Thursday, October 27, 2016

Mrs. Wishy Washy's Farm


 

Our very own Mrs. Wishy Washy saved the day during our class's version of, Mrs. Wishy Washy's Farm!  After the animals ran away from the farm, (...because they didn't want to take a bath) they got caught by the city's animal control.  Luckily, Mrs. Wishy Washy came to the rescue in her old farm truck & brought them back to the country where they belonged...just in time for another bath.





 







Sensory Fun

 

Some days, you just need to practice your letters with sticky fingers...

 



Or paint your watercolor masterpiece...


 

 

Or even make a barn snack, complete with roof, door and edible paint.



Our Trip to Brookdale Farm



The preschoolers had a blast visiting a real farm near our school.  This farm had a barn and animals, but it also had corn & pumpkins!  The preschoolers went on a hayride so that they could find their very own pumpkin to take home.  The tractor was big and strong, but it sure was a bumpy ride!

 

 


 





Sunday, October 16, 2016

OLES Farm Unit

 



Our new thematic center focuses on the vocabulary of "The Farm."  The preschoolers are discovering that many living things take up residence on the farm, including people & animals.  In our stories, as well as in our dramatic play, we are talking about the people who live on a farm & what their jobs might be.  We are also talking about the animals who live on the farm, what sounds they make & what they eat, etc.  As you can see in the pictures, we have a some future farmers in this bunch.  :)


 


Language Experience...another tool for learning



Each week we have a language experience for the preschoolers.  The goal of this experience is to provide a fun & meaningful activity that will help our students to gain an understanding of the vocabulary from our theme.  Additionally, the language experience gives us an opportunity to see what the students have already learned and give them a chance to practice talking about it.  Lastly, these activities provide a time for our preschoolers to put their listening skills to work.

We use a team approach when implementing our language experiences.  One of the speech/language pathologists & myself, a teacher of the deaf, work together to prepare a learning activity that will raise the bar for our students' listening & language goals.  These structured language activities also expose the preschoolers to real opportunities that are highly motivating for using language in a purposeful manner.

After the experience is over, our goal is that the preschoolers will have had a real experience in class that will help them to further synthesize their vocabulary knowledge on a certain topic.  Hopefully, they will be so excited about it that they will want to share what they have learned with someone at home.

For the first month of school, we focused our language experiences on our 2 themes:  About Me & the Pet Shop.  We made apple smiles, a mouse face, a Pete the Cat snack and a hamster snack.  While these particular language experiences used food items as our learning medium, we do not always use food for our language experiences.