Students will learn the life cycle of a pumpkin by reading books, re-creating the lifecycle, and labeling the different parts of the pumpkin life cycle. Extentions to the lesson is included.
This is an excel spreadsheet activity.
It can be done as a whole class or in groups.
Students take a poll on who likes what Thanksgiving foods, as the number is put in beside the word and picture it graphs the answers. Not only do you get a chart with the favorite Thanksgiving foods you also get a graph that corresponds to the graph.
Ocean Stations Directions
There are 11 different activities:
Pearl in the Oysters
Water Color Whale
Jellyfish
Rainbow Fish
Crab
Rice Starfish
Sand Shark
Turtle
Seahorse
Coral
Shark Writing
Living vs. Nonliving experiment
Have the students observe a gummy worm and an earthworm. They will then record their observations on this experiment sheet.
This is a Smartboard Lesson!
I used this on our pumpkin day. The students got to sample each of the different pumpkin products. Then they got to put thier vote on which one they liked the best. I then used this to answer math problems such as which item was the favorite of the class? How many students liked pumpkin pie and pumpkin bread? etc.
Here is a great way to extend you addition lesson as well as meet all of the students needs. This choice board offers a variety of differentiated ways that students can show their knowledge about addition.
This is a math place value menu board. This gives the students choice in showing their knowledge about place value. These activities require minimal prep work.
This is a page where your learners can record their findings as they compare an apple and a pumpkin.
Kindergarden and 1st can draw or write the differences. 2nd and 3rd grade can write about the similarities and the differences.
Build a monster by using a key. Roll a money die and for whatever number you land you, you get to add that part to your monster. Add up how much your monster is worth at the end of the project!
This is just a list of Halloween links that I have collected over time. It ranges from Halloween math games, creating pumpkins online, logic puzzles, sequencing, and much more.
Build a monster by using a key. Roll a money die and for whatever number you land you, you get to add that part to your monster. Add up how much your monster is worth at the end of the project!
These are "job coins" that I use with my students during group work. Print and then laminate the job title and description together. These jobs will make small group work run more smoothly.
Jobs: Question leader, task manager, recorder, presenter, supplies manager, noise manager
Teal back ground