CLASSROOM – Young Readers
Every classroom is full of young readers and encouraging them to keep reading and learning is one of our most important goals. Beyond telling a story, reading is vital to every facet of a child’s education. This week, we focus on National Young Readers Week celebrating children and their amazing capacity to learn.
HOW TO OBSERVE in the CLASSROOM – Young Readers
Download and print this week’s projects for some fun experiments with vinegar. You can also follow the suggestions below to help your students explore the days in their own way. It might surprise you what they discover! We’re often surprised by our own discoveries!
Celebrate Every Day in the Classroom by:
1. Asking a question about the day or observance and finding the answer.
2. Exploring the subject further. Whether you read a book, interview an expert, watch a documentary, or run an experiment, there is always more to learn about the observance.
3. Writing about the day or observance. You can write about what you learned or what the day means to you.
4. Telling someone about the day. You might be sharing information that is helpful to someone. Or, you might brighten someone’s day.
5. Solving a problem. Many observances discuss issues around the world that need fixing. How would you fix it?
6. Being creative. Draw, paint, build, design, bake, create your idea of what the observance means.
Of course, as always, sharing on social media isn’t required; learning is. But if you do, please use #NDCClassroom to share on social media.
THIS WEEK’S PROJECTS
During Young Readers Week, celebrate with these fun projects:
- Celebration Challenge – Week 34 – November 8 – 12, 2021
- Story Mashup – National Young Readers Week
- I Like to Read Because…
There are over 1,500 national days. Don’t miss a single one. Celebrate Every Day® with National Day Calendar®!