Parent-Teacher Communication

One of my goals is to send emails to parents summarizing our school day. The following is one of my summaries, followed by a response from a mom:

Yesterday we started off with letter builders and paper houses on the tables. The children could sort bears and cubes according to color, match one to one on the windows, etc. The paint easel was also available.

At circle, I had three different sizes of pictures. Teddy bears, polar bears, bowls and spoons. We described one picture, then added another. I’m never content with just “small, medium and large,” because as you know, size is relative! What is large with two pictures, could end of being “medium” if you add another! So we brainstormed different words for different sizes. Big, huge, enormous, etc. medium, middle sized…you get the idea.

The children matched the sizes.. Where should this spoon go?

We read “Dustylocks and the Three Bears.” Dustylocks hadn’t had a bath “in a month of Sundays!”

Which took us to snack time.

(After children’s choice) I had planned a couple of learning stations, but children’s choice was so rich with imaginative play, I just couldn’t stop them!

Around noon, we cleaned up and did some gross motor activities on the gym mat. We did a pencil roll. (The children lie on the mat, arms overhead. They then roll down the mat! I’m observing their sense of kinesthesia; body movement. The goal is to be able to roll in a straight line! Very interesting to watch! Please encourage your children to do this at home, on the bed, on the floor, better yet, outside in the grass! 😉

We then did a bear walk… hands and feet on the mat, bottom up in the air! (They’re looking down at the mat.)
The hardest of all was the crab walk. From a sitting position, put your hands behind you, feet flat on the ground. (Face is looking up!) LIft your bottom. walk!

While we were waiting for pick up, we read “Rolling Along with Goldilocks and the Three Bears.” Baby Bear is in a wheel chair and goes to physical therapy, and he and G become good friends!

Lots of smiles, lots of fun!

G

This is a response I received from a mom of a three year old… (reposted with permission!)

It is so interesting that you mention sizes being relative. Last night, S had a bunch of little trucks out and I asked him to “clean them up all your little trucks.” I left the room for a minute, and he had put away about half of the trucks. I came back in and asked him to finish cleaning up, he pointed to them and said “but those are my MINI ones. you said put away my little ones.” He said it so matter of factly an emphatically that I laughed. But I also just assumed he was being a wise guy and forced him to clean all of them up. Next time I will consider maybe he actually was applying something he learned to his every day life:) thanks for the rundown of the day — I would have never been able to connect this home event to school without your summary.