Enhance your writing lessons with this fun and engaging Spongebob-themed anchor chart! Featuring a "crabby patty" burger, this chart helps students visualize how to structure their paragraphs. Perfect for use with a projector screen or printed as a poster, it's an ideal tool for guiding students through the writing process. This anchor chart includes sentence starters and stems, making it especially useful for our animal research project (also available in my shop). Key Features:Spongebob Theme:
Help students build independence, emotional awareness, and self-regulation skills with this engaging Classroom Self-Check Poster! Designed for elementary classrooms, this visual support teaches students how to recognize what their brain and body need, choose a helpful strategy, and return ready to learn. Perfect for classrooms using SEL, restorative practices, Zones of Regulation®, trauma-informed teaching, PBIS, MTSS, behavior supports, or executive functioning strategies. ✨ What's Included
📚 Product Title i-Ready Lessons Tracker | 120 Chart Goal Tracker | Lesson Progress Incentive Chart | Classroom Reward System | Printable Poster ✨ Description Motivate students to stay engaged with their i-Ready lessons all year long with this fun and visual 120 Chart Lesson Tracker!Students color in one number for every lesson they pass, helping them see their growth and celebrate their hard work. Special reward stars are placed throughout the chart to encourage persistence and keep motivat
Help your students become reading detectives! 🕵️♀️ This colorful, kid-friendly poster teaches students how to determine an author's purpose using a simple flowchart and the memorable PIE strategy: 📢 Persuade📚 Inform🎭 EntertainPerfect for first grade, second grade, and intervention groups, this visual guide walks students through a series of questions to help them identify whether an author wants to entertain, inform, or persuade. ✨ What's Included ✅ Full-page 8.5 x 11 color poster ✅ Easy
Elkonin boxes build phonological awareness skills by segmenting words into individual sounds, or phonemes. To use Elkonin boxes, a child listens to a word and moves a token into a box for each sound or phoneme. In some cases different colored tokens may be used for consonants and vowels or just for each phoneme in the word. Pronounce a target word slowly, stretching it out by sound.Ask the child to repeat the word.Have the child count the number of phonemes in the word, not necessarily the numbe