Wednesday, January 13, 2016



Celebrating Mardi Gras!
Vermillion Parish Schools
Everyone loves celebrations! Louisiana hosts one called Mardi Gras. Mardi Gras is French for Fat Tuesday. This holiday is sometimes called Shrove Tuesday. Mardi Gras is a holiday for celebrating and eating. The following day is Ash Wednesday, which is the beginning of Lent, which is a 40 day period when Christians give up something they enjoy until Easter. Mardi Gras began because of Lent traditions and has since evolved into a big festival celebrated by people around the world.

New Orleans, Louisiana has the biggest celebration of any American town. It all started when French explorers celebrated the holiday on the Mississippi River and the party grew from there.

Parades and balls take place all around Louisiana. Kings, Queens and Courts are named. Groups who organize Mardi Gras balls and parades are called krewes. During parades, colorful beaded necklaces are thrown from floats as souvenirs of Mardi Gras. Cups and toy coins known as "doubloons" are also thrown during parades.

The colors for Mardi Gras are purple, gold and green. King Cakes are baked and shared. Small plastic babies are baked into King Cakes. Whoever gets the slice of the cake with the baby usually supplies the next King Cake.

Mardi Gras is a special holiday which Louisiana people love to celebrate!

Questions
1.           What are the three colors used in Mardi Gras celebrations?
2.           What does Mardi Gras mean?
3.           When did Louisiana people start celebrating Mardi Gras?
4.           Doubloons are thrown from floats. What are doubloons?
5.           What is baked inside of a King Cake?

Answers
1.           Green, purple, gold
2.           Fat Tuesday
3.           It all started when French explorers celebrated the holiday on the Mississippi River.
4.           Toy coins
5.           A plastic baby





Monday, January 11, 2016

January Fun Facts and Dates to Remember
Since this year is a leap year, April and July will start on the same day of the week as January –February. Did you know that????

Dates to Know
1 New Year’s Day
4 Isaac Newton’s birth day (1643)
7 International Programmers’ Day
10 National Cut Your Energy Costs Day
11 National Clean-Off-Your-Desk Day
12 Poetry at Work Day
17 Benjamin Franklin’s birthday (1708)
18 Martin Luther King Jr. Day
21 National Hugging Day
23 National Handwriting Day
28 Challenger space shuttle tragedy anniversary (1986)



Friday, January 8, 2016

 24 Simple Ways to Make "Supplies Last" from TeacherList

1. Get Sharpie markers to work again by placing in rubbing alcohol.

1_Sharpies

2. Unclog glue caps with vegetable oil.

2_glue



3. Upcycle empty tissue boxes into a dirty tissue trash receptacle.

3_tissues


4. Velcro your dry erase markers to the board to keep them lasting longer.

4_velcro-dry-erase


5. Revive dried out markers…

5_markers


6. …or repurpose them into watercolor paints.

6_marker-paints


7. Restore an old white board with WD40…

white-board-WD40


8. …or recondition it with Febreze.

white-board-febreze


9. Rehydrate glue sticks with water.

rehydrate-glue-sticks


10. Make a dirty eraser new again by filing it with an emery board.

emery-board_300


11. Glue a pony bead to the end of spiral notebooks to keep them from unwinding.

pony-bead-notebook


12. Wash your paintbrushes in conditioner to make them last longer.

wash-dry-paintbrushes


13. Erase permanent marker from your dry erase board with a dry erase marker.

erase-perm-marker


14. Revive dead ball point pens with the heat from a lighter.

dead-pen-hack


15. Upcycle old Mead composition notebooks into iPad covers.

ipad-notebook


16. Sharpen dull scissors with a mug.

how-to-sharpen-scissors


17. Use the paltry remains of your colored dot sticker stash to group students for activities.

Dots

18. Turn empty bottles of cleaning spray into “Quiet Spray”.

quiet-spray


19. Sharpen a stubborn hole punch with aluminum foil.

sharpen-a-punch4-370x258


20. Use the hooks from an old 3 ring binder to hang bathroom passes from.

3-ring-binder2


21. Use broken bits of crayon to color play dough…

crayon-play-dough-recipe


22. …or melt them into colorful pencil toppers for Valentine’s Day.

heart-crayons


23. Upcycle empty Lysol wipes containers into individual desk (or table) trash cans.

lysol-wipes


24. Use misplaced or old puzzle pieces to create snowflake ornaments – fun for winter classroom parties!

15_hacks_xmas_Puzzle-Piece-Snowflake-Ornament-2










Wednesday, January 6, 2016



Electronic Valentines
Harness your students’ love of technology to create thoughtful Valentine Day’s greetings for others. Search the internet for names of schools and specific classrooms in other cities, states, or countries. Pair students and direct them to send a special Valentine Day message via email to their assigned class or school. Students will eagerly wait receiving their replies and who knows? It could be the beginning of some interesting friendships.

Tuesday, January 5, 2016