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You can reuse these recycling anchor charts year after year!
These 4th grade anchor charts reinforce concepts for reading, science, math, behavior management, environmentalism, and more!
Are you a 4th or 5th-grade science teacher who wants to save time planning your science lessons? Think about how much time you will save if you never have to create a science anchor chart or poster again. Get 37 ready-to-print Science Anchor Charts that are ready for you to immediately use in your science lessons. This science poster bundle includes over 37 anchor charts to help you teach some of the key science concepts. This bundle seriously will save you so much time. I used to spend hours each weekend creating my anchor charts until I finally decided to create them in PPT. Then all I had to do was print them out on Sunday and was ready to teach for the week. These anchor charts include clear and concise language related to the topic of each chart which makes it a great teaching tool for you and a wonderful reference for students to refer to after the lesson is over. Prep is quick and easy... Just print the version of the anchor chart you want to use and you’re ready to teach an effective lesson! THIS BUNDLE INCLUDES THE FOLLOWING ANCHOR CHART SETS: ⭐️ Science Posters - Volume 1 (15 charts) ⭐️ Science Posters - Volume 2 (15 charts) ⭐️ The Scientific Method (7 charts) LOVED BY BOTH TEACHERS AND STUDENTS: Your students will love having access to these anchor charts during the year. They won’t feel the pressure to remember every little detail or step from your science lesson because they know they can look back in their notebooks anytime they need a reminder. You’ll love these anchor charts because they have easy-to-read font and are written with clear and concise language. Your students will understand the topic of the lesson you are teaching with these anchor charts. So many upper elementary teachers love these anchor charts because they aren’t cluttered with excess clipart or fonts that are too “cutesy”. And, you have options. You can choose to print them in half pages for students to glue in their journals… or you can share them with your students in Google Classroom… or you can give students the fill-in version so they can take notes during your lessons. You can pick the version that will work for you and your students. WHAT TOPICS ARE COVERED IN THIS BUNDLE? Here is a list of all the anchor charts included in this bundle. Each anchor chart provides visuals, vocabulary terms, and other details related to that science topic. Animal Adaptations Animal Traits Changes to the Earth’s Surface Earth, Moon, Sun Ecosystems Electrical Circuits Food Webs Force & Motion Insulators & Conductors Landforms Layers of Soil Life Cycle of a Butterfly Life Cycle of a Frog Light Transmission Metamorphosis of Insects Mixtures and Solutions Moon Phases Natural Resources Plant Adaptations Plant Life Cycle Producers, Consumers, & Decomposers Rock Cycle Rotation vs. Revolution Scientific Method Solar System States of Matter The Water Cycle Types of Energy Weather Maps Weather Vs. Climate The Scientific Method Set: The Scientific Method Ask a Question Gather Information Make Hypothesis Conduct Experiment Collect and Analyze Data Make a Conclusion HERE’S WHAT YOU GET: For each of the anchor chart sets, the anchor charts are formatted in the following ways: Half-page anchor charts - perfect for students journals Full page anchor charts - works great for whole group lessons Digital version - created using Google Slides FIll-in version - available for both the half-page and full-page versions and are great if you want your students to take notes during the lesson IDEAS FOR USING THEM IN YOUR CLASSROOM: Use as a model for your whole group lessons. Give students a copy to glue in their journals. Send home a copy to parents to keep them informed. Include a copy with your lesson plans to show your administrators what you’re teaching. Put posters on a ring or in a binder as a reference for small groups or workstations. TEACHERS LIKE YOU SAID… ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ Tiann B. says, "Just like all your other anchor charts, these are an invaluable resource especially for busy teachers (and those like me with little artistic skills and the desire to have everything look perfect). These make using anchor charts easy, plus students can have a copy for their own notebook. Very excited to use these this year.” ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ Tiffany W. says, "My students loved how simplified these anchor charts were used to address each of the expected science standards. It was also a good guide for me to use as I taught the lessons.” ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ Xatavius H. says, "These were very helpful to have displayed on the board throughout the unit. I even printed them to put in the students' notebook as a reference throughout the lesson!” ___________________________________ YOU MAY ALSO LIKE… → Exit Ticket Sticky Notes → Holiday Themed Reading Passage Bundle → 4th Grade Math Posters →5th Grade Math Posters ___________________________________ Copyright © The Stellar Teacher Co. LLC www.stellarteacher.com Permission to copy for single classroom use only. Please purchase additional licenses if you intend to share this product.
Are you looking for a poster that shows the 4 different types of slope? In this post I link a free slope poster to download and add to an algebra word wall. Recently updated slope guy with a color and also black and white version.
