You have so much to do and not enough time to do it...so why not use volunteers in your classroom. Here are 6 ways you can use these eager parents, relatives, friends, grandparents in your classroom...I think you will really like number 4.

Hi there, it is me again this time coming to you with a tip that I feel is sooooo important! The topic may be a thought that crosses your mind at least once a day while you are teaching, maybe twice a day, but I bet especially a lot around the holidays, you are thinking it every minute as you work your tail end off everyday trying to fit everything into the week, day, hour, second...that thought is probably "I need some help here to get all of this done or I will be here until midnight or have to bring everything home only to never get to it and drag my bag right back to my classroom the next morning with the bag still full of things to do!"

Has this thought ever crossed your mind? Well, if you are like me, I am sure it has and when I was teaching, this is how I solved this problem almost every year for at least 25 years of my teaching career. The solution is: Have VOLUNTEERS help in the classroom!!! I know some of you are probably thinking..wait you mean have people watching me in the classroom or have THAT parent who is so overbearing in my classroom? Well, if you handle it correctly...you will not feel that way and you will have volunteers helping you get things done that, at times, are hard to get to everyday!

Let's think about it: Do you want to get student work mounted and up in the hallway as soon as you can? Do you want books organized in your library on days that it just looks messy? How about organizing those reams of construction paper? Do you want student work in folders? papers stapled? lamination cut? All the great stuff that you buy from TpT sorted and organized into folders and files? How about help with getting crafts completed or someone to simply listen to kids read? Volunteers, can and are willing to help you with this and more!

 So here you go...6 Ways to Effectively Use Volunteers in Your Classroom: ( please know that once I get started, it is hard for me to stop, but I promise only to give you 6 ideas..cross my heart!)

1. First, if you are nervous about having volunteers, parent or otherwise come into your classroom, then send things home for parents to complete for you. I would send an information page home at the beginning of the year or at Parent's Night asking parents to sign up to assist with projects or help from home. So, for those parents, who could not come into the classroom, but wanted to support the class in some way, I would send home lamination to cut with a sticky note on how to complete it or a quick phone call with directions. At times I had kid stories that I needed typed; so I would simply have these parents type them in a certain font with directions on paper layout etc. The 5 minutes it took me to write a note or chat was well worth the time since these activities would definitely take much longer than that!


2.  Second, for parents who are able to give consistent time in the classroom, depending on the parent, grandparent, aunt or whoever, have them simply listen to children read. This is especially helpful for ELL children or even have students select their favorite story to read and work on fluency. Make sure to give your volunteers cards with types of questions to ask and decoding strategies to use as they work with students so your kiddos are receiving consistent language when reading. Many times there are retired teachers, librarians, superintendents, principals or moms, who had a teaching degree, but are now home with their kiddos who re looking for this type of activity to put a spark back into their life.  This is a win win situation in my opinion.  Plus these volunteers are always willing to lend a hand with anything that needs to get done because they understand the time restraints of teaching!  You may have some grandparents or parents who are in this situation right now...seek them out to help YOU out!


 3. Third, for special projects like Pumpkin Math or crafty type stations around the holidays, set up one day and have students rotate to 4-5 stations that are holiday related and have a volunteer at each table to support each group. The children rotate to each station. The volunteers after working with each group with the craft, writing, reading or a less academic chore can then mount, cut or finish up anything that the activities need in order to be display ready etc...and voila...all projects can be completed in a day or two!

4. Fourth, if you have some parents who have minimal language or parents of ELL students, but they would like to help out, pick a day that is best for them and have them cut, mount and sort through papers without names or that need to be organized in some visual way. You will be surprised how much these parents will appreciate this small gesture! 2 years ago when I had a volunteer who did not have English mastered, she loved coming in to do these types of activities and then also saw first hand how her child was in school, which for some parents is something they need to see especially if the child is having some type of issue or not.

5. The fifth idea is an easy one requiring little prep. Every Friday or on a specific day that works best for your schedule have a "Guest Reader"come into the classroom for last 20 minutes of the day and share their child's favorite book and, in some cases, the child can share with parental support if needed. The parent and child can select a book and then read it to the class.  Stay close to the reading area to monitor behavior issues but try to get a few things accomplished during this reading time. I have found through my experience with this that many parents always brought a treat or activity for the kids. I had my homeroom Moms set up the schedule, which made life much easier for me!


