Showing posts with label freebie. Show all posts
Showing posts with label freebie. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 1, 2014

Happy New Year!

One of the amazing things about the New Year is that you get this feeling of a blank slate.  The chance to start fresh and doing things differently.  Correct things that need fixing, and fine tune things that were going well.

This is something I love to do with my kids for the New Year.  Like most of you, I teach my kids about New Year Resolutions.  It gives them a chance to focus on bettering themselves.

Remember how we talked about goal setting before?  I made this quick graphic organizer for you to use with your students to set a goal for 2014.  I mean, that's what a resolution is based on after all . . . isn't it?  

Click the picture below to get this freebie.  Or click here to get it from Teachers Notebook.


Have your students identify one goal they have for themselves this year.  You can chose whether you want them to focus on a classroom/school goal or if you want to do a generalized personal goal.  This goes at the top of the ladder.  Then help your students to determine 3 steps that can help them to achieve that goal.  Here's a suggestion:  start with a small, easier step to build momentum.  That one will go in the bottom box of the ladder.  Then build up as you climb the ladder to reach your goal!

Here's an example:


Happy New Year!

I pray that this year is an amazing year for you!

Thursday, December 12, 2013

Past Winter Freebies

Sometimes I forget what I've got out there.  If I forget then you might not even know it's available, right?

Here are some of my past Winter Freebies if you never picked them up the 1st time around!




Wednesday, July 31, 2013

Reading Freebie!

Ever have one of those students who has a hard time decoding unknown words?  Sometimes they guess words without looking at all the letters.  Maybe they use the first letter sound and then guess random words that don't even make sense in the context!  You might continue to emphasize sounding out the word or looking for chunks, blends, or familiar spelling patterns.  There's at least one student like this every year.

In order to get these students to focus on the words themselves it might be a good idea to try nonsense words!  No matter how many words they guess, the word they are trying to read isn't really a real word.  This will help them to focus on looking at the patterns themselves.

I've made this freebie for your kids to practice!  You might use it with RTI students, in Guided Reading small groups, for early finishers, or even at a center.  I've included basic phonemes, blends, digraphs, diphthongs, and word families on the interchangeable cards.  Just place cards on the workmats and decode those nonsense words!




My students love when I make super long nonsense words and challenge them to decode them!



Get it for free on TPT or Teachers Notebook!

Monday, April 1, 2013

Illustration Predictions and Reading Comprehension Freebie

Looking to get your students to take more meaningful picture walks?

Predicting can be very telling of a student's inferring skills.  In this activity students will use this graphic organizer to choose a key illustration from the story to predict story elements including characters, setting, and events.  After reading students will go back to confirm or correct their predictions, reflecting their reading comprehension skills. 

This graphic organizer can be used to practice CCSS.ELA-Literacy.RL.1.7 (Use illustrations and details in a story to describe its characters, setting, or events.).

I first introduced this graphic organizer to my class on my document camera and did a picture walk using an online book.  You can find some great options on sites like MeeGenius, wegivebooks, and KOL Jr. Stories.  We did a picture walk first, discussed which illustration might be a good choice for predictions, and then predicted together.  We read the book and returned to the illustration we chose for prediction.  Finally, we checked our predictions to see how accurate we were and also discussed how we may have come to incorrect conclusions.  After this run through your students should be ready to use this reading response on their own!

I hope you find this freebie useful!

Get it here from TPT or here from Teachers Notebook!

Sunday, January 27, 2013

Calendar Math Updated

A couple of months ago I posted a Calender Math Freebie. 

I've been using this as a center in Math every week with my students.  (It's great because the responses are different every day!)  We recently had our 100th day of school, and that's when I realized the glitch.  My calendar center has a section that focuses on counting up to the 100th day of school.  I've now added a 2nd page to the freebie that can be used after the 100th day of school.  It's free for download on Teachers Notebook or from my Google Drive account.  Enjoy!


Click here to get it from Teachers Notebook or Google Drive.

