Parts of Speech Chart with Examples (Free Printable Chart): Knowing the parts of speech is essential for effective communication. Without knowing what verbs, adjectives, or adverbs are, your communication could be misinterpreted.
Anchor chart for common pronouns. Also black and white printables for students to do along with you.Added an assessment page to use with the chart.***updated***new graphics and fill in the blank chart with word bank...
Show Don't Tell Anchor Chart! This blog post contains a complete writing lesson and the printables you'll need to create the anchor chart and replicate the activities!
Would you like to decorate your classroom with fun, hand-drawn anchor charts/posters? Do you simply not have the time to get them done? Well, you have come to the perfect place! I love making these engaging and appealing anchor charts. I also can draw/create any other topic you would like, just contact me directly and ask! My students absolutely love these posters and references them every day. Many of them are visual learners, so the colorful images really help them connect and remember what they have learned. This particular anchor chart is for readers/writers practicing "R" controlled vowels. These can be a little tricky for students, so using the "Bossy R" character seems to really help them understand the rule. It will be approximately 32 x 24 inches, and will be a copy of my original. **These will be copies unless asked otherwise for a custom poster. They are not laminated, and are printed on normal, anchor chart paper. I ship these out ASAP after being ordered, but please keep in mind once shipped, it is outside of my control. Therefore, if shipping does not meet your expectations, I highly encourage you to please reach out to me first, and we have always been able to work something out to make up for anything that may have occurred after I have sent your package, thanks so much!! Hope you love it :)
Kids are always on the run, and this energetic, rhyming poem teaches the sight word, ran. Features simple text and rebus pictures so students can master this sight word from the Dolch list���independently.
In this blog post, read about my best teaching strategies to teach writing narrative endings. Grab all the freebies to help you teach.
A figurative language anchor chart is a great resource to use to teach young students about the different types of figurative language.
Hi there! It’s Deb Hanson from Crafting Connections, and I've decided to share an adverbs anchor chart and free printable with you today. First, however, allow me to express my dismay. Did you know that adverbs are specifically mentioned in the 2nd grade Common Core State Standards, but are not named in 3rd, 4th, 5th, or 6th grade standards?!? This puzzles me. To fully understand the purpose of adverbs, students must first have a firm grasp on nouns, verbs, and adjectives. I must admit, I don't know many second graders who possess that strong necessary foundation! In fact, I have found that most upper elementary and middle school students are easily tripped up by adverbs. Just a few weeks ago, I overheard my daughters (a 5th grader and a 7th grader) moaning about adverbs. My fifth grader was really struggling to complete her language assignment (that focused on adverbs), and my seventh grader stated how "bad at adverbs" she was, too. After helping Brooke complete the homework exercises, it was apparent that she still had no real grasp of what an adverb was. She definitely needed a LOT more practice. Each day that week, I helped her with her homework, and I paid close attention to the concepts that were causing her the most difficulty. (I must admit that I used her as my own little case study!) These are the three adverb concepts that were most challenging for her: Yes, adverbs modify verbs. However, they can also modify adjectives and other adverbs, too. The -LY rule! Many adverbs end in -ly, but there are also many adverbs that do NOT end in -LY. Furthermore, there are words that end in -LY that are NOT adverbs. When adverbs modify verbs, they can answer the question where. However, words like "park", "hospital", and "school" are nouns, not adverbs. Adverbs that answer where tend to be more general in nature, like "here", "there", "high", "low", "outside", "inside", "backward", and "forward". I observed Brooke's understanding of adverbs increase with each passing day, and by the end of the week, she aced her adverbs assessment. Furthermore, I put my case study to good use, and I created a line of adverb resources for my TpT store that directly address the "problem areas" listed above. I also decided that this would be a good topic for a blog post to share with all of you, which leads us here today. :) I created this adverbs anchor chart. It directly addresses the first two challenging concepts listed above. I created a blank anchor chart for you to give to your students. I suggest creating an anchor chart similar to the one shown above prior to the beginning of class. After you discuss your anchor chart with your students, you can distribute the student printable (shown below). I recommend requiring students to write their own example sentence in each box. This will allow you to check their true understanding of each category of adverbs. After you have checked their anchor chart, you may wish to have your students glue it into an interactive notebook for future reference. Click HERE to download this FREE printable! Here is an example of a finished anchor chart. If you'd like to view some of the adverb resources that I created, just click on the image below. The resources pictured can be purchased as one bundle, or all of the images are available for individual purchase, as well. Finally, I ran across a fabulous read aloud book that focuses on differentiating between adjectives and adverbs. Hop over to my blog to view the book, and discover how I plan to use it when I teach about adverbs! Thanks for stopping by today! FREE Newsletter! Blog TpT Store Instagram Facebook Pinterest My YouTube Video
Although these 5 tips apply to teaching any new concpet, this blog post focuses specifically on applying the strategies to teaching suffix spelling rules.
