This graphic organizer uses the "who, what, when, where, why, how" questions and blends them with some basic story elements. A second page is available that has a highlighted anchor line to help with handwriting skills.
Looking for a ready-to-use, engaging tech lesson for your middle schoolers? This interactive PowerPoint lesson plan is built around real-world troubleshooting scenarios that students encounter. Using the gradual release model (“I do, we do, you do”), the lesson begins with teacher-led instruction, then moves into partner talk and group collaboration. Students will explore tech challenges through "trouble cards" that spark problem-solving conversations. To support comprehension, especially for lo
Simple to see and use handout for student journal or reference. Students will be able to see at a glance: what to capitalize and what not to, rules for capitalizing large and short works, how to punctuate when handwriting or when typing, and examples of each in a real life context sentence.4 handouts to 1 page. This handout has a link from the website AllAboutWritingConsulting.com if you want to learn more about the subject.
This lesson plan is for a 50 minute class format. Students will first learn what is computational thinking and its parts ( decomposition, pattern recognition, abstraction, algorithm design). Students will then get an example of how that process looks like in the project they are about to do. The project will be a Minecraft challenge that includes students communicating and collaborating with each other. Students get to walk around the room and see each others' work. This lesson plan is already
4th - 8th
Computer Science - Technology
FREE
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