If I Had a Hammer

Dear Parents,

On Wednesday we played outside for three hours. It was cold. We were cold. The hand warmers did a great job of keeping our fingers toasty. Mostly we just ran around to stay warm. We found many chunks of ice which were immediately smashed with all our might.

We played a few rounds of Ring Around the Rosie, and we all fell down. Several children pretended to be trains and needed new engines because theirs fell out. Once they were repaired, the engines ran around the yard some more.

We tried to dig in the sandbox but the sand was frozen solid. Instead of digging we scraped. It was frozen two days this week but that did not stop friends from working.

On Thursday we read two books titled Machines. We made a list of machines we know: clock, sewing machine, hammer, saw, drill, and pizza maker, among others. One person said they have no machines at their house.

We looked at pictures of six simple machines and defined machines as something that makes work easier. We reviewed our list to see if this was true and indeed it was! We used scissors to cut paper. We talked about scissors being a compound machine because they have wedges and a lever. We also discussed what makes machines work. Some need electricity, others need gas, and simple machines require lots of elbow grease. We explained what elbow grease means.
We read The Lion and the Bird. We noticed that the lion used two machines when working in his garden, a hoe and a rake.

On Friday we used a hammer. We hammered in the morning, we did not hammer in the evening, but y'all can at home if you like. We hammered nails randomly into one of our xmas tree stumps. We noticed it began to look like a face, so we decided to add hair made of nails. The children quickly came up with names for our creation: Hammerhead, Nail Man (as opposed to mailman), and Woodman. The names made some of us laugh as we took turns hammering.

It was a good cold week, as far as cold weeks go,

Therese

Run, Run, As Fast As You Can

Dear Parents,

We began our week picking up where we left off. We read three versions of The Gingerbread Man and acted it out. Everyone got to choose which character they wanted to be. We had one little old lady, one mower, five gingerbread men, and three foxes. We ran, ran, as fast as we could, around and around the big room.

In two of the books, the gingerbread man got eaten in four bites. We made a paper gingerbread man and cut him into quarters to show how four quarters make one whole.

On Tuesday we mixed dry and wet ingredients to make our gingerbread dough. We talked about where each ingredient came from. Some came from animals, others came from plants, and one came from the ocean. We noticed that two of our ingredients were things we had used in our potpourri: cinnamon and cloves.

Speaking of potpourri, we sent our bag of gifts home on Monday. On Tuesday everyone helped decorate cookies. One person kept yelling, "YAY!" We ate one cookie each and sent home one cookie for each family member. None of our gingerbread men got away, but there was much talk of chasing them around the big room. Some children said we could shut the doors so they wouldn’t get out. We wondered if they would play in the jungle gym.

Our first Power Tots class with Natalie was exciting. The children took turns balancing on a beam, crawling through a tunnel, and tumbling across a mat. It looked active and challenging.

We started our wood sculptures this week. Everyone had a base to build on and used wood glue to assemble their creations. We used some tree stumps from our tree sale. The glue was super hard to squeeze, a good test of hand muscle strength and determination. We will add to them next week.

On Friday we read Iggy Peck, Architect and What It Feels Like to Be a Building. In our building groups, everyone designed different buildings with different purposes: a tower, a hotel with supports, a plane raft boat and ice cream stand, a really cool building to make solar panels, and a building that also had special wires that attracted heat from other buildings. The creativity extended to playing in the snow. Some people thought of things to build, mostly snowmen and tree faces. We loved our first snow day!

Have a warm weekend,

Therese and Alli