Friday, September 29, 2017

Homecoming Week


Here are our kids this week.....dressed in their wackiest...
dressed in pajamas...



off to see the Wizard, the Wonderful Wizard of Oz.....
over the rainbow..



at the pep rally.....
at the parade.











Yes, every day was a dress-up day for Homecoming Week.  And next week?  Maybe we could clothe ourselves with "compassion, kindness, humility, gentleness, and patience." (Colossians 3:12) Now those would be some good-looking clothes.

Sunday, September 24, 2017

A New Creation



And now presenting....the moment we've all been waiting for.....butterflies!

It happened at the end of a long and busy Friday. For days we had been watching our chrysalises wiggle, waiting, wondering...would it be today? We didn't know the details of the transformation process that was going on inside those chrysalises, but we knew it was something wonderful.  And suddenly, in the middle of a lesson, someone spotted it. A butterfly had emerged. Then another.

"I will meditate on the glorious splendor of your majesty, and on Your wondrous works."  Psalm
145:5

Maybe the reason the butterfly's transformation seems so miraculous is because the whole process takes place in a matter of weeks.  We can almost see colorful butterfly wings developing inside that little brown enclosure.  Other changes are taking place daily in our classroom, although these are more subtle.  The children are changing and growing.

Last night I was expressing concern about the difficulty I was having in getting some of the kids to focus.

"You say that every September," my husband reminded me.  "Then in April you say, 'They're all reading.'"

So I continue to provide the students with instruction, discipline, and experiences to help them mature.


As the students learned about Life Cycles this week,  there were sights to behold and sounds to hear, tastes and smells to experience, things to touch and hold.



Mrs. Bonaventure brought her dog, Lilly, to Science lab.

The children felt Lilly's soft fur and posed for pictures.

They learned do's and don'ts for approaching animals.

They learned about the stages of a dog's life: puppy, adolescent, adult.

We're studying plant life cycles, too, and had an apple tasting investigation.

The majority of the class liked yellow apples best. ( We two abstaining: one child liked red, green, and yellow equally. Another child didn't like any of the apples.)

We gather information in a variety of ways, including listening station and IPads. 

Kindergarten children like things they can touch, so lessons include manipulatives.
Little by little, God is working in all of us, transforming us into something wonderful, for His glory.

 "For we are His workmanship, created in Christ Jesus for good works, which God prepared beforehand, that we should walk in them." Ephesians 2:10

Saturday, September 16, 2017

Growing and Changing

The tiny egg hatches. A caterpillar emerges and begins to engage in its singular purpose---its only objective---to eat and grow. The young insect moves and munches.  It eats so much that it outgrows its skin, and in the span of a few days it sheds its skin four or five times. At last it crawls up, up,up, until it finds a high place to attach itself.  Then hanging upside down, its body stiffens in a shape of a J as it builds a protective covering around itself.  It's in its adolescence now, sometimes still, sometimes viciously quivering, changing, transforming.

We're waiting for that wonderful moment when, with a struggle and a flutter, our insects will wriggle free and spread their wings,




Our kids are learning about life cycles. They're learning that living things grow and change. As interesting as it is to watch the butterfly's metamorphosis, it's even more amazing to see little glimmers of growth and sparks of change in the children.  This week I listened as one child explained place value to another. I was impressed when someone suggested that we could exchange two dimes and a nickel for a quarter. I hear the excitement in the children's voices when they find the punctuation mark at the end of the sentence. (Yes, it doesn't take much to create excitement in a kindergarten class.) 

It's sweet to watch the students grow and change. Sometimes they come back to visit as Middle School Big Buddies and High School Big Friends who patiently help the kindergarten children with their projects.






Our mission is to help students grow, as Jesus did, in wisdom and stature and in favor with God and man.It's a joy to observe this process and to see my former kindergartners and first graders become role models for the younger children as they display godly character, discipline, and scholarship. (One of my former kindergarten students is now a PBS high school teacher!)



The ultimate transformation comes when they encounter Jesus and allow Him to produce in their lives the fruit of His Spirit: love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, and self-control. 

"If anyone is in Christ, he is a new creation; old things have passed away; behold, all things have become new." II Corinthians 5:17

Here are a few more pictures of our little friends growing in knowledge as they learn about 2D and 3D shapes.






Thursday, September 7, 2017

Made in His Image



God obviously likes variety.  He created almost 28,000 known species of fish and 18,500 species of butterflies. There are over 1,000 different kinds of potatoes.  But the crown of His Creation is man and woman.

“So, God created man in His own image; in the image of God He created him; male and female He created them.”  Genesis 1:27

He took the “dust of the earth” -the atoms and molecules of the earth—and arranged it into DNA. He put DNA inside of cells-trillions of cells- that divided and differentiated into skin cells and bone cells and muscle cells. He fashioned tissues and organs and systems that work together to form the complex organism that he called “man.”

And then He breathed life into that first man and woman and instructed them to reproduce.

 And being the Master Designer that He is, He didn’t rubber stamp billions of people to be exactly alike. No…. he took His artists’ tools and made every one different. The DNA of every human is almost identical. 99% identical. But every person’s DNA has slight variations in the sequence, and those slight variations are what make each of us unique.

For You formed my inward parts;
You covered me in my mother’s womb.
I will praise Your, for I am fearfully and wonderfully made;
Marvelous are Your works,
And that my soul knows very well.” Psalm 139:13-14

We are, indeed, fearfully and wonderfully made---each person is a Masterpiec


EACH OF US is made in His image.  The life that He breathed into us is sacred.  Every human being belongs to God and is precious to Him.

We have a classroom of 15 unique Masterpieces, each one a little different in personality, in appearance, in interests and talents. Each one is made in the image of God. Each one is special, irreplaceable.   


Here are some photos of God’s little masterpieces, hard at work learning, creating, reasoning, relating to one another and to God.