Students will learn all about how sound energy helps us hear with this Sound Energy Printable. It can be printed in color or black and white. You may choose to project it during a lesson or print it for student notebooks and/or your bulletin board. Sound Energy Printable
Teaching plot elements to upper elementary students? Use a picture book to engage your students! Read it aloud, and then create a plot diagram!
Hello There, If you are reading this, then it is obvious that you are interested in more information about “Printable Chart of Preposition”.
Check out these great ideas for teaching conjunctions including a video lesson with an organizer, posters with rules, and anchor charts.
Pronouns can be so tricky to teach and learn! I shared a photo of an anchor chart I made on Instagram for helping students to understand the concept of a pronoun. With help from TeacherspayTeachers - it received a little bit of l-o-v-e! I received some requests for a printable poster, and I am pleased to say you can download it from TpT HERE for FREE! I hope your students like it. I have started a little packet of printables that would be useful to accompany this and hope to have it finished next week. In other news, I have some new charts that will help your students track their progress towards 100 days at school! You can add a sticker to them each day and count forwards and back from 100. Once you get to the 100 days with your students, use this fun free activity to practice counting to 100 by tens! Thanks so much for stopping by today friends!
This printable anchor chart can be used as a teacher or student resource. Highlights four rules for adding -ed and -ing to the end of base words.
Transform your ESL classroom with our vibrant and informative digital PDF poster showcasing all 12 English verb tenses, plus both active and passive voice forms. This meticulously designed educational tool is perfect for students and teachers alike, providing a clear and concise reference to enhance understanding and mastery of English grammar, specifically for upcoming ESL/ELL/ELA classrooms and teachers. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Each verb tense poster contains: -a visual timeline -subject agreement guide (I, you, he, she, it, we, they) -key words commonly used with each tense -an example sentence to demonstrate structure and meaning ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Includes 12 Verb Tenses + 2 Active vs. Passive Posters + 14-in-one handout for notebook handouts. Color and B/W versions of all posters. 8.5x11 -OR- 16x20 poster size for high quality printing and ink-savers. These look great on grammar walls! Download high-quality color prints to decorate your classroom, or share as digital handouts in your online classes. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ VERB TENSES: Simple Present Simple Past Simple Future (will) Present Continuous Past Continuous Future Continuous (will + be + v-ing) Present Perfect Past Perfect Future Perfect Present Perfect Continuous Past Perfect Continuous Future Perfect Continuous + Active Voice Passive Voice ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ PLEASE: Enjoy this lesson to the fullest extent of the law. Check out some of my other lessons and activities in my store. Recommend other ESL-related topics you'd like to see in my store. Visit my website at talkintownenglish.com. Be the best teacher you can be. I'll do the same. :) ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ This is not a physical product. You will receive a link to download the PDF from Google Drive. Email me if you have any questions about downloading this file and I'll get right back to you.
Display this black and white Classroom Code of Conduct prominently in your classroom, and reference it regularly.
Students will learn all about the five different energy types with this Forms of Energy Printable. It can be printed in color or black and white. You may choose to project it during a lesson or print it for student notebooks and/or your bulletin board. Forms of Energy Printable
We all know the importance of geometry in our maths curriculum. But the scope geometry is much more than just a math 'topic'. And not just in math, it plays a crucial role in constructing chemical bonds as well. Early adaptation of geometry through various ways is important as
Do you hate to teach poetry? Do you want your students to learn and enjoy poetry? Try these simple ways to learn how to teach poetry...
