Providing parents with a progress report during Fall Conferences is a great way to make sure parents are informed of their child's present academic and behavioral levels. This can easily be printed double sided and talked through with each family during their Fall conference. Assessing letters, numbers, and letter sounds out of order is important to insure children are not simply memorizing the alphabet, but have true knowledge of the letter and/or number. Enjoy!
Teal watercolor shapes posters. Easily print at home and frame, or print and display as a learning tool for students in your classroom. Includes the following shapes: circle, square, triangle, rectangle, oval, heart, star, diamond, pentagon, hexagon, parallelogram, rhombus, trapezoid.
Learning Colors is fun with these posters! Print as flashcards or posters for the wall. Easily print at home and frame, or laminate and use as an educational resource. Colors included: red, orange, yellow, green, blue, purple, pink, grey, white, black, brown.
Knowing how to write, spell and trace each shape is important. Kiddos should also know how to count sides and corners! Most importantly, give kids the chance to show you how and where they have seen shapes in their world! Simply have kids draw these real world examples, or challenge them and have students label their pictures as well!
Common Core is all about thorough understanding and being able to solve real-world problems. This number recognition activity will challenge students to carefully inspect each representation of a number to decide what it stands for. First, color the top numbers as a whole group. Everyone color the 5 red, the 6 blue, the 7 green, etc. Once the colors are coded, have the kids hunt for various representations of the number on the game board. Simply have kids color in the box that matches the number
Common Core is all about thorough understanding and being able to solve real-world problems. This number recognition activity will challenge students to carefully inspect each representation of a number to decide what it stands for. First, color the top numbers as a whole group. Everyone color the zero red, the 1 blue, the 2 green, etc. Once the colors are coded, have the kids hunt for various representations of the number on the game board. Simply have kids color in the box that matches the num