Friday, May 10, 2013

Literacy with Popsicle Sticks

I love popsicle sticks!  If I had known how useful they would be in my career I wouldn't have carelessly thrown them away all those years.  Silly, silly, Ms. Q for not thinking ahead. I love educational games for the classroom and popsicle sticks seem to be one of the simplest ways to do so. 

So here are a few ideas...

1. ABC Order: write spelling, high frequency words, or vocabulary words on the end of each stick.  Have the students place them in ABC order.

Over Tunstall's Teaching Tidbits, she has a list of different games to play along with worksheets.  They're $5 at TpT, but may be worth it.

2. Sequential Order:  Write sentences on the sticks and have students arrange them in sequential order.  Use key words like First, Then, Next, and Finally to practice How-To's and beginning, middle, and end. 

3. BAM!: Or Bang!  Write high frequency words, spelling words, or vocabulary words on the end of each stick.  Include some popsicle sticks with the word BAM!  Students each take turns pulling out a stick and if they can read it they can keep it, but if they pull out a BAM! stick they have to put ALL their sticks back. 

4. Rhyming Jars, Word Families, and Word Sorts:  I LOVE this idea over at First Grader... At Last! 
First Grader... At Last Word Sort
She doesn't use popsicle sticks, but you definitely can. 

5. Parts of Speech: This is another sorting idea.  Write different parts of speech on the end of the sticks and have students sort them into nouns, verbs, adjectives, etc. 

6. Build a Sentence: Write different words on the sticks and have students practice building sentences.  As the year progresses the students can practice building longer more descriptive sentences.

7. Story Prompts:  Color code sticks to represent different parts of a story: people, places, and problems.  Have the students randomly draw one of each to create their own story prompt.

8. Sight Word Puzzle: Place 2 popsicle sticks together and write sight words, or spelling words, across both. The students then have to match them up.  Quick, easy, fun way to practice site words.  Click here.

9. I'm Done: For fast finishers write different activities they can complete on the sticks and place it in a cup.  They can come, pick a stick, and work quietly.  Team V's First Grade Fun has a list of activities you can include.



10.  Organizing popsicle sticks.  This is why I created this blog, to keep track of all the great ideas I come across on my never-ending search for teaching ideas.  There was a post, somewhere, at some time, that I rummaged through where the author organized all her popsicle stick activities by unit.  She labeled each jar and had them ready as the students progressed through the year.  The moment I re-find the wonderful post I will appropriately give her credit for a fabulous idea... 'til then...

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