

It was fun. And they really loved it, so much so that we’ve done it several times this summer, even on days that they didn’t choose the card.

It was a matter of finding what got my kids going–and interested in writing–that helped me here. Like Jolie Stekly, writing and literature expert and former classroom teacher says in her piece on Mom’s Homeroom called, The Writing’s on the Road, it’s all about finding little gems of opportunity to give our kids reason to write and at the same time to avoid that dreaded summer slide.

She encourages parents to “in the same way we sneak greens into our kids’ other foods — like adding a few leaves of spinach into a fruit smoothie — we can do the same with writing during the summer months”  She says that “summer travel and events (vacations, road trips, camping, day outings, summer camps) provide great opportunities to put your kids’ already-acquired writing skills to use in a meaningful way” and that they’ll see the writing as fun–not work.

I like that–simple and sneaky like spinach in a smoothie. So if my kids are game to write in the backyard, quiet and carefully, I’ll take it!  Happy writing!

 

July 22, 2012 6 comments
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how to slow down speedy readers
comprehensionfluencyreading

Improve Fluency: Slow Down Speedy Readers

by Teach Mama July 19, 2012
written by Teach Mama

I’ve said before that one of the things that you never want to say to a reader is Slow down! You’re reading too fast! or. . .

. . . You’re reading waaaaay too slow. C’mon, pick up the pace so we can get through this, Honey.

It’s just not helpful, and no one feels great saying these things or hearing them.  And I think we all know that though those suggestions may be short-term, if kids are slow–or speedy–readers, any time they read aloud, they’re not reading fluently.

The awesome news there are a few other really worthwhile, constructive ways of helping children as you ‘coach’ them into more fluent reading.   Everyone wants to be a fluent reader–especially our younger, newer readers.

Here’s the skinny. . .

  • Learning During Read-Alouds–Improve Fluency by Slowing Down Speedy Readers:  Fluency is a whole lot more than reading at an ‘easy-to-understand’ pace.

According to Timothy V. Rasinski in the May issue of The Reading Teacher, fluency should be HOT!  In an article titled just that–and no, I’m not joking–Rasinski says that [his] conception of fluency puts it at the center of authentic reading instruction in which the aim of students’ reading is comprehension (Rasinski, T. V. (2012), Why Reading Fluency Should Be Hot!. The Reading Teacher, 65: 516–522).

He goes on to say that fluency is a critical component of reading instruction and that its two components, automaticity and prosody, are essential to its makeup.  No need to freak out about these two ‘biggie’ reading terms, my friends.

Here’s a quickie clip sharing one way I helped Maddy slow down her super-fast reading this year–improving her prosidy by forcing her to slow at end punctuation marks:

‘Automaticity’ just means that readers can recognize words automatically and without effort, which is why we need to practice those sight words and design balance literacy programs that include word work!  ‘Prosity’ just means that the reading demonstrates the natural rhythm and intonation of language.  Together, automaticity and prosidy make up fluency, so it only makes sense that in order to read fluently, the reader must understand the text.

I’m looking forward to sharing more tips to improve fluency as the year unfolds, but until then, I hope that this little ‘slow down’ trick helps a speedy reader in your life.

What methods do you use to slow down speedy readers? Please share!

July 19, 2012 5 comments
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help kids learn the abc's
alphabetBest Of Teach Mamaearly literacy

10 fun ways of helping kids learn the abc’s

by Teach Mama June 28, 2012
written by Teach Mama

 

It’s so easy for us to say we want our kids to learn the ABC’s and 123’s before kids hit Kindergarten, but how do we actually do it?

Is there an ideal time to start teaching these all-too-important basics?

What if your kiddo is just not interested in such things? How do you make learning the ABC’s fun?

It’s a lot easier than you may think, and honestly, in my opinion, there’s no time like the present to get rockin’ and rollin’ on helping your kids learn the ABC’s.   So whether your child is 6 or 6 months, I’d say get going. Now.  And have fun with it.

Start singing, stickering, hunting, painting, and spraying your way to either an alphabet-filled summer.

Here’s the skinny. . .

10 Fun Ways of Helping Kids Learn the ABC’s:

1.  Play ABC Games — Play alphabet board games, play alphabet clothespin games, play alphabet wordo!

2.  Point Out ABC’s Everwhere —Go on Alphabet Hunts, hide the ABC’s around your house (then do it again).  Then go on Backyard Alphabet Hunts— so fun, it’s nuts.

3.  Celebrate the Letters of Kids’ Names — For the little guys, start with their letter–the first letter of his or her name–and go from there. Find the letter on the cereal box, on signs, in books.  Play Family Name Letter Connect.  Once they master that, move onto the other letters of the name and then introduce family names.

4.  Read ABC Books — There are tons of them out there, believe me, but a super-fun fave of ours is Superhero ABC.  Visit my pal, Allie’s awesome post, 50 Fantastic ABC Books for more.

5.  Sort the ABC’s — Separate letters and numbers.  Sort tricky fonts.  Play with those magnetic letters on the fridge and sort the ABC’s on lids.

6.  Spray the ABC’s — You heard me. Spray the ABC’s.

 

help kids learn abc's

 

7.  Play ABC Bingo — Play Alphabet Bingo with uppercase letters.  Play it with the letters of your child’s name.  Play it with lowercase letters.  Stamp it or write it.  Just play it.

8.  Sing the ABC Song — Sing that song–c’mon, you know it–same tune as Twinkle, Twinkle and Baa Baa Blacksheep.  Sing it all the time.  Sing it at bath time, bed time, breakfast time.  Sing other songs of course, but make ABC top of the charts. It will help.

9.  Crazy Write the ABC’s — Write the ABC’s with sticky stuff, with paint, with water, or with wiggly wigglies.  Make it different.   Write on windows. Write in the sky.

10.  Move and Groove the ABC’s — Get up and move to the ABC’s with ABC Exercise Cards or get leafy with an Outdoor Alphabet Hunt.

 

Want more? After checking out the links above, visit our Read Aloud Learning Series for some super-easy tips, then check the right sidebar for other topics you need.

Want a few more alphabet activities? Check out:

  • backyard alphabet hunt
  • homemade alphabet book
  • leafy letter learning
  • ABC hunt
  • on the road ABC hunt
  • lowercase ABC hunt
  • build your own bingo: uppercase and lowercase match
  • ABC cards and clothespin match
  • alphabet letter splash
  • alphabingo (play with lowercase letters)
  • alphabet letter lids
  • leafy outdoor alphabet hunt
  • build your own board game
  • clothespin letter match
  • 10 fun ways to learn the alphabet

help kids learn the abc's

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June 28, 2012 15 comments
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summer reading cover
booksreading

How To Make Summer Reading Fun For Your Kids

by Teach Mama June 20, 2012
written by Teach Mama

For many children, summer reading is not a big deal.

They’re readers by nature, so the task of reading ten books–or more–is a simple pleasure.  For others, however, summer reading is second on their list of things to do only to walking on glass or poking sticks in their eyes.

So how do you make summer reading fun for kids?

How do you get them to want to read, to want to put down the Wii controller or the DS and instead pick up a book?

It’s not easy, but if you start now–if you carve out some simple patterns with summer reading early in the game–perhaps this year will be different.

And maybe, just maybe, you’ll have year-round readers on your hands.

Here’s the skinny. . .

  • How to Make Summer Reading CRAZY Fun for Kids: There are a million ways to do this, mind you, but for now I’m sharing three.

Just three teeny, tiny ways of the hundreds.  Here you go:

 

What do you think? What are YOUR sneaky-parent ways of making summer reading more fun for your kiddos?

Do you start off with a Summer Reading Backyard Book Party like we did, or do  you rock it out some other cool way? Perhaps your kids are already bookworms?  What if one is and one is not? What’s a parent to do?

Next up: How to talk to your kids about their summer reading books (without making them run screaming from you). . . .

June 20, 2012 8 comments
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summer fun cards
foundationsparenting

Summer Fun Cards: Making The Most Of Our Summer

by Teach Mama June 19, 2012
written by Teach Mama

One of our most favorite parts of summer is making our Summer Fun Cards.

We’ve made them for the past three years, and each year I’m thrilled that each year the kids really seem to get into it. Summer Fun Cards are like our Christmas wish list for summer.

So when Maddy saw it on our calendar for last Friday, she asked every. Single. Day. if we could make them.

We ended up not waiting until Friday and rather doing them here and there Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, and Monday.  And they’re filled with ideas new–and old–and we cannot wait to get to them.

Here’s the skinny. . .

  • Summer Fun Cards: We don’t make these fancy.  They’re certainly not a beautiful work of art like my dear friend MaryLea’s.

But ours are pretty, and they do make a super-colorful hanging along our railing.

summer fun cards

Cora works on the roller coaster in the picture for Dutch Wonderland. . .

summer fun cards

. . . and Maddy draws a shark and a dolphin. (Huh?)

We started making them after lunch last Wednesday, much to Maddy’s prodding, and because the kids are already familiar with what they are, our Summer Fun Cards didn’t need much of an intro from me.

 

summer fun cards

This year, our cards included some oldies but goodies:

  • ice-cream from Jimmie Cone
  • go to the beach
  • eat crabs
  • make s’mores
  • go berry picking
  • see July 4th fireworks
  • catch lightening bugs
  • eat breakfast outside
  • sleep at Nanny & Pap’s

But they also included some new-for-us ideas, some of which are just a tad bit silly:

  • go on a ropes course
  • swim with sharks and dolphins (and live)
  • see MA (something) 4! (translation: see Madagascar 3 at the movies)
  • go to the aquarium
  • swim in a new pool
  • go geocaching

 

summer fun cards

Our Summer Fun Cards finished–

summer fun cards

–and hung up so we see them every day!

And that’s it! Just a quickie, fun start to the summer–a sure-fire way that we make time for all of our favorite summertime things!

Happy Summer, all!

June 19, 2012 11 comments
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booksreading

kicking off summer reading: backyard book party

by Teach Mama June 10, 2012
written by Teach Mama

The school year is slowly winding down, and finally (finally!) we’re settling into our summertime schedule–not the spring-summer overlap that has had me near crazy for the last two weeks.

With the soccer season officially over, three days of dance recitals down, andflag football totally ohhh-ver, we’re on the high road to swim and dive.  And awhole lotta time at home. With my three favorite people in the world.

Summer is always my favorite time of the year, and this year’s no different.

We just so happened to have two new families coming to our school this fall–two families with whom I’ve been acquainted for quite some time, since Maddy, Owen, and Cora were teeny.  So I thought that this final weekend-before-school-lets-out would be a good time to have everyone over for a quick little impromptu playdate and Backyard Book Party.

The sun was shining, the kids were playing, and everyone left with a handful of books.  And it was super to chat with a few great friends and let our kids get re-connected.

I think it’s something I’d like to do each year before school lets out because for us, this little Backyard Book Party got all of our kids reading–and excited about continuing the book-love throughout the summer.

Here’s the skinny . . .

  • Backyard Book Party:  I was grateful to have received a Summer Reading Party Pack from PBS Kids & iVillage in celebration of their Summer Reading Community Challenge, packed with fun summer reading goodies, and perfect for a get-to-know-you brunch.
summer reading: backyard book party

 

Yay for our Book Party goodies from PBS & iVillage and our friends at Scholastic!

summer reading: backyard book party

 

Fun and silly printables–that you can have too!

The party pack included Word Girl & SuperWHY! games and coloring pages, much like ones you can find on PBS Parents or PBS Kids, along with some cool temporary tattoos, bookmarks, stickers, and books.

The party was short and sweet, but we covered a lot of crazy-fun territory:

  • Welcome! Brunch and Play: Mini-bagels, donuts, muffins, and fruit! YUM!
  • Fly-Swatter Painting: It was the book that really caught my attention. It was a new one to me–There Was an Old Lady Who Swallowed a Chick, by Lucille Colandro and illustrated by Jared D. Lee.

When I saw it, I thought, Oh! I know this one! Kids love it! And immediately, the song was stuck in my mind: I know an old lady who swallowed a fly. . . I don’t know why she swallowed that fly. . .

summer reading: backyard book party

 

Kids loved Fly-Swatter Painting. . .

summer reading: backyard book party

 

and the moms thanked me that the paint was washable!