6. There you go easy peasy...right? Wrong...you DO want to make sure you use the right volunteers for the right jobs. Volunteers who will work and not want to chat; ones whose child will not act differently when they are in the classroom, ones who understand that they are not coming in to work with their child only, ones who understand your policies, ones who can hang work up straight on the wall (seriously, I had this happen once. The work hung up looked like a preschooler helped me! Obviously, I just had her mount and cut from then on!!)
So, my last piece of advice for using volunteers is to be PICKY. Differentiate who will do what and in some cases just use those volunteers to help out with group projects or special stations.
Also, it is important to make up a list and basket with what needs to be completed and a sheet with ideas and expectations for the volunteer. The few minutes it takes to do this is well worth it!!

I would LOVE to hear some ideas on how you use volunteers in your classroom or how you have volunteered in your child's classroom. Just write a comment below!

PS Now that I am retired, I volunteer in my daughter's Kindergarten SPED class and love it. I do all kinds of things from working with students to getting projects ready...Maybe there is a retired teacher you know who wants to come in a few days a week to help you?

Note: I realize that now, in the state of Pennsylvania for certain, volunteers need to have their clearances, which is pretty simple, however it does cost money, but this is a small price to pay for the services you will receive.

So while you are sitting on the beach with your feet up, relaxing in the sun, make a mental note about how you can use volunteers in your classroom this fall!!
“Everything seemed possible, when I looked through the eyes of a child. 

And every once in a while; I remember, I still have the chance to be that wild.” 


It is time to bring your inner child on an outing. Have some fun now or later, but now is better: 20+ Ways to Have a Little Fun with Your Inner Child or Make some Time for YOU and YOUR Family...the Time is NOW...I bet You Already are Doing Some of These!


Summer is almost here and I began to think that when I taught full time (I have been retired for 2 years) how I sooooooo looked forward to the summer only to find that it was gone before it started. Have you ever felt that way...like...summer is gone and it hasn't even started it yet?? I mean it is cra- cra-crazy to feel that way, but it happens.  So...this summer I want YOU to enjoy your summer and try not to think about August or the next school year. I know what you are thinking...Yeah...right not think about next year... the school year is not even over yet and you can bet I HAVE already though about next year! So...for the month of June or July, store those thoughts in a box labeled "to think about later" and try some of these ideas that you KNOW and have LEARNED and are TRIED and TRUE and yadda yadda yadda!  This is a post I wrote a while back, but I think it is well worth repeating right about NOW as summer begins and relaxation is a MUST especially if you are a TEACHER!   SO here are some ideas for YOU!!! YES I know you may have your own kiddos tugging on your apron strings, calling your name at least 100 times and kicking screaming and telling you what THEY want to do...BUT...YOU Do need to make some TIME for YOU!  Close yourself in your room after everyone is asleep or get a babysitter or Mother's Helper for a day and try just one of these ideas...actually you CAN do many of these with your kids in tow and as suggested they can be used during the school year with your class, too!  Most of the ideas speak to this:
Why not take your inner child on an outing for a day?
  • Go solo to a park, sit with a good book for awhile and savor the quietness of the world...make sure to pick a bench that is far away from a baseball field and such.
  • Schedule a facial or massage to unwind and just savor the moment...Hand and Stone has introductory offers for about $50/hour....just don't let yourself get talked into the package or do and have one every month...like a massage/facial membership.
  • Take an early morning walk at a slow pace focusing on your breathing so there will not be any intruding thoughts of school or life...enjoy the presence of this moment, this second and calm your mind.
  • There are so many wonderful inspirational ideas that make so much sense that can be learned from reading children's literature! Bring out your inner child for a day and sit down to reread your favorite children's book! I bet you will look at the world from a different perspective!  
  • Go to a park and swing or slide for awhile (Recess is a great time to show your students you are really just like them...I used to LOVE to jump rope (of course as I got older, each jump was a little bit harder on my bladder and more difficult! LOL) play hand games (they LOVED the old fashioned ones I remembered from my day).  When I ran around the playground with my kiddos not only did I squeeze in a little exercise, but also this activity made my class giggle and smile! During the summer these ideas above can be done with your own kiddos. Put the cell phone away...leave it in the car or turn it off and have some fun at the park with your own little ones...believe this time will pass quickly...make memories...they DO remember!!! Oh...and don't forget to bring the wax paper so the slide is FAAAAASSSSSTTTT!
  • Read aloud your favorite children's book to your class, child or grandchild and have them pick a quote from it and expand and say what meaning it has for them.
  • Post a Quote a Day in your classroom or on the refrigerator that came from a children's book you loved and maybe still love and suggest your class or child read this book! You will have the benefit of seeing that quote everyday to encourage your spirit.
  • Draw on the sidewalk with chalk...YES YOU by yourself or with your class or children! A quote on the sidewalk for passersby might just make their day!!!
  • Watch some of you favorite TV shows from years gone by at home with your kiddos and chat about how things are the same and different from what is on TV today!
  • Run outside on a rainy day and jump in puddles or just walk in the rain without an umbrella...make sure it is just raining...no thunder or lightning just sayin'.
  • Build a sandcastle if you are near a beach or play with kinetic sand and build whatever suits your mood!
  • Walk barefoot through the grass or on the beach and feel summer...remember how free you felt as a child...bring back that feeling!
  • Swim in the ocean...jump in the pool, swim and feel the ocean breeze or glistening sunlight on your face.
  • Take a walk in the woods and stop for a few seconds to listen to the sounds of nature.
  •  Go to a trampoline park and jump solo or with your kids.
  • Walk the beach or pretend your walking the beach and visualize what you see, hear and smell.
  • Take the time to finish something you started a while back and never completed it...that children's book you are writing or the craft you never seemed to have time to finish!
  • Go by yourself to a movie that you have wanted to see!
  • Go out to lunch alone without your phone a bring that book you haven't had a chance to read!
  • Do anything that allows your playful childlike side to emerge from the deep, dark crevices of age!
  • Do whatever it takes to have some childlike fun...you won't be sorry!

