Showing posts with label morning work. Show all posts
Showing posts with label morning work. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 26, 2016

6 Benefits of Morning Work in the Classroom



It's that time of the year when every teacher is thinking about the same thing (whether they mean to or not) - back to school! We think about school supplies, labels, curriculum planning, and classroom routines. While every routine is important for your students to learn, your morning routine is crucial because it's how your students (and you) start the day every day! Incorporating some kind of morning work/task in your classroom morning routine can protect your sanity and provide many benefits for you and your students.

Your entire morning routine teaches your student how to be independent and responsible. Where their backpack/supplies go, jobs/tasks to complete, communication, turning in work and self-sufficiently starting their day are all skills that are inadvertently taught during this time. When you show up to school every day, do you wait for your principal to tell you what work to start? No! That's not how it goes in the work force, and we can teach our students that while they are young. It's their responsibility to start working when they show up, and morning work provides that opportunity!

This one goes with "Student Responsibility", but focuses more on behavior. If you establish morning work as part of your morning routine, you won't have to answer 20+ questions about what your students should be doing every second as soon as they walk through the door. And since your students know what is expected of them, this will help minimize behavioral issues that could arise from students' confusion/boredom. Of course it won't eliminate every possible behavioral issue that could occur before the bell even rings (thank you, bus rides), but it helps your students stay on course. This benefit is also helpful for your SPED students who crave routines. Knowing that they have a completed task every single morning will prepare your SPED students for the day ahead and offer a smooth start.

While morning work should never be busy work, this time does give you the opportunity to complete the 549 things to do in the morning - attendance, lunch count, check folders/homework, talk to parents, field trip money, office forms, classroom forms, listen to stories your sweeties just HAVE to tell you RIGHT THEN....it's never-ending! As your students are completing their work, get those little things taken care of so you can devote the rest of your attention to your kiddos.

As mentioned, morning work should not be busy work. Occasionally, I would provide a coloring sheet or fun activity for special days - but this happened maybe 5 times a year. On regular days, I provided work on a current skill I wanted to reinforce for extra practice or a review skill that I wanted to keep fresh on the brain. It's so discouraging when your students forget a skill that you went over repeatedly three months ago! Use morning work to keep those skills alive in your classroom. Some teachers choose to have morning work packets in folders that students keep in their desk. Others use a morning journal so students can respond to a writing prompt. It's up to you to decide what is best for your students. I've done both- my 2nd graders had morning work folders with a daily sheet, but my 4th graders have a daily writing prompt from the reading series we use. Whatever you choose, just be consistent.

To me, morning work is a chance to wake up my students' brains to prepare for the day ahead. I never take morning work for a grade - to me, it's not a fair way to take an assessment. I never knew what some of my students were coming to me from - a bad home situation, a bully on the bus, an empty stomach, anxiety over a personal issue. If those things are fresh on their minds coming into school, would I get a true picture of what they know? Probably not! So I used the opportunity just to wake up their brains and review skills. We would go over the morning work or writing prompt and answer questions before we started our first lesson of the day. However, you could use your morning work for writing samples, RTI samples,  and parent-teacher conference evidence without having to give a grade. Hello informal assessments!

Using this set time in the morning can help you AND your students mentally prepare for the day. No matter what hectic situation occurred the night before or that morning before school, this is a chance to push the mental "restart" button and make a decision to have a great day! You may choose to have soft music playing in the background to create a calming environment or no noise at all. My students are allowed to have some small talk in low voices, but it is not a time to catch up on all the things. That is saved for lunch and recess. That's because I want my students to get their mind right so we can have a successful day.

Only YOU know your students best, so you know what elements you need in a morning routine and what will work best for morning work. If you make it a point to strongly reinforce your expectations during these precious moments in the morning, it will help your year run much more smoothly! Life happens, things come up - if you have to be a little late coming to school in the morning due to a sick child, traffic, or car not starting, you will have a peace of mind knowing that your students will know what to do while someone fills in for you.

If you teach 2nd grade, I have monthly CCSS morning work packets in my Teachers Pay Teachers store. Click HERE to check them out!

Friday, July 17, 2015

Christmas in July {SALE} - Christmas Products

Today is the last day of the Christmas in July sale in my TPT Store. What better way to wrap it up than 20% off all Christmas products?? These are some of my favorites in my store and my classroom.
I wanted to focus on Christmas Writing Prompts because these are my favorite! These writing prompts are super fun and full of holiday spirit. There are how-to prompts, fictional writing, and responding to questions prompts - a variety of options!