But then I looked closer and realized that our books were not the old standby but were indeed a new and exciting version where our happy old lady swallows a chick.  Earlier, I decided that one of our Book Party activities was going to be a craft–something where our kids could get a little creative and colorful–and our book was my inspiration for a fun and crazy craft: Fly Swatter Painting.

A super way of activating schema–getting kids’ brains moving before they start reading this new book would be to get their brains connecting to something they remember in the original book, right?  Flies!  That was it! Fly Swatter Painting would be perfect!

I taped up some white roll paper, put washable paint on paper plates, and let the kids at it.  They loved the mixing of colors and swatting of paint–they giggled and swatted and it really gave them something to smile about!

 

summer reading: backyard book party

 

No paint brushes here, folks. . .

summer reading, backyard book party

 

. . . only fly swatters and paper plates of paint. . .

summer reading, backyard book party

 

. . . such an incredibly beautiful masterpiece!

  • Get to Know You Games: After a quick re-introduction for the handful of kids who were here, we did some fun ice-breaker games.

Silent Sorting is something I used to do in the classroom at different times in the year so my students got to know each other a bit better.  I think I learned these ‘ice-breakers’ way back when I worked at Maryland Leadership Workshop–which I highly recommend parents check out.

Silent Sorting is just that–kids sorting themselves without speaking! So with specific instructions, the whole group of kiddos first sorted themselves from youngest to oldest by age, and then they sorted themselves into alphabetical order by first name.  SO fun.

Usually a great ending signal is that the whole group claps together three times, but I skipped that. . .

  • Book Swap: For the older kids who I knew would be a bit ahead of the There Was an Old Lady Who Swallowed a Chick, we had a Book Swap–a totally informal, ‘bring a book that you’d like to swap’ swap.

The kids were thrilled to add their book to the table, look through the bin of books, and talk to each other about BOOKS! They all left heavy-handed and psyched for summer reading–yay!

  • Drawing, Games, and Play: When everyone arrived, they put their names in a bin for a drawing at the end of the party.

We gave away two prizes–one Scholastic bag filled with reading goodies and one Curious George DVD and book.  The two little winners loved their prizes.  But even if you don’t have prizes to give away, something small–a new book from the dollar store or a pack of markers and a tablet–would do the trick.

Kids love drawings!

summer reading: backyard book party

 

Two fun prizes from Scholastic and PBS Kids–AWESOME!

summer reading: backyard book party

 

The kids loved playing Suspend!

And they also love games–I put out Melissa & Doug’s new game, Suspend, which the kids challenged themselves with as the party winded down.  It’s a super game that I cannot wait to share more about. (And we’ll have a giveaway to boot!)

Check out An Easy-to-Build Stage for the Performers in Your Family!

 

And that’s it! Just a fun late Sunday morning Summer Reading Backyard Book Party with friends new and old! I am really looking forward to continuing the tradition and continuing Book Swaps throughout the summer. . .

 

 

fyi: As a PBS VIP I was given the opportunity to participate in the PBS Kids iVillage Summer Reading Community Challenge, but anyone can–and I encourage you to! I received the Summer Reading Kick-Off Party from my friends at PBS & iVillage, but my opinions here are all my own.  Many thanks to PBS Kids, iVillage, Scholastic, and Melissa & Doug for providing me with items in this post.  This post does include affiliate links.  

And many, many thanks to the amazing and talented Deborah Stewart of Teach Preschool for inspiring our Fly Swatter Painting! I saw her guest post on the amazing and talented Anna’s Imagination Tree blog awhile back.  Thanks, ladies!

June 10, 2012 6 comments
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mind blowing math tricks
computationmath

Quick Trick: Mind-Blowing Math Tricks

by Teach Mama May 24, 2012
written by Teach Mama

It’s no secret that I am not a math person.

And it’s really no secret that my kids’ math skills will soon (hopefully!) surpass my own.

