Do YOU need stronger classroom management??
This awesome pack of resources will help you use Class Dojo like a pro. There are preset behaviors for adding or losing points, but there are also blank forms so you can choose your own. It includes preset rewards for individual and whole class, but also includes blank forms so you can choose your own.
-Parent letter
-Parent and student contract
-Classroom displays
-Student logs
-Teacher logs
-Raincheck documentation for subs or times when the inter
Use this product with a read aloud of The Day the Crayons Quit. This product includes notes over point of view, reading comprehension questions, character feelings chart based off of text evidence, and a creative writing prompt with rubric. I hope that your students will enjoy this story as much as mine.
Print one for each child and you've got one stop for your centers. Students will cut out triangle shapes and then glue them together on a piece of construction paper to complete the puzzle. The touching edges have either standard form or expanded form and the student goal is to match them.
This all-inclusive noun study prints on one page front and back. Students fold it into a book and glue it into their Grammar notebook. Then, it provides notes, practice, and even a game to play.
It includes the following:
Description of a noun (person, place, thing, or idea)
Common vs. Proper
Plural vs. Singular
Regular vs. Irregular Plurals
*The notes section to be completed by students is fill-in the blank with dashes equal to the number of letters. __ __ __ __ __ (PLACE)
This is a comprehensive classroom management plan that I have used in my classroom for 8 years. It includes instructions, a parent letter, color coded self-reflection pages, and an excel file to organize and document all behavior issues along the way. The provided files are set up for 4 grading periods and 25 students, but I can change those if you need.
When students have behavior issues, they have specific questions to answer in conjunction with detention to help them reflect on the choices
Analogies are something that students get very confused with if they have not been exposed to them before. This worksheet uses topics that kids are familiar with to teach how to find missing parts of analogies as well as the connection that links them together. Please keep in mind that some students may come up with answers different from mine that are still acceptable. Use this as a time to discuss the difference between a correct answer and the BEST answer. Analogies should make sense when rea
This is a great 1st Day Icebreaker!
Help students get comfortable with you and each other using this "Getting to Know You" version of Scategories. Rules are included in case you have never played the board game.
Students will love filling in and decorating this page of numbers that describe them. I use this on the very first day with my math students and then hang their work up as a way for them to share details about themselves with me and each other.
Decorate your room easy with this helpful reference! This cute pennant can be printed on bright colored paper and hung in the classroom for easy reference while teaching. It includes 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 9, & 10.
Looking for a hands-on center with a written component for accountability or assessment? Here it is!
Cut these tiles for students to sort by looking at the digit 5 in each number. They should sort them by the value of each 5. Once they finish sorting them, they must record their results on a paper to turn in to the teacher.
Students will cut and paste three equivalent parts to form a complete pencil. There are three complete pencils in the document. Many of the parts use similar numbers to ensure the students are looking for distributive property and not just matching numbers. The eraser has a 2 term addition problem like 4 + 8. The center has the GCF factored out like 4(1+2). The lead has the simplified answer as 12. There is an example to help the students to see what each pencil should look like when they are f
This game can be played by 2 or more players. It can easily be used as an independent center activity. Not only will this game practice multiples, but it also reviews prime numbers up to 100.
This lab invites students to build prisms and pyramids using toothpicks and marshmallows. As students build them, they describe the attributes of each figure and record their data on a table. They then look for patterns and develop rules for both prisms and pyramids. It included lab instructions, data table, discussion questions, and an answer key. Your students will ABSOLUTELY LOVE THIS!!