2 week unit: The students will learn about bears in three different ways: teddy bears, real bears and fictional bears. http://www.geocities.com/kindergartenkapers/bears.html Grade Level(s): K Bears Lesson Plan Songs and poems and cross-curricular activities for a bears theme unit. ...
Filed Under: SEASONAL Tagged With: CENTERS, CLASSROOM, CLASSROOM MANAGEMENT, ELEMENTARY LITERACY, KINDERGARTEN, KINDERGARTEN CLASSROOM, LITERACY ACTIVITIES, MATH ACTIVITIES, THEMATIC ACTIVITIES, THEMATIC UNITS BACK TO SCHOOL LESSONS FOR LITTLE LEARNERS June 14, 2023 by Melissa Chase Back to school is ...
This book is the second in a series of thematic units designed especially for children who are deaf and hard of hearing in kindergarten through the elementary grades. The unit focuses on sea creatures and is divided into seven sections. Five sections contain lessons on particular sea animals incl...
We had just completed a unit on heroes, and I had given my kindergarten class a task to ___ their favorite hero. Each child was ___ with the task, creating colorful masterpieces. However, one little boy was having ___ with the task. Cameron was with autism, but that didn’t matter...
It was one of my kindergarteners who I thought was ___ that day. He had been dropped off at school late and was ___ to open the door. He must have been waiting there for quite a while! Without a word, I rushed him to the hospital. He was treated for frostbite on his hands...
I was the only Arab and only Muslim in my junior kindergarten class. Beyond those obvious differences, Canadian life proved to be quite distinct in other ways. And I discovered another surprise that December. Overnight, everything was suddenly covered in red and green. My classmates talked ...
I was four years old in 1993, when my family emigrated .(移民) from the United Arab Emirates to Toronto. Young enough to be changed by my new home, but old enough to know I was different from everyone around me. I was the only Arab and only Muslim in my junior kindergarten class. ...
Jayce Crowder began noticing in kindergarten that he looked different from his classmates. They had two hands. He had one. “It started when one boy teased him,” says his mother, Cortney Lewis. He'd return home with questions: Why am I different? Why me? Why? He actually said he was...