Also, I put December Morning Work back on sale since it is, after all, full of Christmas spirit as well as academic content! Also check out Snowy Subject-Verb Agreement for some wintery grammar practice.

Thanks for being so great during this sale!

Monday, July 13, 2015

Christmas in July {SALE} - Morning Work

It's the first part of my Christmas in July Sale event!


Aren't those precious first moments in the classroom crucial?! And if your classroom is anything like mine, those moments are filled with attendance, parents, notes, checking folders, about a thousand questions or stories from the kiddos, and getting the day started! How is one person supposed to handle of that??

It got overwhelming for me, so I turned to these morning work packs to help me keep my sanity!

Each sheet has 7 problems that match Common Core standards. August Morning Work focuses more on easy review/1st grade skills to ease those summer brains back into school mode. :) These pages do not have page numbers, so you can put them in any order you choose! 









I printed one page for each school day of that month, and I copied them two-sided. Each child had a "Morning Work Folder" to hold the hole-punched pages.  After unpacking backpacks, the kids would grab breakfast (our school had a grant) and start the next page in their folder. I would check the page before we started our day. I checked them because 1) it held the students accountable for completing the work and 2) it showed me which students needed more support or what skills we needed to review later in the day. 


I have bundled the 1st semester morning work packs for BIG savings! AND it's on sale during my Christmas in July Sale event! Just click on the image to take you there :)

Be sure to come back for the other two parts of the sale. Happy shopping!


Sunday, September 28, 2014

Shapin' Up!

It's been a while since the last blog because of this:

Aaahhhhhhhh. Such a beauty. Nothin' like it. :) Football is so big around here, even the sweeties get into it on the playground.
love it. 

We briefly touched on word problems for a week and discussed our strategies for solving them. As always, Blair Turner's Interactive Notebook had just the perfect flipchart to put in our math journals to help us!




We also used the math journals to get a good grip on what is a "ten". This review will come in handy later!



The kiddos even got to make their own facts to sort into the pockets. Some little ones got super creative and really tried to stretch their math knowledge! Even though some of the number were waaaayyyy to big for the point of the activity, I let it slide since it was a blank card and I loved seeing the creativity. :)



We eventually moved on to SHAPES! We looked at 2-D and 3-D shapes, their properties, and how we can sort them.
We played a great game called "Ways to Fill Patterns" which was a hit in math workshop!



We also looked at shapes to really break down what makes them special from other shapes. 


Once again, from Blair Turner

At the end of the week, we focused on rectangles, rows, and columns. Friday was a great day to break out the geoboards! 




Reading was a review week, so hopefully I'll have more to share as we start a new unit this week. :) This post was short and sweet because the hubby is grilling burgers and it smells DELICIOUS, so I'll let all the pictures do the talking for our bunch.

Oh, and my October Morning Work is up and ready in my TPT store today! Go ahead and grab it for some great practice this month!



Sunday, July 20, 2014

August Morning Work

Shawn had a HUGE medical school test on Friday that was out of town - a 9 hour test about anything medical related. Gross. Which means I was alone for a couple of days. So, what's a teacher in the summer with her husband away going to do?? Why, you watch movies on the couch all day long and make morning work packets! Obviously, right?!

I know you wish you had my life. (School starts in 2 weeks-gotta soak in the last little bit of summer laziness!)

I know there are several ways to assess what your sweeties know at the beginning of the year, but why not use a fun, engaging morning work packet to get an informal look at those sweeties' brains??

My students have a folder just for their morning work. After they unpack and get settled in the morning, they know to get out their Morning Work folder and look at the board to see what page to complete. Nobody is walking around the room to pick up papers, turn in papers, or ask me 9732984 questions about what they are supposed to be doing. (I print front and back to save paper). I don't usually take a grade for it, but I'm trying to find a way where it won't consume my time for a quick grade. Open to suggestions!





Each page has 7 items-a mix of reading and math on both pages. As you can see, not every day has the same layout so it's new and fresh each morning (but still relevant!). This pack is mainly a first grade review with some 2nd grade skills that are super important all year long. I plan for the other morning work packs to be aligned with our reading and math skills in our curriculum for that month. Just waiting on that ever-wonderful pacing guide. :)

Stop by my TPT store by clicking the button on my blog OR get it here!

Enjoy the rest of your weekend!