Sunday, December 2, 2012

Calendar Math Center

After redoing and revamping and rethinking my Math centers for 450th time this year, I've decided to make one of my Math centers a Calendar Math center.  I searched all over Pinterest and blogs and found so many great options for Calendar Math pages.  I really, REALLY wanted to just use one of those wonderful pages and not reinvent the wheel, but of course I ended up making my own version.

Trust me . . . it's not because all those other versions I found weren't great.  It was because some of them are too easy for my higher learners and others covered more things on calendar than I have covered at this point in the year with my own kids.  (I might use those later in the year when I've gone over more skills during our calendar time.)

Anyways, here's my version.  I hope it can be useful to someone else as well!  I've also included a Calendar Math Word Bank to differentiate for my varying learners.  Higher students will not need to consult the word bank, but it is available for my other students who need a little help.  =)

Click the preview to download a copy.
Or click here to download it from Teachers Notebook or TPT.

Saturday, October 27, 2012

Sweet Measurement

In an interesting turn of events . . . 1st Grade Common Core only covers nonstandard measurement of length!  I've always taught nonstandard units, inches, and centimeters.  Now my big rules for the kiddos in measurement are:
  1. Make sure all your nonstandard units of measurement are the same in size (uniform).
  2. Start at the beginning of the object - line 'em up!
  3. Make sure all your units of measurements are touching.  No spaces in between and no gaps!
Here's a fun, seasonal activity:

Click the picture to get it from TPT.

Grab a FREE copy of this measurement page and some candy corn and Smarties from the store.  I went to Dollar Tree and found the candy and cute baggies there.  I put about 10 pieces of candy corn and a roll of Smarties in each bag.  (So it cost me only about $4 for all 23 of my students with some left over to treat students . . . or teachers!) 

This is activity is simple enough that your students can do this as a little independent practice, at centers, or even with you as a form of performance assessment!  For this activity students need to practice the rules of nonstandard measurement using 2 different units of measurement: candy corn and Smarties!  At the end of the activity students are asked whether the 2 different candies delivered the same results.  As you know one of the goals of the Common Core is to "dig deeper".  Here is where we hope the students will be able to conclude that it took more Smarties to measure each object than it did candy corns because Smarties are smaller in size. 

The student's prize for being so smart?  They get to eat their tools of measurement!  =) 

Actually . . . I'm sending the goodie bags home with the kids so they can show their parents how they use nonstandard units of measurements.  THEN they can eat them!


Saturday, September 8, 2012

Get Your Writing On!

Oh my goodness!  Can you say "busy"?  Of course you can . . . you've been in the same back to school boat, haven't you?  I am SO exhausted with back to school, deadlines, new curriculum, AND new software.  All this to explain why I've been MIA (again).

I've had ideas of things I want to make and do but haven't been able to get to them, so I'm glad to say that my 1st time back in a month brings you something good!  =)

I've just created a Writing Prompts package that includes 50 creative and challenging writing prompts for your students.  I use these in Writing Center during Guided Reading.  I generally let my students choose their on topics during Writing Workshop but then give them prompts during centers (giving them practice at both self-chosen writing and writing to a topic).

If you remember my Math Journal Prompts that came out last year, these work the same way.  You just print out enough of the writing prompts for each of your students, and the students cut out a prompt to put in their journals.  (Saves you paper that way.)

Here's a free sample from the pack . . .

Click the preview above to get your freebie!


Click the preview below to get your copy of my 50 Writing Prompts to Get Them Thinking!

*Click here to get it from Teachers Notebook.
 
Oh . . . and if you missed the Math Writing Prompts to last you through the 1st grade year, you can get them here.

Saturday, July 21, 2012

A Year of Common Core Aligned Math Tests!

Oh my goodness this took forever, but I am SO happy to say that I have finally finished my packet of 1st Grade Math Common Core Aligned Assessments!  I am pooped!  I've worked my tail off this week between finally completing this beast and planning/preparing for my daughter's 2nd birthday!

