An analog clock with the visuals that support counting by 5s is most useful to have in a classroom to support students in Tier 3. Whether its taped up by your clock, or posted on the wall, or printed on as flash card on a desk; it's mindful of the students that struggle more with time.
This Google Slides Document can be an easy quick review for your entire class, with a little bit of whole group fun by clapping, jumping, or turning around every 4 words completed. Students are engaged with a progress visual circle to help them stay focused an aware when they will be prompted with an action. The slide backgrounds are appealing and bright.
Catapult Evaluate Assessments are long and hard for students. As a virtual teacher, sometimes students miss the test session or are ill and unable to take it on the scheduled day. In order to encourage students to attend the next available make-up session, these pages were made. These are intended to be eye-catching, uplifting, and bring positive vibes toward the student and student's family as we help each child succeed in showing academic progress. Available use options: send email to student
This resource is intended to take text into a real-world connection for kids. We read without considering the fonts. A young early reader does not yet connect that letters can take on similar styles and mean the same thing. This resource can help introduce this concept in a fun way. They can read sight words with different fonts and/or find the words in real life example visuals.
This reference chart is a fun way to present a visual for students for both spelling and order of days when writing, reading, completing math story problems, etc. Tier 3 students benefit from quick references around the room to help support moments when they can't rapidly recall information yet.
Place Value Chart interactive for dry erase capability up to three numbers. This is meant for a third grade classroom covering ones through thousands. For students in Tier 3, this is a great chart to have when finding place value, comparing numbers, and rounding.
A 180 day incentive chart is a great way to keep students aware of a wholistic view on their behavior progress in the classroom. Incentives avoid tactile objects and target experiences of enjoyment. For the child who can't make it a full 5 days perfect, this chart is set up to reward a student every four days. Set up the procedures/expectations to your need and enjoy watching your students monitor their own successes. This chart can be used with small themed circle stickers or markers. Suggestio
As a tier 3 instructor, and being in inclusion, you want to maximize your time by keeping track of changes in small groups between different classrooms. This record sheet keeps notes minimal and precise as you jump from one classroom to another.
This is a template I will use in a picture frame in my room to keep track of the current date and how many days are left in the school year. As I often ask myself toward the end of the school year the question displayed on the page, I like to ask myself it every single day now. We have a short window of time to work with these precious students. Now, what will you do with it?
As a moving resource teacher, sometimes compact items are needed to reduce the amount of materials moved from room to room. I have a set of these in a zip lock inside a binder I carry around. Not only is it fun and colorful, but in downtime and needing an activity to pull out, it is also a puzzle of its own.
As an inclusion resource teacher on the go, a quick record of an event is needed. This record sheet limits the space to hit only the crisp details of the minor situation needing recorded and allows the teacher or aide to continue forward without issue.
Two birthday certificate cards on a single sheet with a crisp white wood background and a dark green accent color. There are locations on the card to make handwritten personal notes including the student's name, the date, and staff signatures/personal wishes notes.
Today's weather chart is a realistic lense into an understanding of a view into weather. For tier3, we attempt to keep pictures realistic, almost tangible, and applicable to a child's life.