Resources, tips, and materials to help you, help children with autism
multiplication fun activity worksheets
Teaching money--especially how to identify and count coins is getting trickier every year! Check out these 10 steps toward money mastery!
These free printable, counting money worksheets will help your students build an understanding of coin recognition, coin value, addition, subtraction, skip counting, place value, and more!
Here is a fun worksheet and lesson on reading maps. ...
Test your first grader's money sense by helping her count up the coins and write the amount on the price tag.
These free printable, counting money worksheets will help your students build an understanding of coin recognition, coin value, addition, subtraction, skip counting, place value, and more!
Number worksheets for kindergarten
Here you will find our Telling Time to 5 Minutes Worksheets. These sheets will help you child to learn to tell the time on a clock to 5 minutes.
This is a pattern for both an Estonian shawl, that measures 22 inches x 72 inches. This very lacy scarf/shawl is composed of three distinct Estonian stitches that blend together in a gorgeous scarf. Should you want it to be a shawl, simply add repeats. If you have never done nupps before, there are two types of instructions contained within the pattern. The scarf/shawl is beautiful on both sides Both stitches are charted and written out line by line. Skill Level: Intermediate - Intermediate + (assuming a basic knowledge of lace knitting). The scarf was expertly test knitted by: Teddi Sherrill who can be reached at tms808@ gmail.com, and was knit using Lorna's Laces Helen's Lace (undyed) Thanks for stopping by. If you would like this knit for yourself as a wedding shawl, or in color for you bridesmaids, please contact Debi Maige at: dmaige1 [!at] gmail.com
*This is a Digital Product. No Physical Product will be delivered. INSTANT DOWNLOAD: Your files will be available to download once payment is confirmed. I don't accept returns, exchanges or cancellations. Telling the Time Blank Clock Templates Great template to insert times and practice telling the time on both a digital and analog clock. Re-print template and use when needed to revisit concepts. FEATURES OF THIS WORKSHEET TEMPLATE: This reproducible worksheet includes both a digital and analog clock to practice telling the time two different ways. WHAT DO YOU GET: PDF file of the worksheet TERMS OF USE: The templates are copyrighted © 2021 Homeschool Cart and for personal use for you and your student only. 🚫 You cannot share, redistribute, resell, transfer, or give the editable templates away to others (not paid or for free) even if you have made modifications. ★ By purchasing this product you accept these terms. Copyright ©️ 2021 Homeschool Cart| All Rights Reserved IMPORTANT Due to the instant nature of this transaction, I cannot offer refunds or exchanges. If you have any problems with the download or file, please contact me and I’ll do my best to help you. This purchase is a digital INSTANT DOWNLOAD, no physical copy will be shipped.
These free printable, counting money worksheets will help your students build an understanding of coin recognition, coin value, addition, subtraction, skip counting, place value, and more!
This addition worksheets features addition numbers 1 to 10 in vertical and horizontal format. Easy way to learn addition, adding on, more than concepts for the young learners in homeschool, kindergarten, primary school. The download comprises : 10 vertical addition sums 1 to 10 10 horizontal addition sums 1 to 10 Total 20 pages (1 pdf - A4 size) Print the worksheets in black and white. Laminate for lasting use. Thank you for visiting Worksheet Digital. www.worksheetdigital.com
Here is a little recording sheet to use in your Vocabulary Center with the Dictionary.
Easy to make popsicle stick popsicles craft and color matching game for toddlers. Have fun making a craft and the learning colors.