I know there are other packets of Common Core aassessments out there that were completed before I could finish mine, but you know how it is when you have a vision for something.  You just have to see it through!  The way I designed this packet was to create a Unit Test for each of the 4 broader standards set out by the CCSS:  1)Operations & Algebraic Thinking, 2)Number & Operations in Base Ten, 3)Measurement & Data, and 4)Geometry.  Then I created Unit Subtests for each of the standards listed under these headings.  I then created a Problem Solving assessment for each of the Unit Tests and Subtests to help extend student learning and assessment.  These are written in the style that some of you may know from "Exemplars".  They should be solved using problem solving strategies such as drawing a picture, number sentences, graphs, charts, tables, and then completed with a written explanation of the student's thinking. 

Well I'm not sure if I'm feeling generous or if I'm just delirious from all this cooking and baking, but how about a sample of the assessment packet for free?  Get the Unit 1 test by clicking on the image below!

or get it here from Teachers Notebook

Want to go ahead and buy the packet?  Click the image below to get it from my TPT store!
or get it here from Teachers Notebook

Hey!  If you're still reading this you may be in luck!  In celebration of my baby's 2nd birthday the 1st 2 people to comment on this post will get the ENTIRE PACKET for FREE!  Please leave me your email address, so I can email it to you!

And just for fun . . . these lollicakes are just one of the many, many things I did today that's contributing to my present delirium!  Aren't they cute?!?



Enjoy!

Happy Birthday to my baby girl, Analise!  Mommy loves you!  
(And now so do 2 lucky people!  J/k!)

Tuesday, June 26, 2012

Giveaway Revisited

Remember my big giveaway when I finished my "It's Owl Time" unit last summer?  I still get comments from people who have participated even though the giveaway has expired, but when someone puts in the effort to support you of course you still give them the game, right!??!  Well for those of you who never got it, I posted it on Classroom Freebies

Click here to get it.

Enjoy!


Saturday, March 24, 2012

Quotes and Bubbles

I've always thought a fun way of getting students to practice identifying spoken words in story telling was to create comics from stories or vice versa.  That's why I'm giving you this freebie!

In this literacy center students will read a short passage to create a four frame comic strip.  Students will need to transfer words in quotation marks from the story to speech bubbles in the comic strip.  If students need differentiation, give students highlighters to find words that are spoken aloud.  For students in need of more remediation, highlight the spoken words for them (or help them to find the spoken words to highlight).

Get your copy here!
or here from Teachers Notebook.

My apologies - This item has been removed due to graphics copyright conflicts.

Monday, March 12, 2012

Tasty Beginning/Middle/End

I LOVE teaching Writing.  Love it!  It is so exciting to see a young writer develop into a budding author with great potential and promise. That's why when I figure out an effective lesson, I bring it back every year.

I know that you, like me, have found that giving students a good parallel to which they can compare a skill can be highly effective.  This is how the hamburger story evolved in my classroom.  I know the hamburger has been used as a graphic organizer for many different things in the classroom like main idea and various other areas, but here's how I explain it to my kids:

When you eat a burger, what is the most important part to the burger.  The best part?  The middle, right?  A nice, big, juicy burger patty in the middle.  If you don't eat meat, think about that yummy veggie burger patty in the middle.  That's what makes it so tasty.  Otherwise it's just bread, right?  Well, a good burger is like a good story. 

The first part of your burger is the top bun.  This is like the beginning of your story.  This is where you are introduced to your characters and setting.  This is where the story starts.  A good burger is kind of incomplete without a good beginning . . . without the top bun. 

Then you come to the middle.  This is the best part.  It's exciting . . . it's what the burger is all about.  What you want is a juicy middle.  For me, the best burgers have lots of other things packed into the middle too.  I like lettuce, tomatoes, pickles, cheese, ketchup, and mustard.  When you go to Chili's you can build your own burger and add things like onions, barbecue sauce, or my favorite - avocado!  Whatever you want!  Now that is what makes it so special - the details.  No one wants to go to a restaurant and get a skinny dried out burger!  You want it to be tasty and fresh!  So when you write your story, your middle is the part with all the excitement!  This is where most of your events happen.  This is where you find out the problem and you try to solve the problem, but you don't always solve the problem right away.  If you did then your story would end very quickly.  (This is where I insert my Spongebob or Batman or whatever cartoon plot comparison lesson which I'll share in a later post.)  If you want to make your story more interesting, you'll probably try many times to solve the problem but your attempts may not work.

