Wild & Rise · Sample Week · September
This is a complete Week 1 from Wild & Rise Kindergarten. Morning Meeting, the anchor lesson, all five subject branches, Wander Days, and the daily Closing Circle. Click through everything. This is exactly how a week looks and feels.
Week 1 · September
This week everything grows from one idea: your child's name. A name is made of sounds. That's the anchor literacy lesson. It contains a countable number of letters. That's the math branch. It lives inside a family story. That's social studies. It can be drawn and observed. That's the art branch. It can be moved through with your whole body. That's the PE branch. By Friday your child will have explored their name through five different lenses without ever feeling like they studied the same thing twice.
✦ Rise Together this week
Write someone else's name beautifully and leave it somewhere they'll find it. A sibling, a grandparent, a neighbour. A name is a gift. Give it back.
Busy week?
The art branch and wander days are the easiest to drop. Protect the anchor lesson and the math branch. Swap anything else for a few ideas from the wander days and you'll still cover everything that matters.
Wild & Rise · Week 1
Establishing the Routine · 12–18 min · Daily
The goal this week
Same thing, every day, all week. Routine before skills.
The goal this week is not learning. It's routine. By Friday, your child should know exactly what Morning Meeting is, what comes next, and feel settled in it. Skills come later. This week: the same sequence every day until it feels like home.
What Morning Meeting is
A short, predictable opening. 12–18 minutes every learning day. Calendar, then counting, then a rhyme, then a little movement. The same order every time. By Week 3 it runs on autopilot. That's the whole point.
You need: a simple calendar showing the current month, a weather chart (a whiteboard or piece of paper on the wall works), and your ten frame set-up. Two laminated ten frames and a small container of counters.
The same four steps every morning, in this order:
① Point to today's date. Say it together: "Today is Tuesday, September 9th." ② "What day was yesterday? What will tomorrow be?" ③ Look outside. "What's the weather?" Mark it on the chart. ④ Add today's counter to the ten frame. Count all counters together aloud.
How it builds across the week
"We say the same rhyme every day this week until you know it by heart."
Hickory dickory dock,
The mouse ran up the clock.
The clock struck one,
The mouse ran down,
Hickory dickory dock.
Day by day
Nursery rhymes appear in Morning Meeting all year. This one comes back. Learning it now means it's available as a tool later.
"No rules yet. Just move your arm as big as you can."
Day by day
No specific strokes this week. Week 2 introduces tall lines. This week trains the awareness that the arm moves on purpose. That's enough.
Wild & Rise · Week 1 · Anchor Lesson
ELA · Phonological Awareness · Writing · Oral Language · 30–40 min · Start here this week
Learning Intention
Today we discover that your name is made of sounds, and that every name carries a story worth telling.
What is phonological awareness? The ability to hear and play with the sounds in spoken language. In the ear, not on the page. Research consistently shows it's one of the strongest predictors of early reading success. The best way to build it is through play, song, and conversation.
What are syllables? The beats inside words. Kim-ber-ly = 3 beats. Ro = 1 beat. Feeling those beats physically. By clapping, tapping, or pushing a counter forward. Is more powerful than any worksheet. The body learns it before the mind can name it.
A note on fine motor: When your child manipulates small letter cards, picks up counters, or traces letters in a tray, they're building the hand strength and finger control that pencil grip depends on.
What You'll Need
Your Wildlings
The Lesson
Read or watch Alma and How She Got Her Name together.
After reading: "Alma has so many names and every one carries a story. Does YOUR name have a story? Who chose it? What does it mean? Does it belong to someone in our family?"
Take your time. Tell the stories together. Some families have rich name stories. Others are discovering them for the first time. Both are exactly the lesson.
"How many names did Alma have? Let's count." (Six.) "How many names do YOU have?" Count first, middle (if any), last.
Write your child's name in large, clear letters on the whiteboard or large paper. Leave it visible for Steps 3 and 4.
Count the letters in your child's first name. Point to each one together. Ask: "Which letter comes first? Last? Do any letters repeat?"
This is letter recognition. Different from the sound work coming in Step 5.
Your child chooses how to work with the letters. Magnet letters, tiles, blocks, or index cards.
Build the name in order. Mix them up. Put them back. Try from memory. Can they do it without looking at the reference?
The free name tracing sheet (linked above) works well here. Trace each letter before building it with materials.
Set up your tray: sand, flour, shaving cream, or use a chalkboard. Child traces their name through the medium with one finger, using the whiteboard name as reference. Repeat 2–3 times if they're willing.
Then invite. Don't require. A first attempt on paper. Any paper today. No lined paper yet.
"You wrote that. Those marks are YOU."
Watch the syllables video first if you have a few minutes (linked above).
"Names are made of sounds and the sounds come in beats. Let's find the beats in your name."
Clap your child's name: "Kim-ber-ly. How many claps? Three!" Use counters: push one forward for each syllable as you say the name slowly. Count what you pushed.
Try your name, siblings, grandparents, pets. Follow their lead.
What to Watch For
Choose 2 or 3 per session
Name Writing · try a new tool each session
Letters and Names
Syllables
Going deeper?
