Great Math Products!

Ad
Ad
Ad
Ad

Multiplication Tricks

handtimes4

Doubles

FourFingers with Numbers

Telling Time Misconceptions

paperplateclock
Ad

Equivalent Fractions

EquivalentFractionsPatternBlocks

Simplifying Fractions

FactorRainbow3
FractionsWBaseTen

Clock Fractions

ClocksPreview2

Math Fact Motivation

MathWarsTrophies

Bulletin Board Ideas

flagdoor

Classroom Management

marvacollinspoem1

Lines and Angles

horizontalline2
I get the cutest handwriting fonts at Fonts for Peas! kevinandamanda.com/fonts

Search Results for: spider

What You Must Know When Building Spiders with Children

I have repeated these spider lessons multiple years with different sets of children. This year I have had an epiphany! Most years I have handicapped spiders, spiders with missing legs, spiders with too many eyes, children who make the abdomen too small etc. This year I started with the legs. I modeled how to fold the legs first. Fold it down, flip it over, fold it down, flip it over, fold it down, and flip it over. I gave the children two legs to start with. This lets them have something to do to keep busy. Then I pass out more as they are working. Next, I pass out a large piece of construction paper and draw a small circle on the back to show them the wrong way to cut a spider body (abdomen). Then I show them the right way. I tell students to attach the legs to the spider when they have them all cut out. Doing it this way this year gave me a much higher rate of children with spiders that were accurately built with legs and body. Next week is my last spider lesson, so we will see how the finished products turn out!

To read more about the spider lessons go here.

Amazing Spider Web Builder!

One evening, I got a gift! I had been teaching about spiders like I have several times before and THEN…THIS…right on my front porch! I got a front row seat to a spider web creation. Now I get to share it with the sweet children I teach. I was more in awe of the spider constructing such an amazing sight right in front of me. It was almost like fireworks but a work of God’s magnificent creation. Enjoy it with me.

My Favorite First Grade Spider Lessons…

Since my original post here., I have honed and improved my spiders lessons. Here’s the simple approach.

Lesson 1: I read the Hey Little Ant book and we talk about the perspective of ants and spiders. Should you or should you not squish the ant? What if it was a spider? The students do a short writing piece and draw a picture about what they would do. I tell students to be looking for spiders and ants on the playground. We sing the spider song in Deanna Jump’s spider unit. (I repeatedly sing this every time I come while teaching spiders.

Lesson 2: I share a spider power point with lots of different spiders. We talk about which ones are poisonous and which ones aren’t. We also discuss spider body parts.

Lesson 3: We build the spiders which you see pictured in this post. I give the children labels for the spider body parts. If students do everything correctly, I give them a bow (Deanna Jump’s idea) which they can turn into a girl spider’s hair bow or a boy spider’s bow tie.

The children really enjoy this, and it brings happiness to the hallway which in turn makes me happy!

Ahhhh! Spiders!

Now, I must say, I had some absolute fun teaching spiders during the month of October. I did about four 30 minute enrichment lessons and I pulled resources form everywhere. I am going to tell you about what I did because it may give you some ideas to teach your own students.

Lesson 1: I had students write and draw a spider with the body parts they knew to get a general idea of what they already knew. Then I showed students a spider video which tells about whether spiders are poisonous or not and some other spider information.

Lesson 2: I then taught them a spider song which I got from Deanna Jump’s spider resource here. I sang the spider body parts song to the tune of “Are You Sleeping” instead of to the tune of Head Shoulders Knees and Toes. I didn’t really use a lot of her content since I am not a classroom teacher, BUT what I did use I LOVED! During this lesson, I had students point to the spider body parts as if they were a spider. I also pulled a spider diagram from the internet to explain where the spider body parts were.

With our remainder of time, we went outside and the students became “spider hunters”. They were super excited about this. I gave each child one of those cheap plastic magnifying glasses from oriental trading for searching. Prior to searching for spiders, I give a talk about being very careful not to touch, pick up, or damage spiders. Kids will try to smoosh them sometimes if you don’t tell them this. Another important thing to tell students is that they are very big and if they want to see spiders, they need to be slow and quiet. Remind them that is someone 100 times their size was looking at them it would be scary and they would want to run, too.

Lesson 3: We built spiders similar to what Deanna Jump did, but I used black construction paper and modeled how to draw a large oval. Students cut out the black oval and I cut out black circle on the die cut at school. I also cut out strips of black for the legs. Students glued their parts together and labeled the parts with label parts I made. I made labels so that the young students didn’t have to spell the complicated body part words. Depending on the group this took up to two 30 minute slots. Here are some of our finished spiders. We decided not to do Google eyes for time’s sake.

The bows…I totally got from the Deanna Jump resource. In order to get a bow for your spider, you had to have your parts labeled correctly. Not everyone got a bow for their spider 🙂 and they definitely wanted one.

Lesson 4: I read Hey Little Ant which is a story giving students perspective about the size of an ant and of them. At the end of the book, it asks if the ant should be smooshed or stepped on. I used this as a writing prompt for children to write and draw what they would do except I ask them to think about what they would do to a spider. (I did have some children reporting someone smooshed a spider on our spider hunt :(. ) Time overdue for a lesson on empathy.

I hope you can take some of what I have done and use it in your own lessons :). Happy Teaching!

Ad
Ad
Ad

Categories

Archives

Artisteer - CMS Template Generator