Showing posts with label pumpkins. Show all posts
Showing posts with label pumpkins. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 1, 2011

Five Little Pumpkins

Five Little Pumpkins


We had a terrific time entertaining Mom and Dad (and Grandma & Grandpa, too) at our annual play...

Five Little Pumpkins

The munchkins looked great in their little costumes and they sang all their songs wonderfully.  It was a great afternoon. 

Especailly the cookies afterwards!


Until next time...
Giggles,
Mrs. D.

Tuesday, October 25, 2011

Pumpkin! Pumpkin!

A Kindergarten Pumpkin Patch

October always brings with it the fun of pumpkins!  And we loved creating our own little pumpkin patch here in our classroom.

This unit provided us with so many opportunities to learn about plant life cycles.  We loved the Jeanne Titherington story, Pumpkin Pumpkin, for its simple yet fun illustration of this cycle. 

We used our pocket chart to retell the Pumpkin Story (plus we made a mini version of this story to practice our reading skills).













We also practiced our writing skills by making our own version of the Pumpkin Story.  The munchkins did an amazing job remembering proper spelling of our sight words & proper punctuation.  They also did a fantastic job using what they know about phonics to attempt writing unfamiliar words.  It was wonderful to see how many munchkins used a " secret agent 'e' " when spelling the word "vine".  Wow!

See the seed.


See the vine.


See the (fowre) flower.


See the (pumpken) pumpkin.



We also used a pocket chart poem called Pumpkins Everywhere (which came with a little emergent reader to focus on more fluency and sight word vocabulary). 











After playing several games to match the sentence strips to the correct pictures and practice choral reading, the munchkins created a class book with the same title. 
Everyone received a picture of a 3-letter C-V-C word.  The munchkins were to write the sentence:
Pumpkins by the ______.
They filled in the blank by isolating the three sounds of the word in their picture.  They did a great job hearing all the sounds and writing those simple words conventionally!


They did an equally great job segmenting the syllables of the word "pumpkin" in order to attempt that spelling!  It's not such a big word when it's spelled as two little words!












The munchkins took what they learned to create this book page and made a great poster paper for our bulletin board using the same format.  This time, however, after their terrific sentence was written, they cut it apart and glued it back together in the correct order & of course, illustrated it. 











They looked wonderful...














and they made a great bulletin board!




Then the munchkins created their own pocket chart strips...cutting and ordering the story while matching the pictures to the text.













Our other fun pumpkin poem was probably everyone's favorite...

Five Little Pumpkins.

We had a blast with this one using the poem, an interactive book and (the most fun) our puppet mitten.



Then we created a mini book with little interactive pumpkins and a great little accordion book (from Oriental Trading).



















We also made a take home booklet of the poem, complete with little movable mini pumpkins.




 
And who can resist making "Five Little Pumpkins" snack?



YUM!

All in all, we had a great time in the pumpkin patch!

Until next time...
Giggles,
Mrs. D.

Tuesday, October 26, 2010

Pumpkins Everywhere!

Pumpkins Everywhere

Isn't that the truth!











All the munchkins brought in a pumpkin of choice for many of the activities of this fun fall unit.  It's always such a fantastic way to explore classifying & sorting, math measurement concepts and science life cycles. What a perfect assortment we had this year...from HUGE to small, short to tall, bumpy to smooth, and all sorts of colors!  We even ended up with a rotten one before the unit was over!


Scientific Thinkers!

We spent several different days sorting our pumpkins in all the different ways, while creating all kinds of graphs to show our results, too.   


Sorting...long stem, short stem, no stem!
 Hey, that's Miss D, our fantastic student teacher!


Graphing...small, medium, big

 
Converting our floor graph to a chart graph.



And then transferring our data!


 Then Miss D had the munchkins learning all about circumference by creating "belts" for their pumpkins.  The munchkins estimated the circumference, predicted if their estimation was too big or too small, and then actually measured the true circumference of their pumpkin.  It was lots of work, but our little scientists did a great job and came away with some great measurement skills and some new vocabulary to boot!

The Cycle of Life

This was a great unit to revisit what we know about plant life cycles and the beauty of God's hand in all of nature.  We took several opportunities to explore this...from sequencing card games, to ordering the stages of growth, to reading about the life cycle, to writing our own complete "pumpkin story ".  The munchkins did it all!



Much More...

We had lots of other fun with pumpkins and found them everywhere around our room!  There were lots of reading opportunities...


Like the pumpkin patch of words we know...


 And the pumpkin stories we read and made to take home.

And, of Course, Baking...

We can never get through a unit without a recipe (or in this case...two!)

Like mini pumpkin pies!


Pouring ingredients...


Mixing the filling...


Making graham cracker crust...


Finished!


Not too bad!

But then there was the recipe that mixed food with a story and song!
Five Little Pumpkins!
Ours were sitting on a "cookie" gate and as we read the book and sang the song, our pumpkins rolled away (into our stomachs, of course!).

And who can resist just a few more pictures of our munchkins hard at work throughout the last few week, whether it be reading, writing, counting or just plain having fun!


I supposed the best part of our unit (besides the food!) was putting the faces on our pumpkin friends.  We liked them so much, we decided to name them and write stories about them.  Yes...each munchkin wrote a 3 sentence story about his or her new friend.  What fantastic kindergarten writers!



 We were sad to see it end, but just as October was fading away, we knew it was time to harvest all the pumpkins (and take them home before any more ended up rotten!)  And so our classroom went from "pumpkins everywhere" to "pumpkins nowhere"...but...I hear we should be on the lookout for turkeys!


Until next time,
Giggles,
Mrs. D.