As I mentioned here, I love this resource! So I’m going to walk you through this month’s book so you’ll get an idea of why I love these like I do.
Friends and Feelings (September’s Theme). As I mentioned in the previous post, these workbooks can work hand-in-hand with the month’s 20 Daily Activities (each page is labeled for the corresponding Day), or you can work through them independently with no issues. So there is a lot of freedom for mamas like me that may forget about things if they’re not right in front of me and the sticky note has fallen out of my Teacher’s Guide, and we need to make up a few days on the fly. No harm, no foul!
Working on our numbers for the month, 1 & 2. And then a fun activity where the child cuts out the objects at the bottom, and then following the details of the story, places the objects in the appropriate places. (3 acorns in the leaves, etc.)
Counting objects in the picture on the left, and then writing out the number words. On the right, adding friendship beads, and the opportunity to make our own equations at the bottom by cutting out beads and numbers. Natalie loves coming up with her own equations already, so I’m sure she is going to love this.
Color by shape on the left, and on the right, we’ll need the cube we’ll cut out of the following page (pictured below). We’ll roll the cube, and depending on the image that is face up, we’ll color in a box on that row and continue until the path blocks are filled and we reach our destination.
game cube for activity above
Fill in the different emotions and trace the shape
More addition with feelings on the left. On the right, we’ll cut out the cards and turn them over, flipping to try to find the present.
On the right, find a shape that matches the first one on each row.
Pattern practice on the left and shape play on the right. I’m looking forward to this activity! It will be fun to see what creative creatures the kiddos create. (Unintentional alliteration right there.)
On the right, we’ll fill the grocery bags with food, making sure we’re distributing them evenly. This will be a great opportunity to talk about sharing, how we have been given SO much in order to give to others, and fairness.
On the left, a great activity to practice listening skills (draw a happy face on the circles, a sad face on the squares, and a made face on the triangles). Natalie tends to jump right in without waiting to instructions, so we’ll dsicuss that a little bit during this time. On the right, a math exercise with an additional challenge at the bottom.
Pattern practice, with a space to create our own, and a measuring activity on the right.
sorting by color and shape
Counting practice and an exercise on size/proportion on the right
Matching numbers to appropriate numbers of shapes, some more math by drawing objects, and on the right, a quick review.
More pattern review, listening activities, and size assessment. On the right, the Math Skills Assessment chart.
Great resource to pinpoint what areas your child may need more reinforcement and what areas your child has a good foundational knowledge of at this point.
I’m looking forward to jumping into this!
As an official Mother Goose Time Blog Ambassador,
I receive curriculum in exchange for posting about our honest and authentic experiences with the curriculum.
Click here for more information on Mother Goose Time.
I’ve talked about these books before, but I love, love, love the More Literacy & More Math add-ons from Mother Goose Time. Although they are targeted at older preschoolers to help them transition into Kindergarten, I have found that they are a great resource for both my kiddos. And I love that you can do them independently or tracking along with the Daily Discovery Bags for the month. So, I’ve decided to walk you through this month’s More Literacy book (More Math post to come later), so you can see just how great these little books are for yourselves.
I love these exercises where it encourages the child to draw and write (or tell) a story.
Working on our letter “F” for the month
Fun activities that allow the child to practice cutting and them using the pieces to act our a story, or sometimes there are gameboards where we play a game.
Making our own “F” book, discussing F words and feelings (drawing in faces)
Moving into P
Making our own P book now
P & F sound exercises.
Moving onto K and building words by changing the first letter
Color by letter! yay! I used to love these as a kid.
Focusing on ending sounds, as well as making our K Book
Maze time!
Oooh, love this activity! The child is asked to try to figure out what is happening in the story just by looking at the pictures, and then answer the question. I see a lot of fun discussion from this, talking about helpfulness. And then focus on beginning sounds.
Love the idea of incorporating the computer exercise, getting the child ready to start to recognize letters on a keyboard. And then a role-playing activity with the poem “A Tisket, A Tasket”, matching the stamps to the appropriate postcards and playing out what happens in the poem.
Fun cutting exercise to identify objects that start with the /f/ sound.
A quick review of beginning sounds on the left, and then on the right matching 3 different sentences to the appropriate illustration. And then identifying the beginning letter for each picture below.
Some handwriting exercises using the letters we’ve focused on all month long, as well as some sight words and key terms.
And then an assessment chart to review what skills this book has covered, helping you track what activities may still need reinforcement and what activities your child may be excelling in already.
Aren’t these little books great? I’m a workbook nerd, I own that. But I really think that most kids would find the variety of activities and games fun!
As an official Mother Goose Time Blog Ambassador,
I receive curriculum in exchange for posting about our honest and authentic experiences with the curriculum.
Click here for more information on Mother Goose Time.
One of the most exciting days of our week is when we get in our shiny new little school bus box, otherwise known as BOX DAY!
