Joyful Learning Through Math, Art & Play!

30 December 2018

Telling Time to the Half Hour


In our recently listed Math Pack 28 we provide 5 fun and engaging activities for little learners to practice telling time on a digital clock and to become familiar with telling time to the half hour.

We also blogged last week about learning to tell the time.

One of our favorite activities in Math Pack 28 is Half Time Bot. We have found that any activity involving robots is a wonderful way to secure initial engagement with learners.


How to Play Half Time Bot


  • Students can play in a small group. 
  • All cards are placed scattered and face up in the playing area.
  • The students work together to place all the clocks and times on the robots so that the words and numbers match the clock.
  • There is no winner, just lots of discussion, teamwork and time-telling.

Top Teacher Tips for Learning To Tell Time to the Half Hour


  • Ensure your students have a concept of ‘half’ - e.g half a pie. Hand out paper circles, ask them to fold them in half and shade half with a pencil. Encourage students to hold their half above a clock and get an appreciation for a half an hour on the clock face. 
  • Make arrangements so that your students are able to see digital and analog time side-by-side consistently through the school year in your classroom.
  • Ensure that you relate all your teaching and learning in the classroom, about time, to real life experience of the students. 
  • Make it explicit to students that there are 3 ways to express half hour time - 'half past seven', 'seven thirty' and 'thirty minutes past seven'. Make a chart showing these. 
  • Give your students plenty of hands-on experience to learn that when the minute hand shows 'half past' (on the 6) - that the hour hand is halfway between two hour markers. 
  • As well as practical and written learning activities, ensure students have opportunities to talk about time. It is a concept anchored deeply in language. They need to talk about it - a lot!
  • Play lots and lots of games. Don't assume that something that appears as easy as 'half past' will be quickly taught. Check for thorough understanding.

Free Game for Learning to Tell Time to the Half Hour


I made an easy-to-prep game that will combine some important aspects of learning to tell time to the half hour.

What you need to play:


  • paper copies of the game sheet - 1 per player
  • counters or chips
  • pencils
  • toy /learning clock
Find the game template in Google Drive: Free Half Past Clock Bingo Game


How to play Time to the Half Hour Bingo

  1. Ask students to write various half-hour times on their sheet (here they will practice drawing hands on the clock half way between two hour markers)
  2. Ask them to copy their times in digital format (here they are learning to replicate time from analog to digital)
  3. Use the toy clock to show random half hour times, show the students and have them call the time to you (here they are learning to tell time to the half hour on an analog clock)
  4. If a time shown on the toy clock is called and appears on their game mat they may cover it with a counter/chip
  5. The first player to cover all of their times may be declared the winner of the game
Alternatively, students could color the clocks as they are called rather than covering them with a chip.





Math Centers for Learning Digital and Analog Times to the Half Hour

Hop over to our TpT store to find Math Pack 28 which includes 5 printable math centers perfect for sequencing a week of learning for half hour time. 
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29 December 2018

Free 2019 Wall Planner

Mel Lloyd Teacher Planner

This morning I made a wall planner for our home office for 2019. I wanted something A1 in size that was clear, practical and just a little bit cute. 

I had it printed at Officeworks for $20 and have it mounted on an inspiration board from Kikki K.

I would love to share it with you so you can make one for your creative or office space. I've already added some sticky notes to mine, as you can see in the photo.

Find the image file in Google Drive to print yourself - 2019 Pretty Wall Planner From the Pond

All the pink spaces on my planner are scheduled newsletters - or 'Pond Updates'. In 2019 we will be sending them out fortnightly and we would love to include you so we can stay in touch, let you know when we have new items added to our store and share ideas and freebies with you.

Sign up if you would like to join our newsletter. We've been sending it out since 2009 and think you would love it too.
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26 December 2018

Bear Books and a Craft


We read lots of bear books last week! Here are some of the favorites Sam pulled from our home library book cases. His reading ability has soared over the last few months and he is now keen to attempt chapter books. We do love picture books however, especially at bedtime and he is still very keen for me to read to him, which I am thrilled about. 

If you are interested in some of these titles, here are a few Amazon Affiliate links:


One particularly fun read is Bear Snores On by Karma Wilson. It has lively, playful text that seems to skip along from page to page. It is ideal for a shared reading and re-read with concentrated sentence level analysis. 

Any of the pages would be perfect to pull a sentence from and take a close look at the language and word choice.

In a cave in the woods, a slumbering bear sleeps through the party in his very own lair. 

With this sentence written on display for your learners, ask them:

  • what they notice
  • which words are nouns/verbs/adjectives/pronouns
  • are there any unfamiliar words
  • what do they visualize when they hear 'slumbering'
  • cover key words like 'cave', 'sleeps' and 'party' and have your students write their own version of this sentence structure to modify the text


I've made a one page craft to accompany these, or any other bear book that you may be reading with your class. It also includes writing pages for you to use when you set a writing task for your students. 


This one page craft has a 2D shape focus so you can incorporate some mathematics in your lesson as well. After students have made this craft, encourage them to draw another bear or animals from 2D shapes to extend their learning.


