Category Archives: Nurture Blog

Oak Room Update

Oak Room

The Oak Room children have continued their tasks after the holidays and we are loving the better weather! This has allowed us to participate in outdoor painting with the sun in our faces.

We are working our way through group novels including ‘Westlandia’, ‘Doodlebug Alley’ and ‘Mouse Noses on Toast.’ We love to have some calm reading time after lunch to help our minds prepare for learning.

 Pupils this term are focussing on ‘Goal Setting’; this allows them to set a realistic target around their social and emotional development and staff are able to support their achievement of this. Discussions around perseverance and making choices are linked to this. Throughout this topic we will also continue to learn how to understand and manage our feelings.

Pupils will be supported with their hopes and fears around transition into the next academic session during our tasks this term, as we understand although exciting for some, this can be a daunting  time for others.

 Children are continuing to achieve success using their ‘Pot of Gold’ target trackers and we have already had a few special treats relating to these.

A special welcome to the children who joined the group after the Easter holidays, the feedback around this has been hugely positive!

As always your support is hugely appreciated.

Mrs Crawford

Oak Room

Welcome back to all families!

Pupils in the Oak Room have been very busy! The children love to come along to each session and are making great progress and great friends along the way!

This term pupils will continue to grow their social and emotional skills and will be using ‘Target Trackers’ in class to support them in this. As part of our Health and Wellbeing learning pupils will explore ‘friendship’ as a theme; we will focus on positive relationships and how we foster these and will explore issues and barriers to friendship such as bullying. Pupils will produce art work related to these themes and participate in group discussions.

The children are enjoying our group novel ‘Charlie Changes into a Chicken’, the pupils enjoy having a chapter read to them each day. This helps to regulate us and promotes conversation, attentive listening and group relationships.

Chat with your child around their attendance of the Oak Room, I am always happy to hear family feedback!

 

 

Mrs Crawford

Hello boys and girls

Hi boys and girls.

I am so excited to be the teacher in the Willow room and Oak room next session. I might not be working with many of you…BUT…. I still want to see your lovely little faces around the school so remember to say hi when you see me. If you are going to be part of the nurture classes, I cannot wait to work with you, we are going to have great fun!!

I am missing you all lots and cannot wait to see you in August. Have a great summer with your families and I will see you all soon.

Lots of Love from Mrs McCreadie xxxx

Willow Room

Hi boys and girls.

I hope you are all taking care. I have been busy getting ready for your return to school in August. I am really missing you all and hope you all have a brilliant summer. Here are some photographs of what the Willow room will look like in August. I know that the classrooms look very different but I do not want you to worry. The teachers have all been working hard to make sure that you are all safe, but most importantly that we can have fun when you come back.

Lots of love, Mrs McCreadie

Image result for love heart clip art

 

 

Emoji Code Breaker

As part of our Paths programme, we have talked a lot about the different emotions we experience, how it looks and how it feels, inside and outside our bodies.

Using  our cute paths friends and some emoji’s we are familiar with, can you decode the hidden message?  This is a challenge for you all to try at home and parents can help our infant pupils if they are finding this challenging.

Have fun!  Can you decode the hidden message?  Let me now if you managed to work it out:

susan.travers@eastayrshire.org.uk

 

 

Twiggle Misses His Friends!

It has been a difficult few months and much has changed in our ordinary, every day lives.  Where once we could go to school to learn and see our friends, we now learn at home and have been unable to see our school friends.

Twiggle shares his feelings about being at home and missing school and his friends.  His Grandma listens and helps him to feel a little better about it.

Like Twiggle we have had to find new ways to communicate and spend time with our friends and families.  We miss them, but doing a video chat or having a chat on the phone, helps to make us feel a wee bit better.

Take care, together we are Team MC!

Inside Out!

Paths Emotions

We all know we feel things on the inside, which shows on the outside. Our paths challenge this week was to try and identify some of the feelings we may experience by looking at facial expressions.
Did you manage to guess what some of our Mount Carmel Staff were feeling?

