Saturday, August 3, 2013

Completed Art Projects

Monday- Book "Brown Bear, Brown Bear, What do you see?"

VISUAL ARTS- Puppets made from pipe cleaners

MUSIC- All the Characters on zip ties

Brown Bear Has Moves-MOVEMENT/DANCE (made with brass fasteners)
DRAMA- Character Necklaces 

(More to come soon!)

Tuesday- Book "The Very Busy Spider" (To be continued later..)

Wednesday- Book "The Mixed-Up Chameleon" (To be continued later..)

Thursday- Book "From Head to Toe" (To be continued later..)

Friday- Book "The Very Hungry Caterpillar" (To be continued later..)

Book Unit Plan- Eric Carle Books

Eric Carle Book Collection Unit Plan


 






Mrs. Harmon's Class


Grade Level: Kindergarten

Friday, August 2, 2013

Friday- Book: "The Very Hungry Caterpillar"


The Very Hungry Caterpillar (To be Continued Later..)

Language                           Connection
Numbers
Days of the week                           
Math
Fruits                                         Life Cycle
food                                              Nature 
(C)Measure word                       
Nutrition



Research and Presentation
Research over life cycle of ants, bees, beetles or dragonfly.
Write, illustrate and present. 




FINGERPRINT PREDICTIONS & PAINT

Thursday, August 1, 2013

Thursday- Book "From Head to Toe"


(To Be Continued Later...)

Language                    Connection

Animals           -->       Physical Education
Body Parts        -->    Following Instruction
Action Words      -->             Five Senses


ACTIVITIES & PROJECT:

  • Students will use play dough to make body parts.
  • Song: This is the way
  • Students will categorize the features of the animals.
  • Mr. Potato Head- Piece together
[Who doesn’t love Mr. Potato Head?  It’s personally one of my favorite childhood toys!  But did you know that Mr. Potato head is also a great toy for helping your child grow and develop?  This toy is not only fun but it helps to build creativity, sensory-motor development, language skills, and cognition.  Next time you and your kids are playing with your Mr. Potato Head, consider these benefits and ideas:
  • Build language acquisition by naming the different body parts, clothing, and accessories.  Talk about the actions you are performing, such as “I am putting the eyes on” or “I am taking the hat off.”  Encourage your child to ask for the parts they want and make choices, such as “Do you want the hat or the shoes?”
  • Develop your child’s ability to follow directions and improve their spatial awareness.  Have them follow directions, such as “put the eyes under the nose” in order make new creations and funny faces.  Or work on two step directions by telling the child to “put on the mouth then put on the nose.”
  • Talk about differences and similarities.  Place two Mr. Potato Heads out on the table and have your child tell you how they are the same and different, such as they both have two eyes but one has lips and one has teeth.  See how many similarities and differences your child can find.
  • Improve body awareness and body identification skills.  Help your child identify the different body parts, as well as the clothing and accessories.  Then have them point to those parts on their own bodies.  Improve their understanding of what actions the different body parts perform by asking him or her to find “what allows you to smell” or “what allows you to see.”
  • Develop eye hand coordination, hand strength, and bilateral skills by putting the pieces on and taking them off.  Encourage your child to use a two hand approach to help them stabilize and manipulate the pieces. Information provided from http://embraceyourchaos.com/2012/12/101-ways-to-play-32-mr-potato-head/]





^Another Craft Idea^







Wednesday, July 31, 2013

Wednesday- Book: "The Mixed-Up Chameleon"





Language:             Connection:

    Body                        Nature (disguise)
  Color                                           Math
Animal                               Self Concept
       Art                                        Science

*Prior Knowledge: Find out what the students already know, or think they know, about chameleons by completing a chart as a class: What We Know About Chameleons.  Keep the chart so that it can be revisited at the end of the week to check and see if what they knew was correct.
Facts
A chameleon is a lizard that is able to change it's skin color. 
A chameleon can turn pink, brown, blue, red, orange, green, black and yellow.
Unlike what is commonly thought, chameleons do not change colors to match their surroundings.
Chameleons change colors due to their physical condition, mood, temperature, light exposure,
and efforts to communicate and attract a mate.
Chameleons are naturally colored for their surrounding as a camouflage.
A chameleon is a reptile.
Chameleons are found in Africa, Asia, and Europe.
Chameleons have a poor sense of smell and are almost deaf.
They have very good vision.
There are 100 different species of chameleons.

