Editable behavior plan with picture examples to go along with a student's daily schedule. Cute fonts can be added, as well as pictures of items that the child likes.
This is a chart that includes pictures of 2 dimensional shapes that the students will fill in the chart about. They will answer if the shape is a quadrilateral, what kinds of lines they see in the shape, and what types of angles they can see in the shape.
Shapes include:
Square
Rectangle
Parallelogram
Trapezoid
Rhombus
Pentagon
Hexagon
Octagon
Star
This is a chart that includes pictures of 3 dimensional shapes that the students will fill in the chart about. They will document how many faces, edges, and vertices, each shape has.
Shapes include:
Cube
Rectangular Pyramid
Cone
Triangular Prism
Sphere
Cylinder
Rectangular Prism
Triangular Prism
This is a great example of how to write using our senses. The activity includes a reading sample with great sensory language and a chart for the students to fill out for each example of the senses. When they have completed this they can write their own sample and use this same chart to check their writing or switch with a partner.
This is a great way for your students to plan their personal narrative. They will begin by brainstorming 3 ideas that go with the prompt. They will narrow it down to 1 idea and expand on that by determining the 5 W's on what they will be writing about. They will then select 2-3 ideas that belong in the beginning, middle, and end of their story. Print this out for your students to fill in, or just as a reminder poster to hang in your room!
This is a great way to have students practice using synonyms to improve their writing. It asks them to select 3 boring words from their writing piece to highlight and write in the first box. They will then fill out the columns of boring and fancy words. Fancy words will be synonyms of their boring words, that make their writing sound better. This can be used when introducing synonyms, or on a daily basis when you are wanting the students to revise their writing.
Hop and Solve is a game that gets students moving around the classroom while practicing math skills. Post the individual shapes around the room. (There are 12 different shapes) The students will need a clipboard with their "Hop and Solve" recording page and a pencil. They will then rotate around the room solving each problem as they go, and recording the answer on their chart. After they rotate through all of the 12 shapes, review the chart as a class and see if everyones answer matches up.
A perfect activity to do with your students when you are introducing probability. I put 20 M&M's in snack sized bags and made enough for each student. They filled in the chart using the probability equation (Desired outcome/Total outcome possibility).
This is a helpful form to fill out before a parent conference. Great tool for first year teachers or anyone that wants to come prepared to the conference.
These labels are made for the 2" by 4" shipping labels. (Standard shipping label size.) I made a page of labels that are filled in with a cute font. You can edit my text or copy and paste, whatever you need to do! Super cute and a great way to organize shelves, supplies, etc.
After taking notes on the different elements of fluency, I have my students read poems around the room to different classmates. We use this exit ticket to assess our own fluency rates!
This chart is a good way to have your students formulate words that they know, words they kind of know, and words that they do not know. From here you can evaluate what words you need to review. This is a great tool to use during any lesson or read aloud. You could even laminate it and have one on each students desk for them to fill out with an expo marker!
This is a great way to check for understanding. Print this image off and make copies so that everyone may have an exit slip. It has one basic probability question for the students to complete.