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Saturday, May 3, 2014

How Does Your Garden Grow?

Last week may have been one of the best weeks in Pre-K ever! At least I think so, because I love, love, love to garden and that was our theme! Amy and I started preparing for this week about a month ago because we had some big ideas that we knew the peas would get excited about. We wanted to use garden week to do some S.T.E.M. activities and do a big project with the peas.  (If you don't know what S.T.E.M. is you can check out this post!) We started by discussing gardens with our classes and came up with some driving questions to get us started.
We discussed how to start the project and what we would need. Then we started brainstorming what we would plant in our garden. I let them go crazy with any ideas they wanted to add to the idea board so that later we could look them up and they could learn if they were realistic ideas.
We also researched what kind of materials we needed for a garden. We decided we wanted a raised garden bed. The peas decided they also wanted pots for planting, we would need garden tools, a watering hose, seeds and extra soil to fill the garden. They looked at different gardens and designed what our garden should look like.
 
 I printed off every item they had added to the idea board and they made their own graph. They used the ipads to look up if each item came from a tree, bush, vine, flower, plant or grew underground. They worked on adding things for several weeks a little at a time. Every time they found out something grew on a tree they would moan because they knew we couldn't grow a tree before school gets out! We had a lot of fun looking up how all the different fruits and vegetables grew.
 Later, we looked at the graph and decided what was practical (what we could grow in a month to several months) and what was not practical (what would take a lot of months or years to grow). We reorganized our items in these categories. Our peas are pretty little, but doing it this way helped them understand the concept of time a little better. This gave us a realistic list of what we wanted to grow in our garden. Now we knew what seeds we needed to get!
Meanwhile, Ms. Amy's husband, Mr. Hillard, volunteered to build our raised garden bed!
 And here's a big thumbs up to Ms. Molly who let us save up requests for several weeks of supplies to get all the soil we needed. Thanks Ms. Molly!!
We decided we were going to start some of our seeds indoors before the garden bed came. We also learned about germinating seeds! Believe it or not, the peas, who are SO smart, started to look on the back of the seed packages to see how many days it took for certain seeds to germinate. They all wanted to choose the smallest number!
 They labeled their own peat moss pots and planted seeds.
 There was serious discussion about what to plant in each pot!
 
Here's two of the bags we germinated seeds in! These have already been relocated to the garden bed, but the peas really loved watching them break out of their seed coats and sprout. It is pretty amazing.
If you would like to watch a green bean germinating, here's a clip. I've seen it close to 100 times already and it's pretty incredible.
Here's some seedlings getting relocated to peat moss pots for planting.
After Mr. Hillard and Ms. Amy delivered the garden box, we still had to till up the dirt where we were going to be planting. The peas got to work digging and were fascinated by the fact that there were a ton of grubs. I was not so fascinated. Just gross.
 We also planted an herb garden behind our garden box. Here's all the seedlings that will go into the garden bed when it's ready.
Next, we planted!
We read some great books this week as we learned.  Seeds! Seeds! Seeds! was one of the best books we read all week. It gave so much information, Amy and I both loved it as much as the peas did.
We also studied seeds all week. The peas started to figure out that beans and nuts are seeds, too. We sorted and counted and patterned seeds.
 
We did a little artwork, too. We labled the parts of a flower and made a sunflower using our hands in Pre-K 1.
  
Pre-K 2 labeled a flower, too and they used real seeds in the center of theirs!
 During interactive writing, we discussed what plants have, need and give.
 
 The peas were really into germination and watching the seeds sprout, so both classes made seed bags to hang in the windows. We used all different seeds so we can observe and graph which ones germinate first, and how fast.
 
Ms. Amy read this favorite to both classes:
Then she did a shared morning message with them about where food grows. Isn't this adorable?
Afterwards, we ate the parts of a plant. Amy and I weren't too sure how they would like this activity, but it turns out they went crazy for it! They had second and third helpings of spinach, broccoli and carrots. A little ranch probably didn't hurt. :)
 Eating the parts of a plant!
Afterwards, Pre-K 1 graphed whether we liked to eat seeds.
We also had some fun sensory play. We added silk flowers to the sensory table for some flower shop fun.
 These were for me. I mean, best job ever, right?
We also had to plant grass heads. Ms. Amy had grass seed, we had soil, they're fun, so why not?
Lastly, we learned about compost. This book had some great information. The peas got really into the idea of composting. So much so in fact, that we now have...
A compost pile! There's a list on the back door of Pre-K 1 if you want to know what can go into the compost.
We had such an incredible week filled with fun and learning and the peas came back with more questions every day. I know they are so little, but they love doing projects on their own and when they love what they are doing, they are learning without even noticing. It's amazing. I'm sure you haven't heard the last of our gardening project, we'll keep you updated! Have a wonderful weekend.
 
 
 

1 comment:

  1. I would agree, yes, Best Job Ever!!!!!!!!! What a fun week and who knows maybe a few little gardeners will actually sprout from all this fun education. I will take a little credit for teaching you all about gardening when you were just a "PEA" yourself! Nothing more fun than watching God creation in action!

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