I don’t know about you, but I’ve struggled for years with plastic ziplock bags. Well, not me so much as my students. Plastic bags are great for holding manipulatives, but by the end of the day, my students have destroyed the zipper on half of them and unknowingly mixed the contents with their neighbors’ beside them. Regretfully, I could never think of a better solution, at least not one that I could easily afford.
This year I finally found something cheap, fairly sturdy, and perfect for holding manipulatives and other materials my students need for class.
Enter, the traditional plastic drinking cup.
To be honest, I can’t remember what I originally had planned for these cups, but they’ve turned into my go-to item for passing out classroom materials. Here’s a list of the ways I’ve found them useful this year.
Crayons
Every year I have one grade level, or more, use crayons to compose music for Boomwhackers. We use a pentatonic scale to start, so they only need the colors red, orange, yellow, green, and purple. Instead of having students share out of a common basket, I put one crayon of each color in the cups. The process of getting crayons, putting them away, and assuring everyone has the right colors is a breeze. The best part is no fumbling with plastic bags. Students just toss the crayons back in the cup and go.
Manipulatives
I use manipulatives a lot in my room, especially rhythm cards like the one pictured below.
2 Responses
Great idea:)
Thanks! By the way, I really wish I was doing what you're doing in that picture right now 🙂 I'm hearing more snow for this weekend…