When Junior High and Middle School was introduced in 1909, the children sat at desks, were lectured, and encouraged to study in preparation for a career as the primary focus. Over the past century, the curriculum has been updated by legislators, and new textbooks have been issued, but not
Discover effective homeschool tips for parents on Kids Who Learn. Elevate your child's education with our expert advice and resources.
It can be hard to know where to start when homeschooling, but with some focus and general steps to follow, you can do it!
Homeschoolers often classify themselves under different methods, and if you are new to the whole idea of homeschooling you might be confused by some of the terms.
Mummify Barbie! I had my daughter use information that we gleaned from books to come up with a list that we could use in our own mummy activity.
Are you interested in teaching your child in a way that creates energy and excitement for learning? The unschooling method encourages your child to learn.
Learn all about China and lots of intesting facts About Chinese culture with these coloring pages! Simply print worksheets!
Learn common types of abbreviations that all 2nd grade students should know, and abbreviations activities to use in the classroom.
Are you looking for an honest review of Weaver Homeschool Curriculum? Here, we provide an in-depth analysis of the curricula and its components.
Visual? Auditory? Reading/Writing? Kinesthetic? I’m Kinesthetic-Visual. That means I need to interact with people and things to learn and that I need to see information in diagrams or charts …
Use this boys' learning styles overview to find the learning style your boy has. Find how to work with your boy to help him learn in the best way possible.
Why would someone want to become an artist? In this writing worksheet, kids will state their opinion on the topic and provide a few reasons to expand their thoughts. This worksheet is designed for practicing manuscript handwriting . For writing in the manuscript style download the worksheet here. To read the passage about artist Andy click here.
This has two versions of a 3-2-1 reflection that students can use to write their thoughts as they reflect on their work. This is great for teachers to use to monitor student learning and for formative feedback. Check out the Party in the Art Room Blog for other ideas!You might also like Vincent van ...
We all learn differently. Download this FREE Learning Styles Quiz to find out what are the best activities and methods for your child to retain information and to take the stress out of homeschooli…
Data handling is an important activity that helps achieve fluency in mathematical reasoning. One can become a pro in numeric logical reasoning problems with a lot of practice. Amongst various data-crunching tools, the one that stands out in delivery and appeal is a venn diagram. A printable Venn diagram
Today, we have some {3 in 1} Free Kids Printables from the Little Bunny series. With these printables, kids explore the concept of opposites!
Our scope and sequence changes as it needs to, nothing is set in stone. Science Scope by Kathryn Stout- The concepts and skills...
Learning styles. Is there value in using them to educate my child? For sure, find out how to successfully educate your child with learning styles every day.
Knowing and understanding your children’s learning styles, or the way that they process and understand information, can help you as a parent and a teacher.
You don't need a spell to engage students with Macbeth, but a spark of inspiration can certainly work its magic! This complete and editable Macbeth unit plan will help you make Shakespeare's play relevant, rigorous, and FUN! Each act contains interactive notes and creative activities to help bring this drama bubbling to life! So with that... Double, double no toil or trouble Macbeth engagement is going to double! You will get: Macbeth Pre-Reading Activities: ⭐Introduction stations to hook students from the start ⭐A playbill template with character list and notes Macbeth Reading Activities: ⭐Interactive notes for Macbeth Act 1 with prompts to summarize, quote, and explain ⭐Interactive notes for Macbeth Act 2 with the prompts to annotate, contrast, and infer ⭐Interactive notes for Macbeth Act 3 with prompts to analyze, annotate, and illustrate ⭐Interactive notes for Macbeth Act 4 with prompts to characterize, create, and contrast ⭐Interactive notes for Macbeth Act 5 with prompts to explain, illustrate, and paraphrase Macbeth Drama Activities: ⭐Acting troupe group activities for each act that helps bring this play to life! ⭐Act it out activity ⭐Finger puppet play ⭐ Theme Tableau Macbeth Connection Activities: ⭐Informational text pairings ⭐Hand washing experiment ⭐Movie Guide Macbeth Post-reading Activities: ⭐ TED Talk pairing and discussion ⭐Unique essay prompts ⭐50 question editable test (self-grading if using the Google Forms option) ✅ This unit is editable to fit your needs! ✅ This resource can be printed or use digitally in Google classrooms or other LMS providers. ✅ This unit has answer keys!
A look at kids, bedrooms, and houses around the world through children's books and a photographic essay. Great addition to any community unit!
