I have 12+ years experience teaching both middle and high school students in New York State. I have also done enrichment programs with elementary school students. I am certified in science and special education grades 5-12. I am also working on my administrator certification as I have recently graduated with my Master's in School Building Leadership from Mercy College.
This quiz has both multiple choice and extended response questions all about energy for a K - 6 classroom. Topics covered include forms of energy, energy transformations, magnetism, and electricity as a major form of usable energy. There is a student answer sheet and teacher answer key available today.
sound, light, heat, temperature, thermometer, nuclear, mechanical, kinetic, potential, wind, solar, transformation, electricity, magnetism
K - 6th
Basic Principles, General Science, Physical Science
Use this 40 page packet to guide you through a unit on magnetism for elementary school children and/or middle schoolers. There are 9 hands on lessons, with lesson plans, worksheets, helpful diagrams/pictures, and answer keys.
magnetism, electromagnet, electromagnetism, force, dipole magnet, magnetic field, field lines, iron filings, motion, electricity, Earth, North Pole, South Pole, compass, magnetic domain, needle, attraction, repulsion, attract, repel
Use this question bank to build assessments for your K - 6 science classroom. There are multiple choice and extended response questions. Answer key is included.
electrical energy, heat energy, mechanical energy, sound energy, light energy, friction, gravitational potential energy, chemical energy, the Sun as a source of all energy, temperature, thermometer
K - 8th
Basic Principles, General Science, Physical Science
Use this question bank to assess your K - 6 elementary students during your units of study about science. This packet contains multiple choice and extended response/graphing questions that deal with weather.
weather, precipitation, freeze, melt, snow, rain, sleet, hail, water cycle, runoff, evaporation, clouds, temperature, condensation, groundwater
Use this Cloze (fill-in-the-blank) worksheet to help your elementary science students learn about general science skills. The skills in this worksheet are identified directly from the NY State Elementary Science Learning Standards. There is a teacher answer key provided.
Safety, See, Measure, Weight, Force, Temperature, Volume, Liquid,
Time, Respect, Permission, System, Measurement, Unit, Record, Sequence, Classify, Differences, Senses, Reports, Analyze, Patterns, Effect, Questions, Orga
Use this fun and engaging activity to help introduce the skills of observation in science. This webquest requires you and your students to visit a webpage and pretend that you are crime scene investigators. You will observe a crime scene for a brief period and then have your students respond to questions that assess their visual recall skills. There are pre-activity questions and post-activity analysis/discussion questions. There is a teacher key for all questions.
observation, observe, inv
Use this fun webquest activity to help develop pattern recognition skills in your elementary science students. This activity requires a journey to a website for some interactive demonstrations that will assess student skills in pattern recogntion through a virtual crime scene analysis. There are pre and post activity questions. There is a teacher key provided.
pattern, recognize, identify, notice, observe, memory, similar, different
This cloze (fill in the blank) worksheet is designed based on the inquiry and process skills for elementary school science. The worksheet could be used as a teaching tool in elementary science or an assessment tool in middle school science. There is a teacher answer key provided and student word banks.
classify, communicate, compare, contrast, create, model, organize, collect, data, generalize, identify, variable, infer, interpret, decide, manipulate, measure, observe, predict
Use this free and fun webquest to teach your elementary science students about the importance of paying attention. This activity uses the famous selective attention experiment of the "invisible gorilla." You will watch a brief video with your students and respond to some questions. There are pre and post activity questions and a teacher key for all questions.
notice, observe, memory, attention, forget
3rd - 5th
Basic Principles
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About the store
Experience
I have 12+ years experience teaching both middle and high school students in New York State. I have also done enrichment programs with elementary school students. I am certified in science and special education grades 5-12. I am also working on my administrator certification as I have recently graduated with my Master's in School Building Leadership from Mercy College.
Teaching style
I like to combine the sentiments of Gardner's multiple intelligence theory with the constructivist theory of Twomey.
Awards & shining teacher moments
Member Golden Key National Honor Society
Graduated top 10% of high school class
Graduated top 10% of PSU
My own education history
Pennsylvania State University - 2001 B.S. in Psychology with Biological Sciences Option.
Manhattanville College - 2005 - M.A.T. for Science (5 - 9) and (7 - 12).
Certified Biology grades (5 - 12), Students with Disabilities (7 - 12)
Additional biographical information
Member Orange County Chapter of NY State Archaeologial Association
Avid Birdwatcher
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