*Writing Assignment: Have the students do research on chameleons if necessary and then complete the one of the following writing assignments.
Format 1 (Click on Website at the top to view documents)

Format 2 (Click on Website at the top to view documents)
*Scavenger Hunt: Created and shared by Alice Thomas
Scavenger Hunt (Click on Website at the top to view documents)
*Comprehension: Listen to the story on tape. (you can record it yourself or purchase the book & cassette)
*Story Elements: After listening to the story and/or reading it, discuss the story elements: title, author, setting, characters, main character, something that happened in the beginning of the story, middle, end, problem, solution, was the author's intent to entertain, inform, or persuade the reader, what was the lesson learned?
I created story element pocketchart cards for this activity.  Print the story element cards below on cardstock, laminate and cut out.  Place them in your pocketchart one story element per row.  The activity can be done in a couple of ways.  As you're discussing each element, you can jot down the answers of the students.  Later make answer cards from their answers by writing them on sentence strips (one answer per story element).  OR, you can have premade answer cards and as a student supplies the answer, place the answer card in the pocketchart beside the story element.  (This is what I'll do) 
The next day, after reading the story again, review the story elements.  Then remove the answer cards and pass out to students making sure that everyone can read their answer card.  (for lower level students, you can quietly read the answer card quickly with them as you had them the card)  Then go back to the pocketchart and read the story elements.  As each element is read, the student with the correct answer card should raise their hand and read their card.  If it's correct, they place the card back into the pocketchart beside the correct story element.
The next day, you could have all the answer cards in the pocketchart, but have them placed mixed up and have the students take turns putting the answer cards in the correct place. 
After the activity has been sufficiently reviewed, you can remove the answer cards and place them and the pocketchart with the story elements in a work station or center for the students to complete individually or in pairs.
printable story element cards (Click on Website at the top to view documents)
*Comprehension: Have students read or listen to the first paragraph of the story.  Have them create their own booklet for the paragraph.  Write one sentence on each page and illustrate it.  For example:
1) A small green chameleon sat on a green leaf.
2) He moved to a brown tree and turned brown.
3) He got on a red flower and turned red.
4) When he got on the sand he turned yellow.  You could hardly see it.
*Shared Reading & Concepts About Print: Write the sentences from each page to make a pocketchart activity so that they can be read together.  The teacher will point at each word as it's being read.  Then the students can match pictures to each sentence.  The picture cards are made by using clipart, printing onto cardstock and laminating.   

