Pizza Fractions. The easiest way to explain fractions is with pizza. The students cut out the toppings and add them to their pizza. Then they write how many are on their pizza out of how many were in the bunch (on the sheet). They glue it on their pizza and color their pizza. You can cut out the pizza and put it on construction paper. An easy, quick, and fun assessment tool. There is a questions page (not shown) to assess their knowledge. (ex. "I have _______ (a fraction) mushrooms on my pizza.)
20 questions to see if the students have mastered the skill on subject verb agreement. Can be used for homework, classwork, worksheets, centers, and assessments.
Not many colors, VERY printer friendly.
With this easy spreadsheet, you can easily check off which student met which standard. No more guessing. Just make a copy, rename it and you're good to go. Versatile: Fields (standards) can be change for any grade level, any subject and any standard by just changing the fields.
I hand drew this assessment to see if my students really got the concept of comparing fractions using fraction strips. I told them to take out two different color crayons. They had to color each problem with the two different colors. Then compare the fractions. I noticed, when they were able to "see" the different colors and which fraction was "longer/greater" it help them tremendously. Hope this helps your students too. :)
This is great for sorting pronouns from possessive nouns. I am going to use it for Halloween. They will cut it out and I will hang them in the hallway.
This can be printed on cardstock, laminated, and then cut to make a puzzle. My students love it. Please tell me what other things you would like to see in a puzzle and I will try and get it uploaded. :)
This printable can be used for the holidays to compare and contrast Thanksgiving to Christmas. Older students may use harder concepts such as, "we are off of school on both those days", while younger students may use concepts such as, "we eat with our families on both those days".