5 worksheets reviewing topic sentences, concluding sentences, and extraneous details. Students cross out sentences that do not belong in a paragraph, circle the topic sentence in a paragraph from multiple choices, and draw a line to match the paragraph to its concluding sentence.
Students complete repeated addition sentences and multiplication number sentences. The back is a "challenge" sheet for early finishers to create their own story and number sentences.
Students will design and layout an apartment, fitting all the furniture they are given into the designated space. Once all the pieces are laid out on the grid, they are glued down. Students can then solve the perimeter and/or area worksheet to determine the perimeter and/or area of their apartment and the objects within their apartment. I did this lesson in partners and the students loved having a "roommate"!
Students participate in a whole class discussion about survival by viewing an interactive PowerPoint presentation. The presentation contains real-life imagery. Students will learn what plants and animals need to survive. People need food, water, air (oxygen), and shelter. Plants need water, air (carbon dioxide), food (nutrients), and sunlight.
This PowerPoint discusses different types of weather (rainy, cloudy, snowy, sunny, etc.), a brief overview of the thermometer, the four seasons, and typical weather patterns, activities, and clothes during winter, spring, summer, and fall (autumn). There is also a worksheet in the last slide. Student draw a line to match a picture of a tree to the name of the season it shows. They also write in the typical weather during each season.
This PowerPoint presentation explores why we need plants and the many things we use them for. We eat the roots, seeds, and fruits of plants. Medicine, fabric, erasers, and chewing gum are made from plants. Plants also give us wood and paper.
This is a graphic organizer and rubric for writing a news story. Students write WHO the story is about, WHAT happened in the story, WHEN it happened, WHERE it took place, WHY it was important, and HOW it happened.
This is a language arts review game based on the classic board game, Trivial Pursuit intended for third graders. Questions review the subject of a sentence, common and proper nouns, subject/verb agreement, fact and opinion, compound words, synonyms and antonyms, verbs, and contractions. Students roll a die and move their game piece that number of spaces. They must answer one question correctly for each color on the game board. The student who answers questions correctly in all colors first is th
This is a kindergarten assessment covering addition and subtraction. Questions are multiple choice and write the answer. Students add quantities, solve number sentences (equations), listen to story problems and draw to show the answer, and answer 20 mixed addition and subtraction problems paying close attention to the sign.
Students use the rainbows to find combinations of 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, and 10. Each color of the rainbow shows one pair of numbers that equals 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, or 10. This helps students with automaticity of addition facts. Includes student sheets and color teacher models.
This PowerPoint presentation introduces students to plants and animals, including their similarities and differences. Students will learn that both plants and animals move, breathe, and grow. They will learn that plants make their own food while animals do not. There is also a short plant or animal picture quiz at the end.
It's word surgery time!Your little doctors will have the best time cutting away extra letters and putting the contraction together with an apostrophe bandage. Print the bandages on sticky paper for extra fun! The contractions are glued into the booklet. They write the two words, write the letters removed, and a sentence using that contraction. Also includes printable for anchor chart and cards that can be used for a matching game or memory game! You can check with parents, a local doctor, or a
Students sort real-life images of producers, consumers, and decomposers onto a mat for a forest, desert, arctic, or coral reef food chain. After sorting the pictures on the food chain mat, students can record their answers on a worksheet.
This poster highlights analog and digital clocks and their parts. It also shows a quick explanation of how to tell time to the hour and half hour. Designed to fit 13x19 or 8.5x11 paper. You can scale up or down depending on the size of your poster.
Students learn the difference between solids, liquids, and gases. There is a link to a music video about the states of matter and a short quiz at the end of the presentation.
This is a gameboard with numbers to 100. Students can play with a partner or in small groups using a game piece (my students use counting bears or linking cubes) and dice. Students roll the dice and move their piece that many spaces forward. The student to reach 100 first is the winner. Great counting and addition practice disguised as a game! *5 different boards: blue, pink, orange, green, black and white
PreK - 3rd
Math
CCSS
1.OA.B.3
, 1.OA.C.5
, 1.OA.C.6
$2.00
Original Price $2.00
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