Wild & Rise · Week 1 · Branch Lesson
Numeracy · Counting & Cardinality · Comparing Quantities · Numeral Formation · 20–25 min
Learning Intention
Numbers are everywhere. Even in our names. Your name has a number, and today we find it.
One-to-one correspondence is the ability to touch one object while saying one number. Many children this age count from memory without matching the count to actual objects. This lesson makes counting physical and meaningful.
Comparing quantities. More than, fewer than, the same as. Is the language of mathematics. We're building it naturally through names your child already knows and cares about.
Numeral formation is separate from letter formation and equally important. Practising the specific numeral that represents your child's name length gives the writing practice meaning.
What You'll Need
Your Wildlings
The Lesson
Point to each letter in your child's name and count together. One touch per letter. "How many letters? Let's write that number." Write the numeral large on paper.
Place a counter under each letter as you count. One counter, one letter.
Write 3–4 family names (or names from Alma). Count the letters in each and write the numeral beside it.
Ask: "Does anyone have MORE letters than you? FEWER? THE SAME?"
Use the words: more than, fewer than, the same as. Say them out loud together.
Arrange the name cards from the name with the fewest letters to the most.
"We put them in ORDER. Shortest to longest, least to most."
Can your child predict where their name will sit before counting?
Practise writing the numeral that matches your name length. Just that one numeral. Parent models formation first. Write it big, small, in different colours.
Optional: write it in the sand tray from the anchor lesson.
What to Watch For
Counting and Comparing
Numbers in the World
Ordering
Going deeper?
Wild & Rise · Week 1 · Branch Lesson
Visual Arts · Creating · Identity · Visual Observation · 25–30 min
Learning Intention
A name isn't just a word. It can be a beautiful object. Today we make our names into art.
Letters are visual objects. This lesson asks your child to look at the shapes inside their own name. The curves, straight lines, diagonals, and open spaces, then turn those shapes into art. It's a different kind of looking than reading or writing.
Process over product. A name filled with dots and stripes is as successful as one with elaborate drawings. The goal is engagement with the letters as visual objects, and making something worth displaying.
What You'll Need
Your Wildlings
The Lesson
Look at the name written on the whiteboard from the anchor lesson.
"What shapes do you see inside the letters? Any curves? Straight lines? Circles? Diagonals?"
Just noticing. Building visual observation before creating.
On large paper, draw each letter very large. At least palm-sized, filling the page. Use a thick marker or dark crayon. Refer to the anchor whiteboard name as a reference.
Leave the insides of each letter empty. That's the canvas for the next step. Parent can guide letter formation if needed, or draw the outlines for younger children.
Fill each letter. The inside spaces. With colour, pattern, or design. Each letter can be different, or all can match. There is no wrong way to do this.
Prompt gently if they get stuck: "What if this letter was full of dots? Or stripes? Or your favourite colour?"
Try different tools if you have them. A marker for bold lines, watercolour washed over crayon, or coloured pencil for detail work.
Find a place on the wall and put it up together. This is their first piece in their learning space.
"That is YOUR name. You made it beautiful."
What to Watch For
New Surfaces and Tools
Letters in the Environment
Going deeper?
Wild & Rise · Week 1 · Branch Lesson · FMS Week 1 of 40
Physical Literacy · Body Awareness · Spatial Awareness · Personal Space · 20–25 min
Learning Intention
Today we discover where our body is in space, and that it can make any shape we imagine.
Body awareness is knowing where your body parts are and how they move in space. Without having to look at them. It's the foundation of coordination, balance, and eventually handwriting. Children who lack body awareness struggle to stay in their seat, hold a pencil, and navigate crowded spaces.
Personal space. The invisible "bubble" around your body. Is not just a social skill. Understanding where your body ends and space begins is a spatial concept that supports letter formation and reading direction.
All three FMS domains are present this week: Stability (body shapes, personal space), Locomotor (walking through space without collisions), and Object Control foundations (spatial awareness for future tracking skills).
The name connection is real: Asking a child to make their body into a letter shape requires them to hold a mental image of the letter and translate it into physical form. That cross-domain connection strengthens both movement literacy and early reading.
What You'll Need
Your Wildlings
The Lesson
"Imagine you have a big bubble all around you. Stretching from your fingertips to your toes to the top of your head. That bubble is YOUR space. Move around the room without popping anyone else's bubble."
Walk slowly at first, then a little faster. Can they navigate the space without bumping into furniture, walls, or each other?
Freeze on your signal. "Is your bubble still whole? Good. Your body knows where it is."
Move through the space freely. When you call out a body part, they freeze and point to it, or touch it as fast as they can.
Start easy: "Freeze. Show me your elbow. Your knee. Your shoulder." Then get harder: "Show me the back of your knee. Your collarbone. Your heel."
Follow their lead. If they ask to be the caller, let them. That's the whole game working at its best.
Call out shape words. They make their body into that shape. No wrong answers.
"Wide! Narrow! Tall! Small! Twisted! Round! Flat! Pointy!"
Try combinations: "Wide AND low. Twisted AND tall." Can their body do both at once?
