This simple worksheet will help your child to look at triangles, and to add the length of each line to provide the perimeter. It is a bit mo…
3rd Grade Daily Math Review: This spiral review is one of the easiest ways to make sure you are covering all of the important math standards that your students need to know. PREVIEW and REVIEW all year long! This is a 2-week sample of my 36-week Daily Math Review. Each week has 20 (“5 a Day”) math skill items that can be done in class or assigned for homework and then discussed/corrected in class the following day. You can get the complete editable 36-week resource here: 3rd Grade Daily Math Spiral Review Skills Included: Rounding to 10 and 100 (3.NBT.A.1) Multiply by Multiples Of 10 (3.NBT.A.3) Add & Subtract within 1000 (3.NBT.A.2) Multiplication & Division Fact Families (3.OA.C.7) Area & Unit Squares (3.MD.C.5; 3.MD.C.6; 3.MD.C.7.A-C) Time Problems (3.MD.A.1) Arithmetic Patterns (3.OA.D.8) Represent & Solve Multiplication & Division (3.OA.A.1-3) Understand & Represent Fractions (3.NF.A.1 & 2) Unknown Factors & Quotients (3.OA.B.6) Measure Lengths (3.MD.B.4 ) Partition Shapes (3.G.A.2) Apply Properties of Multiplication (3.OA.B.5) Equivalent Fractions (3.NF.A.3.A-C) Perimeter (3.MD.D.8) Reason with Shapes & Their Attributes (3.G.A.1) Find Areas of Rectilinear Figures (3.MD.C.7.D) Multiplication & Division Word Problems (3.OA.A.3) Bar Graphs & Picture Graphs (3.MD.B.3) Two-Step Word Problems with Four Operations (3.OA.D.8) Compare Fractions (3.NF.A.3.D) Need Another Grade Level? 3rd Grade Daily Language Spiral Review 4th Grade Daily Language Spiral Review 5th Grade Daily Language Spiral Review 6th Grade Daily Language Spiral Review 7th Grade Daily Language Spiral Review 8th Grade Daily Language Spiral Review Looking for Daily Math Spiral Reviews? 3rd Grade Daily Math Spiral Review 4th Grade Daily Math Spiral Review 5th Grade Daily Math Spiral Review 6th Grade Daily Math Spiral Review Looking for Daily Reading Spiral Reviews? 3rd Grade Daily Math Spiral Review 4th Grade Daily Math Spiral Review 5th Grade Daily Math Spiral Review Stay Connected with Teacher Thrive! ➜SIGN UP for my email newsletters. ➜VISIT me on TeacherThrive.com. ➜FOLLOW me on Facebook. ➜FOLLOW me on Pinterest. ➜FOLLOW me on Instagram. Please read: This is a nonrefundable digital download. Please read the description carefully and examine the preview file before purchasing. © Copyright 2018 M. Tallman. All rights reserved. Permission is granted to copy pages specifically designed for student or teacher use by the original purchaser or licensee. This is intended to be used by one teacher unless additional licenses have been purchased. The reproduction of any other part of this product is strictly prohibited. Copying any part of this product and placing it on the Internet in any form (even a personal/classroom website) is strictly forbidden. Doing so makes it possible for an Internet search to make the document available on the Internet, free of charge, and is a violation of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA).
We are on our 4th week of measurement in my class! PTL the rulers are put away this week because we've moved onto learning about area! After 3
A fun gunslingers and outlaws project to do with 4th, 5th, or 6th graders. Great for Gold Rush lessons!
I’m here to share a fraction anchor chart freebie and a hands-on mini lesson idea I used with my math intervention students. When we started our unit on fractions and did our pre-assessments, I quickly learned that I have a small group of students who need quite a bit of intervention. Unfortunately, many of them...
I love math. It's my favorite time of day and my favorite to teach. Mostly because it seems like every year, my kids come to me and hate m...