A full moon always calls for a crazy day... My Friday/end of the week sanity was saved by a professional development day. Let's play catch up on some of the "wintery" things we did this week! I ventured out to introduce pronouns this week. I generated a list of pronouns (inside the bubble) that could essentially take the place of my list of nouns. I had my kiddos tell me which pronoun would work best and we recorded it on the chart. After discussing how interchangeable the two were, we chose one noun and wrote a sentence about it. We turned that noun into a proper noun using the same sentence. From there we chose a pronoun to replace the proper noun. This was a great way to show word choice in writing also. Making fact family houses was a great and easy way to assess my students without them even realizing it! I gave each a sticky note with 3 different numbers on it and they had to create a fact family using those numbers. Who would have guessed it would have got the reaction it did.... "This is SO much fun!" We also made snowmen out of our fact family numbers. Another hit! If you haven't read the book The Snowglobe Family, it is a must! It goes great paired with the snowglobe activity below or as you've probably seen on Instagram or Pinterest. We also read Snowmen at Night and revisited verbs with all the action the snowmen have going on in the book. They had to write what they would do if they were a snowman an night using one verb of their choice. ------------------------------------------ Enjoy your extra long weekend! Don't forget to head over to Doodlebugs Teaching and link up.
Hello Everyone! It is so nice to have time to put some finishing touches on a couple of units that we have coming up! Another historical figure we will study after Eleanor Roosevelt is Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. As a nation we celebrate his life daily! Thank you Dr. King! Officially we celebrate on the third Monday of January. I have posted about our activities before, but I went through and cleaned up, and added to my unit. Here are some pics from the updated unit! If you would like the 30 page free printable unit CLICK HERE!! :) My second offering for today is a unit our curriculum team worked on this summer. We had fun integrating reading and social studies and are finding it a natural way to teach and get everything in. This next unit is about other important historical figures. It includes posters about Alexander Graham Bell, Ben Franklin, Thomas Edison, Garrett Morgan, and Richard Allen along with reading strategy practice activities. It also includes an invention home project packet for kids. The unit ended up to be over 50 pages! I am excited to include this unit in our curriculum in a few weeks!! Here are a few pics from the unit! For your free 52 page Inventors Unit CLICK HERE!! :) So glad I had time to share these endeavors! Hope you can use at least parts of either one! It is my joy to be able to share and help your journey in the classroom or homefront become a little less stressful. As always, please let me know if this is something you can use, if there are any typos or problems, and if you would like to see something else in particular on this little blog. I hear from teachers and parents from all over the world, and I am so grateful for all of you!! Joyfully! Nancy
Are you looking for materials to help your students practice the conditional modal verbs could, should and would? This variety pack has everything you need for a range of students. This packet includes a 3 posters highlighting when to use could, should, or would with examples. The same information is included on a student reference sheet I made a second student reference sheet with just the words could, should, and would in Spanish, since I used this with bilingual students. There are 12 multiple choice task cards with recording sheet and answer key to practicing choosing the correct form. There is a spelling/ writing practice page using the target words as well as a writing prompt. Again, there are two copies of the same activity to choose from - wide-lined or narrow-lined. I used the wide-lines with first grade and narrow-lined with upper grades. There is a multiple-choice page which requires students to use the context clues to choose the best word - could, should, or would. Answer key included. Finally, there is an oral language dice activity which requires students to generate examples with the target vocabulary. All pages of this product are visible in the preview - check it out! You Might Also Like... Would You Rather Be a...? A Persuasive Writing Project Reading Longer, Big Words Strategies and Practice Vivid Words: Synonyms for Overused Words Remember to leave feedback to get TPT credit to use on future purchases. Go to your My Purchases page and click the Provide Feedback button. Each time you give feedback, TPT gives you feedback credits that you use to lower the cost of your future purchases. I value your feedback greatly. Be the first to know about my new products - they're 50% off in the first 48 hours! It pays to follow me! Look for the green star next to my store logo and click it to become a follower. Or, you can click here! Thank you! Sarah
10 Printables Identify The Nouns Worksheets for Grade 1 - 3, ESL Learners, Homeschool Homework Practice Learn to identify nouns in sentences. 1 PDF file - 8.5 x 11 inches Total 10 pages Print, laminate or use with transparent pvc sheets for long lasting use. Thank you for visiting our store. https://www.etsy.com/shop/WorksheetDigital
Teaching synonyms is a fun way for building vocabulary and allowing for more concise writing skills. Anchor charts and free worksheet printables will help!
