Saturday, March 10, 2012

T is for Turtle

Bear did parts of a turtle cards and nomenclature book.  You can find some from Montessori Print Shop.
I have a CD of three-part cards I won two years ago but didn't like their turtle cards, which were clipart, not realistic.  I didn't feel like paying for their new ones, which are nice.  I found the ones we ended up using at Montessori Materials.  Bear made her own cover.




 
Both J-jo and Bear did the turtle shape craft from Mama Jenn.  I use her print outs every week for MFW K, but we don't do the copywork.  Bear does so much other copywork that doing this would be too much and obviously, J-jo can't write yet.

 
This is a cute turtle rhyme from PreKinders.

This is my turtle.
(Make fist, extend thumb)
He lives in a shell.
(Hide thumb in fist)
He likes his home very well.
He pokes his head out when he wants to eat.
(Extend thumb)
And pulls it back when he wants to sleep.
The MFW instructor's guide has a turtle poem in it as well, and I used a few things from around the house to act out the first stanza.   (It goes something like...there was a turtle who lived in a box...)

I had this turtle pattern block mat from Prekinders printed from ages ago.  Neither kid was very interested.

I set out a tong transfer of turtles (from various Toobs) with one to one correspondence to the turtle clipart (the turtle bingo from PreKinders).  This was something J-jo kept returning to do.


I used the boards from our Tag counting toy and added turtle erasers I found last year or the year before at the Dollar Tree.



J-jo did his MFW K sheets.  These are the same each week - cutting and sorting letter sounds and other prereading worksheets.  It isn't much - four sheets for the week and we don't do the copywork or the drawing.  He is now starting the reading section of the curriculum, which starts on week 6, the turtle week (I haven't blogged about each week because I am behind in blogging).  He isn't quite ready, but I "do" the lessons with him when he is willing and find it interesting when it seems he is reading a cvc word.  He is unlike Bear in that she likes to show off what she knows.  He likes to pretend he doesn't know anything when in fact he kind of does.


(blurry, but I love this look of concentration)

We read a lot of books about sea turtles, and a couple about tortoises.  A hit was A Mama for Owen, which is more about a hippo, but the hippo's new mama is a tortoise.  We read Turtle Splash again, which is a countdown book.
There's a great movie about sea turtles on Netflix streaming that we watched.  It was impressive to follow a sea turtle from hatching to her return to lay eggs and I wish I knew how they had filmed that.

Bear did a narration of what she remembered about sea turtles from the readings and the movie.  It was a very good narration that she read as her presentation at Classical Conversations.  I still write her narrations for her.  I find the narrations are much more thorough if we do them this way.

Bear did a lesson from Artistic Pursuits Book 1 on drawing from photos, using a photograph of a tortoise.

We are moving on from "U is for Us" (and I probably won't blog about that one because it was uninspired and uninspiring) to "D is for Dinosaurs." Here's what we did for dinosaurs almost two years ago.

4 comments:

  1. what a conincidence! Im planning a turtle theme activity for my sonshine too! Thanks for sharing your ideas!

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  2. What a fantastic idea you had using those boards from the Tag counting toy. Great way to work on numeracy & having the child "visualize" the number/quantity!! Loved it.

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  3. What a fantastic unit! I love every single different material. I featured your post on the Montessori MOMents Facebook Page. Thanks for inspiring us all!

    www.facebook.com/MontessoriMOMents

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  4. I love your turtle activities, Julie! I featured your post and turtle transfer photo in my Montessori-Inspired Turtle Activities post at http://livingmontessorinow.com/2013/05/20/montessori-monday-montessori-inspired-turtle-activities/

    ReplyDelete