1: calm  2: angry  3: excited  4: tired

5: shocked  6: happy  7: scared  8: sad

Henrietta our PATHs Hedgehog has this lovely song about feelings. Why not try singing this with Henrietta at home?

As always, stay safe and take care. Together we are Team MC!

PATHs Challenge

As it is Health Week and we are looking at different aspects of health, this week the nurture blog will focus on PATHs and our emotional health. PATHs has become a huge focus in all our classrooms as we begin to understand the different feelings we may experience. We recognise that these emotions can be categorised as ‘comfortable’ and ‘uncomfortable’.

We have spent time talking about how emotions change our facial expressions and by looking at the eyebrows, eyes and mouth, how this can indicate what a person might be feeling. Its important we recognise these emotions in ourselves and others, so we can help someone if they are experiencing uncomfortable feelings. Or use a strategy to help when we recognise those feelings in ourselves.

You may see a few familiar faces below as some of our Mount Carmel staff helped put a PATHs challenge together. Can you guess the PATHs emotion expressed by each member of staff? There are 8 different emotions being expressed and once you have guessed, can you sort these into comfortable and uncomfortable?

Why not give it a try at home? There is no better way to understand a feeling than to try and express that emotion yourself. Focus on the facial expressions and try a few of our comfortable and uncomfortable feelings. You can use a mirror to do this or ask a parent to take a photo of you and become the star of your own PATHs emotions chart. Send these to me and I can share these on our blog (check with parents this is okay before sending).

susan.travers@eastayrshire.gov.uk

Stay safe, have fun and take care

Willow Room Tasks w/b 8th June (Health Week)

Hello Willow Room boys and girls,

Below are the tasks I would like you to try next week.  As its health week, the tasks are a little bit different and focus on different aspects of health.  There are some work sheets attached to the grid activities this week too.

Willow Grid Health Week

Teeth Brushing Sequencing

Measuring Task (page 2 only)

Have fun with the activities and remember to send some pictures of your work or you completing your activities.

Take care, stay safe

Mrs Travers

Come Dine with Me!

Like the popular TV show, but with a twist, create a ‘Come Dine with Me’ experience at home, with your family. Choose a day and set the table for a meal. Allow the children to make lunch, parents providing the ingredients and foods children will need to make a snack. Children will prepare and serve lunch to the rest of the family. Like the TV show, you will give the children a mark out of 10 for their efforts.

In the evening, parents can then make a family meal and serve the children in the same way as lunch was served. Likewise, children will also get to score the meal out of 10. Who will win in the battle of the meals?

Use this time to have a chat with your children too. It is very likely, with talk of schools returning, your child will have some anxieties or concerns about how this is all going to look as we transition into a new school routine given the governments guidance.

Watch the our PATHs video story about Tamera, who is worried.  It helps children to understand if we share our worries with someone, it helps us to feel better.

Make a list of your child’s worries and talk about each point, discussing what the reality may be like. Reassure your child, that staff will work together to keep them safe and happy.

Stay safe, together we are Team MC

You are a hero too!

Taking Control

In life there are things that we can control and things that are out with our control. It can be hard to put negative thoughts out of our heads, particularly when we worry about what others think of us. It’s good to remember those things we do have control over and focus on what we can do, to make ourselves feel better.

Persistence

When times are tough and it feels like a struggle, remember the quote above. The river cuts through rock, not because of power but because of its persistence, it doesn’t give up. When you are having a tough time, what helps you keep going? Where do you find your strengths?

Superhero

What are your superhero strengths? What helps you keep going when times get tough? Try drawing yourself as a superhero and think about your superhero strengths. Are you hard working, persistent, good at problem solving? Whatever it might be, try to list at least three superpowers you have. It’s because of these powers, you can achieve anything!!

As always, take care, stay safe, together we are Team MC!

Willow Room Tasks w/b 27th May

Hello Willow Room boys and girls.  I hope you are all safe and well and managing to complete some of the activities from the grids I have been sending to you.