Move between shapes quickly. The transition IS the movement challenge.
"We've been making shapes with our bodies. Now let's make the shapes of the letters in your name."
Start with the first letter. Look at the whiteboard name (from the anchor lesson) if needed. Can they make that shape with just their arms? Their whole body? On the floor?
Work through as many letters as they're interested in. Some will be easy (I, O, L). Some will be wonderfully silly (S, K, Z). All of it counts.
Laugh together. Silly is the point. Silliness lowers the stakes and raises engagement.
What to Watch For
Body Awareness Games
Shapes and Space
Going deeper?
Wild & Rise · Week 1
Child-led extensions across all subjects. Dip in when the moment is right. Nothing here is required.
Each subject branch has its own Wander Day built in. This page brings them all together if you want to plan the week at a glance. The full instructions for each are in the individual branch tabs.
Numeracy · 2–3 sessions
Counting name letters in the world. Groceries, books, signs. Comparing quantities in daily life. Making a family name bar graph for those ready to go deeper.
Social Studies · 1 session
Family name exploration with an elder or grandparent. Looking for community names on signs and landmarks. Wondering where names come from.
Visual Arts · 1 session
New surfaces and tools. Chalk, watercolour, sticks and stones. Finding name letters in the environment and in nature.
Physical Literacy · 1–2 sessions
Body awareness games, mirror play, shadow letter names in sunshine, flashlight letter tracing at night. All child-led, all low-stakes.
How to use Wander Days
Wander Days aren't assigned. They're available. Drop them into gaps in the week. After lunch, during quiet time, on an afternoon when the anchor lesson didn't happen. Nothing on this list has a prerequisite except interest.
If a Wander Day turns into an hour-long deep dive, let it. That's the whole point. If it gets one sentence of interest and then nothing, that's fine too. The curriculum doesn't penalise curiosity that doesn't pan out.
Wild & Rise · Week 1
A gentle ritual to close the learning day. 5–10 min · Daily · Same structure every day.
Closing Circle mirrors Morning Meeting. It gives the day a shape and tells your child that today is complete. One prompt. A little quiet drawing. A moment to name something good. The same each day until it's a ritual.
Day 1
Draw a self-portrait. This is you on Day 1 of your learning journey. Tell one story about your name. Parent scribes.
Day 2
Draw one letter from your name. Make it big and beautiful. Tell one thing you noticed about names today.
Day 3
Draw something that starts with the first letter of your name. Write that letter next to it.
Day 4
Draw your family. Write (or dictate) how many people. Label each person with their first initial.
Friday
Draw one thing you learned this week. Complete the sentence: "I am good at ___." Save this page. It's your first portfolio entry.
Friday's Closing Circle is a portfolio entry. Keep it. This is what "Week 1, Day 1" looked like. It will mean something at the end of the year when you can see how far your child has come. Put it in a folder, a binder, a box. Anywhere it will still be there in June.
The Prompt
One question or one invitation. Read it aloud. Let your child sit with it for a moment before responding.
The Drawing
5–7 minutes of quiet drawing in response to the prompt. Parent scribes words if the child wants to add them.
Something Good
Name one good thing from today. The child shares first. It can be tiny. It just has to be real.
You've seen one week
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Wild & Rise · Week 1 · Branch Lesson
The Story Behind Your Name
Social Studies · Identity · Family & Community · Cultural Connections · 20–25 min
The Story Behind Your Name
Learning Intention
Our names connect us to our families, our histories, and our places in the world.
Some families have rich name stories passed down for generations. Others are discovering them for the first time. Others may have complicated relationships with name history. You don't have to tell any story today that isn't yours to tell.
If you don't know the story: "I don't know, but let's find out together" is one of the most powerful things you can model. Even "we chose it because it felt right for you" is a complete and true story.
If the story is hard to tell: "Your name is yours and it belongs to you" is enough for today. If your family has names from another language or culture, this is a beautiful moment to share that. You don't need to speak the language or have all the answers.
What You'll Need
Your Wildlings
The Lesson
"I want to tell you how you got your name."
Share the story: Who chose it? Why? Does it belong to someone in the family? Does it come from another language or place? Take your time. Tell it like a story, not a fact.
If you don't know the full story: "I'm not sure. Let's find out together." Write down one question. Who could you ask?
If the story is complicated: "Your name is yours. We chose it because it felt right for you." That is a complete and true story.
Draw your family. Everyone who matters to your child. Parents, siblings, grandparents, close friends who are family, anyone your child includes. Let them define who belongs in this picture.
Write each person's name underneath (parent scribes for younger children). Do any names repeat across generations? Are there patterns?
Look up your child's name meaning together, or ask a family elder. Write or draw what it means next to the family drawing.
"Does that feel like you? Does it fit?"
What to Watch For
Names in Our Family. Wander Further
Family Name Exploration
Names in the Community
Going deeper?
Weave into your day
No set-up needed.
When you encounter a name. On a book, a sign, a show. "I wonder where that name comes from?"
Notice names in your neighbourhood on walks or drives.
Ask one family member today to tell you something about their name.