A figurative language anchor chart is a great resource to use to teach young students about the different types of figurative language.
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.
Hello Everyone! Thanks for stopping by our blog to see what's happening in our first grade classroom! This week we are working very hard on "retelling"stories we have read. Learning how to retell a story helps our little learners as readers and thinkers. It helps to organize thought, and recognize the thoughts we have during reading. It helps us recognize when our thinking changes throughout our reading. Characteristics of good retelling are: using character names, telling about the setting, including the happenings or plot (beginning, middle, and end), discussing the problem the character is having, and describing how the problem was solved. Today I introduced our "retelling rope." Each symbol represents the parts of a story. I have used retelling ropes before, but revamped this with some better visuals. The kids really get it when they can actually manipulate the parts. This year I wrote a simple poem to go along with our retelling activities. We practiced retelling several stories together using the large retelling rope, and then the kids got to make their own mini one to manipulate during their own reading time. After putting these together, some kids chose to work with others to retell a common story (The Lorax has become a favorite for some reason :) !) We also practiced recording our retelling thoughts. We will continue to work hard on this important skill! When I read a story! For your printable of these pages plus larger visuals to make your own retelling rope click here! :) here's the link to the printable with student rope pics! :) Or click here! :) I love helping kids improve their retelling skills!! Don't forget to retell your own stories with your kids!!! Stop by again soon!! Joyfully! Nancy
Are you working on the 1-1-1 Doubling Rule when it comes to adding inflected endings, such as -ed or -ing? You’ll love these freebies from our Interactive Inflected Endings Pack! *The free printables can be found at the END of this post. Scroll down and find the teal download button. If you know me well, you ... Read More about 1-1-1 Doubling Rule Printables
If you find your head spinning when you think about all the addition strategies that you should be teaching, you are certainly not alone. Although teaching addition is one of the most important math concepts
This resource includes everything you need to teach the use of modal auxiliary verbs (helping verbs) to convey various conditions. Everything you need is here! The materials will allow you to explicitly teach, reinforce, and assess modal auxiliaries. What’s Included: •PowerPoint Lesson (Monday) •Practice Printable (Tuesday) •30 Task Cards (Wednesday) •Sketch Notes (Thursday) •Assessment (Friday) •BONUS: Interactive Notebook Activity Download the preview for a detailed overview of the resource. NOTE: This resource was written based on fourth-grade content standards. However, none of the student materials are labeled with a grade level. This will allow teachers to use this resource across grade levels.
Pronouns can be so tricky to teach and learn! I shared a photo of an anchor chart I made on Instagram for helping students to understand the concept of a pronoun. With help from TeacherspayTeachers - it received a little bit of l-o-v-e! I received some requests for a printable poster, and I am pleased to say you can download it from TpT HERE for FREE! I hope your students like it. I have started a little packet of printables that would be useful to accompany this and hope to have it finished next week. In other news, I have some new charts that will help your students track their progress towards 100 days at school! You can add a sticker to them each day and count forwards and back from 100. Once you get to the 100 days with your students, use this fun free activity to practice counting to 100 by tens! Thanks so much for stopping by today friends!
Hi there! It’s Deb Hanson from Crafting Connections, and I’m going to share a character traits lesson with you today. This lesson is based on one I did a few years ago for a formal observation. My pri
Our Spelling dictation words this week are focusing on plurals. I'm a bit worried about introducing this concept with ELL learners, so I thought I'd make some posters to help guide them. I'll use these with a center activity that I can ask my EA to help out with. Big thanks to Michelle, the 3 AM Teacher, and Nikki at Melonheadz Illustrating, and Mel at From the Pond for the great graphics! Click either of the images for the link to these free posters. - Amanda
Learn everything to make teaching the C vs K rule easy, and get a free anchor chart and multisensory worksheet to support your instruction.