130 Ideas for Brain Breaks Suitable for all ages -- especially Grades 4-12. Lower grades might require taking out or explaining a few prompts. Page 2: Get Up and Move Ideas Pages 3-4: Would You Rather Questions Pages 5-6: Conversation Starters Pages 7-9: Random Facts Pages 10-12: True or False Questions Page 13-14: Trivia and More Ideas for How to Use: 1) Print and cut cards on colored cardstock (you can print the different kinds of activities on different colors). 2) Number the prompts,
Students will love this board game to help them practice adding, subtracting, multiplying, and dividing fractions! Materials: Fractions deck, operation deck, game board, 1 die, game piece, student answer sheet. Alteration: You can also play this game with only one or two of the operations. My students played the game with just multiplication and division.
Students will love to move around the room for this activity! Similar to a Mad Lib, students will answer questions in order to fill in the blanks of a story.
Shapes include rectangles, squares, triangles, circles, and semicircles.
Includes, student work page, answer key, and two version of the questions (half page and full page).
This product is perfect for interactive notebooks! The front reviews the area of rectangles, triangles, circles, and half circles. The back provides three examples of compound figures.
This is a 5 page packet that is split into 4 sections: multiplying integers, dividing integers, multiplying fractions, and dividing fractions. You can split it into different days or as homework or a study guide! I used it for remediation during summer school.