Thursday, October 22, 2015

Pumpkins, Pumpkins, Pumpkins!


Pumpkin day last Friday was a HUGE success! The day was filled with many pumpkin activities.
Check out the fun we had!

We read to pumpkins in the Reading Patch.


We read and acted out our pumpkin life cycle poem, read our life cycle books, played a life cycle game, and even matched rhyming pumpkins.


The children were very excited for the afternoon when they got to work in partners and travel to four investigation stations that parent volunteers facilitated.

Children counted the number of lines on a pumpkin and remembered to use smart counting strategies...



They also determined if pumpkins sink or float, measured the height of their pumpkins with cubes, and had the opportunity to feel the gooey inside of a pumpkin and count its seeds.



To count all the seeds, Mrs. Brown had the children each grab a handful and put a group of ten seeds in each small cup.  At the end of the day, we arranged the cups of seeds into ten frames so we could practice counting by tens to 100 and then from there counted by hundreds, the leftover tens, and the ones.  The total number of seeds for our pumpkin was 544!!  Thank you to families who shared your seed estimates with the class.  We enjoyed reading the comments during morning meeting.

We finished up our pumpkin unit this week by reviewing what we already knew about pumpkins prior to the start of our unit and what we were hoping to learn.  The boys and girls were surprised with how much they learned about pumpkins.  Congratulate your pumpkin experts on the new knowledge they attained and have been eager to share with staff members in our school.



Yesterday, we finished up our pumpkin unit by comparing them to apples.  We were surprised to see how similar pumpkins and apples are!  Can your child share with you one way apples and pumpkins are the same and one way they are different?

Lastly, we were excited to hear Mrs. Lancaster's father-in-law was happy to bring his award winning giant pumpkin to school for all the students to see today.  The children asked Mr. Lancaster thoughtful questions about growing giant pumpkins, what the patch and seeds of a giant pumpkin look like, and how he transferred the pumpkin from the patch to the trailer.

This is a Dill Atlantic Giant Pumpkin that won 2nd place at the Topsfield Fair.  It weighs 1,954 pounds!
Thank you Mr. Lancaster for coming to Fuller Meadow!
I am impressed with the knowledge your children have gained!  I am sure you have learned a little more about pumpkins these last couple of weeks as well :).




1 comment:

  1. What a great unit!! Thank you for sharing all the fun pics.

    ReplyDelete