I've converted the printables for this to PDF format,
so you'll need Adobe Acrobat Reader to open the file.
The Mixed-Up Chameleon Pocketchart Pictures (Click on Website at the top to view documents)
I wish I could be big and white like a polar bear. (white polar bear)
 I wish I could be handsome like a flamingo. (pink flamingo)
 I wish I could be smart like a fox.  (red fox)
 I wish I could swim like a fish. (orange fish)
 I wish I could run like a deer.  (brown deer)
 I wish I could see things far away like a giraffe.  (yellow giraffe)
 I wish I could hide in a shell like a turtle.  (green turtle)
 I wish I could be strong like an elephant.  (blue elephant)
 I wish I could be funny like a seal.  (purple seal)
 I wish I could be like people.  (people)
 I wish I could be myself.  (chameleon)
 I also made an extra set of the text (on yellow sentence strips) and cut them apart.  (in bag)  Students can use to match the text.
 *Sequencing: They can use the same pictures/sentences above to practice sequencing in the pocketchart.  They can sequence the pictures and/or sequence the sentences. 
 *Word Order: Make a  second set of sentence strips using another color and cut the words apart.  Students will build the text next to the sentences in the pocketchart using the word cards. (in a wide pocketchart .. if using a standard pocketchart you'll probably have to provide a model of the sentences printed onto cardstock)  Word cards will be cut close to the word so that emphasis can be placed on the student creating “meatball” spaces between the word.  Lower ability students can match the words to the text by placing the word card OVER the matching word in the text (sentence strips that aren't cut apart).  More advanced students can create the sentences without a model.  You may want to separate each sentence into a ziplock bag to make it a little easier.
*Comprehension: Student can choose one sentence from the pocketchart activity above to copy on his paper and illustrate.
*Song Chart: This is posterboard size and the chameleons are clipart from the 'net.  I added a strip of grass border across the bottom and some flying insect stickers before laminating.  Do you just hate that laminating glare on pictures? :(  But the chart turned out cute and the kids like it and the song.
 *Color Words Match: Use a chameleon illustration and copy onto different colors of cardstock.  Create some color words cards so that they can match them to the correct color chameleon. 
When I actually started creating this I changed up my idea.  Carol, at The Learning Tree (Click on Website at the top to view documents), shared one of her ideas with me using letter tiles and I adapted it (of course, we both do that ;) ) and came up with this activity.  In this activity the student has to match the correct color chameleon to the one on the card AND then build the color word using the letter tiles.  They fit into the blank boxes.  You can buy yellow letter tiles from the teacher catalogs or you can purchase white letter tiles from Wal-Mart for around $4 a set.  I have both.  I prefer the ones from Wal-Mart because they are thinner and take up less room in my letter case (a plastic nuts and bolts storage case also from Wal-Mart).  The chameleon pattern I had in my files and it's originally from The Mailbox online.  (Thanks Carol for sharing your ideas and your template! ;) )

When I first came up with this idea, well .. after the first, first :), I was going to make the mats above but put "green" on green, and "red" on red to show the way the chameleon's skin changes to camouflage himself.  Then after I got into it, I realized that the colored mats would give away the color word, so I changed the idea.  You could use the "camouflaged" version with preschoolers who are working on learning their colors and leave off building the word if you liked.
*Story Innovation: Students can  write their own story using the same format: I wish I could be .... or they can work together to create a classbook.  Each student would complete the sentence frame and illustrate their own page, then all the pages would be compiled together to make a book.  I suggest typing up each student's sentence on page for them to illustrate rather than relying on them to print it correctly.  I feel like if you're going to "publish" something like this that it should be in an easily read format.
 *Graphing: Have students decide what they'd rather be and graph the results as a class (polar bear, flamingo, fox, fish, deer, giraffe, turtle, elephant, seal, person, chameleon)  You can create a class pictograph by having each student write their name on a boy or girl die-cut.  Each student would place their die cut in the correct spot on the graph.  (Use bulletin board paper or a white plastic shower curtain to create the graph and the printables from above for the column icons)   Students can use the class graph to transfer to their own graph and create a bar graph.
printable student graph and graph questions (below) (Click on Website at the top to view documents)
*Interpreting a Graph: Answer questions on response sheet using graph.  For example:
How many people would rather be a turtle?
How many people would rather be a giraffe?
How many people in all chose to be a giraffe or a turtle?
How many people are in the class?
Which one was chosen more?
Which one was chosen less?
Were any the same?
*Have students draw what they'd rather be (from the choices above) and write why they chose that answer.
*Rewrite the story having the chameleon visit a circus, a school, a hospital, etc. instead of a zoo.
*Alphabet Match: Cut a chameleon graphic(s) into half.  Program head side with a capital letter & tail side with a lowercase letter.  Can use different graphics or different colors.
       
