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Ben Travis

Rated 4.92 out of 5, based on 313 reviews
908 Followers
Hermitage, Tennessee, United States
About the store
I have taught in Nashville public schools since 2003, both in middle school and in an elementary Montessori school. I am now an RTI interventionist and technology coach.
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Preview of Symmetry - PowerPoint & Printables - Teaching With Powerpoint

Symmetry - PowerPoint & Printables - Teaching With Powerpoint

Created by
Ben Travis
**Over 150 slides of symmetry-teaching goodness, plus 5 pages of printable pdf sheets that students can cut out!** This may be my favorite of all my "Teaching With Powerpoint" series. If your students don't understand symmetry after working through this, I'll gladly refund your money. This activity is made to take place over at least 4 separate days. Notice that the printables say “Day 1,” “Day 2,” “Day 3,” and “Day 4” on them, so you would typically print only one sheet for students per day
Preview of Polygons - Teaching With Powerpoint

Polygons - Teaching With Powerpoint

Created by
Ben Travis
**this one is free to give you an idea of how these PowerPoints work... most of the others are more elaborate... all of them walk students through a lesson in a clear, step-by-step way** This PowerPoint is part of a new series I'm developing called "Teaching With Powerpoint." It is free for now so that I can get some feedback on it. Enjoy! This PowerPoint teaches students what a polygon is, as well as the names of polygons from triangle up to decagon. It teaches, then quizzes students on th
Preview of Geometry study guides and tests - 1st, 2nd, 3rd grade

Geometry study guides and tests - 1st, 2nd, 3rd grade

Created by
Ben Travis
These are some geometry study guides and tests that I have created for 1st, 2nd, and 3rd graders. Each one also comes with an answer key. These are in Microsoft Word format, and can be edited if needed. These cover the following skills: -identifying solid shapes (including cylinders, spheres, pyramids, etc.) -identifying polygons (including quadrilaterals, hexagons, octagons, etc.) -rays, lines, line segments, intersecting lines, parallel lines, etc. -types of triangles (acute equilateral, ob
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About the store

Experience

I have taught in Nashville public schools since 2003, both in middle school and in an elementary Montessori school. I am now an RTI interventionist and technology coach.

Teaching style

Montessori/Public

Awards & shining teacher moments

Student Teacher of the Year 2001 - Belmont University

My own education history

Bachelor's of Music - Belmont University - 1996 Master's in Education - Belmont University - 2001

Additional biographical information

I have created several PowerPoints to go along with an idea I have that I call "Teaching With Powerpoint." The vision behind “Teaching With Powerpoint” is to use PowerPoints not just as a presentation tool, but to actually teach content. I have been a classroom teacher for over 11 years, and I think I’ve found some pretty clear, concise ways to communicate some tricky concepts such as telling time, money, and many others. I use my method of teaching and create PowerPoints that walk through it step-by-step. My hope in doing this is to give new teachers some additional tools that you can use to effectively communicate concepts to your students, possibly even helping you pick up a few tricks along the way that you hadn’t considered. I also hope that seasoned teachers will find these useful, since it’s something you can easily put up on the screen and walk your students through. In most cases, you probably aren’t necessarily seeing anything you’ve never seen, but I’m taking the time to create these so that you don’t have to. The way these PowerPoints are designed to be used is to put them up on a screen (hit F5 to start), then continuously click a wireless pointer or wireless mouse as you talk through them with your students. I intentionally design my PowerPoints on a simple white background both to decrease distractions and to give you the ability to move slides back and forth between PowerPoints more easily if you want to do that. If you want a spiffy design, you can just click the “design” tab and click one that suits you. I find that the white background creates a little more of a “white board” feeling which keeps things simple. That’s how I like it, but you’re welcome to make changes once you have it. I hope you’ll find these useful to your teaching. If you see anything you think should be changed, or if you have ideas for other PowerPoints that I haven’t designed yet, please let me know. I am continuously in the process of making new ones. The more you buy, the more I will be motivated to design, so thanks for all your support! -Ben Travis