Section general grammar tips. Teaching English online has become more and more popular in recent years. Through the following courses below, we will show you how to adapt your existing skills and knowledge to suit this specific area of the teaching world.
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Science and art combine in this amazing and simple rainbow experiment. The kids will love to make, explore and paint rainbows,
Some pics get a bit crazy so watch out. Don't worry, I find these, like everywhere! Like the title suggests, some of these contain disturbing, obscene, racial, somewhat explicit images that are all out of the ordinary (and may induce a loss of appetite or your food) so please beware as these may not be suitable for young or all readers. Oh and also, A most of these don't belong to me... unless of course I say so and if you want to use my own shitty images, ask me beforehand. 2022: bro, I'm done with this lmao
For the bathroom my two little girls share, I wanted artwork that was girly, but not frilly since the boy uses it sometimes as well when i...
English grammar
Make a homemade spectroscope with a few simple materials and explore the spectrum of different light sources. You’ll see all kinds of rainbows! This science activity for kids makes a great addition to a unit on light or weather and is perfect for St. Patrick’s Day too! Follow our Science for Kids Pinterest board! Light …
80's punk rocker in front of his wall of graffiti. Notice his Minor Threat pillowcase... badass. The teenage bedroom--- a refuge away from fighting parents, chores, snarls from insecure jocks at school, the mediocre outside world,
Discover these amazing buildings devised by the Pritzker Prize–winning architect over the past five decades
ROCK IDENTIFICATION KEYS Mineral Identification Links that we used to identify minerals: The Rock Key Table of Contents and Information- Rock Key: A Dichotomous Key- ROCK ID- Follow the arrows and …
Bristlebots are tiny robots made by repurposing a toothbrush and equipping it with a vibration motor. It sounds boring until you see them go! Turn your creation into a fun project or educational science lesson!
Find out what APGAR means and what doctors evaluate in the minutes after your baby is born.
Battling cartoonists, a CD sale, Alan Rudolph, and Cary Grant’s daughter are just a few of the highlights on this week’s agenda.
Strand: Geometry and Spatial Sense Grade: 1 Key Concept /Big Idea – Identify common two-dimensional shapes and three-dimensional fi…
Homesickness Quotes. "Maybe you had to leave in order to really miss a place; maybe you had to travel to figure out how beloved your starting point was."
i like their dynamic #GenshinImpact
Visit www.pork.org/realpork for more recipe ideas!
Did you know that you can make rainbows using CDs? Yup! It's true. Check out this rainbow that Chuck and I made right in his room. All we needed was a bright patch of sun, a CD, and a white surface. Keep reading to see how we made these lovely rainbows! Here's what you need to make your very own rainbows: Bright patch of sunshine (or, if it's cloudy, you could use a flashlight) CD White surface (We used the wall and a white canvas) Got everything? Great! Let's make some rainbows! (Note: If you're looking for the scientific explanation behind why this works, check out the Exploratorium. I found this idea there. The site also has lots of other fun science activities that you can do at home.) Place your CD in a bright patch of sunshine. Use the shiny side to reflect your rainbows. (If it's not that sunny, you could also shine a flashlight onto the CD to reflect rainbows.) At first, we reflected rainbows onto the wall. I was delighted to see the colors, but Chuck was not so impressed because the rainbow was rather pale. Then, I set up a white surface closer to our CD. Whoa! Now Chuck got excited because we saw vibrant colors. We made lots of different looking rainbows when we wiggled the CD around. Here's a circular rainbow! And of course, we had to give Chuck's buddy Mac a turn at making his own rainbows too. Happy rainbow making, friends! Hope this activity brightens your day! (Psst- If you're looking for more rainbow themed posts, check out Kids Chaos for a great list!)
Each school year a unique mix of middle school students enter the doors of my classroom. Each with a story, each with different strengths, each with different weaknesses. I never take this responsibility lightly because what this means for me, as their teacher, is that I don't get to take the already published book off the shelf and write the same story as I did last year. Instead, we create and co-author a new story together. A story that I could never dream up or predict until it happens the way that it needs to happen. After all, doesn't every new class that enters your classroom door deserve a story of their very own? Because of this, the walls of my classroom to begin the year aside from staples I keep up each year, begin as a blank canvas. The anchor charts that fill my room happen naturally, as our story is being created, new anchor charts are being created to match the learning that is happening in the classroom. When students need to be reminded of a concept we have covered or an expectation that is expected of them, they can refer to the anchor charts on our walls and be brought back to that moment in our journey. Anchor charts help with retention of material, they help with developing student independence, and they also help to anchor routines and expectations. Below is the story of our learning so far this school year. "Before you turn in any piece of writing, ask yourself..." This anchor chart is designed to help students self-assess their writing and be that self-talk that many of them need. Teaching students to be reflective is one of the hardest yet most beneficial skills we can teach as teachers. This anchor chart is a great reminder for my students and for myself. The best thing about it? My co-teacher who teaches the same group of our students math and science is on board with holding students to these same writing expectations with this same language. During our weekly sentence stalking, students can use this anchor chart to gather ideas of different items to notice so that they're not always noticing the same types of things. These are the symbols I use when editing student writing and also the symbols I want them to use when they self-edit and edit their peers' writing. This anchor chart is a helpful, quick reminder of the editing symbols. I LOVE this anchor chart for middle school students. During the first few weeks of school, we referred to it often to self-assess how we did as a class and as an individual with following the expectations in order to make independent reading and writing time productive. If we have a rough day with following expectations, I come right back to this anchor chart and reinforce the positive behaviors students ARE exhibiting. Our current interactive read aloud is Killing Mr. Griffin, and it's written in 3rd person omniscient. Students are loving the almost spooky way the narrator of the story seems to know EVERYTHING. We had an awesome discussion about point of view through that and now students are actively identifying the point of view in their independent reading books. Reading is thinking, and one of the strategic reading actions to show that thinking is by summarizing. I like to start the year with a few minilessons on summarizing because it seems to be a building block for the other reading minilessons. These are some of the criteria we set for what summaries should include and not include. Writers use transitions for a variety of purposes. Crafting transitions smoothly into writing improves sentence fluency and help make ideas clear. This anchor chart will be a great reminder to aid students in doing this in their writing all school year.
a Temple-theater complex discovered only at the beginning of the 2000s in Monte San Nicola, in Pietravairano of Caserta province. Lying at 410 meters high in the Sannio area, dates back to the late Roman Republican period, 2nd-1st century BC.
I have seen many versions of character traits lists but this one is more extensive and would be perfect for the intermediate grades. Free...
Useful sewing tutorials (you did not know exist): Get access to useful sewing tutorial that you did not know they exist! Great set of sewing 101
My kiddos are always asking for hands on science activities, even if it’s one we have done over and over like this Hovercraft Science experiment project.