Fun activities for teaching 3D shapes (solid figures) for Kindergarten and 1st grade
At the beginning of the year I was getting the above question about a million times a day. I had explained to my students that they always had the option of reading, finishing morning work or practicing their spelling words. Well, those options worked for a while but then the question came back and I knew something needed to change. I took to good ol' Pinterest to get some ideas on brain breaks or activities for fast finishers. After I found a few great things, I used a combination of those ideas and came up with my own system. Introducing the "Sticks Center" Now, when my students are finished and are sitting there with nothing to do, they have the option to read, finish their morning work or "do the sticks." Simple system that works like this. 1. Draw a stick 2. Do what it says Simple right? :) Here is a closer look at the sticks in the can: These are all of their options. The rule I have is they can't look when they draw a stick and whatever they get, they have to do or they go back to their seat and read.("If you're gonna do the sticks, you do 'em right" I say that a lot) If they draw the same stick in a day they don't have to do it twice, they can redraw. Been doing this for about four months and it has been great so far, they enjoy it and are great at completing the activities. Very little work on my part and they don't ask me the dreaded question anymore! Here are short explanations of each stick. Flash Cards: There are two sets of multiplication flashcards (about 20 cards each) they take them back to their seat and go through the cards twice. Word Problems: The students gets to be the teacher and they write me two word problems. I have to solve it by the end of the day. The only rule is, they have to know the answer to the problem! Sometimes I solve it wrong to see if they can catch my mistake... they have no idea and get so proud of themselves when they catch my mistake! Spelling ABC Order: Write that week's spelling words in alphabetical order. Wrap-Ups: Subtraction and multiplication manipulatives. Buy here. Spin Multiplication: Fun interactive multiplication flashcards. Thanks to the teacher who had my room before me! Random Worksheet: This folder is full of random challenging worksheets. They have to draw a random one without looking. There are all kinds of things in there like crosswords, riddles, math challenges, word searches. Book Report: Students get a piece of notebook paper and write a short summary of a book they read recently. Just for Fun Book: I have a tub full of lower-level children's books. I still think those are fun to read so why wouldn't fourth graders? Spelling Story: Students write a story containing all of their spelling words. Rhyming Words: Students pick a word and write as many words that rhyme with it as possible. Write a Short Story: Students write a story no longer that a page about anything they want! Math Challenge Number: I created a worksheet with a different number at the top. They pick one and each worksheet has them adding 15 to the number, subtracting 25, writing the number with words, dividing by 3, and multiplying by 13. Really makes them think! Write Cursive Letters: I don't make my students write in cursive very often but they still need to practice. For this stick they simply have to write their cursive alphabet. Spelling Pictures: Students draw a picture to go along with each spelling word. Spelling 2x Whiteboard: Students grab a whiteboard and write their spelling words two times each. Dictionary Hunt: I love this one! Students use a dictionary to find 3 words they don't know. They write the word, the definition and draw a picture to go with it. Write 20 Verbs: Pretty self explanatory. Write 20 adjectives: Ditto! Alphabet List: Students write their alphabet, then try to come up with a word for each letter. Bonus if they use past vocab or spelling words. Boggle: My kids are OBSESSED with this one right now. I printed out some pre-made boggle lists with 20 letters. They are all trying to beat each other for who can come up with the most words. One of my students has a list of 112 going right now.. she won't quit! I LOVE it! ABC Order Challenge: In one of the trays I have multiple worksheets that have lists of words that start with the same letter and need to be put in alphabetical order. They are tricky and my kiddos like the challenge. Addition Challenge has been replaced with Division Challenge: A large sheet of division problems with remainders. My kids love to do these and see if they can get them all right in one try! This truly has been great for my classroom! It makes my kiddos use their brains all day long, no sitting doing nothing and a lot less getting into trouble in between activities! Try it, you'll like it!
Back to School Activities that are great for an online classroom or inside a classroom.
Fun ideas for teaching adjectives and descriptive writing that are just right for October and Halloween week in the primary classroom.
