Handy free printable leif erikson for kids worksheet and coloring pages to make into readers to learn about famous early explorer!
Included in this long ago unit are anchor charts, sorts, student worksheets and an interactive social studies flap book. Get a freebie in this blog post!
Context Clues, Synonyms, Antonyms, Homographs Common Core Standards: Language: Vocabulary Acquisition and Use L.5.5. Demonstrate understanding of figurative language, word relationships, and nuances in word meanings. Use the relationship between particular words (e.g., synonyms, antonyms, homographs) to better understand each of the words. *Although this is the only place in the fifth grade Language Arts Common Core that synonyms, antonyms, and homographs are specifically mentioned, there are definitely additional places where they are integral to literacy. Enduring Understanding: The relationships between words help me understand what I read and improve my writing. What are synonyms, antonyms and homographs? How can word relationships such as synonyms and antonyms be used as context clues? How can I use word relationships to improve my writing? Vocabulary: Synonym – two or more words with the same meaning. Antonym – two or more words with opposite meanings. Homograph – two or more words that share the same spelling (graph) mean different things and can be pronounced differently. Context Clues – Hints found within the text that help the reader understand tricky words or phrases. Resources: Synonym Antonym Homonym PDF Hink Pink Game Board - Use Synonyms to Create Hink Pinks Synonym Search Group Activity Free Activities: Synonyms Antonyms Homographs Homophones Free Activities: Context Clues Context Clue Chart Homonym Chart (Cute) Synonym Antonym Homonym Game Board CARDS GAMEBOARD Books: Student Riddle Template for Eight Ate
I've gotten so many amazing resources from my blogger contacts out there. Now it is my turn to share one with you. I know many of my Virgini...
Are you new to social studies interactive notebooks or lapbooks? Read about how I design my lapbooks and how this method of delivering instruction will have your students more engaged and organized with the content. Inquiry-based design helps move students through 3 supporting questions and toward a final culminating written response. Learn about the different sections as well as tips and tricks to using lapbooks. My elementary students love using interactive notebooks and yours will too!
Read a few ideas for civics and government activities. There are free lessons and activities as well as other fun hands-on, engaging ideas.
Children use their investigative skills and powers of deduction to complete a series of questions and prompts about their local government.
Are your students loving their social studies classroom or are they feeling that it is an extension of their ELA class? Are you wondering how to increase student engagement in the classroom so that your student cannot wait to come into your classroom and learn? Keep reading for ideas to incorporate all learning styles into ... Read more
Learn About the 7 Continents! Exploring the 7 Continents has never been more exciting! It’s a Small World Continent Study is filled with over 35 activities to help your students gain a greater understanding of the seven continents. This 130+ page unit is filled with great resources, posters, printables, activities, and projects that will open […]
I've read about choice menus forever, but never tried it until just recently. I decided to created a menu to use during social studies review when students finish with stations early or we have a few extra minutes in class. I introduced the menu a week ago and you would've thought I'd given my students gold! They were thrilled!! I asked if they'd seen a menu before and we talked about a fast food restaurant menu. Then I asked what they would buy if I told them they had $5 to spend at the fast food restaurant. We played around with that a few minutes and then, with great drama, I introduced the social studies menu. I told them they had 50 points to "spend" and they were beside themselves - some even wanted to know if they could "spend" more! As we were going over the points values for different items one students even said, "All the fun stuff costs more points, but the boring stuff doesn't cost as much." I really had to pinch myself! How did this happen?!?! We've had a week to work on the menus and they have really been successful so far. I've been amazed at the creativity my students have shown. It's also been really interesting seeing which people and time periods they choose to work with. I think this is a strategy I will try to use again. Maybe next time I'll try something with reading - after a class novel or maybe even for their self-selected texts. You can click on the picture to download a copy of the menu. It is specific to 4th Grade Virginia Studies, but it might be a good place to start for a menu specific to your social studies standards. I'm linking up with Holly from Fourth Grade Flipper for another great Tried it Tuesday linky.
Inclusive Classrooms ~ "Promote a safe and welcoming classroom school and community where individual differences are valued..."