Chameleon ABC Matching Cards (Click on Website at the top to view documents)
*Beginning Sounds Match:  Chameleon graphic with lowercase letter & match to picture that begins with same sound.                               
printable beginning sounds matching cards (Click on Website at the top to view documents)
 *Building Words: Make words from the story using big chameleon graphic and the word written in tiled letters.  Students build the word underneath it using plastic letter tiles.  If you use a chameleon illustration instead of a graphic,  you can place the word on the chameleon.  For animal words like turtle, fox, giraffe, etc., you can use graphics of the animal with the word instead of the chameleon.
*Ending sounds: Use a graphic for each animal in story and write the word leaving off the last HEARD ending sounding.  Create ending sound cards.  For words like giraffe and turtle, you can use “fe” or "le" with a slash through the e indicating that the e is not heard (silent).
 *Beginning or Ending sounds: Use animal graphics from story and place on a sentence strip vertically as it is in the story.  Program wooden clothespins with the beginning or ending sound for each animal.  Have the student clip the correct pin with the beginning or ending sound to each animal picture.  OR, you could do both ... beginning sound clips on the left side of the strip and ending sound clips on the right side of the clip.  Be sure to place your clips on the strip before programming them to insure that the letters are programmed correctly.  If you don't, you're liable to have letters upside down.
Sentence strip pictures printable (Click on Website at the top to view documents)
*these are sized to fit on a sentence strip vertically*

*Vocabulary Words: You can also use the activity above, but instead of programming the clothespins with beginning sounds, you could program them with the animal names.
*Patterns: If you print out multiple copies on the animal cards above, you can use them to practice patterning in the pocketchart.  Ex. giraffe, elephant, elephant
*Art: Give each student animal parts or let them create their own.  They will glue them together to create a new kind of animal.  They will need to name their animal and write one sentence about it.  They can use the sentence frame: I wish I were a ______.
*Compare & Contrast: After reading The Mixed-Up Chameleon several times, read Leo Leonni's A Color of His Own several times.  Then use a Venn diagram to compare and contrast the two stories.
*Culminating Activity: Watch the video of The Mixed-Up Chameleon.  It's on the video with The Very Hungry Caterpillar
Related Books:
A Color of His Own - Leo Lionni

Resources:
Lizards - MM2096 Snips and Snails
A Color of His Own - The Mailbox Aug/Sept 2002
Color Time - A - Z Language Games PreK - K MM2047

Links:
The Chameleon emergent reader

Vocabulary Planning Sheet

Literacy Bag for The Mixed-Up Chameleon

Incorporating Technology

Language Experience Lesson (scroll down)

Mixed-Up Chameleon

The Mixed-Up Chameleon resource

Bulletin Board - The Mixed-Up Chameleon

Mixed-Up Chameleon - Grade 2 lesson plan

Science-Literature Links - The Mixed-Up Chameleon

The Mixed-Up Chameleon

Chameleon Observation

Chameleons Science Lesson Plans (3rd)

Visiting Chameleon (Gr 2)

Reptiles

All Mixed Up

Who Am I?

Children's Art Exhibit - The Mixed-Up Chameleon

Building Up Self-Esteem Through The Mixed-Up Chameleon

LizardHouse

The Mixed-Up Chameleon (story prop printables)

Tuesday, July 30, 2013

Tuesday- Book: "The Very Busy Spider"



Language:                              Connection:

  Animals                                                               Hard Working
 Tell Time                                                                    Farm Life
 Action                                                                                Math
 Animal Sound                                                      Science: Insect
                                                                                 Spider's Life
                                                                                  My Routine


TASKS AND ACTIVITIES

  • Song: Old McDonald had a farm
  • Song: Itchy wincey spider
  • Spin a Web using yarn.
  • Make an appointment using a clock.

Bookmarks for The Very Busy Spider


   


Emergent Reader for The Very Busy Spider
Print the pages below.  Cut the pages on the dotted line.  The base page doesn't get cut.  
Stack the pages on the left of the base page and staple/bind in place.  Have the children color 

the pages and then get them busy reading their book.

                                

                           


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Animal Word Match Worksheet

Students will complete this worksheet. Have the children cut out the animal pieces and glue them onto the worksheet.


--->Popsicle Stick Puppets for The Very Busy Spider<---

Print the pages below.  Color the animals and cut them out.  Staple them to popsicle 
sticks to make puppets.  Use the puppets to retell the story.