I cried my way through calculus (no joke), and I’d rather walk on fire than take another statistics course.  While my friends would quickly calculate the final cost of that awesome pair of shoes at 25% off with a $14.75 store credit and (shhhh!) a pal’s employee discount, I’d still be stranded at the 25% off part.

Or I’d pull out my super-secret tiny purse calculator.  (It was before we all had smartphones, thank you.)

I have to think through or write out just about any sort of math computation.

So I’m a huge fan of tricks.  And songs.  And just about anything that makes this math mountain easier for me to climb.

But are ‘math tricks’ okay for kids to learn? What do you think?

Here’s the skinny on a math-happy Quick Trick I learned recently that I find so totally cool. . .

  • Mind-Blowing Math Tricks: A few weeks ago, someone told me about the 9 times tables trick.  At this point, I have no idea who that person was (sorry!), but if you were the person, please remind me.

I had never heard of it before, so when I showed Maddy, she was pretty amazed. So very happy.

It goes like this:

  • 9 times tables trick— take 9 x 3 and put your third finger from the left down.  Then count the number of fingers on the left side of that finger (here you get 2) and on the right side of the finger (you get 7).  Put those numbers together (27) and there’s your answer.  9 x 3 = 27.

Why does it work? I have no idea.  But it’s so cool.

mind-blowing math tricks

 Maddy tries out her ‘new’ multiplication by 9 trick.

Want to read about some tricks for:

  • multiplying by 4?
  • multiplying by 11?mind-blowing math tricks, 9 times table
  • multiplying by 12?
  • multiples of 3?

And want to know why the multiplying by 9 trick works?  Check out 5 Cool Math Tricks You Didn’t Know over on Mom’s Homeroom; it’s full of mind-blowing mathy-math tricks that may make this road a little easier for your kiddos.

But I especially love what math expert, Laura Laing believes about these crazy math tricks. ‘Kids can benefit from knowing math facts cold’ she explains, because ‘when the arithmetic is simple, children are allowed to focus on more complex concepts’.  We get that, right? Just like our kiddos need to have a solid knowledge base of sight words so they can focus on comprehension instead of decoding.

However, Laura feels that children should have a strong foundation of basic math skills before the ‘math tricks’ are introduced–this is usually around grades four or five.  (Shoot, so poor Maddy will be off here. . . )

She explains that ‘straight memorization is not always the best’ and that ‘when kids spend a great deal of time really unpacking what these math concepts mean, their understanding is far more likely to extend toward many other concepts’ (5 Cool Math Tricks. . . ) which . . . well, yes, yes, and yes! Save the tricks for a little later so the understanding is a little deeper.

But a few tricks in a kid’s back pocket won’t hurt, right?

Do you have any other math tricks that work for your little ones? Have you shared them with your kids already, or are you waiting for a strong, foundational skill-set to develop? I’m so curious! Do tell. . .

 

fyi: This blog post is part of an incentivized online influencer network for Mom’s Homeroom. Mom’s Homeroom is brought to you by Frosted Mini-Wheats.

May 24, 2012 25 comments
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Anytime Number Learning
mathnumbers

Counting, Identifying, And Writing Numbers During Play

by Teach Mama May 23, 2012
written by Teach Mama

One of the things I believe in strongly is that any time can be a great time to sneak in some sort of learning.

Whether it’s counting the candies in the line at the grocery store checkout, learning about the fish in your neighbor’s backyard pond, or trying new veggies from your local CSA, kids are naturally curious and their brains are pretty much like sponges at this point.

They want to learn. They want to try new things every single day.  So it’s our job to jump on those opportunities when we can—and where we can.

Yesterday was a rainy, grey day, so Cora and I decided to open one of her birthday gifts—a Shrinky-Dink Pet Playset.

And though we are huge fans of all things shrinky dink, we did manage to sneak in some learning along the way—and of course Cora didn’t even realize she was learning.

She was just happy to have time to craft, chat, and play with her mama.

Here’s the skinny. . .

  • Anytime Number Learning– Counting, Identifying, and Writing Numbers During Play: The cool thing about anytime number learning is that it can be done with anything, at any time.

counting, identifying, and writing numbers during play

Cora organizes the pieces. . .

counting, identifying, and writing numbers during play

. . . then surprises us with some of her first-ever written high(er) numbers!

