Oral language
Children will interpret information presented in a book read aloud and increase the number of novel words they understand.
New:
Review:
Be Prepared: This is the third of three repeated readings of a book with children. Today’s session focuses on children’s interpretation (explanations, reasoning) of information presented in the book. The session also will help children understand more novel words. From the list of novel words you identified prior to your first reading of the book, select 2–3 words to define for children today. See the Language/Literacy section of the ELM Curriculum User Guide: 3–5 Years for additional information on how to select and define novel words.
Now let’s spend some time with our book.
[See Week 3, Day 5 of Language/Literacy for a description and examples of how to approach today’s book reading. Key aspects are summarized below:
Geometric and spatial knowledge
Children will identify classroom objects that approximate a basic shape.
*1 large cutout of the following shapes: circle, triangle, square, rectangle
*Printables provided
Review:
Offer Week 10, Day 1 to review basic characteristics of circle, square, triangle, and rectangle.
Engage children in playing I Spy to identify classroom items that represent basic shapes.
Explain that some things in our room have the outlines of a shape we know. Point to and describe how the classroom door is the shape of a rectangle. Hold up a rectangle cutout in front of the door. Describe how the door has four straight sides and four corners. Two of its sides are very long and two of its sides are shorter.
Today we will play the game called I Spy. You will say the name of a shape and look in the direction of what you spy. Children will try to guess what you are looking at (spying). Example: Say “I spy a rectangle” as you look at the classroom door. Draw children’s attention to the focus of your eyes (what you might be looking at).
Items you may wish to include in an I Spy game include the following:
After a shape has been identified, hold the appropriate cutout in front of or near the item and ask children to describe how the item looks like the stated shape.
Invite all children to participate. Encourage children who are quick to correctly respond to all “I spy” statements, to give other children a chance to point to or say the name of a shape.
Add challenge by describing a shape’s characteristics rather than saying the shape name. Example: “I spy a shape that has four straight sides and four corners. Two of the sides are very long, and two of the sides are shorter. What do you think I spy?”
Motor development
Children will strengthen their locomotor skills by hopping and jumping.
Tape or sidewalk chalk (see Be Prepared)
Review:
Offer the Week 21, Day 5 activity to provide practice in jumping over an object.
Support children in alternating jumping and hopping.
Be Prepared: Provide a straight path that alternates two squares for children to jump to and one square for children to hop to (see diagram) by using tape to form squares. Sidewalk chalk may be used to form squares for an outdoor activity. Provide up to 10 hop/jump designations. To enable two children to jump/hop at about the same time, provide a second pattern if space permits and additional adult assistance is available.
Open the session by demonstrating (or inviting a volunteer child to demonstrate) a pattern of jump, hop, jump, hop, jump, hop. (This pattern is used in hopscotch, but today’s activity is not a hopscotch game.) Remind children that we land on both feet when we jump, and we land on one foot when we hop.
Invite children to take turns alternating a jump and a hop. Encourage children to name their movements (“hop, jump, hop, jump, hop, jump, hop”). It is not necessary for children to complete the path. This activity is not a competition.
To decrease challenge, children can jump instead of jumping and hopping. Encourage children to alternate landing with feet together in one square and with feet apart on two squares. For this arrangement, it might be helpful for a child to say or hear “feet together, feet apart, feet together, feet apart” as they jump along the path.
Exploring Where We Live
Social Studies
Skill and Goal
Knowledge of social and physical environments
Children will strengthen their understanding of walking as a method of transportation; using animals as transportation, and using multiple types of transportation to move people or objects.
Materials
Needed
*Printables provided
Key
Concepts
Review:
This week we learned that walking, a wheelchair, and animals can be used for transportation. We also learned that more than one type of transportation may be needed to get items or people from one place to another.
On Day 1, we learned that walking is a type of transportation. We learned that people with a disability may use a wheelchair to get from one place to another. We looked at a map of our program’s neighborhood for places we can walk to.
Let’s look at our map.
[Display map.]
What is one place a person can walk to?
On Day 2, we learned that animals can provide transportation.
[Display pictures of animals providing transportation.]
On Day 3, we learned that different types of transportation are used to get toys or other items from a factory to our homes or other places, such as our program.
Yesterday we learned that when people take a trip, they may use different types of transportation. We talked about taking a long trip and the different types of transportation we might use to get there.
What types of transportation did we talk about yesterday for our pretend trip?
This week we learned about two more types of transportation. We talked about walking. We also talked about how animals can provide transportation. We also learned that more than one type of transportation can be used to get people or things from one place to another. We talked about how something made at a factory gets to the place where it will be used. We talked about a pretend trip that involved different types of transportation.
Scaffolding Tips
Extra support
Enrichment
Center Activity
Provide transportation stencils, paper, colored pencils, and markers at the art center. Encourage children to use materials to create pictures focused on going on a trip.
Family Child Care
Invite children to pretend they are in charge of moving items from the factory to the store. Provide boxes and “trucks” to help them move the items.