Connect the Alphabet Spider Web for The Very Busy Spider

Have the children connect the letters in alphabetical order to create a spider web for The Very Busy Spider.

[Upper Case Letters]




[Lowercase Letters]







Character Headbands for The Very Busy Spider
Print the headband pieces and have the children color the character of their choice.  Cut the piece out. Add either a sentence strip or a strip of colored paper to make a headband.  Now have the children wear the headbands as the act out and retell the story. You could 
easily add a narrator part to say, "The spider didn't answer.  She 
was very busy spinning her web."




Mini Word Cards for The Very Busy Spider
Print the page.  Have the children cut the cards apart.  Have them use the cards to practice reading the words from the story or use them at a writing center.




Information provided from: http://www.makinglearningfun.com/themepages/SpiderVeryBusyLiteracyIdeas.htm

Monday, July 29, 2013

Monday- Book: "Brown Bear, Brown Bear What do you see?"











Brown Bear, Brown Bear, What do you see?


Big Book:  Introduce this book unit using the Big Book.  Point to the words as you read.  After one or two readings, encourage students to read along with you, especially the parts that are repeated throughout the book.  Some of the students will want to "read along" almost from the moment you start reading, especially if they're familiar with the book.  I always ask that the students not read along during the first reading so that those who haven't heard the book before will be able to hear the text clearly. 
I don't have the Brown Bear Big Book.  I'm printing out the text and gluing it along with the colored pictures that I printed out onto cardstock.  I'm also going to add the text to the pages just like I did in the emergent reader so that the student doesn't have to guess or memorize what picture comes next.  The text will be cued by the picture.  Then I'm going to have the whole thing laminated before I put it together.  (Don't forget to make smaller pictures for the last page like I did.)  I was going to staple the pages together or tie them together with yarn.  The latter, I know, works well for posterboard Big Books. 

Directions for Big Book
First, lay the last page of your book on the table, the back of the book facing down.  Take a long strip of clear packing tape and tape half over the side of the page where you want to bind (the left side on the book above) and the other half will be stuck to the table.  Press the tape down on the book, but not on the table (you're just going to have to pull it off the table later anyway).  Next, lay your next to the last page on top of that page and repeat the process, making sure to keep all the pages straight and even.  (You may need a helper, I did)  Keep doing this until the last page is your cover.  Then gently pull the layered tape and book pages from the table and stretch the tape that's sticking out on the left side towards the back of the book creating your binding. 
Class Big Book: Print out the black and white pictures from DLTK and have students paint or color them to make an additional Big Book for your class. 
(Language Arts**) Vocabulary:  Create word cards with the accompanying pictures for a portable Thematic Word Wall.  Once you've made the cards, display them in a pocketchart.  Students can use them to match text, match words to pictures, and for use in their writing.
red birdbrown bearyellow duckwhite dogblue horse
green frogpurple catblack sheepgoldfishteacher
childrenredyellowwhiteblue
greenpurpleblackbirdbear
duckdogfrogcatsheep


Brown Bear Mascot:  Purchase an inexpensive brown bear and use him to increase appropriate school behavior.  He can sit at the table of a student or students who are exhibiting appropriate behavior.

(Language Arts**) Reading Buddy:  You can also place a stuffed brown bear in your Reading Center.  Students can then sit and read to Brown Bear.  This may help to increase their retelling/reading of stories as they'll be reading out loud so that he can hear them. :)

Brown Bear Introduction to Staff:  Use the story format to introduce students to school staff.  An example would be:

Mrs. ______, Mrs. ______, who do you see?  I think Mrs. ______ is looking at me.  Insert the appropriate names and pictures on each page.


Sequencing:  Provide students with picture cards of things in the book.  Have them practice sequencing them as to how they came up in the book.

For this activity we used the book and glued pictures onto a sentence strip.

Patterns: Use small pictures of things from the book to practice patterning with your students. 
AB= brown bear, red bird, brown bear, red bird
ABC= yellow duck, blue horse, green frog, yellow duck, blue horse, green frog,
etc.