Below are links to the tasks I would like you to try next week.  As Monday 25th May is a holiday and Tuesday 26th is an inset day,  its just a short week and therefore there is a smaller amount of tasks than normal to complete.  Give them a try and let me know how you get on.

Willow Room Task Grid

Could you also try a few activities from our IDL grid? There are a couple of attachments to go with this grid.

P1-3 IDL Task Grid

French Rainbow w/s

French Greetings

As always, please take care, stay safe and I hope to see you all soon.

Mrs Travers

Have a Little Adventure!

Growing Your Brain


https://biglifejournal.com/ (for more kids’ journal ideas)

Try this activity at home. When we make a mistake, it causes our brains to spark and grow. In fact, when we get something right, our brains do not grow. What a wonderful fact to learn… it’s okay to make a mistake!! In fact, mistakes help us learn and grow.

Think of a time you made a mistake. How did you feel? When you stuck with it and figured out how to get the right answer, did you feel a sense of achievement?

Our brains need lots of things to help it grow and work properly, like exercise, sleep, new learning and healthy foods. Try doing the activity on the blue page above and look at all the ways we help our brain to grow!

Nature Treasure Box

Why not have a Welly Wednesday walk (it doesn’t have to be on Wednesday, it can be any day you have time to do this as a family). Our Willow Children always enjoy exploring nature and the great outdoors.

Take an empty egg box and fill each empty compartment with an item from nature, you found on your walk. It’s a great way to have a little piece of nature at home and a lovely memory box of your family walk.

Why not take a photo of your nature box and send it to me. I’d love to see them: easusan.travers@glow.sch.uk

As always, stay safe, take care, together we are Team MC!

Name it!

Mirror Image

This game requires coordination, copying another person like you are looking in a mirror. If the instructor raises their right hand, the other person raises their left. Take turns at being the instructor and the mirror image. Try moving different body parts and concentrate and think about what part of your body you must move, like looking in a mirror.

Try doing the same with facial expressions. Can you make a face displaying one of our comfortable/uncomfortable Paths emotions? Can you, or the other person name the emotion being expressed? Talk about what that emotion looks like and how you may feel when you express that emotion.

 

What is in the box/bag?

This is a game we often use in our Willow Room, which encourages the children to listen for/use good descriptive words to describe an item in the box/bag? Find an empty box or bag and fill it with small items and toys. Make sure the box/bag is not transparent as the item should remain hidden.

The child places their hand in the bag and without revealing the item, describes how it looks and feels to another person when they hold it in their hand. This is a sensory activity, so having items with different textures would be good. The other person will then guess what the item is, based on the description given. The child and the other person can then swap places, and the child can guess what the next item is.

AS always, stay safe, stay well, and take care! Together we are Team MC! 

Hello Willow Room Boys and Girls

I hope our Willow Room children are keeping safe and well.

I’d love to hear from you all.

I have put together a grid of activities I’d like you to try.

Willow Grid

You could try some of these activities too:

H&WB grid P1-3

Why We Stay Home Story

I’ve sent a special message in an email to you all today.  I hope you are able to receive it and enjoy it!

Take care for now,

Mrs Travers

 

 

 

New Tasks

Activity Ideas

A few more activities to try at home if your child is feeling worried or anxious. They are designed to help them talk through and resolve the anxiety or create a sense of calm whilst focussing on texture or listening for instructions.

Simon Says

The Simon Says game is a great way to encourage getting the body moving and relieving tight body muscles whilst having some fun. It aims to get your child listening to another person and being able to follow instructions in a fun way.

If the adult starts by giving instructions, such as ‘Simon says jog on the spot’, ‘Simon says touch your toes’, ‘Simon says do star jumps’ and the child will follow these instructions. How well are they listening?

The child should only complete the instruction if it starts with ‘Simon Says’. Give a final instruction, ‘touch your nose’ and see if the child completes the instruction or not. If not, they can become the instructor and if they do, they try again.