The end of the story is like when you hit the bottom bun of your burger.  It holds everything together and keeps stuff from falling out.  This is where you solve the problem in your story.  Without the end (bottom bun) your story (or burger) feels incomplete.

Now, inevitably as you're listing out all the different things you love to put in your burger, somone's going to yell out things they like in their burger.  Or someone will yell out, "Eeeeewww!  I don't like _____!"  That's when you say, "That's ok!  You don't have to like that!  It's my burger . . . my story!  That's what makes it special and unique.  Someone may not like my story, but to another person it will be the best story ever!  You put what you like and that is what is going to make someone else really like it.  It's ok to like or to not like a story.  Everyone has different taste.  Write what you know."

Well, this year I've got an amazing gift in my classroom.  I've got my first student teacher.  She's amazing, and I am so blessed to have her.  It just so happened that after I did my introductory Burger Beginning/Middle/End lesson, it was her turn to start taking over the classroom.  This year we worked together to take the burger story to the next level. 

We started with the burger graphic organizer I usually use.  (It's actually one I found online, but I edit it to suit my purposes.  Since I can't post that one, I took some time to create my own.)  Click on the previews below to get the color or black & white versions of the Beginning/Middle/End Hamburger graphic organizer.  This is where the students start to map out their stories.
Color B/M/E Graphic Organizer
B&W B/M/E Graphic Organizer
My fabulous student teacher took ever, walking the kids through a story of her own, modelling how to use the organizer.



When students were finished we had them rewrite their stories in their Writing Notebooks, drawing a line after each section to keep them separated.  As they rewrote this was their chance to revise.  They were told to reread each section as they copied it into their notebooks to see if there was anything they wanted to change or add.  This is also when they checked to see if the story made sense. 

 We followed the revision with our editing checklists (return sweep, finger spacing, capitalization, punctuation, and spelling).  Once this was finished it was time to . . . .

BUILD THE BURGER! (Publish)

We made lined circles for students to publish each section of their story.  The more details students added to their story, the more circles they would need which means the fatter the burgers would become!
Click to download burger circles.
I cut a bunch of construction paper slightly larger than the circles.  

When the burger circles were completed, students would then glue their circles to a piece of construction paper and cut the paper as they liked to create the pieces of the burger.  I used yellow (didn't have manilla), brown, orange, green, red, and yellow construction paper.  Here's my student teachers sample she used to show the students how their burger stories would look at the end.
She added sesame seeds to the top bun.

Then she glued the beginning circle underneath so you could read it when flipped open.  She also cut the lettuce paper with a wavy edge and added squiggles to make it look more like lettuce.




Staple the top edge to keep the pages together and VIOLA!
Beginning/Middle/End Hamburger story complete!

Student samples soon to come . . . they're almost done!

Monday, February 20, 2012

I feel like I keep posting my seasonal items at the last minute.  SORRY!

If you're still looking for some Presidents Day activities, here's one for you:

If you saw the Valentine's Day Main Idea literacy center I posted last week, this is the same idea but with a Presidents Day theme!  If you like these, stay tuned . . . I've got an "anytime" packet of main idea literacy centers in the works.  I'm hoping to get it out and available to you this week.

Click the preview below to grab your FREE Presidents Day Main Idea Mix Up literacy center!


Sunday, February 12, 2012

Valentine's Day Main Idea Mix-up

Do you need a fun way to get your kids to practice main idea and details?  Here's a cute new Valentine's Day themed center that will get your kids thinking!  Your students will need to use their thinking caps to sort through the details and match them up to the main idea.  This FREE center includes 2 graphic organizer boards, main idea and supporting detail cards, and a cute writing paper template for your students to use once they are done sorting the main idea and detail cards onto the graphic organizer boards.  Challenge your higher thinkers to use text-to-self connections to add personal experience or opinions to their writing using one of the completed graphic organizer boards.

