September 18

Calloway Gardens

Have you taken your family to Calloway Gardens?  Less than two hours away from Atlanta, it is the perfect destination to enjoy the outdoors.  My husband and I visited over Labor Day weekend, but we made many trips there with our daughter.

I saw the best spider web ever!  Look at the design around the orb web.


These pictures were taken inside the Butterfly House.


There were leaves as tall as me!

In addition, The Little White House (FDR’s retreat) is only about 30 minutes away.  If you love history, you’ll find this spot very interesting!

September 17

Flower Lab

Pollen can travel to the pistil by wind, rain, or pollinators, such as bees or butterflies. We pretended to be pollinators. Just like real pollinators, we were attracted to the colors of the flowers, drunk the sweet nectar (sugar water) and as we sipped the nectar, pollen stuck to our hands (Cheetos). Watch the video below for additional information.

 



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September 13

POPCORN

Popping popcorn was a fun way to review the way we use our senses!


We also learned that the Native Americans first popped corn.  Corn grows on a stalk and we eat the seeds.  Inside a kernel is a small drop of water. When the water is heated inside the kernel, the water turns to vapor and expands which causes the kernel to explode and turn inside out.  Watch the video below to see this happen in slow motion.

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September 11

Is it Alive?

First grade is studying living and nonliving things.  We put this turtle in water.  I asked the children to watch it for me and to tell me if it was living.  It grew and grew!  The children told me that although it grew like a living thing, it wasn’t living because it didn’t move on its own, didn’t need food, and couldn’t reproduce. 🙂  So how did it grow so large?  They had lots of thought provoking ideas.  One student said that it must be a sponge, but we squeezed it and no water came out.  Hmmm… We took it out of water and now we are watching to see what happens.  Will it return to the original size?  If so, how long will it take?  If there is water inside, where will the water go?

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September 8

Thermometers

Third grade completed their lessons on thermal energy with a lab about thermometers.  In this investigation, we watched the thermometer as the hot water cooled to determine which cup was the best insulator.  Thermometer concepts and skills were new to many of my students.  Vocabulary included Fahrenheit, Celsius, Kelvin, degrees and scale.  We also learned freezing and boiling points of Celsius and Fahrenheit scales. To reinforce this concept at home, show your children places you use thermometers (such as your thermostat, oven, fish tanks, or car).  Show ways you use thermometers to measure the temperature of your body, air, liquids, or meat.

thermometer

Click here to practice reading a thermometer.

Click here for NASA thermometer activity.

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September 6

Poem

Taught this poem to our kindergarten classes. I love children’s artwork! These masterpieces were completed in Mrs. Hornsby’s homeroom.

God made the birds.
God made the bees.
God made the flowers,
And God made me!

God made the sky.
God made the sea.
God made the animals,
And God made me!


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