 

Finger Painting

Finger painting is a great way to relax and have some messy fun. Either out in the garden or on a table indoors with a wipeable table cover. Start by putting out two trays, a different colour of paint in each. Kids can begin by mixing the two colours on paper and talk about what happens when mixed. Then make marks or patterns, using their fingers and talk about how the paint feels on their skin.

What happens when you put a dollop of paint on the paper and pull a comb or run a toy car through the paint? Is there anything else you could use to create a pattern? Why not take a print of the patterns you have created by gently placing a piece of paper on top, gently peal back and leaving it to dry?

Why not change the texture by adding sand? How does that feel when you mix it with your fingers? Or use shaving foam instead? How does it make you feel when you touch these different textures?

 

Worry Dolls

Worry Dolls are a great way for your child to explore the different emotions we experience by creating a doll for each emotion. Why not start with 6 feelings such as: happy, sad, worried, frightened, excited and tired. You can add to the collection as your child discovers new emotions.

Using large wooden clothes pegs, colour, paint or create clothes for their doll using fabric or wool. On the head (rounded top), draw in the emotion each peg represents and this will become the face.

Bedtime is a good time to use these, although your child can play with these dolls throughout the day to talk/work through or role play any emotions, comfortable/uncomfortable, they may be experiencing. It can aide a restful night’s sleep, if your child is able to discuss these emotions before bed, releasing the ‘worry’ or feeling that may be making it hard for them to sleep.

Stay safe!

Give it a try!

Good morning on this beautiful sunny Monday morning.

A few more activities to try at home. It is always good to take a short break from schoolwork activities and these ideas are great for a short brain break:

Busy Bags

Creating a ‘busy bag’ for your child is a great way to have a 10-minute break from schoolwork, or a chance to have quiet time if they are feeling overwhelmed or anxious. Using the resources in the bag, children can fidget, build, or make a craft item.

Fill the bag with craft items such as pom poms, stickers, collage type materials, pens, pencils, small pad of paper, glue, pipe cleaners or any other items your child will want to get creative with. What can they create?

Try putting some Lego pieces or toy cars in the bag too and children can build a small object or roll the cars around on the floor. These are good ways to help a child self-regulate and ‘switch off’ to the world for a short time.

 

Brain Breaks

Our brains are a muscle and need exercise too. Challenge your child to the test below.

The first test is easier, ask your child to read the colours as written. Then ask them to say the colour of the word. This is more challenging as it is asking your left and right side of the brain to work against each other. Left wants to read the colour, right wants to say the colour it sees.  Give it a try!

 

‘I Am…’ Poem

To remind your child of how fantastic they are, and to fill their thoughts with positivity, ask them to create an ‘I Am..’ poem, and to be honest about their worries and their hopes and dreams. You can use the template below or as a guide to creating your own.

Stay safe and well!

Primary 4 – Learning Tasks 27.4.20

Good Afternoon Primary 4,

Here are the new Learning Grids for next week.  I am  delighted to see so many of you have been managing to get online and working hard reading your Bug Club books and completing your Sumdog Assessments. I have also loved receiving your updates on how you are getting on at home and the beautiful photographs you have sent of all your amazing work!  Keep up the brilliant work!

Literacy – P4 WB 27.4.20

Numeracy – P4 WB 27.4.20

Health and wellbeing 27.4.20

Super hero

Here is a suggested timetable that you could follow next week:

9.00am- Some exercise with Joe Wicks, Cosmic Yoga or Just Dance

10.00am – Numeracy pick a task from the grid that you would like to complete. Show off your Number Talk Strategies, do some Mental Maths or Play a Problem Solving Game on Active Hienemann

11.00am – Have a break, some exercise and a snack (remember to drink lots of water)

11:30am – Literacy pick a task to complete or read a book that you are enjoying

12:30pm – Lunchtime help to make something nice to eat

1.30pm – Finish your day with a Health & Wellbeing Task from the grid

3:00pm Finish your learning for the day and do something that you enjoy!

