Today I'm going to be talking about our "Letter of the Week" we offered over the past year. We got the majority of our letter ideas from the amazing No Time For Flash Cards website.
We went through the entire alphabet, while changing the letter every Monday. We updated our bulletin board each week with new, easy to recognize items that also started with the same letter. Having kids run into the room to see what the new letter was each week was a really fun experience at the desk.
We had a great college assistant who prepped our craft each week. She cut out the letters with our Cricut machine, added any supplies we needed in separate plastic baggies (all the pom poms in one, the google eyes in another, etc), and then threw them all in a tub. Since our desk is usually pretty busy, our goal was to make the letters as easy as possible. Staff simply handed a letter to each kid and then reached into the baggies to hand out the necessary supplies.
For the first two weeks we had kids trace and cut out their own letters instead of using the Cricut, but after observing we saw that overwhelmingly it was the caregivers doing the letter and cutting. Since we also wanted it to be as non-staff intensive as possible, taking away the scissors was appreciated by all. I know scissor usage is a great skill for littles to practice, but it wasn't feasible with our staffing. I made sure to include weekly literacy tips on the "craft table" that talked all about letters, scissor usage, etc.
We soon had patrons coming in every week specifically to do the letter of the week craft. Caregivers told me they were making scrap books at home of the letters, and even creating their own letter themed weeks depending on where we were in the alphabet.
After the letter K, we consistently averaged over 50 kids a week. For a passive program, that required very little staff time, this was definitely a win in our book. If you have a volunteer that could prep the supplies each week, then it would be even better!
Seeing each unique letter made every day a little better, especially during summer reading craziness. It was a great opportunity for us to talk about process rather than product with the caregivers. One of my hesitations was having an "example" letter each week on the bulletin board. However, we stressed to caregivers to allow the kids do their own thing and that the examples were simply there to remind kids to ask for the letter craft. It helped that the "example" was on a bulletin board a good distance from the craft table. Unless caregivers got up to walk 20 feet and checked the bulletin board, they had nothing to compare their child's letter to.
Hi! I just watched your Infopeople webinar with Kendra (it was awesome, btw!) and came over here for more info on this passive program. Just to clarify: the supplies were loose behind the desk and you gave out handfuls to the kids coming up, or were the supplies already counted off in individual baggies that you handed out? And also, did you also provide glue or tape, or were the crafts mostly completed at home? Thanks! -Julia
ReplyDeleteWelcome! Thank you for the kind words. The supplies were already counted off and in individual baggies that we handed out. This helped us keep an accurate count on how many kids were participating each week. So there was one baggie that held all of the things needed for the letter (googly eyes, construction paper, etc), and then we handed them a small basket filled with scissors, glue, tape, or any other item they needed to complete the craft.
DeleteWe tried a similar activity this summer with it being a take home activity instead and our numbers were way down. So, I'd definitely recommend letting them do it at the library if possible.