Welcome

GRADS is like a classroom without walls. We help our students make connections in their community, find reliable information online and show them how to be lifelong learners throughout their parenting journey. There are also other methods of teaching our students without the traditional textbook. Follow my classroom blog as we stretch the boundaries of teaching and learning.

May 21, 2012

Post-It

virtual book
http://www.classtools.net/education-games-php/turningPage

Bubbl.us


You can create colorful mind maps online then save and share. This image was exported and downloaded as an image. The image was inserted in this new post. Students can make their own by going to this sight. but they will need to create an account.

Class Tools

Click here for larger version


This Venn Diagram is available on ClassTools.net. You can embed this interactive tool into your blog using the html code. (click the save icon in bottom right corner, copy the html code, paste in to a new post. Click "compose" in the upper left corner of your new post. Publish when finished)
Click anywhere on this image to fill diagram. 

May 2, 2012

Online Baby Book

Do you have a baby book about your own birth and childhood? Do you know the details of your birth, when you took your first steps, the first word you uttered? Baby books are a way of keeping records of the events that occur on practically a daily basis as a baby grows.
I have found an awesome e-baby book that is similar to a blog. Kidmondo is very easy to use and you can upload photos and videos of baby too! I am going to help each student create an account and journal about their pregnancy and baby. When they get to the end of the book they can order a printed hard cover for a precious keepsake and start a new book for the next year.
Check out the other online baby books I found:



April 23, 2012

Important Documents About Baby

Last night my husband was filling out some permission forms so our daughter could fly to Chicago with her BPA team from her high school this week. (I'm as nervous as a cat in a room full of rocking chairs!) He asked me if I knew when  Katie had her last tetanus shot? She's 15 now and I thought those days of keep track of all of her baby shots were over but apparently we are not done. We do have a file with medical information but couldn't find anything about Tetanus. (will have to call her pediatrician today). There is a lot of information parents need to keep track of, especially with babies - their growth, sleeping pattern, what they eat, how often you change a wet diaper when they are ill and then all of that medical information.

You are going to keep some of these forms them on your blog for easy reference. These are the steps:

  1. You can go to the document I have linked below, copy the url, 
  2. Open your blog, click "new post", type the name of the document, click "link", paste the url, then publish.
  3. Try it out by viewing your blog post with the document, click on the document and begin making changes. 
  4. Always save your work. You can print when finished then cut the cards and give to family or childcare giver.

Emergency Contact Card

March 13, 2012

Understanding Pregnancy

There is probably a lot you already know about pregnancy. Look at this list of pregnancy terms and pick out 5 words you've never heard of and 5 terms you know and understand. You can Google search the terms you're not sure about and be prepared to mention some of the terms in your next blog post.
There are so many things you must be aware of to keep yourself and your baby healthy during pregnancy. Here is an excellent article for you to read, How the First Nine Months Shape the Rest of Your Life, that investigates how a person is affected by many factors out of their control while in the womb. Print a copy of this Fetal Origins Study Guide and answer the questions as you read the article. It's kind of long but filled with amazing information that will explain how we turned out the way we did.
To complete this lesson write a blog post describing the new information you learned about pregnancy terms and  how a fetus is affected by things outside it's control.

Fetal Development

How big is your baby now? What can your baby do at this stage of development?
Your assignment: Search the Internet and find at least 3 reliable websites about fetal development. Gather 10 facts to answer the opening questions.

February 10, 2012

Build a Brain

This week we learned about the development of the brain before and after birth. The first amazing concept was that a baby is born with 100 billion brain cells. To illustrate the enormity of this number I displayed a table-sized poster containing 1 million stars, which went along with the children's book, How Big is a Million? 
The class calculated how many posters it would take to equal 100 billion brain cells. Answer=100,000! Then the class calculated the number of posters each student in their school would need to equal 100 billion. (1,800 students would each carry about 55 posters). Wow! Can you imagine?

The brain has been ready to learn even before birth and the cells are reacting to each and every experience by connecting to each other called Synapses. The more connections made in the first three years of life the more intelligent your child will be. Check out this video for a demonstration of how brain cells connect.


Visit this site to play with the Interactive Baby Brain to learn how a baby's brain develops during each period of growth.

February 1, 2012

Baby Talk

How will your baby learn to talk? Listening to you? Watching TV?
Check out The Gift of Gab.
Here are 3 great videos that will demonstrate how children learn language.

View this news video Babies Lip-Read