PS.  Here are 2 of my favorite books from when I was a child.   
  1.  The Velveteen Rabbit by Margery Williams...I read this story to all my children as they grew up!  We often had great discussions about the topic of being real. As one quote from the book says, " Real isn't how you were made," said the Skin Horse.  It's a thing that happens to you. When a child loves you for a long, long time not just to play with, but REALLY loves you, then you become REAL."Does it hurt?" asked the Velveteen Rabbit.  "Sometimes said the Skin Horse, for he was always truthful.  "When you are Real you don't mind being hurt."
    A Great Guide to putting the Velveteen Rabbit's hidden message to use in every day life is: The Velveteen Principles: A Guide to Becoming Real Hidden Wisdom from a Children's Classic
  2. Trixie Belden Mystery Series by Julie Campbell Tatham I mention this series because one summer the summer of 1961, I spent the entire summer reading every book in this series!  These books are what hooked me onto reading. Before that I was in the "crows" reading group and of course I knew that the "Cardinals" were top notch in the class! However I was obsessed with these books and couldn't wait to read more and more. i remember being so disappointed when I read my last and final book in the series! These books were out of print from 1986-2003...I had no idea the early books were reprinted by Random House!  Think I will go on Amazon and get one to bring out my inner child ( 5th grade inner child!). 

I WOULD LOVE TO HEAR WHAT BOOKS YOU FAVORED AS A CHILD...comment below!


The Mother's Day gifts were completed this morning with my daughter's Kinders! I LOVE how they turned out! They are soooooo adorable. You should have seen how proud each child was when they completed the project. A few just kept walking up to the display with a huge toothless smile and could not stop staring at them. We had to place them on the windowsill for ALL to see! So, here are the details and directions on how to create the cutest Mother's Day Gift ever...Oh did I tell you how proud the kiddos were and how cute it is? #canthelpmyselftoodarncute! I apologize for getting this to you late,but it is quick and easy if you have all the materials ready. Sooooo #sorry #notsorry I had to share. I mean who can wait until next Mother's Day? Just save the post and use it then or maybe for some other special occasion with your own children like Aunt Katie's birthday, or Great Aunt Mary's or maybe Mimi's #hinthint (If my daughters are reading this, did you get that last part???)

 So Here it is the Grand Revealing of this amazing, dazzling, sweet, not too sparkly cutest Mother's Day Gift EVER!!!!!



Materials Needed:

1.  5X7 Thin Canvases or white/colored construction drawing paper.
2.  Various Colors of acrylic paints.
3. Heart stencil (I cut one from card stock)
4. Kiddos thumbprints
5. A poem for the back, which you can copy the one I wrote or make up your own.
6. Frames from the dollar store (optional).

