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Lyttle Learning

Rated 4.8 out of 5, based on 59 reviews
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Jeff, Kentucky, United States
About the store
With 10 years of experience teaching high school science and 4 years serving as a Library Media Specialist, I bring a unique blend of content expertise, literacy leadership, and instructional design to every resource I create. My classroom experience sharpened my focus on rigor, engagement, and standards alignment. My work as a librarian has expanded that lens to include research skills, digital literacy, technology integration, and cross-curricular collaboration. I design resources that are academically strong, thoughtfully structured, and classroom-tested tools that support both teachers and students in meaningful learning.
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Preview of Classifying Changes in Matter Self-grading Color By Number

Classifying Changes in Matter Self-grading Color By Number

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Lyttle Learning
Description Students can practice classifying changes in matter with this self-checking pixel art, color by number activity in Google Sheets. No moving pieces - students classify, enter their answer, and coloring appears on the grid. Using the Color by NumbersStudents should view in Edit Mode: Students will classify changes in matter for the 18 scenarios listed in the sheet and type their answers according to the instructions into the given spaces. This is self-checking - if they answer correctl
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About the store

Experience

With 10 years of experience teaching high school science and 4 years serving as a Library Media Specialist, I bring a unique blend of content expertise, literacy leadership, and instructional design to every resource I create. My classroom experience sharpened my focus on rigor, engagement, and standards alignment. My work as a librarian has expanded that lens to include research skills, digital literacy, technology integration, and cross-curricular collaboration. I design resources that are academically strong, thoughtfully structured, and classroom-tested tools that support both teachers and students in meaningful learning.

Teaching style

I’m a firm believer that science should be active, messy, and rooted in inquiry. Students should be asking questions, testing ideas, and backing up their thinking with evidence, not just copying notes. One frustration I kept running into was the lack of strong science reading resources for high school students. The materials available often felt either too elementary or not aligned with real scientific thinking. So I started building my own. The resources in my shop are designed to blend science content with literacy skills in meaningful ways, helping students read like scientists, write with evidence, and truly understand the “why” behind the content.