Sunday, October 2, 2011

Station Management

I am a big fan of using a workboard to manage stations. My students use our workboard each day to see what literacy and math stations they'll be going to. I have been using Debbie Diller's literacy work stations kit for my workboard for several years now and love it! It has a card for me to write each student's name and stick on a photo (I covered up the photos with apples in the picture below to give my students a little privacy, so just imagine they are student photos). Next to the students' picture cards are the stations they are assigned to each day. Each student goes to 3 literacy stations in the morning and 2 math stations in the afternoon. The literacy station cards come from Debbie Diller's work station pack- and have cute icons to help the kids figure out which station to go to. When I began doing math stations this year I just made some number cards to put on my workboard for those.


At the end of each day, I quickly move all of the station cards down a row, with the very bottom row moving up to the top (I do not move the students' photos). I have magnets on the back of all my station cards so it is easy to just slide them down on the magnetic board. I do not use Debbie Diller's station pocket chart because it doesn't have room for more than two stations a day. This year I'm using a cheap oil drip pan I bought at a local auto store and spray painted white for my workboard (because there was no extra room for stations on my magnetic white board at the front of the classroom). I love how the pan is magnetic-and you can't really tell it was an oil drip pan because it is covered in stations cards. I just wish it was a little bigger-you can see one of my student's photo cards is practically hanging off the bottom since I ran out of space.

My students are all partnered up for station time-and really 2 students at each station is perfect-although when I have an odd number of students I end up having one group of 3. I have found that if more than 2-3 students work together they tend to get into mischief! When I pull reading or math groups, I do not worry if I split up a partnership (and one partner comes to my table and one partner stays at their station)-the kids know that if their partner is pulled to work with me then they will just have to work at their station alone. I am NOT a station-I like to pull kids for as much or as little time as I like and not have to wait for the stations to rotate (I rotate them about every 15 minutes).

I don't worry too much about partnering my students up with a partner of similar ability (although if I have any extremely high kids I tend to put them together so they don't do the station for their partner and also so I can sometimes give them more challenging activities). I really tend to partner my kids together more by personality-and I try to put kids together who will get along but not so well that they will be chatting all the way through station time! Partnering boys with girls has worked very well for my class this year.

I train students in the beginning of the year how to use our workboard-and they catch on surprisingly quickly. I absolutely start using the workboard the first week of school. We all sit in front of the board and I help each pair of students find their photos on the board and which station they are assigned to. Then after the first station is over, I ring my bell and we all come back over to the board and we find what station each pair of students is assigned to next. After 2-3 weeks of school, all of my students are able to figure out independently what stations they are supposed to go to and we don't have to meet back at the board between each station to go over it.


My literacy stations are spaced out all over the room-and students know where to go for our library station, our writing station, our listening station, etc. The little sign at each station matches the icon on the workboard's station cards.

For our math work stations, each pair of students has been assigned a table spot to work at. Then they just grab the numbered math bin they have been assigned that day off my math bin shelf, and go get started on the math station activity in that bin.

When math station time is over, my students put their math station bins back on the shelf. I did have to put little numbered stickers on my shelf so that the students could figure out where each bin belongs (number order was a tricky concept those first few weeks of kindergarten!).

I have a small filing cabinet in my room that I devote to storage of math station activities. However, that filing cabinet is starting to get pretty full with all of the awesome math station activities I have been downloading from other bloggers. So, my new plan is to keep more generic math stations in my file cabinet (like the games for learning shapes and telling time) and then if a math station has a seasonal theme (like apple patterns or counting pumpkins) I will store it with the rest of my teaching stuff for that particular month (I have big sterilite tubs in my classroom closet labeled for each month that I keep my seasonal teaching materials and theme stuff in).

I'd love to hear how you all stay organized and manage your work stations and centers!

14 comments:

  1. I loooooooove your management board! It is too cute!! Get excited, because tomorrow (if I don't put it off for another day...) I am totally putting up my management board!! I am just about to leave to print my kid pictures and I think I'll look for those erasers for stations! Yay stations!

    About my apples.... the 3rd/4th grade teacher next door did the same activity as me the next day but she did leaf outlines with red, yellow, and orange tissue paper. It was really cute! Maybe you could make that work? Or pumpkins. But my kids LOVED IT. I have a super perfectionist who worked on her apple for like an hour. It was super not hard to cut out the middle. I just folded it lightly, made a little chop and then cut to the inside edges from the chop! I hope that makes sense, haha.

    I also laminated a game board today and realized that I just want to laminate everything in sight. It brings me such joy!!

    Marvelous Multiagers!

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  2. This looks wonderful! I am struggling with storing my math stations when I am done. I was thinking about using the file cabinet and my MEGA tubs too. I think I just need to ask the principal if I can have an extra room for my goodies.... You think that would fly?

    Mrs. Wills Kindergarten

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  3. How did you get the oil pan to stick to the wall?

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  4. Getting the oil pan to stick to the wall was a little tricky. First I tried velcro-a lot of it. I ended up also having to add some of that sticky foam tape to help keep it up. It has stayed up all year now and I'll probably never take it down.

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  5. Where did you get the trays that you use for your math centers?

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  6. Where did you get the trays you use for your math centers?

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  7. I recently saw them at target in the dollar section for $2.50

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  8. I recently saw them at target in the dollar section for $2.50

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  9. Looks great! Where may I ask are your math stations bins from? Thanks!

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  10. The bins are from the dollar spot at Target-they usually sell them each August.

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  11. I love how you do workshop! I've been trying to implement a workshop similar to yours with my kinders, but I'm struggling with time management. Specifically, finding the time to explain and model each new workshop job when its time to change jobs. It doesn't look like the majority of your jobs stay the same, so how and when to you explain new jobs when the time comes? Do you explain them all at once? Any help would be great! Thanks!

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  12. I love how you do workshop! I've been trying to implement a workshop similar to yours with my kinders, but I'm struggling with the rotations. Specifically, how often do you change out your tubs, and when it is time to change the jobs, how to you go over the new activities with your students? I used to change my 11 tubs every two weeks, but at the beginning of the rotation, I found myself spending a good 45 minutes explaining each new job before sending them off. What is your secret?

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  13. Where did you get the fun numbers for your math stations?

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  14. Where did you get the cool number labels?

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