Here's a perfect way to learn about Newton's 3rd Law. This upper elementary STEM Challenge is a student favorite and easy prep for you. Editable lab sheets are included and will guide students through the design process. What is the challenge? Students will use materials to design and create a Newton’s Cradle. In this event, students will review what they know about the laws of motion- especially the third law. Students will have to build the frame for the device, a way to attach strings to the marbles, and a way to attach strings to the frame. This can include measuring as the length of the strings is a factor. What is your prep? You will need supplies in addition to this package. This includes craft sticks, straws or beads, masking tape, marbles, string, low-temp glue guns, and glue- one glue gun per team. The option of using low-temp glue for the assembly is yours to make. You may want to ask for parental help in your classroom- depending on the age of your students. NOTE: This was tested with fifth graders and is recommended for that age group or older students. This is an amazing challenge, but it is a challenge. It may take many tries to get the strings attached and working. Students will love the task and cheer when their device works - even if it works imperfectly! The package specifically includes: Cover Teacher background Materials and preparation page 9 pages of teacher directions Constraints list in 2 styles A special page of information about Newton’s Laws of Motion 5 pages of photographs Student lab sheet in 2 versions Scoring rubric Terms of Use page Forms for this challenge are provided in an editable format! Student answer sheets are not included, but samples from student work are included in the teacher direction pages. The page count listed for this package includes everything. This challenge will need 1 - 2 class sessions to complete. We needed two full-class sessions to complete this project. This challenge works perfectly with these Newton challenges: Build a Bottle Car Build an Egg Car ➡️ Click here to save 20% on this STEM Challenge in a bundle of 3! ➡️ Click here to save 20% on this STEM Challenge in a bundle of 6! NEWTON'S LAWS The simplified version of the third law is that for every action, there is an equal and opposite reaction. So How Does This Apply to Newton’s Cradles? This is easily demonstrated with a purchased Newton’s Cradle. We had to drop one marble, then 2, then 3, and then 4 to get every student to see that the force is always equal and works the same on opposite sides. Building a Newton’s Cradle is the perfect item to share with the third law of motion. ***************************************************************************** Be the first to know about my new discounts, freebies, and product launches: Click here to follow my store. It’s that easy to receive email updates about Teachers Are Terrific! ***************************************************************************** Thank you so much, Teachers Really are Terrific!
Here's a perfect way to learn about Newton's 3rd Law. This upper elementary STEM Challenge is a student favorite and easy prep for you. Editable lab sheets are included and will guide students through the design process. What is the challenge? Students will use materials to design and create a Newton’s Cradle. In this event, students will review what they know about the laws of motion- especially the third law. Students will have to build the frame for the device, a way to attach strings to the marbles, and a way to attach strings to the frame. This can include measuring as the length of the strings is a factor. What is your prep? You will need supplies in addition to this package. This includes craft sticks, straws or beads, masking tape, marbles, string, low-temp glue guns, and glue- one glue gun per team. The option of using low-temp glue for the assembly is yours to make. You may want to ask for parental help in your classroom- depending on the age of your students. NOTE: This was tested with fifth graders and is recommended for that age group or older students. This is an amazing challenge, but it is a challenge. It may take many tries to get the strings attached and working. Students will love the task and cheer when their device works - even if it works imperfectly! The package specifically includes: Cover Teacher background Materials and preparation page 9 pages of teacher directions Constraints list in 2 styles A special page of information about Newton’s Laws of Motion 5 pages of photographs Student lab sheet in 2 versions Scoring rubric Terms of Use page Forms for this challenge are provided in an editable format! Student answer sheets are not included, but samples from student work are included in the teacher direction pages. The page count listed for this package includes everything. This challenge will need 1 - 2 class sessions to complete. We needed two full-class sessions to complete this project. This challenge works perfectly with these Newton challenges: Build a Bottle Car Build an Egg Car ➡️ Click here to save 20% on this STEM Challenge in a bundle of 3! ➡️ Click here to save 20% on this STEM Challenge in a bundle of 6! NEWTON'S LAWS The simplified version of the third law is that for every action, there is an equal and opposite reaction. So How Does This Apply to Newton’s Cradles? This is easily demonstrated with a purchased Newton’s Cradle. We had to drop one marble, then 2, then 3, and then 4 to get every student to see that the force is always equal and works the same on opposite sides. Building a Newton’s Cradle is the perfect item to share with the third law of motion. ***************************************************************************** Be the first to know about my new discounts, freebies, and product launches: Click here to follow my store. It’s that easy to receive email updates about Teachers Are Terrific! ***************************************************************************** Thank you so much, Teachers Really are Terrific!
