Get your preschooler really engaged with these letter E activities! Between crafts & science experiments, they're going to love learning about the letter E!
Get your preschooler really engaged with these letter E activities! Between crafts & science experiments, they're going to love learning about the letter E!
Looking for ideas for teaching the Letter E? Check out this Letter E lesson plan full of cute crafts and activities and free printables!
Looking for a list of delicious food that starts with E? Look no further, because you've come to the right place!
The pillar of character Prairie Valley is focusing on currently is respect. Last week both 3rd grade classes brainstormed ways to be respec...
Here's what our week looked like for Letter E: Read, Read, Read . I love reading to my kids on a daily basis. My three h...
Here is my plan for preschool for the month of October. It’s so nice to have it all planned out and ready to go. Sometimes that’s the trickiest part! The whole last week we will be having fun with Halloween activities and then we’ll start H the first week of November. I’ll probably pick and choose from what is listed each day. I hope to try lots of new Halloween activities (I’ve just recently discovered how fun Pinterest is!) and add them that week. One other tip … I’m starting to collect empty cereal boxes, cake and brownie boxes, yogurt tubs, egg cartons, milk jugs, juice bottles … right NOW so that we’ll have lots of fun things to put in our pretend grocery store during G week. To Print: Click on the calendar below. Click on the “Print” icon (top right) You can also find each month over in the right sidebar. Feel free to email with any questions or great ideas you’d like to share! Happy October!
A fun, hands-on way to explore the letter Xx with your students! My students explored the letter Xx and the best word that I know of to examine the letter Xx is x-ray! Begin with a Book We had lots of fun with the word x-ray and today, I will share
Letter Ee is for Egg free comprehensive curriculum for ages 3-5. Activity ideas: Egg Dissection, Cooking, Who Lays Eggs?, Life Cycle of a Chicken, and more
You can find this letter of the week Letter E activities bundled with the whole alphabet at a HUGE discount here: Letter of the Week for Google Slides™ Bundle 5 days worth of simple activities focusing on the letter e that can be used virtually with students or used in your classroom. Easy to implement paperless activities to reinforce the letter e. You can present these Google Slides™ activities with students over a zoom meeting or students can complete individually using Google Classroom™. These can also be used whole group or small group in a classroom to present the letter of the week. It is easy to implement and differentiate using this tool. In this interactive activity, students drag and drop to answer questions. Includes 5 days (10 slides) worth of activities focusing on the letter t that are color coded for each day: Sample schedule: Monday: introduce how to write the letter and sound (slide 1 and 2) Tuesday: Students use a moveable thumbs up or thumbs down for target sound. Also play dough letter and pictures for students to make the letter and make pictures that begin with that letter (slide 3, 4 and 5) Wednesday: students use paper and pencil to rainbow write the letter (you will have to teach them how to do this), build the letter out of virtual snap cubes and identify pictures that begin with the sound (slide 6, 7 and 8) Thursday: students use a moveable circle to the letter and sort beginning sounds (slides 9 and 10) Friday: students virtually ”highlight” the letter and sound and read cvc words with short vowel e sound. (slide 11 and 12) Also has "I Can" statements and instructions and a printable handwriting sheet and color the picture that begins with the letter. This is the perfect kindergarten distance learning phonics assignment that can be assigned in Google Classroom™. This assignment can be "turned in" and checked by the teacher using Google Classroom. It is not self grading. Perfect for phonics in kindergarten. To check out the letter letters you may like: Letter A Activities for Google Slides™ Letter M Activities for Google Slides™
See unique and creative plant life cycle activities and teaching ideas with hands-on plant needs experiments for kids.