We just happened to have Shrinky Dinks on the brain and a playset at our fingertips. But it can be done with blocks, dolls, cars, crafts, you name it.  Very simply, all we did was pull out all of the Shrinky Dink pets and parts, and we colored and counted as we completed each piece.

Cora started by saying, Let’s count how many pets we colored. 

And I said, Super idea.  We can count as we put them on the baking sheet, and once we have about 15, our tray will be filled and we can start shrinking!

Yes! she said, as she started placing them randomly on the tray.

 

It might be easier for us to keep track of our counting if we put them in straight rows, like our grid games, I said.  Let’s try that.

 

counting, identifying, and writing numbers during play

Shrinky dinks are all lined up and ready to be shrunk!

 

So we did.  And the rows weren’t perfect, but they were all we needed.  As we counted, Cora wanted to write down the number of Shrinky Dinks we had.  She asked me, What way does a ‘7’ go again?

 

counting, identifying, and writing numbers during play

I grabbed the Number Spelling and Math Terms sheet that I created for Maddy a few months ago, and I put it on the table in front of Cora.  The Number Spelling and Math Terms sheet is here to download as a pdf if you’d like.

 

This is Maddy’s number sheet, but I’m sure she’d have no problem letting you borrow it.  (Anything Maddy does is cool, so I was totally playing on that. . . ) Take a look at this sheet, count down from one, and see if you can find number 7. 

She did.  It was a super reference to have, and she used it the whole morning.

 

She wrote number 7 on her page.  And as soon as we finished coloring the eighth Shrinky Dink, she wrote a number 8 right next to the 7.

 

We’d chat a bit, color a bit, sometimes stop for a snack or to let Brady out, but we’d always come back to re-count our colored Shrinky Dinks.  And Cora would write another number on her paper.

Once our tray was filled, we’d shrink them and add them to the set.

We got to as high as 15, and then we shrunk the Shrinkys. Then we’d start again.

Quick, easy, and sneaky learning in between coloring and catching up and playing with Shrinky Dink pets.  Love it.

Today, we’ll finish up the coloring and shrinking–and during homework time I plan to give her the Number Writing Practice sheet I have saved on my laptop for months now.  And if she’s up for it, great; if not, no biggie. I think it would be a great foll0w-up, and it will be even more fun if it’s followed by some window writing, jell-o writing, or the like!

I am embarrassed to say that I’m not sure where it came from! So if you are the creator–or if you know the creator–please let me know so I can link back to your work (if you’ll allow me!).

Happy playing, counting, and sneaky learning!

May 23, 2012 8 comments
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early literacysight words

Words 3 Ways: Learning Sight Words For Kindergarten

by Teach Mama May 17, 2012
written by Teach Mama

Cora is totally into learning how to read, so I am seriously running with it.

She wants to practice the sight words that were included in her kindergarten packet.  She wants to be able to decode the words in her High 5 Magazine and her Weekly Reader.

She wants to read to her dolls, read to Brady, and read to me.

At least most days she does.

Some days, she doesn’t want to have anything to do with reading, and she only wants to dance or sing or paint or play dress-up.  But that’s okay with me because she’s getting closer, and I know it.

So I’ve been exploring some new and exciting ways for her to practice the ‘all-too-important’ kindergarten sight words, and I think we’ve come up with a way that seems to work for her.

Here’s the skinny. . .

Words 3 Ways: Learning Sight Words for Kindergarten:

The concept of words three ways is simple– children ‘play’ with words in three basic ways.

It’s similar to Maddy’s Trace, Copy, Recall for beginning work with spelling words, but catered a bit more toward littler ones.  It’s a great way to begin work with sight words.

The printable words three ways can be downloaded below as a pdf if you’d like to let your little one try it at home.

learning sight words for kindergarten

 

Sometimes I write the words in uppercase letters and sometimes I write them in lowercase; I want her to be familiar with both.