However, the beginning of the school year (September) means an extra special box, because it includes the “Getting Started” kit! YAY!!! We received one of these kits this past May when we started with Mother Goose Time, but this new additional booklet is an excellent resource that walks you through the start up process wonderfully, step by step. I already knew that this curriculum was so helpful and user-friendly, but this really took it to the next level. Being new to homeschooling this year, it was great to have a lot of the mystery eliminated for me and it freed me to focus on important things, like starting a new rhythm for my kids and making sure I was available for them mentally and emotionally during this new transition process, not wiped out from hours of pre-planning and distracted by trying to follow complicated processes.
I love this! I am such a visual person, so I love that they took the time to break everything down so you know how to really these resources to their fullest potential. Included in this month’s box was the Getting Started Booklet (which the following pictures will be out of), as well as the Teacher Toolbag (you get one of these every month in your box), the Circle Time bag with fun new supplies for your circle time board (I will have this posted at the very end of this post), as well as the usual 20 Daily Discovery Bags (these are the bags that have most of the materials you will need for a day’s agenda found in the Teacher’s Guide), and the super fun Math Manipulative bag that you get each month as well with fun new toys. We’ve started quite the stockpile of these since starting in May, and the kids love them. In fact, they are playing with a set in front of the TV as I type this post.
These wonderful visuals so you can easily spot what it what for any newcomer to Mother Goose Time.
Each Daily Discovery bag is sealed individually, with about 90% of all the materials you will need for the activities involved. It’s actually pretty amazing how detail-oriented this company is.
I fell in love with this. Started this past May as a Blog Ambassador, I thankfully had a community of other women that had gone before me that I could pull ideas from and that shared pictures of their set-ups. That was SO helpful when it came to setting up my circle time board at home. However, to see this provided in the Getting Started Packet – it’s perfect. AND the fact that it breaks down all the supplies on the following page to allow you to see the intended purpose, it just takes the work out of it all.
This is a tri-fold board so that you can easily put it away at the end fo the day, if you don’t want a permanent display in your room or classroom. This is great for us since we don’t currently have a dedicated homeschool room, and share the office space for other purposes.
Here the book breaks down the supplies provided fro the Circle Time board that cover annual resources, and then below, pieces that will be added to each month in the following boxes.
As you can see, we’ll be adding letter flags, friendly bees that represent different character traits (the first we received is Respectful), shapes, colors, etc.
Here is some of the reasons behind the idea of a Circle Time board, as well as suggestions for different stations you can set-up to expand the learning opportunities, and roles that each student/child can play to learn responsibility. Although the stations are more geared towards a traditional classroom/preschool setting, we still use the ideas for activities occasionally around our home, even without the designated spot. We just pick and choose what works best for us.
Here the Getting Started book breaks down the elements in the Teacher Tool Bag, which is in each monthly box. It has the theme poster, the planning journal, the Teacher’s Guide that has the daily lesson plans already designed, as well as a supply list to let you know what minimal supplies you will need to gather each day (broken down by day – I mean, seriously, how could you ask for more?!), and then the assessment chart to let you know what skills are being covered on what days of that month’s curriculum.
Here is an explanation of the Daily Discovery Bags, each individually packaged so you can just grab one or two, along with your Teacher’s Guide, and get going for the day.
In some of the daily bags, you’ll find the flag letters that represent 1 of the 3 letters the child/children will be focusing on that month, as well as one book each month (YES, I said a book), games, number cards, and more.
These pages broken down the flow of the daily lesson plan, taking what little mystery there was out of it.
Here are some helpful checklists you can go through to see if you’re getting the most out of the curriculum.
If you are a teacher or mama that care about tracking developmental goals and achievements, there is a built in assessment process with each month, letting you know what skilsl are being taught during what activities each day, and how to best track those.
All throughout my experience with Mother Goose Time so far, it’s evident that the people behind the company have a passion for helping children (and teachers/parents) learn. It’s neat to see how thorough and holistic their approach truly is.
Gotta love a pretty chart, right?
And then here are additional resources, not included in the monthly packets, that you can order to compliment each monthly theme, such as a Toy box, the Experiencing God add-on (which is a-mazing!), the Little Goose guide which offers variations to the daily activities in the Teacher’s Guide to accommodate younger children (ages 18-30 months), Dance ‘n Beats , and the More Math & Literacy workbooks (which we also love that help provide some reinforcement for my oldest that goes along with the month theme).
Okay, last but not least, the Circle Time bag that came with the Start-up kit this month!
Look at all these pretty pieces!
We’re focusing on F, P, and K this month, obviously, as well as the numbers 1 & 2.
Here are our day clouds, as well as letter flags and cards, that each include different animals and objects that start with their letter.
And this was a fun new addition this year. We’re going to be collecting paint globs each month on our pallet, as well as our paint can will go in Mother Goose’s Nest (see example picture above).
I get so giddy with all the cuteness.
(Pictures of my updated Circle Time Board to come, as soon as I get it finished!)
As an official Mother Goose Time Blog Ambassador,
I receive curriculum in exchange for posting about our honest and authentic experiences with the curriculum.
Click here for more information on Mother Goose Time.