Directions:


1.  Tape stencil onto the canvas/paper.

2.  Use paint and have each child dot their thumbprints inside the heart shape.


3.  It might look like this...PERFECT or not, but that is okay...it looks cute no matter what!


4. Take the stencil off and here is what you have!!!
5. Have the students, if they can, use a Sharpie of their choice and write Happy Mother's Day Across 
    the top and then the year.  Write Love, at the bottom and then they can sign their name OR you can
    write the top and love at the bottom. and have them select a sharpie and write their name.
    This all depends on the OT needs of each child.


6.  Put the canvases/papers in a frame and glue the poem above to the back of the frame!

And there you have it...the cutest Mother's Day Gift EVER!!


Happy Mother's Day...May this Mother's Day be the Best Ever!!!
I wasn't planning to write a post about Mother's Day, but then I had this really cute idea that I can't even actually show you because I have not exactly completed it yet! I know that is not exactly how you are supposed to do things in the #teachepreneur world, but I was just so super excited about the idea that I could not contain myself and I just had to share it with ya'll...okay that might be a bit of an exaggeration, but you get the idea...at least I hope you understand and forgive me for sharing before the actual product is not completed!  I am hoping you will thank me for showing you this adorable, cute, priceless, tear inducing, wonderful, heart-warming Mother's Day idea that I am helping my daughter create with her Kinders. (if you know any of the Moms from her class, please don't share #kidding #notkidding).

So here is the project that we did for an auction for my granddaughter's preschool to raise money for the school.  I LOVE it SO MUCH that if my bid doesn't win, which probably won't, I am making another using my grandkid's thumbprints!


So here is what we did with the preschool class...not for Mother's Day.  Hold tight...my idea will be shared in a minute.

Supplies:
* Brown paper bag to make heart-shaped stencil
* Paper plates to squeeze paint onto
* Acrylic Paints in various colors
* Kiddos
* Patience
* Wipes to clean up the mess

Directions:
1. Make a heart stencil out of a brown paper grocery bag and tape the cut out part of the heart to a 16x20 in canvas so only a white heart-shaped canvas is visible...no messy spotted canvas if a child misplaces his/her thumbprint.  If you would like, you can pain the canvas a color and let it dry before creating the heart!

2. As each child comes up, have them choose a color for their thumbprint.

3.  First have them place their thumbprint by their name on the Key, which will be glued to the back of the canvas to show which color belongs to each child.

4.  Each child then stamps their print many times onto the white part of the canvas within the heart shape.

5. Continue in this manner until all children have participated.

6.  Paint or stencil a saying or phrase across the top and bottom of the canvas.

7. Voila! A beautiful wall hanging! Colors can be changed to your liking!

Are you following me here?  Can you guess what I am thinking for the Mother's Day gift?
That's RIGHT...you guess it! Individual 5x7 in canvases for each child...smaller heart stencils...colors of choice and Happy Mothers Day printed across the top and the date at the bottom!

Like I said, crazy idea or not, we are doing it this week!!  I will post some picks when they are completed!

Here is an idea of what it might look like:
This was created on the computer!

Here are some other ideas for Mother's Day that can be found on my TpT shop!

                                                             Quick Mother's Day Freebie




Happy Mother's Day Writing Activity and More




Happy Mother's Day to all the Moms out there!!



Find something positive in what life's journey brings everyday. Even a negative situation can have a positive twist.
About a year ago as I strolled around town stopping at various places: the Post Office, a local health food store, a grocery store, the high school to drop of a letter of recommendation, the bank and a few other local spots, I began to look at people's expressions...no smiles, no upbeat prancing, no laughing, giggling, singing, humming or happiness or if they were happy no one was showing it except for one man who smiled and said,"Hi, how are you doin' today?" I thought to myself; Where's that happy to be alive attitude, time to smell the flowers wisdom, dance like no one is watching attitude...where was it? It was buried deep down in the hecticness of life. I am a firm believer that the diamonds you look for are usually right in your own backyard (Russell Conwell Acres of Diamonds) Everything you need to be positive and happy is in your own mind or right in your own life.  When a door seems closed, usually another opens when you least expect it.