Cora has been using Words 3 Ways for a few weeks now, so she understands how it works, but when I introduced the idea, I said, Okay, Cora, today we’re going to rake a really big step.  You just had Kindergarten Orientation, so I know you’re excited for school to start in the fall, but there are a few things we’ll do between now and then that will help you be really, really ready for all the fun  you’re going to have in Kindergarten.

I know you already know a lot—your letters, numbers, and how to write your name and our family’s names, so we’re moving on to bigger things, now, and I know you’re ready. We’re going to really start playing with sight words.

learning sight words for kindergarten

 

Sight words are words that you’ll see in almost all of the books you’ll learn to read in Kindergarten—they’re usually small words that you can’t really sound out, so you need to know them by ‘sight’. We got a list of sight words from your Kindergarten teachers, and I put them on flash cards.  We’ll play different games with them, and by the time you start school, you’ll be able to read them all by yourself! How awesome is that??!

So today we’re going to start with Words 3 Ways. It’s a fun way for you to learn five new words.  The words are here (pointing to words in left column).  Let’s read them together. 

Okay, now you get a chance to do three things with each of these words: first you’ll use your finger or a highlighter to trace the word.  Then you’ll form the word, and you can do that by stamping the letters, using letter stickers, or using magnetic letters.  And the last thing you’ll do is write the word. 

So you’ll trace, then you’ll form the word, then you’ll write it.

Let’s start with the first word.  I’ll read it, then you read it. 

‘The’.  Cora read it herself.  Great! Now use the highlighter to trace the word. 

She traced it.

I could tell that you were really concentrating on each letter: ‘t’, then the ‘h’, and then the ‘e’. 

learning sight words for kindergarten

 

Cora’s writing her words. . .

learning sight words for kindergarten

 

Now you get to form the word, or build it. 

Do you want to stamp it or use letter stickers?  She chose to stamp the word, and as she hunted for and then stamped each letter, I said the letter name.

Finally, you get a chance to write the word all by yourself. 

Do you want to use a pencil or the bee pen or a marker to write it?

She used the pencil, just like Owen and Maddy use for their homework, to carefully form each letter.

Fabulous job! I said.

While Maddy and Owen worked on their homework, I talked Cora through the next two words; she finished the last on her own.

And the next few days, she asked me for Words 3 Ways with different words.  Awesome.

Right now, Words 3 Ways has become Cora’s go-to, her favorite ‘homework time’ activity because she’s all about reading. I’m a huge fan, too, because I can really add any words I want into the sheet—family names, color words, number words, sight words, you name it.  And I like that she’s tracing handwritten words; we sometimes forget that kiddos need to learn how to read handwriting and print.

Words 3 Ways gives emerging readers an opportunity to focus on a small number of words, looking closely at them in three different ways–first tracing the word, then building it, and then writing it on their own.

It’s not foolproof, it’s not instantaneous, and it requires foll0w-up, but it’s a start!  Happy sight word learning, little readers!

Grab your copy of the form here:

We’re huge fans of Melissa & Doug’s Alphabet Stamp set because it is a super set for emerging readers to use when building words, playing with names, or creating personalized masterpieces for loved ones.

Want a few more alphabet activities? Check out:

  • backyard alphabet hunt
  • rainbow words: free sight word printable
  • homemade alphabet book
  • leafy letter learning
  • ABC hunt
  • on the road ABC hunt
  • lowercase ABC hunt
  • build your own bingo: uppercase and lowercase match
  • ABC cards and clothespin match
  • alphabet letter splash
  • alphabingo (play with lowercase letters)
  • alphabet letter lids
  • leafy outdoor alphabet hunt
  • build your own board game
  • clothespin letter match
  • 10 fun ways to learn the alphabet

And don’t miss our #raiseareader series on YouTube!

Follow us on pinterest, and check out our literacy pins:

 

fyi: Some of the links in the post above are “affiliate links.” This means if you click on the link and purchase the item, I will receive an affiliate commission. Forever and always I recommend only products or services I use personally and believe will add value to my readers. I am disclosing this in accordance with the Federal Trade Commission’s 16 CFR, Part 255: “Guides Concerning the Use of Endorsements and Testimonials in Advertising.”  For more information, please see teachmama media, llc. disclosure policy. 

