Thursday, December 30, 2010

After-Christmas Retail Therapy for the Classroom

It's transition time: the Christmas ornaments need to be taken down, wrapped, and put away until next December, and the house will become relatively calm again until most likely, spring break, when we have a family trip planned.

Between the baking, wrapping, cleaning, unwrapping, eating, cleaning, laughing, Wii-ing, re-arranging and cleaning, I've managed to schedule in some visits to several antique malls, wandering their aisles wondering what treasure (Marcrest?  Individual salt cellars like my great-grandmother's?  Photos of adoptable ancestors?  Old slide rulers, game pieces and story books?) I might find.  As much as I might like the idea of sleeping in, it takes much longer for my body to switch gears and alter its internal clock, so I've been out of bed by eight, no matter what, every day of break.
I've also hit the after-Christmas sales, oh yes.  While it's true I've found great deals on goodies for NEXT Christmas, after-holiday and clearance sales have also been great places to find crafty items and decor for classroom use. Ah, the ~inner teacher monologue~ as I walk up and down each store's clearance sections:

Oooh!  Red works for Valentine's Day!


And green!  St. Patrick's is just around the corner! 


Look!  Snowflake shaped paper garlands!  On clearance!  And we're learning about winter, so it's curricular!  

Sad, sad, I know, but honey, I *own* my inner teacher monologue!

Teacher Tip: Track down traditional (and solid colored) red and green tinsel, tissue paper, raffia, bags, and even ornaments for Valentine's and St. Patrick's Day decor, bulletin boards and art projects.  

White and silver bulbs and tinsel work beautifully in January, when many students are enjoying learning about winter, and don't put away those white twinkle lights until the snow melts!

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Non-traditional colored tinsel and garland in pinks, blues and purples add a fun touch to spring or patriotic displays and crafty art.  

Red pony beads and pipe cleaners used for candy cane ornaments in December can also be used to make valentine hearts...

... and yes, buy those holiday pencils, erasers, and treat bags NOW, at 75% off.  Put them away, though not TOO far away, or else you won't be able to find them next December when you'll need to find them quickly between your students' Christmas program rehearsals, class parties and end-of-semester report cards.  Are you wanting a classroom table top tree?  NOW is the time to purchase one, unless you're a gifted yard sale shopper or know someone who is!

Ah, retail therapy... for the classroom.

*wink*

Saturday, December 25, 2010

Merry Christmas!

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... and warmest wishes for a ~very~ Happy New Year!

Monday, December 13, 2010

Appreciation Gifts

Each year the two respective "wings" of our school give holiday gifts to our night custodians.  I've been asked to make the dear lady's card to accompany our gift, a card large enough for grades K-2 to sign.  I couldn't resist making a matching holiday bitty banner (she has purchased several from me) to accompany the card:

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How do you help your non-teaching staff celebrate the holidays?

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I love to give my Stars a book each Christmas (holiday pencils too!), usually one we've read and enjoyed together.  This year, The Gingerbread Man, sassy sing-song-iness and all was a HIT with boys and girls alike, so I redeemed my bonus points through Scholastic, and purchased twenty-plus copies:

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Do you need some teacher/colleague appreciation gift ideas?

~ The Long Thread created a nice linky-list of crafty gift-giving ideas...
~ Brown Paper Packages teaches us how to package the fixin's for "Snowman Soup..."
~ Crafty coasters and notepad how-to's can be found at Beneath My Heart...
~ Living Locurto shares not only affordable gift ideas but free printables too...

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Students and their families always help me celebrate my birthday, since it's two days before Christmas.  Gifts of hugs and handmade cards often accompany sweet little packages.  What brings a smile to my face every year?  Artwork created by my students, photos of my Super Stars, coffee gift cards, ornaments that I can bring out year after year, books, pretty binding clips for big stacks of papers, crafty supplies, fruit baskets, and of course...

Chocolate.

Thank you Dear Stars and Super Star Families!

Sunday, December 12, 2010

I'll Be Changing the Blog

... over the next few weeks.

Change number one has already happened:

I've created a second blog, devoted entirely to my crafty adventures, blog roaming and family updates, Twigs and Tulle.

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Kindergarten's 3 R's will return to its original focus: respect, resources and rants for the world of early childhood education.  Here I'll continue to share kindergarten links, ideas and humor from the classroom.

It's taken three plus years and over seven hundred blog posts for me to realize that I have two voices: the teacher Me, and the crafter/mommy Me.

Crafty Me is ready to spread her wings!  If you feel so inclined, please join me over at Twigs and Tulle for Etsy shop updates, links to home decor, recipes, music, humor and crafty endeavors.

Of course you can keep visiting me here where we'll continue our kindergarten adventure together, okie dokie Artichoke-y?

Friday, December 10, 2010

I'll Be Participating...

... will you?

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Visit Lisa over at A Whimsical Bohemian for all of the info!

Thursday, December 02, 2010

Rudolph Had Better Watch Out...

... because my Super Stars are after his job!

We made the traditional triangle/antler/glitter nose Rudolph project for one bulletin board, but followed up with photos of the Stars sporting their own antlers and glittered schnozzes... Rudolph should know how willing they are to fill in should Santa need their help this year!

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This fellow appears appropriately nervous:


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I took photos of the Stars standing in front of our white board, printed them out in grayscale on 8 1/2 by 11 inch paper (the white background made it easy to cut away the details that WEREN'T part of each child's body), had the students cut out antlers, glue them to the backs of their photos, and then glue their new portrait onto black construction paper.  White glue was swirled onto each nose, and red glitter was sprinkled on top and left to dry overnight.

The text on the first board reads "Run Run Rudolph!" while the other exclaims "We want your job!"

Do you have a favorite reindeer/Rudolph activity or story?  Add a comment and feel free to link us on our way to it!




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Want to learn more about reindeer?  Visit the Reindeer Research Program at the University of Alaska-Fairbanks (yep, where I earned my teaching degree) and check out all of the links!  Make sure to visit the Gallery and head down to the  "Educational Outreach" link.  The second photo featuring Elsa was taken in my classroom when I still taught in Alaska.  Your students can even help name each season's new calves!  Go here for more information.

Wednesday, December 01, 2010

See That Smile?

It's the smile forced after having two-hundred-and-fifty paper cuts sliced into my hands for our annual Christmas Countdown Chain art activity.

The things we endure for our students' magical moments.

And *SO* worth it!

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What are your essential holiday art activities?

Posting This Almost a YEAR Ahead!

As I type, it's actually January 8, 2010, a "snow day" off from teaching here in Oz.

Keeping myself bundled up (and in jammies, *score*!) this morning, I stumbled across this song and video by Lenka and knew I didn't want to forget to share it for "next" Christmas, eleven months away...which as you read this, is *now*!

What can I say, cute captured me... I think I'm going to like doing the bloggy-time-warp from time to time!

Happy Holidays from me, myself, and I in January, to you in December: