Thanksgiving is drawing near and I
can think of so many things I am thankful for! One of them being you! Thank you for reading our blog and sharing our blog! I means the world to all of us!
I am sure you can think of
several things that you are thankful for as well! But, how would you narrow it
down to just one thing if you had to?
That is what I have asked my
kindergartners to do…come up with the one thing that you are MOST thankful for and
we use it to make a special placemat that they can use on Thanksgiving Day at
home. We do this project over the course of a week.
I start by asking my students what
Thanksgiving means to them? Why do we celebrate Thanksgiving? What does “give
thanks” mean?
Then I read the book Thanksgiving is for Giving Thanks written
by Margaret Sutherland. I then go back and ask the same questions I asked
before to see if students may have changed their minds.
We then talk about the things that
we are thankful for. Some students share many things they are thankful for and
others may only share one thing.
I make a predictable chart, “I am
thankful for __________.” I tell
students that I know that they are thankful for many things and so am I, but I
want them to think of the one thing that they are MOST thankful for. Then, one
by one, students will tell me what they are thankful for and then come up and
help me finish writing the sentence. It is nice when there is more than one
adult in the room because then you can split the class into two or three groups
to do this part and it won’t take as long.
Once all of the students have been
able to tell me what they are thankful for, the students will come up and read
their sentence with the special Fall pointer, being sure to point to each word
as they read it.
Next, I will write out the
sentences on small strips of paper and hand them out to the students. Students
will read their sentences at their seats. Once they have done this, students
will then cut out the words in the sentence and the period. When the words are
all cut out, they will mix up the words and then put them back together in the
correct order 2-3 times. I make sure that students leave a finger space between
each word and they must read it to me one time after they have put their
sentence back in the correct order.
Students then will glue their
sentence on a white piece of paper and illustrate. I have also had students write out their sentences instead of gluing them on.
Once students are done
illustrating, they will take their work and glue it onto an orange or brown
piece of construction paper. I will then give them time to dry and laminate
them so that we can use them for our Kindergarten Feast at school and then
students can take them home and use them for Thanksgiving Dinner with their
family. They can also help in saying the prayer before dinner by reading their place mat.
I hope you have wonderful
Thanksgiving, spend it well with family!
Carie also writes her own blog:
Carie Ramirez
I love writing on the chart paper. That turns their sentences into a poem (or a song). I love this idea!
ReplyDeleteTerri
KinderKapers
Thank you KinderKapers! I never thought of turning it into a poem! Great idea!
DeleteLove this idea, too! Thanks for sharing! :)
ReplyDeleteThank you Lorena! Happy Thanksgiving to you :)
DeleteThank you for the ideas! I will be using the I am thankful for... while the kids illustrate a picture at the bottom. Great idea.
ReplyDelete