Monday, March 27, 2017

Want to teach in the Arctic?

It is a truly one-of-a-kind teaching experience that really everyone should try at some point!

http://www.alaskateacher.org/jobs/detail.htm?choosedistrict=true&applitrackclient=1696&all=1

Besides a great salary and unique living situation, you get smaller class sizes & really great students.

Here are two other blogs about the great things you'll see and do:

Fort Yukon, Alaska. https://snowschuler11.wordpress.com/
Venetie, Alaska. https://floridatoalaska.wordpress.com/



This week it is State Testing & Carnival. We didn't have Fall/Winter since the State was getting a new vendor and for my 3rd Graders, this will be the first time they will have this State assessment. But they don't seem too worried about it. The school is having a basketball shooting contest at 8:30 in the morning to incentivize students to show up on time. We also have early release at 1:30pm all week. Today, some of my students will be participating in the dog mushing races.


Over $16,000 in prizes for this week-long Carnival! Amazing!


#Cupchallenge

There is something so incredibly joyful of building something that is taller than yourself. 
Amazing how much conversation & cooperation this fostered

And when it fell, they were so excited to build it up again. 

This time, they did it "rainbow" by sorting the cups by color. 

We measured it with the yard stick. 40 yards. 

Plus 40 yards plus 12 which was about 92 yards. They will try to make it even taller tomorrow. 

Wednesday, March 22, 2017

Would you rather fight a horse-sized duck or duck-sized horse?



I had a student walk in and ask me this question yesterday. This morning I found it hilarious that Neil Gorsuch was asked this same question in his hearing.

http://time.com/4708665/neil-gorsuch-supreme-court-jeff-flake-horse-duck-reddit/

What was my answer?

I said I'd rather fight a horse-sized duck because after the fight I'd be able to eat a lot of roast duck.

...though now that I think about it, a duck-sized horse would be adorable.


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Here in the Arctic, the days are getting longer. So nice to see sunlight. Its up when I wait for the bus in the morning, which has made a big difference.

 It really does feel like spring. We were able to go play outside for the first time last week, which has been SO great!

Monday, March 20, 2017

#MarchMadness


I started this week having the students fill out brackets with me. I haven't done this since college and it was fun to share this collegiate tradition with them.

A couple of my girls are really interested in WNBA and so I told them the story about college basketball & the UConn Woman's team who set a record of winning 107 consecutive games in a row. 


As review for our upcoming state assessment, I also made some brackets for the students to compete in. There is Math, PE, Art, and Language Arts. Each student gets to compete in 2 events in the 1st round. I know I paired them up right because I heard things like

"I'm so glad I'm in Math and PE, those are my favorite"
"I'm happy that I'm in Language Arts and Art because I'm not as good at PE and Math"

Some wanted to  be in more than 1 event, I had it set up that all could compete for fun and only those who were in the bracket would move along in that event.

Day 1 had the Mathletes competing in time trials for the 1 and 2 times tables. The Artists had a pictionary type face-off drawing the same items (submarine, spagheti, Ice fishing, and quacking).

 PE had an obstacle course consisting of running, jumping, and shooting a basket in a time trial. Language Arts had a trivia game consisting of questions from books that we have read this year.


LET THE MADNESS BEGIN!!!! :) 

#DrSeussDay & #StPatricksDay QR Code Scavenger Hunt








We celebrated Dr Seuss Day by having an Elementary School-wide activity day complete with a green eggs & ham snack.

In my classroom, my activity was based on "Wocket in my pocket" I printed out and hid little Seussical monsters all over the classroom. The students then competed in teams of 3 to find all 15 montsters the fastest.






For St. Patrick's Day, I decided to do a scavenger hunt using QR codes.

Clue 1 was an equation. The answer was 6, which took them to the 6th grade classroom door.
Clue 3 was the 13th letter of the alphabet and the first vowel of the alphabet in a place where there were lots of books.

Friday, March 17, 2017

#Ididacontest




One of my students placed 3rd ihttp://ididacontest.org/index.cfm/1,122,525,2,html/2017-IDidaContest-Winners-Movies for her claymation movie in the "Make me laugh" category.

I didn't tell her, I slowly showed the kids the different placed movies from the different categories. They were so excited for her. We also watched the 2nd and 1st place movies, they weren't impressed. LOL

Afterwards, they wanted to start making more movies. I told them the next ididacontest wouldn't be till next February. They didn't care. They have their eyes on 1st prize for next year :)

Fire Safety with Molly

https://education.microsoft.com/Story/VirtualFieldTrip?token=1P874


 We got to learn about Fire Safety from Molly the Fire Dog over Skype.
 We were Molly's 43/50 State and her trainer was excited that she got to hold the Alaska Flag for the first time!
Molly has a brother named Beau, who is learning how to be a fire safety dog too. They were sleepy because they had accidentally gotten up at 3am thinking that they had a 5am skype when it was a 5pm skype! They taught us to have a plan to get out, to have a meeting place with your family and to crawl when there is smoke. They were very smart dogs! 

Some cool trivia about dalmations. Firetrucks were originally horse-draw carriages, so they were used to keep other dogs away. Dalmations have a special scent that doesn't bother horses, which is why they were so popular as fire station dogs!