How many days until Christmas break? Not that I'm counting down or anything... Anyway! The past week or so, we have been focusing on Fact and Opinion. I wanted to find a super-duper-fantastic idea that would leave my kiddos begging for fact and opinion daily, but I came up short. Many google and pinterest searches came up inconclusive. So! I racked my brain and came up with an idea of my own. Shocker! I didn't know I was capable of this anymore. I'm a big big BIG fan of anchor charts. I don't know what it is, but I love rallying the troops around the carpet and charting information on a piece of chart paper together. Maybe it's the second grade teacher in me. Anyway, I love it. My original plan was to create an anchor chart for fact and opinion, create our own definitions and write examples... blah blah. (I say "blah blah" like its a bad thing, but I still highly enjoy that idea!) I decided to give the anchor chart a little face lift. Paging Dr. Paul Nassif (RHOBH, anyone?)! Using a bulletin board, I created a giant T-Chart with border and my cricut. One side labeled, "Fact" and the other "Opinion". First, we ironed our own definitions of fact and opinion and wrote those on chart paper. Then, using sentence strips I modeled writing down an example of an opinion. My opinion statement was, "I believe the Grinch is the best Christmas movie, ever!" We discussed why this was my opinion and it couldn't be proven true. Then, I handed the sentence strips over to the kiddos and let them write! They were chomping at the bit to write down examples of facts and opinions. We were writing, stapling, writing examples, and stapling some more. It was super interactive and high energy in my classroom for the entire lesson! Yes, 3x3=9 Eh, Football is okay! Overall, it was a pretty fun lesson and now we have our stellar bulletin board to refer to. Anyone have any other great ideas for fact and opinion? Send them my way! Have you seen my friend Ashley's delightful blog One Fine Day? If you haven't, you should head over because she's hosting her first giveaway! She's a talented blogger and if you aren't following her, you must start NOW! Smitten & Swell
Students read a book in pairs. After a page or two each they roll a dice and the corresponding number instructs them to apply a certain comprehension strategy - infer, retell, summarize, use questioning, visualizing. The set includes a set of 2 game cards and a recording sheet for teachers to phot...
A surfing themed 2nd grade math worksheet focusing on Operations & Algebraic Thinking: Subtraction to 20.
All Love Notions Sewing Patterns are digital downloads, you may print them at home or send to a copy shop. A physical pattern will not be mailed to you.The Rhapsody is the perfect top & dress for your summer wardrobe. This blouse & dress is meant for lightweight and drapey wovens. It features nine sleeve options, a flattering curved hem, gathering at the yoke and french seams so the inside looks as nice as the outside! The v-neck line is bound with self-made bias tape and can include ties to give it a beachy feel.Rhapsody Blouse Features: Meant for woven fabrics Blouse & Dress views 9 sleeve options: sleeveless, cap, short, flutter, 3/4 cuff, 3/4 flare, 3/4 bishop, trumpet, and full length bishop Full Bust optionSizes: XS-5X (See Size Charts here)Skill Level: IntermediatePattern Formats Included: Print at home for US letter & A4 paper, trimless format with layers Large format file for copy shop printing. This file will print on four A0 (33″ x 46″) size sheets. Be sure to instruct your printer to print actual size in black and white on their cheapest paper. We recommend PDFPlotting for printing the large format files. A projector file is also included for those using projector technology.
A few weeks ago, I asked teachers on my FB page for topics of interest. I wrote all of the topics down and pinned them on my office's bulletin board. My bulletin board is my "go to" place when I need a topic for a blog post. Today's topic, vocabulary games, is courtesy of my FB readers. Here are a few games I found that you might like to try: This site has elementary and middle school games. Middle School Vocabulary Activities Elementary and middle school vocabulary game. My all around favorite site that had MANY activities including this one: Click to visit the site. It is great! This vocabulary packet is aligned with 1st - 3rd Common Core Standards. Click
Discover the magic of learning with Count on Tricia's free winter-themed color by number math fact activities! Engage your 2nd, 3rd or 4th grade students in mastering addition and multiplication facts through festive and fun worksheets. Download your freebies for a math-filled winter wonderland
This blog post uses the cupcake analogy to define and explain story themes. Just as creme can be hidden inside the cupcake, the theme is hidden inside a story. This blog post includes free posters, too!
