In the classroom -- Learning by numbers
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Danette Goulet
NEWPORT BEACH -- It was nonstop action in Cathy Blue’s kindergarten
class Monday at Mariners Elementary School.
It seems that is what it takes to keep the attention of more than a
dozen 5- and 6-year-olds. In less than an hour, I must have seen five
activities.
When I arrived, students were sitting in a circle, each holding a book
open to a page that he or she had selected.
When a student was called upon, he or she showed the favorite page and
either read a sentence or at least five familiar words.
Before anyone had a chance to get bored or distracted, the students
were back on their feet and at the blackboard to figure out the day’s
mystery word, which appeared as four squares with the numbers “4, 21, 3,
11” written underneath.
While I looked at it quizzically, little arms shot up with fingers
waving about. The children knew it was four letters and how to figure out
the letters.
Once it was determined that the word was duck, what with “d” being the
fourth letter of the alphabet, “u” the 21st and so on, the students went
over how to write the letters.
The teacher used the word to teach the sound of long vowels versus
short vowels and how to form vowels in American Sign Language.
Next, students put the letters’ corresponding numbers in numerical
order. Then they came up with and wrote sentences using the word “duck.”
Soon, they were on to the next activity.
They sang and signed three songs along with the morning kindergarten
teacher, Ellen Borlin.
Then they were up again to practice for an upcoming puppet show. Each
child had made a puppet head, and their parents made the body.
At one point, five children stood in a row, each with a different,
original puppet on one hand and practiced their rendition of “The Little
Red Hen.”
Oddly, the children, who probably are quite loud when out at play,
were barely audible while reciting their lines, except for a resounding
“oink, oink,” from Kevin Olson, 6, or “moo, moo” from Courtney Sayler, 5.
I was exhausted trying to keep up with it all.
* IN THE CLASSROOM is a weekly feature in which Daily Pilot education
writer Danette Goulet visits a campus within the Newport-Mesa Unified
School District and writes about her experience.
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