After much consideration (and way too many late night pinning sessions on Pinterest), I have decided that my classroom theme for the upcoming 2013 - 2014 school year will be owls and polka dots!
I am so ecstatic to be moving to the red kindergarten hallway this year. Not only will I be closer to my grade level team and my mentor, but my move also means that my new classroom will be RED! Red is a color known for energy and excitement, which perfectly matches my educational vision for my class this year. Since I am a firm believer in working with what you have, along with my theme of polka dots and owls, I have chosen to use red as my main classroom color and green as an accent color.
While indulging myself in one of my many aforementioned late night pinning sessions in search of the perfect classroom theme, I came across these adorable polka dot owls from
Schoolgirl Style. It was love at first pin.
I am planning to use these owls as name labels for my students' work cubbies.
I also somehow managed to stumble across these super cute (and coordinating!) name plates from
The Moffatt Girls.
After I laminate the students' name plates, I will velcro them in place, which also makes for easy seat changes later on in the school year.
After deciding on a theme for my classroom, I started looking for basic supplies in coordinating colors, such as pencil and crayon baskets, trash buckets, and table caddies.
The Dollar Tree is my favorite spot for super cute, super cheap, and durable plastic student supply containers. I purchased these cute red trash buckets for $1 each. I found free coordinating table number labels from
Rowdy in Room 300's TpT store, which I then attached to each bucket.
I chose to purchase the same color buckets for each table because not only will it go with my theme, but it will also help students to reinforce their number recognition skills. Instead of relying on knowing that their table always gets the red bucket, students will have to know that they are a part of table one and; therefore, must use the bucket labeled "Table 1." Later on in the school year, I might change these labels from numerals to number words to reinforce number word recognition.
I also managed to find green table caddies at The Dollar Tree (also for $1 each) that will hold each table's liquid and stick glue, as well as their scissors.
I dressed these caddies up with coordinating red polka dot ribbon from Walmart and the same table number labels.
One piece of classroom management advice regarding table caddies and trash buckets: keep them off of students' tables and out of the way until you are ready to use them. Otherwise, during a math lesson you'll look up to discover that one of your students has glued his neighbor's arm to the table or that another has decided that math is too tricky and that she has decided to go for her cosmetology license by cutting her own hair (yikes). I store mine on the window sill and it is a much coveted job for a student to retrieve their table's caddy and trash bucket.
I typically try to purchase pencil and crayon baskets at The Dollar Tree as well because they run 3 baskets for $1, but alas, two stores in my area were out. :( Based on a tip from a teacher friend on Instagram, I decided to stake out Big Lots for the ever elusive pencil baskets. As luck would have it, I found several, but not in my colors of red and green.
These turquoise baskets were 3 for $1.20 at Big Lots, so it really wasn't far off from my usual steal at The Dollar Tree. I decided I could live with turquoise pencil baskets as teachers usually stock up on these items and I would rather have pencil baskets of some kind than not at all. I was also pleasantly surprised with how well they coordinated with my red polka dot owl name plates when I brought them home (see below).
Each student will have their own pencil basket, which will hold two sharpened pencils with either fully functioning erasers or eraser hats as well as the basic crayon colors to start with. My mentor taught me to start each student off with only the basic colors in order to teach them how to properly treat and keep up with their crayons. They will later receive a full box of 24 count crayons labeled with their name to store in their pencil basket once they have demonstrated that they can properly care for their crayons.
Everything is starting to come together!