Showing posts with label letter of the week. Show all posts
Showing posts with label letter of the week. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 29, 2015

Letter of the Week-Yay or Nay?

There are many debates about weather Letter of the Week and if it is best practice or not.  I want to explain my stance on it and how it works in MY room.  Not all classrooms are the same, not all districts will agree.  That is ok-consider this an opinion piece.

Let me start by saying I teach 4k.  That means my students must be 4 by September 1st.  This is the first school experience by many, we do not use common core, and we are a play based room.  That means my students come in to play, learn the critical social and emotional skills related to school, and then gain as much academics as they are personally ready for to help them prepare for kindergarten. This is my 4th year teaching and in my past 3 years I have had students come in my room at a vareity of starting points as far as letter recognition, but EVERY SINGLE YEAR 88%-100% of students leave passing their PALS levels!

I do use Letter of the Week in my room.  This does not mean I teach the letters in isolation. I want the kids to have memorable experiences with the letters to help them make connections, have fun with learning, and PLAY.  We play with letters.  I cannot play with all the letters at once and have them have meaning.  Therefore, we play with the letters one at a time.  At the same time, during calendar we talk about the letter in its environment on the month, the day, etc regardless of letter of the week.  When we are doing a shared reading or writing, we talk about all the letters regardless of the letter of the week.

Ways to Play with letters: ~~Yes, I do all of these with each letter of the week!
Get to come up to the teacher board and write them (easel)
Sing about them (We use Literacy Links)
Make a sound symbol (Also from Literacy Links)
Decorate the letter with something that sounds like that letter*
Make a hand print activity for the letter*

*We make a book with these.  School Supplies consist of 30 page protectors.  We put them together with binder rings and they have a book with a letter and an image.  They use this for reading once the alphabet is done.  These books also help teach critical early reading skills such as 1:1 correspondance, left to right, one touch for one word (not syllable), figuring out the word if they are ready, knowing if the words are ___ the the illustration is going to be ____

Book Template available HERE

Daily Environmental:
Calendar Month
Calendar Day
Center Names
Room Lables
Job Names
Their Name

Shared Reading: Poem of the week 
Find letters in the poem
If I hear the __ sound in __.  If I hear ___ what letter is this right here?

Shared Writing: Class Book
Pick a topic the whole Class can relate to (a trip, a theme, school, etc)
Have children illustrate the page (either everyone make a page or work as a team to make a page).
Have students come up and write what they hear *with class help* in the correct spot on book. Teacher can finish.

To Review:
Dos:
  • play with letters
  • sing about letters
  • have fun with letters
  • use the letters
Don'ts:
  • Teach in isolation
  • skip teaching a letter because its not the letter of the week
  • only talk about that letter for the whole week
  • skip environmental text 
  • skip literacy activities like shared writing/shared reading

Sunday, July 13, 2014

Letter of the Week

As stated in my original post, I am going to be starting my school year on maternity leave.  I am spending my summer prepping for the sub, making my sub binder, and breaking down all of my procedures in my room in a series of blog posts.

     •Before school on Monday, I put the letter of the week up on the board, and the large outline next  to the calendar.  I purchased a set of alphabet letters that also have sign language on them.  I have an area labeled letter of the week (left of this picture).  I post this weekly and then refer to it during the week.  We teach the kids the signs to go with the letters to help the students who are anesthetic learners as well as the auditory learners.  

      I created a set of bubble letters on poster board.  I then laminated each of the pages.  Each week we will work on words we know that start with the specific sounds and then write them on there.  These will be posted on the right of the calendar (in the blank spot between the calendar and the purple fabric)

•On Monday, in opening circle, I introduce the letter of the week.  I tell the students the name of the letter we are working on--both the capital letter and the lowercase letter, the sign language and the sound symbol (Literacy Link book)

•At carpet dismissal time on Monday, I teach how to properly write the letter on the board to help those kids who need help with their gross motor skills.  Students must write the letter correctly (and hold the marker correctly) and then they are dismissed to their learning centers.\

•On Monday closing circle, I read the AlphaTales series.  We discuss the words in that book that started with our letter.  We will write these words on the bubble letter mentioned above.  

•During Monday snack, I play the YouTube Video from Have Fun Teaching.  Kids love the upbeat songs, writing things in the air, and they really start to sing along quickly.

•During Tuesday morning work, students will complete the coloring book page that goes along with the Literacy Link series.

•On Tuesday, during small group, students will decorate the letter of the week with something that starts with that letter.  Click HERE to see all images of my letter decorating for the whole alphabet.

•During Tuesday snack, I play the YouTube Video Olive and the Rhyme Rescue Crew.  Kids love the stories and often request these videos even during indoor recess.

•During Wednesday snack, I play the YouTube StoryBots videos Kids love the songs and build a nice vocabulary as well as give them words that start with that letter.  We put these on the bubble letters as well. 
•During Thursday morning work, students will complete the Beginning Sound Crown from Lidia Barbosa from KinderAlphabet.

Thursday small group, students will read the sentence on the page (discuss letter name, find another on the page, what is this at the end of a sentence, read me the sentence, make sure they use their reading finger and one to one correspondence.) Click HERE to see all images of my hand print activities for the whole alphabet. 

•During Thursday snack, I play the YouTube Sesame Street Clips for the letter.  I just search "Sesame Street Letter __" The classics are sometimes the best!

Thursday closing circle, students practice the proper hand writing of the letter on the sheet.
Through out the week, we write the words the students know that start with this letter on the big letter.

Through out the week, at carpet dismissal, students  practice correct formation of the letters.