May 17, 2012 30 comments
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Mastering Multiplication Tables (With Mini Flash Cards)

by Teach Mama April 29, 2012
written by Teach Mama

Learning math facts has been a long, hard road for Maddy.

It’s actually very often a long, hard road for many kids–including myself–way back when.

I remember hours of practicing my basic facts and hours of frustration at the fact that I just wasn’t learning. I just wasn’t remembering.  I felt anxiety on every Mad Minute; I felt stupid because other kids were able to do so much more than I.  I felt angry. And confused.

Eventually I got over it, but to this day, I still feel like I don’t really know math like I should.  So I’ve been determined to support my children’s learning of math from the very beginning. 

We’ve tried to make math an everyday thing for us; we try to incorporate it into our morning newspaper reading to our trips in the car to preschool–or anywhere.  We use flashcards often and openly.

And for a long time I felt a wee bit guilty about the fact that we’ve been creating–and using–math fact flash cards for weeks and months and years.  I’m not sure why I felt bad, but I did.

If I were a halfway decent mom, I’d help her learn these facts in fun and creative ways all of the time, I convinced myself.

I tried to make flash card practices fun, exciting, and sneaky, but what I realized before long is that it’s hard–really hard–to make flash card work fun all of the time.  I get that.  But what I have been reading, researching, and remembering is that flashcards aren’t all that bad.  (Woo-hoo!)

Here’s the skinny. . .

  • Mastering Multiplication Tables: We have flash cards with us usually at all times.  I simply throw a set into my bag or in the car, in the event that we are stuck somewhere and have time that we can bust out a little addition or subtraction fun.

mini multiplication math fact cards

multiplication table mini flash cards

 

Only recently has Maddy been invited to move forward and into multiplication in her weekly math-fact assessments, and we realized that a lot of the multiplication learning fell on our shoulders since technically, multiplication is a third grade component.

First of all, I made math fact cards multiplication, following the format of our addition and subtraction mini flash cards.

The math fact cards multiplication can be printed as a pdf on cardstock, cut, and either used together or by number families.  Then throw ’em in a bag, and  you’re ready to roll.

Then we started using them.  I pulled them out here, there, and everywhere:

mastering multiplication tables

  • in the car, waiting to pick up kids or drop them off;
  • while preparing dinner;
  • before or after bedtime books;
  • at the grocery store;
  • out front, out back, outdoors, or in;
  • while drying hair;
  • before or after homework;
  • anywhere and everywhere.

Some days, we’d just run through them one by one.  Other days, we’d mix it up.  We might:

  • play ‘Shine On’ — flip the top card on two piles and shine a flashlight on the first answer she knows;
  • race — Maddy and I race to say the answer to the card that’s flipped;
  • use chalk, paint, markers, water–anything–to write the answer to the flipped card;
  • play ‘High/Low’ — flip the top card on two piles and point to the card that shows the higher (or lower) number as the answer;
  • just plain-Jane call out the answers.

Whatever floats our boat, whichever way the wind carries us that day.

And recently I ran across an article on Mom’s Homeroom about learning the times tables (“Make Time for the Times Tables,” by Laura Liang, and I was literally doing a jig of joy because the teacher-expert who wrote it actually advocated for using flashcards to learn the (sometimes) tricky multiplication tables. Actually, she didn’t say that outright; she said that “relying on one strategy is not enough” and that “memorization and the ability to model the facts are both necessary.” Yay! Yes! Woot!

I knew this–of course I did! It’s the same deal with teaching reading–and nearly everything else.  We don’t rely on one type of strategy to teach reading comprehension; rather, it’s a combination of strategies and techniques, a combination catered especially to each learner’s needs.

So from here on out, I’m going to continue flashing those multiplication cards to my Maddy, helping her to memorize–but also to learn the number concepts of those tricky multiplication tables.  And hopefully other parents will do the same.  Happy flash-carding and math-learning!

fyi: This blog post is part of an incentivized online influencer network for Mom’s Homeroom. Mom’s Homeroom is brought to you by Frosted Mini-Wheats.

April 29, 2012 27 comments
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