Here's a quick and easy tool you can use to facilitate your data tracking of student growth and progress monitoring of individual skills and standards! This pack includes six form options (three whole class and three individual student) for tracking pre- and post-assessment data on your choice of skills, standards, units, or writing pieces. The applications for use can include: -Tracking student growth for teacher evaluation systems based on Charlotte Danielson's Framework for Teaching (or your state's system/rubric). -Conversations about instruction/assessment data in professional learning communities (PLCs). -Grade-level accountability on common assessments. -Inclusion of data sheets in student data binders. -Data for parent-teacher conferences. -Collect data and monitor progress for Response to Intervention programs. Etc.! Use to meet your specific data needs. Be a superstar teacher and WOW your admins with your fabulous data-tracking superpowers ;) If you like, please leave feedback. Thank you for visiting my store! :) Brandy
This week in Reader's Workshop, we are continuing our study of characterization. We want to understand how characters think, feel and change during a story. This will help us understand what we read. Below are a few examples of what we are working on during class! Our goal is to understand what a character looks like on the inside and the outside. Before writing about characters in a book, we wrote about ourselves! Reader's Workshop focus wall! We studied many characters in our favorite stories, including Molly Lou Melon, and Camilla Cream from "A Bad Case of Stripes". We focused on what the characters looked like on the inside and the outside. Today, our focus was about how characters change in a story. We read about "Lilly" from "Julius, The Baby of the World" by Kevin Henkes The students filled out a response sheet about how their characters changed during the course of their reading.
Most of us probably start off with the same few examples when we are describing to our students what it means to "make inferences"...or "to infer" something... If Johnny walks inside with a heavy coat on...what can you infer? Kids: "It's cold outside!" If Jane has chocolate between her teeth...what can you infer? Kids: "She just ate something chocolatey!" Then we move on and ask our kids to infer on a deeper level...but what text should we use? Most stories or reading passages do not require kids to infer very much, if at all. Details are usually given away in the setting or the things the characters say/do. This is where poetry becomes my favorite way to teach inferences! WHOLE GROUP ACTIVITY: I start with the poem called "January" by John Updike. Click the photo below to download the PDF version of the poem. To begin, I cover each stanza of the poem separately with a post-it note. I do this because this poem is on the difficult side, and I want the students to focus on one stanza at a time. When you receive a poem, it is super hard not to read the whole thing at once! "Chunking" is best when you are introducing something new or difficult to your students. We've all heard about putting the information into "digestible bites", right?! ;) Too much professional development for me... I also hand out this "Making Inferences with Poetry" sheet. We will use this throughout this entire lesson. I start by modeling with the first stanza, and the kids follow my lead. They become more independent and willing to share their ideas as the lesson continues. I model using the document camera or by creating an anchor chart with them while they write on their own paper. Click the photo to download the PDF version of this worksheet. In the first column, the students will write the exact line from the poem that they are going to think about; for example, "Fat snowy footsteps track the floor" (from the second stanza). In the second column, the students explain their prior knowledge on the topic...what do YOU know about snowy footsteps tracking the floor? Example answer: I know that if you walk through snow outside, you will bring it in on your shoes when you come inside. Last, the students fill out their inference column. What can they infer based on that line? Example answer: There is snow on the ground outside! This is a WHOLE GROUP lesson, and is definitely difficult for students to try on their own. Some of the lines of the poem could be trick (especially for my South Floridian students who don't experience winter at all!) A fun extension to this activity would be to have had the title missing from the poem before the students receive the copy - have a contest to see if any group can get close to guessing the name of the poem! I had a group guess "December" this year...pretty close! PARTNERED ACTIVITY: For the partnered activity I choose a "fun" poem. A poem that uses imagery to set a scene in the students' minds is a great one for inferencing. This year I used "Abandoned Farmhouse" by Ted Kooser and the students LOVED it! Super spooky and they loved the extension activity I had them do after we inferred! You can find "Abandoned Farmhouse" by Ted Kooser by clicking here. Students went line-by-line making inferences about what the author was trying to say in the