We have had and are continuing to have a great time learning all about animals and non-living items. Below are all the printable s that are in included in the Animals, Animals Everywhere download. Here is a sample of our great work this week. Check out the cute handprint animals below. We had a great time at the Jacksonville Zoo. My students picked their favorite zoo animal and wrote about them. They did a great job and the animals were so cute. We sorted Living and Non-Living pictures. Here is a Living and Non-Living worksheet that I made. We sorted animals by the way they move. Here is our super cute Mammals board. The animals turned out so cute!!!!! Our Mammals thinking map. They used the map to write about mammals. Handprint elephant with writing. Handprint whale with writing. Handprint giraffe with writing. Handprint monkey with writing. I loved this one. :-) This those not have anything to do with animals......But we made Rockstar Bingo this week!! The kids were very excited.
Ideas and activities for learning, building and writing about landforms. See our imaginary islands and creative narrative writing about landforms.
Get your students excited to learn about forces causing movement with these fun and engaging activities they will love.
What an awesome week we had! Quite a few blog-worthy moments so I'll start with what we did in Science. We have been discussing Forces (push...
Financially savvy kids are future leaders!
Via The Scout Report "Educators in many disciplines may be interested in Developing Evidence-Based Arguments from Texts, a strategy guide from ReadWriteThink. Constructing a logical and well-supported argument is one of the fundamental skills needed to write a successful paper and it is something that many students struggle with when learning how to write. This strategy guide is intended for use with students in grades 6-12, but instructors and teaching assistants at the undergraduate level may also find helpful teaching tips here. It includes multiple suggestions for explaining the difference between argument and persuasion, as well as downloadable handouts, links to sample essays for illustration, and links to related ReadWriteThink resources. This strategy guide was published by the National Council of Teachers of English and authored by Scott Filkins, a high school English and math teacher in Champaign, Illinois."
Our school has adopted the Next Generation Science Standards and one of my favorite units in 1st grade is our Sound Unit. NGSS asks that students conduct experiments to explain that vibrations make sounds and sound can make materials vibrate. Today I’m sharing some of my favorite ways to keep sound hands-on and writing based!...
Looking for 5th grade anchor charts? Try some of these anchor charts in your classroom to promote visual learning with your students.
Getting started with CER (claim, evidence, reasoning) in your science class this year? Explore this roundup of CER resources.
We create and use anchor charts all the time in our second-grade classroom! Anchor charts are a great way to help students learn new information and make
When it’s time to head back to school, I think about all of the expectations that must be taught. Some of those expectations are specific to how we use our science class time. Here are 4 anchor charts that accompany class discussions about our expectations. We can revisit these charts as often as needed throughout ... Read more
Well we are finally settled into our second grade little classroom! The days are productive and enjoyable, small groups for reading and math are in full sail, and I... well, I finally have some time
Explaining the Feudal System can be difficult and, well, futile, if you don’t add some life to it, when teaching kids. I’ll be teaching the second half of Story of the World, Volume 2 …
Ideas for teaching proportional relationships (7.RP.2) - including activities and common misconceptions to avoid in your math classroom.
CVCe anchor chart inspiration is here! I've gathered up all of my favorite free anchor charts for teaching CVCe as silent e, magic e, bossy e, and more!
The dreaded, REQUIRED, annual Science Fair project is due on Thursday. Our first graders LOVE LOVE LOVE Science, and we think it's pretty awesome too! However, something about the word required makes it not-so-fun for teachers. In k-2 at our school the class does a project together. This year we asked the question, "Which liquid stains teeth the most?" We are using hard boiled eggs (the shell is made of calcium, very similar to our tooth enamel) and a few of our favorite sugary drinks to find our results. Before we went too far into what our project was all about, we decided to tackle the SCIENTIFIC METHOD with our firsties. We created an anchor chart together to explain the steps scientists use. We suggest incorporating a lot of WHOLE BRAIN teaching when explaining these steps to your students. Fancy words like HYPOTHESIS can be very tricky for first graders to say, let alone understand. Trust us, the more whole brain learning... the better. Today we wrote out our question: "Which liquid stains teeth the most?" Next we wrote down our Hypothesis. Most students think coffee will stain teeth the most. Even our student's were saying, "Oh no! Ms. Peterson and Ms. Prussing are in trouble. They love coffee" We put one egg into each of the four liquids (coffee, grape juice, sweet tea and Root Beer). The eggs are going to soak in the liquids for the next few days. Tomorrow we plan on making observations and recording our data from day 1 and day 2. More Science Fair fun to come!
When it’s time to head back to school, I think about all of the expectations that must be taught. Some of those expectations are specific to how we use our science class time. Here are 4 anchor charts that accompany class discussions about our expectations. We can revisit these charts as often as needed throughout ... Read more
Anchor Charts that are ACTIVE with examples of active anchor charts for reading, ELA, writing, math, and science. Take anchor charts from Read Me to Try Me!
These 4th grade anchor charts reinforce concepts for reading, science, math, behavior management, environmentalism, and more!