Enjoy your Valentine freebie!


Tuesday, December 13, 2011

Motivation of Winter Break

In past years I have made a packet of books and worksheets for my students to practice over Winter Break.  When I first started teaching 10 years ago there were only a couple of students who would not read/practice over break.  Over the years, however, less and less students utilized the packages I made for them and some failed to return them.  To be quite honest . . . it was a lot of work getting those packets together and sometimes even more work getting the books back from students!

This year I've decided to save myself the headache.  I will not be sending home an optional packet.  Instead I plan on sending home a list of recommended websites and suggestions for practice at home such as Parent-Child Journals (the children and parents write back and forth within the same notebook), personal journals, letter writing, grocery lists, etc.  I also plan on encouraging my students to read the books they have at home and to visit their local library. 

For those students who do this and can produce evidence, I will reward them with a special treat (popsicle or something to that effect).  I'm including this bookmark freebie for any of you who would like to do the same.  The boomark has space for the child to record 5 books they have read and get their mom, dad, or caretaker to sign off on the bookmark confirming that these books were indeed read.  Click the link below to get the bookmarks!

Friday, December 9, 2011

Winter Writing Prompts

I love to write . . . when I have the time, that is!  That's why I love to teach my kids Writing.  I teach them in the hopes that they too will come to love this form of expression. 

I've noticed over the years that some students are just bursting at the seems with ideas of things to write about.  Sometimes when we make our list of writing ideas in the back of our Writing Notebooks, some students have difficulty getting started on a writing piece because they have so many ideas they want to add to their lists!  I've also noticed, however, that there are some students who can't seem to come up with an idea on their own . . . they need a little help getting started.  Give them a prompt and watch them go!

Here are some Winter themed writing prompts I came up with to help some of them get going.  I like to use these prompts in my Writing center during Guided Reading centers.  I just print out enough copies and let the students cut out a prompt and glue it in their own notebooks.  Less work and less copies for me (and y'all know how important it is to save on copies!).

These are free to you . . . so click and download away!

Saturday, November 26, 2011

Penguin Party!

Here's a FREEBIE!

These Party Penguins love to dance and your students will be dancing around your room looking for them!  In this fun version of Write Around the Room your students will follow the dancing penguins around the room copying and completing their sentences with the correct ending punctuation.  Get your free center by clicking the preview below!

Sunday, November 6, 2011

Inventors Use Imagination!

We've been studying Benjamin Franklin for Social Studies lately, and something that I've noticed is the amazement my children have when they see pictures of his inventions.  As I describe the inventions and explain what each invention does, you can actually see some jaws drop and a little light shines in their eyes.  Adorable!

This week we are combining the use of imagination we have been talking about in Writing (regarding fictional writing) and the background knowledge we have from studying Benjamin Franklin's inventions.  For journal my kids will be thinking of their own inventions, naming them, and explaining the purpose of the invention and how it works.  Last week I hinted that we would be doing this, and they were so excited!  I can't wait to see what they come up with! 

Here it is if you'd like to try this too!

Monday, October 31, 2011

Intervention Documentation

Last week I had an anonymous comment on my post for Parent Communications Documentation form asking if I had anything to document interventions.  Here's something I whipped up.  Nothing special, but it'll get the job done!  Hope it's useful to you!



Tuesday, October 25, 2011

Documentation

I've been looking over the students that I need to take through the RTI process and gathering all the data and documentation I need to be prepared for my meeting with my AP.  Have you done that lately?  As you were doing that did you realize that you forgot to write a few things down so you don't have exact dates?  If so, then you're probably searching through files and your calendar trying to figure out when you talked to or met with one of the parents!

I know I should be more organized than this, and I really think I might have been at one point!  The problem is that as things got so busy, other things (like detailed documentation) has slipped through the cracks.  That's why I made this Parent Communication Log form to put in the file folder I have for each student.  Whether or not I will need documentation of parental contact, it never hurts to have it on hand "just in case"! 

Here it is if you'd like to use it.  Pretty straightforward with the main details without it being too cumbersome.  Snag it for free below!

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