I have been teaching for 10 years in Northern Wisconsin. I spent 9 years as a cross categorical special education teacher and am now in my first year of teaching 3rd grade in a traditional classroom.
This graphic organizer works great when working with the common core and teaching students about writing a personal narrative which connects to a realistic fiction book.
* Gets students to connect events from their life to a characters life.
* Has students writing a catchy lead
* Has students writing a memorable ending
* Encourages students to use details in their writing
This resource allows you to build your students scheduled every day, or allows your student to have input in their daily schedule. The purple choices are categorized as “Have To” choices. The pink cards are “Want to” high interest choices. And the Green Choices are tasks that are part of the day that the student does not have control over such as lunch time, speech pull out time, ect.
The daily schedule boards and daily choices have Velcro on them so they are easy to put on and take off.
The addition properties can be difficult for students to remember and understand. These three centers, each one focusing on a different addition property, will help provide extra practice for your students.
Print, cut out, and laminate each letter. Then cut the pictures on each letter apart to form a puzzle. I use these with my students learning their letter sounds. I present each student with the pieces from two letters, I let them know the letters we are working with, and then have them sort the pictures into piles depending on the beginning sound. Once the letters are sorted they can put them together to form that letter.
These posters are great to display in your classroom for student reference when teaching the addition properties. Included are the Identity Property, Commutative Property, and Associative Property.
IEP At a Glance can be filled out and given to classroom teacher. Looking over full IEPs at the start of the school year can be very overwhelming, this tool makes the IEP reviewing process much more manageable.
Posters to help young writers find memorable ways to end their writing instead of the ever popular "The End!" Each poster has an example of that form of ending.
Ending suggestions include:
* I will never forget...because
* The lesson I learned...
* The next time...
* Now I know...
* Be careful when...
When teaching about the writing process these posters displayed in your classroom will help students to identify where they are in the writing process and what their next steps should be. These posters can also be bound together to make a clip chart for students to use to show their place in the writing process.
These posters are great to display in the classroom while you're teaching about the multiplication properties. Included in this set are posters for the commutative, zero, identity, and associative properties of multiplication.
These multiplication bracelets are a fun tool to help students memorize their multiplication facts. This set includes bracelets with the products as well as bracelets with the product missing which require the student to compete the equations before wearing the bracelet.
I hope your students enjoy making and wearing these as much as mine have!
These posters are great to have in your classroom to help remind students what you are asking for when you ask the typical post reading questions. My students often confuse what I mean when I ask for a connection or a summary. Included in this pack are four posters illustrating:
-Connections
-Summary
-Favorite Part
-Authors Purpose
This product is designed to help special education teachers track the progress their students are making toward their benchmarks on their IEP goals.
K - 12th
FREE
Showing 1-14 of 14 results
About the store
Experience
I have been teaching for 10 years in Northern Wisconsin. I spent 9 years as a cross categorical special education teacher and am now in my first year of teaching 3rd grade in a traditional classroom.
My own education history
I attended undergrad at the University of Wisconsin Stevens Point and have a degree in both Elementary Education and Special Education. I also have a masters degree in Educational Technology.
TPT is the largest marketplace for PreK-12 resources, powered by a community of educators.