From the Pond
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A blog by Melanie Lloyd (From the Pond) about classroom activities and printables for K-3 learners: the mission is to provide motivating and practical teaching resources to teachers and parents of primary school-aged children. The aim of this blog is to make learning fun with bright, happy, skill-focused K-3 classroom printables!
From the Pond
2d ago
Do you find that your children love to learn about ocean creatures? Share a few books or informative websites with them and they'll be captivated! The ocean has some of the most fascinating and mysterious creatures on Earth. They come in all shapes and sizes, and they live in a wide variety of habitats, from the shallows of the coastal waters to the deepest parts of the ocean. Why not learn about a new marine animal each week with your class.
Over in the Pond Coloring Club I have a free drawing page for a Flashlight Fish. Draw it after you've done some shared reading about this very cool l ..read more
From the Pond
6d ago
Integrate some ladybug themed activities into your week to engage your students and support their curiosity for the natural world.
You could:
watch some short videos that include ladybug facts - ask your students to remember a few to present to the class in a later discussion
count ladybug spot in math
draw and paint ladybugs
make a ladybug craft in fine motor activities
read books and tell stories about ladybugs
explore the ladybug life cycle
A printable pennant banner is available in my store to help create a classroom learning center, display header or spark interest in the top ..read more
From the Pond
1w ago
Encourage your children to write about ladybugs this week! They could write a:
Ladybug Life Cycle:
Write a story about the life cycle of a ladybug, from egg to adult (this pack has a page for drawing and writing labels on a life cycle).
Ladybug Habitat:
Write a poem about the different places where ladybugs live. Research some facts about ladybugs, isolate some keywords and make a chart for students to use as a word bank in their writing.
Ladybug Helpers:
Write on and draw a poster about how ladybugs help the environment and plants by eating aphids.
Ladybug Friends:  ..read more
From the Pond
1w ago
Tracing and Painting Are Great for Kindergarten on a Friday!
Have a little Fun Friday session to help your students wind down the week and review some of their learning activities. You'll integrate plenty of learning opportunities - but they'll just think it's all fun and games!
There are hundreds of stations you could set up in independent-learning style activity centers - here are just a few:
They could:
draw and make with paper scraps and glue
choose anything to read from the class library
play some math games you’ve taught through the week in a relaxed, independent learnin ..read more
From the Pond
2w ago
Here is one game from our Ten Frame Activities pack. Your learners will:
subitize numbers to ten on a ten frame
count objects
develop an understanding of the relationship between numbers and quantities; connect counting to cardinality
use a rectangular array to count 'how many'
How to play Make It Mouse
have a teacher set of ten frame flashcards and briefly show these to your group, giving them time to look at the number
decide if you'll ask your students to call the number right away, or remember it in their mind (depending on their math skills)
have your students re-create the number ..read more
From the Pond
2w ago
Here is another game to use in math groups using any of the mats in the Play to Ten pack! Here we are using the robot cards but you can use any of the 20 different themed cards to engage and motivate your students. Students will
count to make a number on the robot
add or take away to make another number
How to play Robot Remake
place the numeral cards in a face down pile
players flip a card and make the number - e.g 7
flip another card and then remake the set to show the new number - e.g. taking one away to make the new number 6
Here we've flipped a number 8 card and have ta ..read more
From the Pond
2w ago
Here are the new Pig Pairs math activity cards from the Math Kit! They are ideal for reference during any math activity - where students can easily be supported to learn the addition facts that make ten - but they can also be used for interactive games too! Here is one idea:
Pig Dig
the pigs are digging for food and when they find a pair can eat (line up cubes as food)
students take turns to choose a number to 'dig'
for example, a student might choose the number 7 (uncovered) and say '3' before digging (sliding the cube off)
if correct, the cube is kept by the student until the end of the ..read more
From the Pond
3w ago
Spring - a lovely season of more sunshine and blooming flowers! Color, activity and new beginnings. Let's have our students tend to a garden in a small group math activity and encourage their minds to bloom with foundational counting and emerging number sense.
For this game I'm using a page from the Pond Coloring Club (Pick a Flower) and flower cards from the Math Kit.
Sunshine in the Garden - a math warm up or small group activity
remind your students that flowers need water (rain) and sunshine to grow
have a pile of flower cards and a coloring page
take a flower card and copy the ..read more
From the Pond
3w ago
Drawing Fun Snails with CrayonsSnails, with their beautiful shells and slow-paced nature, can be a delightful subject for drawing. And what better way to capture their charm than with colorful crayons?
Help your children have a fun drawing session where they’ll practice a round circle shape and a curved (capital C) to integrate some early-handwriting skills too!
Materials needed:
a sheets of paper or pages from my printable pack
a variety of crayons
watercolors (optional)
Instructions:
Start by drawing 3 round ovals for the snail's shell (see photo below).
Draw a curved letter C shape f ..read more
From the Pond
3w ago
Here is a math warm up to get your kindergarten children counting to ten with counters. Use it to engage them before you start a mini lesson at the math table and to review and asses their counting and number sense. I've used the frog lilypad cards and dot cards (1s and 2s) from the Math Kit.
Using Counters in Math PlayUsing counters or blocks is important for:Hands-on learning:
Using physical objects like counters allows children to engage in hands-on learning, which research has shown to be effective in early math education.Concrete representation of numbers:
Counters prov ..read more