Persuade, Inform, and Entertain
bible, movies, music, church, god, jesus, love, friend, father, wife, man, dance, worship, praise, prayer, video
This post is both for first-time homeschoolers who are wondering where to start and for veterans who are looking for some inspiring teaching strategies to get the kids completely engaged day-to-day! Since I’ve gotten a number emails/messages asking where to begin I thought I would write a post to say You CAN Do This!! This post may also have some useful resources/activity ideas for those of you who have been...
We just finished writing biographies about classmates and are diving head first into more nonfiction writing - Informational Texts. Yesterday we discussed a very important word: Research. We made an anchor chart to discuss what research was. For our texts students will write about an animal. We will use 3 sources: nonfiction books, the internet, and an encyclopedia. We also brainstormed sub-topics that to research for our animals. Then I began modeling the informational text writing process myself. My text is going to be about Jaguars. I got to see lots of Jaguars when I traveled to Belize last spring and I think they are pretty cool! I have showed the kiddos how to use each source to get notes. I simply take 4 pieces of notebook paper and write one sub-topic at the top of each page. Then whenever I come across a fact that I want to remember I make a bullet and write it down. By the end of yesterday I read information aloud/showed it on the document camera and they were able to tell me facts and what topic each fact should go with. It's always interesting to hear where they think we should look online for research. Most of them said "Google". While I'm definitely a big fan of googling myself I want them to learn to use information from reliable sources. Our school subscribes to Pebble Go, an online nonfiction listening library, so we used that. I highly recomend Pebble Go as it is an awesome way to expose young children to nonfiction that they will understand. My kids love watching the short "video" of each animal along with listening to the sounds. Next I showed how to write an opening paragraph and then copy down 3 facts for each topic. My kiddos were shocked at how simple it really was to make their plan! I also had them pick a few key vocabulary words for each page and think about a text feature that would make the page more interesting. The planning page is available for free on TPT. I recommend copying it onto 11x17 paper as it gives the kiddos more room to write. Today my assistant and I were very pleased at how engaged my kiddos were during my writing mini-lesson. They loved helping me find facts from my sources, pick the 3 facts to use for my plan and come up with ideas for the title. I'm really excited to see them write their own informational texts!
How the cone of learning fosters sensory integration and creates active learners.
As we explored the different styles of homeschooling, we decided on a classical approach. One of the cornerstones of the classical curriculum is learning Latin. I've never taken a Latin class, so I was a bit worried about how I was going to teach a subject without any experience! How We Teach Latin in
Here's a perfect way to learn about Newton's 3rd Law. This upper elementary STEM Challenge is a student favorite and easy prep for you. Editable lab sheets are included and will guide students through the design process. What is the challenge? Students will use materials to design and create a Newton’s Cradle. In this event, students will review what they know about the laws of motion- especially the third law. Students will have to build the frame for the device, a way to attach strings to the marbles, and a way to attach strings to the frame. This can include measuring as the length of the strings is a factor. What is your prep? You will need supplies in addition to this package. This includes craft sticks, straws or beads, masking tape, marbles, string, low-temp glue guns, and glue- one glue gun per team. The option of using low-temp glue for the assembly is yours to make. You may want to ask for parental help in your classroom- depending on the age of your students. NOTE: This was tested with fifth graders and is recommended for that age group or older students. This is an amazing challenge, but it is a challenge. It may take many tries to get the strings attached and working. Students will love the task and cheer when their device works - even if it works imperfectly! The package specifically includes: Cover Teacher background Materials and preparation page 9 pages of teacher directions Constraints list in 2 styles A special page of information about Newton’s Laws of Motion 5 pages of photographs Student lab sheet in 2 versions Scoring rubric Terms of Use page Forms for this challenge are provided in an editable format! Student answer sheets are not included, but samples from student work are included in the teacher direction pages. The page count listed for this package includes everything. This challenge will need 1 - 2 class sessions to complete. We needed two full-class sessions to complete this project. This challenge works perfectly with these Newton challenges: Build a Bottle Car Build an Egg Car ➡️ Click here to save 20% on this STEM Challenge in a bundle of 3! ➡️ Click here to save 20% on this STEM Challenge in a bundle of 6! NEWTON'S LAWS The simplified version of the third law is that for every action, there is an equal and opposite reaction. So How Does This Apply to Newton’s Cradles? This is easily demonstrated with a purchased Newton’s Cradle. We had to drop one marble, then 2, then 3, and then 4 to get every student to see that the force is always equal and works the same on opposite sides. Building a Newton’s Cradle is the perfect item to share with the third law of motion. ***************************************************************************** Be the first to know about my new discounts, freebies, and product launches: Click here to follow my store. It’s that easy to receive email updates about Teachers Are Terrific! ***************************************************************************** Thank you so much, Teachers Really are Terrific!