Improve students' reading, writing, vocabulary, and spelling with this huge collection of Greek and Latin roots word wall cards. This set of over 250 word wall cards has everything you need to create a color-coded, organized display aligned to your curriculum. Over 250 common Greek and Latin roots, suffixes, and prefixes are covered. These word wall cards can be printed, laminated, cut, and used for years and years. Buy once, use forever! The study of Greek and Latin roots takes the mystery out of word-meanings by teaching students the building blocks for over 70% of the words in the English language. If your students know the meaning of about 250 roots, they can figure out the meaning of thousands of English words. WHAT'S INCLUDED Two printing options: 2 Cards Per Page 3 Cards Per Page DETAILS To add context and help you stay organized, the cards are color-coded. Green - Prefix Blue - Numeric Prefix Black - Root Word Red - Suffix To save paper and ink, roots with the same meaning share a card. For example, "-astro-" and "-stell-" share a card because they both mean "star." To see every prefix, root, and suffix covered, see below. PREFIXES a- a- ab- abs- ambi- amphi- ante- anti- aristo- astro- audio- auto- bene- biblio- bio- circum- co- col- com- con- contra- cosmo- de- dia- dis- dys- en- endo- epi- ethno- eu- ex- exo- extra- fore- helio- hemi- hyper- igneo- il- im- im- in- in- inter- intra- ir- iso- mal- mega- meta- micro- min- mis- multi- neo- non- nov- omni- opt- over- pan- photo- poly- pre- proto- pyro- re- retro- semi- sol- sub- super- sy- syl- sym- syn- tele- theo- therm- trans- un- under- zo- NUMERIC PREFIXES mono- uni- bi- du- tri- tetra- quad- penta- quin- hex- hept- sept- oct- ennea- non- dec- cent- kilo- mill- ROOTS am amat ambul anim ann aqu aster cand carn cede ceed cess chroma chron cred cycl dem derm dict dorm duc duct dur dyn ego enn equ fact fec fer fic fict fid flect flex form fract frag gen geo globus gon gram graph hydr hypno ject jud jur jus leg lith log lumen mania mech medi ment meso meter metr migr miss mit morph mort naut nav necro orb pac path ped ped petr phil phile phobia phone phyll phys plac pod poli port psych quer ques quir quis rupt scope scrib script sens sent soci sol soph spect spher spir stella struct tain tempo ten tent terra tin tract urb vac van vid vis volut volv SUFFIXES -able -al -cracy -crat -ed -en -ence -er -est -ful -fy -hood -ial -ian -ible -ic -ied -ies -ing -ion -ish -ism -ist -ition -ation -ive -ize -less -logist -logy -ly -ment -ness -or -er -ous -s -es -ship -tion -ward -y
(Glenn posted the original version of Structure Strips on his History Tech site several months ago. He loves the idea of Structure Strips so much, he’s sharing it with us here at Doing Social…
In this 3rd grade math worksheet, your child will practice geometry and addition as they calculate the perimeter of each house to find the largest one.
I believe in doing alot of shared writing. Writer's Workshop is great and I use that too but for some third graders, WW time is HARD! The...
I love social studies and how it mixes so well with everything that we are doing in ELA!! Right now, we are reading “The Lemonade War”! My kiddos love it and so do I! The best part is that it fits perfectly into our Economics standards! We use this novel study to go through the ... Read More about Market Day Economics Project
I've been meaning to share this lesson for a couple of weeks, and I finally got around to uploading my pictures! I've even missed Science Week, but better late than never, right? The very first science lesson I do each year is about observations and inferences. Since we do much of our learning through investigations and experiments, it's really important for students to be able to make observations and inferences and understand the difference. We talk first about ways to record observations, and we start making a chart that I'll keep up all year long: I start by placing a cube taped to an index card in the middle of each table group, with strict instructions not to remove the index card. Each cube has the numbers 1, 2, 3, 4, and 6 printed on the five visible sides. The kids make as many observations as they can about the cube at their table and record them any way they think best. Some kids make bulleted lists, some draw detailed paragraphs, and some write complete sentences. As the kids share their observations, I record them on the board in two columns: I purposefully don't label my two columns; after we have several ideas on the board, I ask students how they think I grouped their comments. They usually figure out pretty quickly that the list on the left contains things we know for sure because we can see them, while the right column contains ideas about the bottom of the cube that we can't see yet. Then I label the left side "observations" and the right side "inferences," and we finish our chart: Finally, I let students remove their cube from the index card. Most cubes do, in fact, have a 5 on the bottom, but I always mix in one that has a star or smiley face instead. We wrap up the lesson by having a quick conversation about how scientists make inferences to the best of their abilities by looking for patterns, and usually patterns are predictable. However, there's always the possibility of inferences being not quite accurate, and that's why scientists are always looking for new and more accurate ways to make observations.
Social Studies, first grade, centers, belonging, planning, centres, assessment
Picture books are one of my all-time favorite ways to introduce content in social studies! They're perfect for bringing in higher order thinking skills.
When you sign up for the HSG Newsletter please be assured that we will not blast your inbox everyday! I know, it annoys me too when that happens!
Social studies has always been one of my absolute favorite subjects to teach. I get so excited about United States history, and I do my best to make a potentially boring topic come alive for my students! There are a lot of opportunities for hands-on, get out of your seat lessons and projects in the...
Academic vocabulary instruction is hard for both students and teachers! Especially all of the vocabulary that is required for Social Studies. Many of our students of poverty and our second language learners struggle with learning
In Texas, 3rd Grade Social Studies is ALL about communities. When I first started teaching 3rd, it seemed like every unit was another "Communities Unit"
Sentence stems help students communicate what they are thinking about, help many students with special needs, and provide focus for our lesson.
I love spending the final weeks of school working on projects with my students! While we complete a variety of projects throughout the year, my students become project-making machines after testing!! And we love every minute of it!! At this point in the year, the stress of fitting in curriculum has vanished, students have…
10 Creative ways to embed social studies into your literacy block. Find fun westward expansion activities that address literacy standards with center ideas.
This post includes more pictures of my social studies interactive notebooks we have used this school year. You will see most of the information in this post are foldables from Dinah Zike and mine is lacking color like the students. Global grid system notes Maps versus globes Venn diagram Parts of a map foldable Vocabulary to accompany our textbook Landforms found above and below sea level foldable Types of landforms foldable Cornell notes on South America from our textbook This is a bad copy of the foldables notebook I used. Hope this helps all of those who were wondering where the book came from and what it looked like.
As we move into a social studies world that is asking kids to collect evidence, organize evidence, create products, and communicate results, writing skills are becoming more and more important. But…
10 Creative ways to embed social studies into your literacy block. Find fun westward expansion activities that address literacy standards with center ideas.
“Right is for Reflection” This side of the notebook focuses on ways that students can process and be creative with the information that they learned on the left. The type of assignment …