My
team met last month and planned out our first unit of study. YEAY!! We were
given time to collaborate and build our unit with the help of some of our
administrators after learning about the process. A few months prior, we had
received some professional development based on the book Essential Questions: Opening Doors to Student Understanding (I went cross-eyed a few times while
reading/discussing some of the chapters). It took a few (full) days to build
this unit and agree on an essential question. Now, we’re definitely on our way
to answering it.
We
began our unit of study after returning from Winter Break. It’s centered on
life in cold climates (Arctic & Antarctica). Many of my students have
little to no experience with freezing temperatures or snow. A snow day in
Central California?! That’s unheard of (especially this season when our lowest
temps have been around 40). So, I decided to make fake snow for my kiddos. You
should have seen their little faces when I told them we would be making snow.
Of course, one of my little geniuses raised his hand and said, “Wait, are we
making it out of paper or something else?” He thought I was pulling his leg. I
had to explain that it would look and feel like snow. Holy moly! The whole
class started buzzing with excitement.
I
stopped at Target to pick up 4 pounds of baking soda, and the Dollar Store for
a bottle of hair conditioner. I couldn’t believe how easy and cheap it was to
create such a memorable experience for my class.
I was
so fortunate to have a couple of parent helpers come in and assist with the
activity. They chose students to mix the ingredients and monitored them as they
made snowmen, igloos and cakes. The mixture made enough for 10 kiddos to play
with and share with the carpet. The other half of my class did a craft, and
then switched activities after 15 minutes. I had to apologize to my custodian
for all the mess my little friends had left behind. OOPS! Although, I don’t
think he minded much because our floors are always so spotless.
On the day of the activity, my students were so excited that the first thing they said to me that morning was
“It’s Snow Day!”
|
I
would highly recommend this snow activity if your students have had limited
experiences with snow. It has created so much more excitement for our unit of
study.
If you'd like a page to compliment this activity, click {HERE}. I'm always looking for ways to get my kiddos writing.
I can't wait to share more about this unit! Stay tuned!
I can't wait to share more about this unit! Stay tuned!
Kids were running up to telling me all about this! :) Definitely, snow much fun!
ReplyDelete