What Do You Do When It Rains? What Will You Be For Halloween? I’m Not Afraid Sensory Bin Welcome to Letter E week! (Also the week of Halloween 🎃). You know the drill, let’s start things…
Many schools participate in Week of Respect. It's a week for accepting and celebrating differences while discovering common interests. Check out some ways to incorporate a little R-E-S-P-E-C-T into your lessons! 1. Use morning announcements to make suggestions for showing respect. These ideas could be separated into categories such as respect for family, respect for friends, respect for animals, respect in public places, respect for the environment, etc. 2. Create kindness rocks. Students paint rocks with inspirational messages and hide them around the community for others to find. You never know who you may inspire! 3. Make a new friend. Challenge students to play with someone new during recess. 4. Write messages about respect on the sidewalks. Students could research quotes and use sidewalk chalk to motivate others. 5. Have a respect your elders day. Have students make cards or pictures for nursing home and assisted living residents. 6. Have a theme week. Examples to include: Have a Mismatch Clothes Day to remind us that we may be different but we can all get along. Another day could be Team Jersey Day to show that we may belong to different teams but we all enjoy the game. 7. Have students complete a choice board: Week of Respect Choice Board The benefits of Week of Respect activities just may continue throughout the school year! Are you a subscriber yet? FREE Activity for new subscribers: Sign up for the Fourth Grade Frenzy newsletter! Click the star to follow my TpT store! ⭐
What Do You Do When It Rains? What Will You Be For Halloween? I’m Not Afraid Sensory Bin Welcome to Letter E week! (Also the week of Halloween 🎃). You know the drill, let’s start things…
This week we learned about the letter D! We did a bunch of fun activities full of dragons, donuts, and dump trucks. You can purchase this full week of Letter D Curriculum on my TpT shop for just $5…
Teach your preschooler the letter E with these 25 preschool book recommendations.
Are you a homeschooler looking for letter H activities? This post features five activities for the letter H: including a craft, worksheets, and a recipe!
What Do You Do When It Rains? What Will You Be For Halloween? I’m Not Afraid Sensory Bin Welcome to Letter E week! (Also the week of Halloween 🎃). You know the drill, let’s start things…
This week's letter for our snack list is "H." If you're teaching preschool, homeschooling, or just looking to add some variety and fun to ...
I am back to share a few pins that I loved this week! I have no idea WHY so much math stuff grabbed my attention this week! LOL! I guess I was just in a math-tastic mood?!?!? And remember... ***Please do NOT pin these pins directly from my
One of our OT’s was so excited last week to show us the new activity she was doing with a few of her kiddos. She had just started it so she hasn’t had time to embellish it for pictures…
Happy Friday. :::::
Teach your students about Silent e and how to recognize and read Silent e words in one week with these fun and engaging Sneaky e activities.
1) Mess Free Earth Painting from Still Playing School: Paper Plate Gallon Size Ziplock Bag Green & Blue Paint Squirt blue and gr...
French phrase of the week routine ‘Une phrase par semaine’ or ‘French phrase of the week’ is a weekly routine for French language classrooms. Learning new phrases can your students gain confidence when speaking French and increase fluency. You can collect some of your favourite phrases to use or use these fun posters! Below I share some tips on how you can include this routine in your FSL class today! 1. Introducing the phrase of the week –Display your poster for the phrase and practice pronunciation with your students. Have them listen to you a few times and then repeat the phrase. Provide a few examples for use of the phrase. Be sure to try to use the phrase throughout the week in conversation with your class. Challenge your class to try to use the phrase correctly during the week. Consider providing recognition or a small reward to students that use the phrase correctly. 2. Create a display – Print out each poster and place on a bulletin board or wall in the classroom. It is best to have a space specifically designated to this activity to create consistency (your students will know where to look for the phrase). Print your posters in colour or in black and white on coloured paper for an attractive display. 3. Mini-cards – Small versions of the larger poster have been included to use with your students. Some ideas for these cards include: providing a printed set for students to glue in their notebooks or to use as flashcards. Also, you can play ‘SLAP’ with the mini cards. To play, place all of the cards face-up on a table. Have two students on either side of a table. Call out one of the phrases, the first to ‘slap’ the correct phrase card wins a point. 4. Skits – Using your set of printed mini-cards, hand out a set to small groups of students (2 or 3 per group). Have students work together to create a skit or brief dialogue that incorporates the phrases that they have been assigned. EXTEND- You can extend this activity by assigning each student a phrase and having them provide their own illustration to convey the meaning/usage of the phrase.
Another way to integrate Art History into your lesson plans. This project looks specifically at the paintings of the Sistine Chapel. There is no need to get a close up picture for the students be…
The 5 most important ones everyone should memorize and start using now when sending emails to communicate in a business environment.
Thousands of free printable preschool worksheets, games, activities, and more! Preschool themes, math, alphabet fine motor, sight words, sign language, reading, social studies preschool curriculum.
Betsy Morningstar