Find this free craft in Google Drive right here: Free Shape Bear One Page Craft

You can find more one page crafts over in our TpT store. They are perfect for busy teachers because
  • they can be easily incorporated into theme work
  • we have included a great variety of projects in each pack
  • the prep is ridiculously fast (just one page per student)
  • kids love them and will ask you over and over again for more
  • they can be completed independently by students, building confidence with creativity 


We hope you enjoy reading some bear stories with your learners!


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22 December 2018

Matching analog and digital time to the hour

Learning to tell time takes lots of practice and teaching it requires a dash (or two) of patience!
Learning To Tell Time To The Hour

Early concepts of time

Before you spend too much time planning wonderful 'clock' lessons, check your learners informal understanding of time. Can they:

  • use and understand basic terms like daytime, night time, yesterday, today, tomorrow, all day, in a while, in a long while etc
  • sequence events in a day
  • sequence events over a day
  • use the names of the days of the week correctly
  • identify significant and relevant times in their life
  • compare the duration of a few events
  • use informal units to show the passing of time
  • use calendars, days and dates
  • recognize the months of the year and seasons?
Our Math Pack 16 will help with some of these early concepts.


Two of the activities in our latest Math Pack 28 will require your learners to tell time to the hour and match it on digital and analog clocks. Digital and analog times can be taught concurrently.

Tips for teaching time

Here are some things to consider when you are teaching this unit:

  • keep a clock, with big clear numbers, visible in the classroom at all times
  • students should be able to see a clock in the classroom at all times - this will assist them in understanding that time is continuous
  • some learners will be able to tell you the time but will have limited sense of the passing of time / continuous nature of time
  •  relate your activities to the world of the students as much as possible - e.g. 'we eat lunch at 1 o'clock'
  • make explicit that 5 o'clock in the morning is not the same as 5 o'clock in the evening
  • use terms like 'hour hand' and 'minute hand' rather than 'big and little hands'
  • consider that some learners may not have clocks at home and will have had very limited experience telling time

Matching digital and analog hour time

Time to Match is one game in Math Pack 28. Learners will match a digital time clock and analog clock. An accompanying worksheet will challenge them to write and draw these times also. 

Digital Time Math Center

Time To The Hour Math Center

Our fun, bright and happy designs will engage your students and have them wanting to play over-and-over again!

If you find that some students are playing this game easily - challenge them to:
  • sequence the times
  • on scrap paper, draw something that happens in their life to match each time
  • on a whiteboard, copy the clocks
  • pivot and work on addition: roll two dice, add the numbers, find the number on the clock and cover it with a token - fist to cover all numbers wins (number 1 can be covered as a free turn)
  • record the time that is 1, 2 or 3 hours after each


I have prepared a bonus game for you also - Hour Before and After. It is over in our store and you can download it for free. 

Students will need to determine the time that is one hour before and one hour after each of the clocks shown on the game mats. Simply print the pages, laminate if desired and you are all set. A recording page is included as well as a cover page for organizing your resources.


And if you are in the Coloring Club, be sure to find the clock page to color. Becoming familiar with the layout of a clock is important for our learners and something that requires a fair amount of repetition and repeated exposure. 



After your lessons, check that students can show you times on a clock using the hands. Can they use the classroom clock to tell you the time? Have you provided them with opportunities to share their personal experience with time and clocks? Are they ready to learn time to the half hour? 

I'll be back in a while with some half-hour time ideas. Have a lovely day!


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20 December 2018

Paper Bag Bear Craft


We had fun this morning making some cute brown paper bears. They were so easy to make and super cute! A few simple folds, some freehand cutting and drawing and you are set.

We have read some lovely bear stories too, and I will share some ideas from our reading with you later in the week. 

Here is how we made our bears:

What you need for an easy paper bag bear craft:

  • brown paper bag (no gusset)
  • scraps of paper - dark brown, pink, black
  • glue stick
  • scissors
  • brown marker


How to make an easy paper bag bear craft

 1. Flip the bag to the back and fold the top corners down. With each fold we added a small swipe of glue.


2. Fold the corners back again, leaving about a centimetre from the original fold in position.


3. Fold the tips of the corners back again. 


Here is what it will look like from the front, after these 3 folds.


4. Fold the two base corners in. 


5. Fold the base up to create the bear's chin.


6. Use your paper scraps and scissors to freehand cut features for the bear.


7. Draw extra detail using the brown marker.


8. The bears look lovely on a bulletin board or clipped to a line to create a banner!


We do hope you have fun making some lovely cute bears too. See you later this week for some more bear goodies!

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17 December 2018

Christmas Coloring Posters to Encourage and Motivate


Encourage and motivate your learners with some growth mindset style messages of motivation and inspiration this Christmas with our Color Create Motivate poster set. 

Use the designs included or ask your students to develop their own positive messages and phrases with the 'wordless' versions!

Here is a close up of the posters:

Be Jolly

Be Merry and Bright 

Be as Original as a Snowflake 

Bright and Happy

Don't stop believing  

Give, give, give 

Have a Merry Little Christmas

Ho, Ho, Ho, Ho 

Joy to the World 

Peace, love, hope 

Shine, shine, shine

We have snow much fun 


If you love coloring, you might like to check out our Coloring Club over on the website! We recently added some Christmas designs for your little ones (or you!) to enjoy!






We hop your learning space is filled with joy, laughter and positivity this week - enjoy the festivity and be kind to yourself too!


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