This illustration of the alligator "eating" the larger number incorporates the greater than/less than sign. Use it in worksheets to illustrate the concept for young students. The "greater than" and "less than" alligators are included as both PNGs and an SVGs. (They're mirror images, so you can also just use the "greater than" gator and flip it when needed.) The preview image, a JPEG that depicts both indicators, is also included.
This packet helps present the story of the real St. Patrick. The heart of the packet is a brief, kid-friendly biography with glossary, and a coloring page based on an older portrait of St. Patrick. It also features that image, and a couple of maps to help contextualize the biography. (Please note that the perspective of the biography is Protestant, as Patrick was.)
This one-sheet reference page lists Dewey Decimal topics by tens. This is helpful for browsing the library, or getting a high-level overview of the non-fiction section. (Please note that some numbers are still reserved for future use and thus are intentionally "blank.")
This template is intended to make the creation of Montessori-style 3-part cards easier. The zip file includes two options. A PDF preserves the formatting but will enable manual card creation. A DOC is included for those who can open/edit it, to enable easy copy-and-paste creation.
Help your young students learn to observe their surroundings when out on a nature walk by using this worksheet. A series of images suggest nine common items for children to be watching for: a bird, a cloud, an ant (or a bug, if you want to be less specific), a leaf, a person, a cat (or pet), a squirrel, a tree, and a flower.
A blank version is also included so you can include your own preferred items to watch for. (Increase the difficulty for older students by making it more specific -- a map
These skip-counting cards are intended to be printed on cardstock, cut apart, and laminated for use and reuse with dry-erase markers. (A binder ring is also helpful, but completely optional.)
These are great as workbox activities, or for practice after regular work is complete.
These place value cards are designed to be printed on cardstock, laminated (optional), and cut out for use as manipulatives.
Units may be placed atop tens, which may be placed atop hundreds, which may be placed atop thousands, so students can visualize the concept of place value.
Most coloring sheets -- and other illustrations -- of Noah's ark are more of a symbolic or caricaturized variety, and don't resemble the biblical description at all. Here is a more historically-accurate option for your Bible class or Sunday School classroom.
PreK - 1st
Religion
FREE
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