This resource is great to help your students with writing the different parts of a letter! Use the graphic organizer to draft the letter and then utilize the writing template page to write the actual letter.
Use this fun activity to introduce non-standard measurement! Students will trace and cut out there foot to measure various objects (with a wide variety of answers), then use a foot template to do the same thing (with answers being pretty similar.) You can use the book "How Big is a Foot?" to go along with it, but it's not necessary.
Updated for 2026! Are you ready for March Madness?! Use this book bracket to create a life-size display for your classroom, grade level, or school! Book suggestions are included, but you can choose your own. Previous years books are included as well. File includes bracket pieces, title, book cover photos, and jerseys for students to decorate.
Use this resource to celebrate National Tooth Fairy Day (February 28th), for Dental Health Month, or to introduce letter writing. There are Tooth Fairy book recommendations included and a simple craft.
Celebrate National Scribble Day! This resource contains premade scribbles, a scribble drawing sheet and writing paper, plus Scribble Stories to use for a writing center, early finishers, or anytime!
Counting coins can be tricky! This resource allows students to practice by isolating specific coins together, beginning with pennies and nickels and moving through different coin combinations up to quarters, dimes, nickels, and pennies.
Teach your students to come back to the classroom with SLIME! Perfect strategy to use whenever students come back from services, the nurse, or come to class late. Students will stop and look to investigate what the other students are doing. They will then decide how to match what the rest of the class is doing and enter the classroom.
March 6th is National Oreo Cookie Day! You can use this resource to celebrate, to introduce opinion writing, or both! There are two writing prompts included and a class graphing activity.
After learning about pumpkins, students can brainstorm different adjectives to describe them. I brought in pumpkins for a hands-on experience! Students can then use the adjectives in their writing and create a pumpkin with different textures/patterns!
K - 3rd
FREE
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