One of my all-time favorite television shows is I Love Lucy. Not only is the show utterly brilliant, Lucy became an instant style icon for me. One episode she’d be wearing a wonderful slacks …
This set includes 4 episode correlated activities from the first season of "I Love Lucy". The correlated activities include vocabulary, speaking, listening, reading, and writing activities to go along with each episode. Each activity sheet is one page in length, and the set includes differentiation suggestions for multi-level classes. Set 1 activities correlate with the these episodes from season 1: "The Girls Want to Go to a Nightclub" "The Diet" "Be a Pal" "Lucy Thinks Ricky is Trying to Murder Her" Please also check out future sets with this television show, along with "The Cosby Show" correlated activities. Please remember to rate! This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported License.
Enjoy all 31 Episodes of the fourth season of I Love Lucy. Features episodes like: "Ricky's Movie Offer", "Lucy Learns To Drive", "California Here We Come", "Lucy Gets In Pictures", "The Hedda Hopper Show", and "Harpo Max".
Classic episodes from the iconic CBS sitcom, which is celebrating its 65th anniversary
If you’re feeling uninspired or just don’t know what to wear this season, then I’m sharing 20 of my favorite outfits that will hopefully get you in the spring spirit! From bold pops of color to neutral monochromatic outfits, these are some of my favorite looks that are perfect for this time of year.
Cuban-born bandleader Ricky Ricardo, and his wife, Lucy, live in a Brownstone apartment building on East 68th Street in New York City. The beautiful but daffy Lucy has the nasty habit of getting into jams, scrapes, and predicaments of all kinds. The Ricardo's' best friends and landlords, Fred and Ethel Mertz, frequently find themselves in the middle of Lucy's outlandish escapades.
The other day, I was watching my season 5 DVD set of I Love Lucy…. you know, the Hollywood episodes. And as I was watching one of the episodes, Lucy wore one of my favorite outfits in the en…
Let me once again proclaim that "I Love Printmaking!" It is such a fun process and I love the surprise each time you pull a print. Printmaking is a way of making multiple pieces of art by creating a printing plate and using ink and paper for the copies instead of a single drawing or painting. We do a variety of types of printmaking in K-5 at Dolvin, and 5th grade gets the challenge of reduction printing. It isn't difficult, but there are a lot of steps and procedures that must be followed correctly, so you've got to be focused! The printing plate is reduced, or made smaller, with each session of printing - this can be done by actually cutting the plate or by filling in areas with pencil so they wont receive ink. A simple image works well for reduction printing, as it will go through several stages and changes of color and texture, so we selected a leaf or acorn shape and drew a contour outline on the printing foam. We printed with a single color ink on a few different colors of paper. Once dry, we rinsed the foam plates and added a cross-hatching pattern in the negative space, as well as a few details inside the positive space - the leaf/acorn. The following week, we printed the same sheets of paper, however this time it was important to register, or line-up, the plate with the original print. we also used a new color of ink. We rinsed the foam again and filled in the positive space with lots of pencil marks, and then cut away the negative space with scissors. On the third printing day, there is very little plate left. Again, we use another ink color and register the plate for printing over all the previous print layers. We also printed a couple of extra white sheets with our final plate design, just to see how much it had changed. If you are a teacher looking for printmaking tips, here are some things that I have found to be really helpful... 1. Have students select printing papers and write names on them the week before actual printing takes place - this gives you more time for printing and clean up on printing day. 2. Label the table covers with a sharpie - messy middles and clean corners! Inking occurs in the messy middle, while transferring ink to paper stays in the clean area. Printing papers should be stored under the clean corners. 3. Have students immediately take each print to the drying rack/area as they are pulled. Wet prints shouldn't be sitting around on the print table. 4. You control the ink. I walk around the entire time monitoring the process and refreshing ink trays as needed. 5. As soon as the first kids finish, they are the ink tray washers. They start collecting and washing ink trays as students are finishing up. 6. Fold over the table cover and save for the next day. I store mine on top of my drying rack. Use again and again.
'Lucy' is a classic comedy that, under the surface, shows you that no matter what you do you can't fully escape your past.