I hope you are all safe and happy! Enjoy the sunshine this weekend with your families!

Take care,

Mrs Strachan x

Welcome Back!

Hello and welcome back!

I hope everyone had a lovely Easter break and enjoyed some sunny weather in their gardens. It is still a very strange time for us all, our routines have completely changed, and we are missing seeing everyone in school.

Below are a couple of ideas you could do at home with your children, to help children talk about how they are feeling, what they are missing and to help us to share our thoughts as a family.

Conversation Café

Set up a ‘conversation café’ at home, ask the children to help set a table for afternoon tea, in the house or in the garden and let them help serve some sandwiches or sweet treats. It’s always nice to have some cake, a cuppa and a chat together. The attached photo suggests some conversation starters you could have together, which will encourage children to think about happiness.

Friendship Card

Like many of us, your children will be missing seeing their friends from school and may be finding it hard to understand why they can’t have a play date or a catch up with friends.

Encourage your child to make a ‘friendship card’ for a school friend.  They can design and decorate their card with all the things they know their friend will like.  Ask your child to write a personal message to their friend, writing about all the things they miss about their friend and what they hope they will do together once life returns to normal.

As always, any child who feels they would like a chat, can email me through Glow at any time and I will be sure to respond.

Take Care

Mrs Travers

At home relaxation!

During these troubling times, we are aware our children may be feeling scared, worried or anxious without the familiarity and routine of an ordinary school day.

I have attached some links and activity ideas which may help to relieve some worry or anxiety and will hopefully help our children to feel a little bit better during these uncertain times.

These activities are only a suggestion, there is no requirement to complete these, they are here to help should you feel your child may need them.

Activity Ideas:

Paths Mood Chart & Check in

By drawing the emotions from our Paths mood chart, using the emotions faces children are used to, children create their own mood metre and indicate daily, by pointing or putting a sticker on the emotion they are feeling. Parents and siblings can do the same and encourage children to talk about their feelings. Having a ‘family check in’ where you share your worries and feelings, can have a positive effect and help to relieve some of their worries or concerns.

Daily Diary

By keeping a daily diary and writing down the emotions you are feeling, this can be a positive way to release some of the worry you may be feeling.

Relaxation/Breathing

This video encourages controlled breathing and visualisation, which may help to relieve any stress or muscle tension children are experiencing.

Massage

Our school have had inputs on massage, which can be a relaxing way to wind down, or prepare for a good night’s sleep. Below are a few of those massage techniques children should be familiar with:

Head massage

Back massage

Try doing it as a family!

As always, any child who feels they may benefit from a chat with me, can email me, at any time, during this holiday period or otherwise, and I will be sure to be in touch.

Take care of each other!

Mrs Travers

February Update

Both our Willow and Oak nurture rooms are established and running well, giving pupils the opportunity to make connections and develop friendships with their peers. Children are happy and participating well in tasks and activities aimed at developing their health and well being.

In the Willow room, our focus for our Welly Wednesdays will be to have more opportunity to explore the great outdoors. We will primarily explore our immediate environment, but may explore areas further away from the school. The children will partake in a Wild Challenge, completing 6 activities linked to the RSPB challenge, which will encourage exploration of the natural habitats of small animals and insects from our local environment. Children will be encouraged to work in small teams, to create housing and gain knowledge of these animal habitats.

The focus for some of our children will be preparing for full time attendance in their primary classroom, reducing time spent in the Willow Room and helping the children find strategies and tools to support them throughout this period of change. For the children remaining in the Willow Room, they will need to time to adjust and chat about the changes taking place and how it makes them feel.

In our Oak room, the discussions and activities supported in the connected classroom materials, will continue to be our main focus, looking at different emotions, the impact these have on our bodies and how to manage big feelings. With time for discussion and sharing of experience, children will develop tools to help them manage feelings and see a positive outcome.

As always, if parents have any questions or would like to chat about any aspect of our nurture provision, please don’t hesitate to get in touch.

Mrs Travers