Saturday, August 11, 2012

Clock Labels

Since I'm teaching time this year, I decided it would be fun to have the clock labels I've seen frequently on Pinterest. Of course, being a little "OCDish," I wanted them to match my classroom colors. I'll add a picture of the clock later when I post my updated classroom pics next week, but I wanted to share the minute labels before the school year gets started.

 

Since I can't figure out how to make a link for a PDF file, if you'd like a printable copy, please comment with your email address and I'll be glad to send you the file.

Tuesday, August 7, 2012

Doing Away With "Rules"

In my classroom, I'm not a huge fan of "rules." Instead, I prefer to let the kids know what my expectations are. On Pinterest, I found a great sign which I quickly decided I wanted to make (with edits) for my own classroom.

Here is the finished product!



Thank you Creative Genius Art for the inspiration.

Wednesday, August 1, 2012

Money in an Apron

Last year, my behavior management theme was stars. The behavior chart was stars with numbers on each point, and the students turned their star if redirection was needed. Students could also earn paper stars to use to make purchases from the treasure boxes.

With moving to second grade, I'm also moving away from stars. A good friend of mine who is going from second to fifth grade this year shared with me how she used play money for rewards and consequences. A few times a year, she would set out this extravagant store in which the students could make purchases with the money they had earned. Seeing that we teach money in second grade, I decided to follow her lead and transition from a currency of stars to make purchases, to using money and real-world situations.

Of course, now I had to figure out how I would have the money with me throughout the day. I could buy a little apron somewhere... but would it have the right number of pockets? Probably not.

When you can't find what you want... make it!
Notice the owls! I knew this was the fabric I wanted as soon as I saw it.
Its hard to see in the picture, but this apron has seven (yes, seven!) pockets. Each pocket is made using darts so they stick out further and have room for plastic coins, and paper bills. 4 small pockets on the right, 2 long/horizontal pockets middle/leftish, and 1 vertical pocket on the far left. Yikes! That was quite a task, but quite a rewarding feeling when I finished them.

You can see a second apron made for a friend.