(Math**) Pattern Hat: Use the same pictures from above and have students glue them onto a sentence strip.  When they're dry, fit the sentence strip to their head and staple it (but not to their head :) ).

What's Missing?:  Display the flannelboard characters from the book.  Then have the students put their head down.  Stand in front of the flannelboard and remove two or three of the pictures.  Have them look at the board and guess which ones are missing.  You can make the game increasingly more difficult by decreasing the number of characters that you remove.  The most difficult activity would be to guess which ONE character is missing.

Categorizing:  Have students categorize each animal in the book into 3 categories:

No legs
2 legs
4 legs
goldfish
bird
bear

They can categorize them by picture or with the words, depending on their reading ability.  You can create the table above on posterboard, a file folder, or cardstock, depending on the size of your pictures/words.  If using pictures, you can also have the words written underneath the picture to reinforce the written vocabulary.  Laminate everything for durability.

(**Visual Arts) Storybook Walk:  Divide the students into groups of 2-3 students. Have enlarged printouts of each animal in the story and have students work together to decorate them.  Cut them out.  Display in the correct sequence around the walls of the classroom.  Students can walk around the room and retell the story as they walk.

(**Visual Arts) Memory Game:  Place a picture of each book character around the edge of a circle cut from posterboard.  (Place the pictures in a random order, not sequentially.)  Laminate, then place a spinner in the middle of the circle.  Have students take turns spinning the spinner.  When the spinner points to a character, they must tell what that character saw next in the book.  

(Math**) Problems:  Use the storybook characters to create math problems.  Brown Bear saw 2 black sheep and 1 goldfish.  How many did he see in all?

(Math**) Sorting/Graphing:  Have students bring their own bears to school, then sort/graph them by color.

(**Drama) Role Play:  Print out the colored pics onto cardstock and laminate.  Add yarn to create a necklace.  Issue each student a character and have them act out the story as you read it. 
  • Cut out each animal and tape it to a popsicle stick or an unsharpened pencil.
     
  • If working with a group of children, each one can be a certain animal.
     
    • When their part of the story comes up, they can wiggle around the puppet and either chant their section of the story or make the animal sound.
       
    • You can have an animal parade...  Line the children up in the order they are mentioned in the story and let them march around the room, waving their puppets.
        
  • Animal sounds:  As you color the pictures, talk about each animal.  What sound does the animal make?  Where does the animal live?  Has the child ever seen that animal?
     
  • Color recognition:  First, ask all the bears to stand up and wave their puppets (or make their animal sound), then all the birds, etc.  Then ask all the people with BROWN animals to stand up, then all the RED animals, etc.
(**MUSIC) -Choral Reading:  Have students read the book together as a group and record them reading it.  Then place the tape and the book in the Listening Center.  This is a big hit with the kids! :)

Crayon Game:  Have each student get out one crayon for each color in the book (brown, red, yellow, blue, green, purple, white, black).  Flash a color word to the group and have the students raise the appropriate crayon to match the color word.  You can tell at a glance who still needs additional help with their color words.

(Science**) Brown Bear Tasting: Provide each student with a taste of foods matching the colors in the book:
brown - chocolate pudding, Hersey Kiss, cookie
red - strawberry, cherry, Red Hot
yellow - cheese
blue - blueberry
green - grape
white - milk, crustless bread, frosting, cream cheese, sour cream, grits
black - Oreo, black olive, jelly bean
purple - grape juice, jelly bean

Sound Sort:  For more advanced students, have them sort pictures onto pictures of the story character if they begin with the same sound.  For example, provide them with either a picture of the bear or the bird (/b/), the duck or the dog /d/, frog /f/, horse /h/, cat /c/, teacher /t/, goldfish /g/ <watch out for those who'll want to call it a "fish" ... wrong sound>, and then for really advanced students, sheep /sh/, and children /ch/.  The student will sort provided picture cards onto the picture with the same beginning sound.

Estimation:  Provide each student with a blackline shape of Brown Bear.  Have them guess how many M&Ms it would take to cover the bear.  Graph their responses.  Then provide M&Ms for each student to cover their bear.  See which student came closest in their estimation. 