poem. What does that mean? Who are they talking about? What can you infer about the setting or the character? They had to write their thoughts next to each line of the poem as they read. This was fun for them because the poem has a spooky side...which all kids love! When I was walking around during this portion of the lesson, the students were even arguing (in a friendly way!) a little bit about what they inferred from each line! I actually LOVED it because they were voicing their opinions and felt confident in their thoughts/ideas. I extended the activity the next day by having the students write the last stanza to the poem. We called this the "missing stanza" because it seems Ted Kooser's poem does not have an ending. The students created their own ending stanza and then illustrated it! It was super fun! We were able to talk about mood and tone as well, because the students had to try to stay in the same mood/tone as the author in order for their stanza to "fit in" well with Ted's poem! At the end of this lesson, we learned that sometimes different people infer different things based on their prior knowledge. It is important to listen to other's ideas so that you can see their perspective and how it is different from yours. Thanks for reading :) I hope you find this useful! Bridget
Word Up! Common Core Vocabulary Graphic Organizers for Grades 2 - 5 includes 12 separate organizers to help students practice essential skills. What makes these any different from others? They are fully editable so you can customize the organizers to suit your needs. They also include examples with images. Three formats included: Microsoft Word (.doc), Microsoft Powerpoint (.ppt), and Adobe Acrobat Reader (.pdf). Standards practiced include the following: 2nd Grade: CCSS.ELA-Literacy.L.2.4a , CCSS.ELA-Literacy.L.2.4b, CCSS.ELA-Literacy.L.2.4e, CCSS.ELA-Literacy.L.2.5a, CCSS.ELA-Literacy.L.2.6 3rd Grade: CCSS.ELA-Literacy.L.3.4a, CCSS.ELA-Literacy.L.3.4b, CCSS.ELA-Literacy.L.3.5a, CCSS.ELA-Literacy.L.3.5b 4th Grade: CCSS.ELA-Literacy.L.4.4a, CCSS.ELA-Literacy.L.4.4b , CCSS.ELA-Literacy.L.4.5c, CCSS.ELA-Literacy.L.4.5b 5th Grade: CCSS.ELA-Literacy.L.5.4a, CCSS.ELA-Literacy.L.5.4b You might like... iPad Literacy Creative Writing Assessment {Grades 3-5} ELA Common Core State Standards Checklists for Grade 5 Creative Activities for ANY Book or Story Created by Tracee Orman Mrs. Orman's Classroom
Your students will LOVE identifying the meaning of words with prefixes & suffixes while playing Prefixes & Suffixes Checkers! Cut out this board template and attach the sqaures onto a real Chevkers game board. The game is played per Checkers instructions only students must state the meaning of the word in a square before claiming that spot on the board. *This idea was not originally that of This Little Teacher, therefore this product is FREE. *This Little Teacher does not have any rights to Checkers. (But I think it's an awesome game if that means anything at all!) :) Enjoy!!
"Lake Life Canoe" is by Artisan Kate Sherrill. This 15"X15" decorative black framed wall art. This image would be perfect for any lake house the canoe rests in the middle of the image with the script reading "Lake Life". This simple image would be perfect in any location. Our products are proudly made by skilled American workers. The surface of our framed art is textured with a fade resistant coating, so no glass is necessary. A vegetable-based glue is used in the production of our products, and our frames are crafted from 100% recycled material. In keeping with our environmentally friendly approach towards manufacturing. Arrives ready to hang.
This is a giant word search puzzle for early finishers. It is large so it's a bit difficult for the earlier grades, but it should keep them busy for awhile. :) It contains 36 Christmas-related words hidden horizontally, vertically and diagonally. (Please Note: If you want an easier Christmas puzzle for younger students, click here.) ***And if you want a big bundle of Christmas activities - including 8 Christmas Word searches - you may like my Christmas Activity Pack. ** This vocabulary-boosting puzzle includes words such as: Santa, carols, gathering, thankful, appreciation, gratitude, snowman, cheer, joy, holly, jolly, elf, turkey, ornaments, and more. As the Winter holidays approach the children start to get that excited feeling...and it gets harder for them to concentrate in class. A fun puzzle like this can help keep them engaged while learning new words. You could also pick some words from the list to use as your spelling quiz for the weekend before the break. I hope your students enjoy the puzzles. If you like this word search puzzle, please leave a review. It really helps other teachers find beneficial products. Thank you, Tim from Puzzletainment Publishing Check out this other fun Christmas word search: CHRISTMAS CAROLS WORD SEARCH More fun word searches for kids. Christmas WORD SCRAMBLE for Grades 2 & 3 Winter CLOTHES Word Search Puzzle Thanksgiving word search Spring words word search Insect word search Ocean Animals word search Football words word search THANK YOU, enjoy this Christmas word search puzzle and have a very Happy Holidays! Sincerely, Tim from Puzzletainment