It was a rainy, windy, hurrican-y day in Northern Maine, so I snuggled up on the sofa in my pajamas and made a fall action verb game for our literacy stations on Thursday. I'm super excited for my students to play it!
Let's face it...teaching can be hard. It can be stressful. And at times you may even consider throwing in the towel! Tearless Teaching is a blog for teachers who want to find ideas that help make teaching less frustrating. It includes ideas to help organize your classroom, activities that are versatile and fairly easy to create, and other ideas that as a whole make teaching even more rewarding! I love teaching and my desire is to help other educators love it as much as I do!
Saturday, September 16, 2023
Saturday, July 8, 2023
Back to School
Over the last few days, I have been looking for excuses to stay inside, in the nice air conditioned house, doing as little as possible. In an effort to feel a little less guilty, I've been working on turning things I've used in my classroom over the years, to products that other teachers can benefit from. One of the projects I finished up today was the microwave popcorn wrapper that I have handed out at both Meet the Teacher Night as well as Parent-Teacher Conferences (not in the same year of course!) If you are interested in purchasing a customized digital file for this, send me an email at kristinerayna@hotmail.com
Tuesday, June 27, 2023
Money Using Rubber Stamps
So, it's only been about 6 years since I made a blog entry, and I'm now teaching third grade, and not PreK. I'm not sure why I decided to post today, but here I am. Maybe I'll get better about making posts, and maybe I won't. Only time will tell. Haha!
Today in summer school we were working with money, and I pulled out my coin rubber stamps. You would have thought we told them they had won the lottery! It was a super easy activity to do. I found a digital grocery flier online and modified the prices a bit. They picked four items, cut them out, glued them on the left side of the mat, and then used the stamps to show the amount of money for the item (today they just drew rectangles for the whole dollar amounts). This would be easy to do for making change, too. If I had remembered to grab a sales flier or two from the grocery store, it would have been a lot easier. SOOOOO if you teach math, or want an activity to do with your kids this summer, this is super easy to do AND easy to differentiate! You don't even need the recording mat, just give them blank paper and let them have a go!
I definitely need to buy a couple more sets of coin stamps from Amazon to use in math stations next year, though! One set did not quite cut it. I'd also like to add some tail ones