Real or Make-Believe:  One of our benchmark objectives is for students (K or 1st, I can't remember) identify "real" or "make-believe".  Scan the pictures from the book, laminate, and provide them along with corresponding real animal pictures that have also been laminated.  Prepare two workmats.  One with a "real" scene at the top, and the other with a "make-believe" scene at the top.  Laminate.  Have the students sort the animal pictures into "Real" and "Make-Believe". 

New Quilt:  I used Brown Bear again this year as part of a Bear Unit that I'm doing with some kindergarteners and I wanted to redesign the quilt.  So I decided that I'd have them create the Brown Bear square again because he's so cute and that's good cutting and following directions practice, but then have them choose and paint their favorite character from the book as the alternate square.   And what kindergartener doesn't like to paint!?! :)  So that's what we did and I think it turned out cute!

Of course the alternate quilt square patterns that we used for the favorite character came from DLTK!  I just downloaded and resized them to fit on a 9x9 square of white paper.  Cut out and mounted them onto the square.  The small parts like feet, beak, bubbles, etc. they colored with crayons.


Graphing: After the children chose their favorite characters, I created a graph so that we could graph the favorite Brown Bear character.  Once the quilt was hung in the hallway, the children were each given their own graph and a clipboard and went in the hallway for class.  That in itself was neat! :)  There we discussed the results of quilt by talking about how many people chose the red bird as their favorite character, the blue horse?, the purple cat?, the goldfish?  Then we talked about getting that information onto our graph and graphing the results.  I did a model graph with them to how them how it was done.  They had been instructed to bring along only the colors they needed, so then they colored their animals and completed their graph independently without the aid of the model graph.

If doing this again, I would not include Brown Bear in the graph or allow him to be chosen as a favorite character.  The students were easily confused between the favorite character squares and the Brown Bear squares.  They wanted to count all the Brown Bear squares as a "favorite character."

Hallway Display: This is how our hallway looks at the moment for our Bear Unit.  This is all our Brown Bear stuff.
We're "Bear"y Excited About Learning!


Beginning Sounds: I created these picture cards from the story and then the matching beginning sound cards.  We fudged a little and used "f" for "fish" and "k" for "kids" instead of "children".  Then I put the pictures on my magnetic board (oil drip pan) and they matched the sounds to the picture. 


Beginning Sounds Printable: If the students were having trouble getting the beginning sounds that they know down on paper, this matching activity sheet(s) would help them practice that. 

4 Square Writing: With more advanced kids, they would write about each picture, but with younger grades, we practice saying a complete sentence about each picture.  I would say to the students, "Tell me a sentence with Blue Horse." 


Additional Books:
Seven Blind Mice (about colors)






Additional Links and Resources:
Bears @ The Virtual Vine

Brown Bear, Brown Bear, What Do You See?

Animal Tales: Figures to Tell Brown Bear, Brown Bear, What Do You See?

Bulletin Board - Brown Bear, Brown Bear, What Do You See?

Brown Bear Brown Bear

First Grader, First Grader, What Do You See?

Brown Bear, Brown Bear, What Do You See? Literature Theme

A to Z Kids Stuff Brown Bear, Brown Bear

Brown Bear - Kinder Art Littles, Preschool Activities and Lessons

Going On a Bear Hunt (webquest K)

Lesson Exchange: Brown Bear, Brown Bear

Family Storyteller Books and Activities

Brown Bear and Beyond With PreK

Brown Bear, Brown Bear part one

Brown Bear

Bear Facts

TeacherSource - Math. Here, There, and Everywhere Lesson Plan

Literacy Matters

Brown Bear, Brown Bear, What Do You See? learning video

Bear Misc.

Bear Games

A-Book-A-Week: Classroom Instruction

Teachers Page

Colors

Brown Bear, Brown Bear, What Can You Read? (1st-2nd)

Bear Links & Activities

Brown Bear Story Patterns

Brown Bear book printable