So, after the crazy hectic day I had yesterday...a bank overdraft...not one, but two, and an encounter with a crazy person, where I became the example for everyone, a computer brain lapse, where I could not remember how to use a PC because I am so accustomed to MAC, my grandson going to the ER for a knee injury and all the other everyday dilemmas that occur in one's life...BTW I am retired and life is supposed to be all relaxation, calmness, bliss, daydreaming, ahhhh the retired life...NOT YESTERDAY!!

 Ok so...I am going to share just one short story from yesterday...just so you see where I am going with this crazy day thing!  I went to the bank quickly before I was helping a friend give a workshop to the district from which I retired, and the teller stated that my account was overdrawn..."What I replied...wait Say what?" He repeated your account is overdrawn and again I am like..."Wait there was money in there yesterday!" Now you have to understand that this account is a small account that has been compromised at least 5 times...no exaggeration...at least 5 times in the past 3 years...I mean the teller at the bank sees me waiting in a chair to chat to someone laughs and says "Oh no not again!" So, as a result, I don't keep a lot of money in this account for that reason.  So, I was shocked because I knew exactly how much money was there and exactly what I had spent.  So I smiled calmly, made a joke of it and said...okay...let's see what happened this time!! As he checked through my transactions, he said, Did you go to yadda yadda  restaurant the other day?" I replied, "Yes, it was $21.00 including the tip...$17.00 plus a $4.00 tip!" He smiled calmly and said, "Well, according to this statement you spent $417.00 there and you have $70.00 worth of overdraft fees!" "Whaaaaaat? OMG are you kidding me?"  Long story short...we transferred money from one account to another and all was fine with the bank...this time round.  However, I still needed to get my money back so I took a chance at calling the restaurant explaining my dilemma and the owner looked back into his transactions, explained that they put the tips and transactions into the credit card companies by hand and accidentally added too many zeros on the tip!!!  So instead of a $4.00 tip...The sweet waitress gave herself a $400.00 tip...by mistake...??? I stayed calm, positive laughing here and there fuming on the inside, panic attack mode, ready to explode...but I stayed in control...things could be worse....it is not a life or death situation....it is only money...NBD (no big deal). The owner explained he would refund all my money including my lunch and he would also take care of my next meal at his establishment. ( I never went back and if I do I am paying CASH!!)  Okay money problem solved...but I still had to explain this whole bizarre situation to my husband...OH NO!  That is another story for another time.

So, here is what I needed to remember and felt it was worth repeating in my post... I call it Mimi's Mini List of Ways to Stay Positive Everyday.

1. Count your blessings and there are many. Everyday before you go to work or get your day going, think of 4 things you are happy about. It can be a small as I woke up this morning and am able to enjoy this beautiful day! Maybe for me it might be my bank account has some money in it and no one stole my bank card number!

2. Look for the positive in everyone you encounter and give them a smile and a kind word. A smile and a kind word can go a long way and you never know just how important that smile may be to the person who noticed it...show those pearly whites!

3. Find something positive in what life's journey brings everyday. Even a negative situation can have a positive twist. My dad was an extremely fast paced type "A" personality kind of guy. He never stayed in the same spot for more than 5 minutes and in fact, if he had something to deliver to my house, he would beep the horn and toss it on the lawn...no joke! At age 66 he had a stroke, this negative situation was turned quickly into a positive. He was not able to pick up and move around too much after this unfortunate situation, but I got to know him better than ever because he could only sit in his wheelchair and talk. Sitting and chatting in his living room created some the fondest memories I have of him. He expressed his feelings and I really began to develop a friendship with my dad that may not have happened if it were not for this illness.

4. Don't take anything personal. If someone snaps at you and you respond in a negative way then you will feel that negativity long after the incident, but if you respond with a smile and kind words...you will spread positiveness and maybe even make a friend.

I know these ideas seem simplistic, but....why not give it a try? You may just change the way you think and...According to Aristotle: Happiness depends upon ourselves. Be positive...think positive...stay positive...you have nothing to lose!

So, today I look back on yesterday smile in the mirror and say,"Today is a new day...a chance to turn negative situations into positive memories that I will laugh about, tell stories about and smile about later!" ENJOY your day and share your story in the comments if you would like!

I just found this article today that piggybacks off of my post...It is definitely worth reading!
Want to be Happier?   ENJOY and think one positive thought everyday!