Our theme this week was "Our Five Senses" and we focused on the letter B and the shape circle. We read this week: Ferdinand by Munro Leaf Paddington by Mark Brown Paddington and the Busy Bee Carnival by Mark Brown The Very Hungry Caterpillar by Eric Carle Stellaluna by Janelle Cannon Our question of the week was "What is something that you are really good at?" For our theme of the week, we talked a lot about our senses, what they help us do and why we need them. We made texture collages: This week is full of some of my favorite activities from the year, these texture collages being one of them. I love how each one is different, and the kids are so proud of the texture choices that they make. AND they look amazing on the wall. We tasted sweet, salty and sour things, and the kids had to vote on their favorite taste. (They think it's awesome when they get to eat things as part of a project.) We tested their sense of smells with this project where I asked them to describe the things that they were smelling. I used perfume, shampoo, chocolate syrup, pickle juice, toothpaste and (the most tricky) water. Out on our schools nature trail we talked about the different sounds that we could hear. We did this at various points of our walk, close to the school, by the parking lot and deeper in the woods. Lastly we did another activity with the sense of touch. I set up my table with different texture objects. I used flour, rice, oatmeal, sand and a scrubbing sponge. As the students felt each thing, I asked them to describe what they were feeling. It was hard to get them away from just telling them what the items were and to use describing words, but we got there in the end. For our shape of the week, the kids practiced drawing circles with this cool worksheet of circles and another with squares and circles. We also worked on recognizing circles out of other shapes. We talked a lot about things that are circles. We sang the song "This is a circle, this is a circle. How can you tell? How can you tell? It goes round and round, No end can be found, It's a circle, it's a circle." -Found Here For our letter activities, we used our handwriting sheet for the letter B, the sheet that helps work on letter recognition, both were mentioned in the "All About Me" post. The students also wrote in their journals for the letter B. We turned B's into Bees! After we read Ferdinand we all made our own bees. This was a great way for the kids to practice their cutting skills. I love how each child's bee is different. Another project that we did (another one of my favorites all year) is the Boat Builder activity. I love it because I give the students the materials and the end result is something completely their own. Each child got a piece of white paper, a square of brown paper, a skinny black rectangle, scissors, a glue stick and crayons with the instruction of make me a boat however you want to. (They love when I say that). If I get "I don't know how..." or " I can't do it.." We go back a few steps and talk about boats.. what do they look like, where do we find them, what do they do, and then the creative juices start flowing. Here's the end results! Love it! For our Alphabet wall we made butterflies with coffee filters and water color paint. After the children painted their coffee filters and they dried I used small pipe cleaners to turn them into butterflies! And with the B addition, our wall now looks like... Our list for words beginning with B's was very impressive. Here it is! As a side note, teachers always need to be flexible, and as such, it was in the best interest of the flow of the classroom to switch two centers, the library and dramatic play center. And I'm always telling the kids to make sure that they turn off the water faucet after getting a drink or washing their hands. I tell them to "Save the water for the fishes, so I painted a mural for above the sink to remind them. Up next week: The letter C, Triangles and "Our Feelings".
Are you ready for the month of March? We are all geared up for some fun learning this month! Our March NO PREP packets are done and we are ready to go!
When you need printable or digital second grade math worksheets, Lucky Little Learners has you covered! Learn more about our Measurement, Time, Money & Data worksheets!
These fun drawing pages are a great way for kids to see symmetry. There are 10 different finish the picture pages that you can print and use over and over.
Dreaming of taking off to Italy? The most overwhelming thing can be planning where & how you're getting around so I have my three weeks in Italy mapped out!
NO PREP! PRINT AND GO! These logical consequences ensure that misbehaviors are met equitably and fairly. This intervention is great for students who: Push back against consequences. By giving students choice in the consequence, it increases the likelihood that they will both accept and participate in the consequence. Have with behavioral needs. This product includes: One set of class expectations 8 behaviors, with 2 consequence choices for each behavior 3 non-negotiable behaviors with consequences Reflection sheet (a consequence choice for several of the behaviors) COLOR and BLACK AND WHITE print options Please be sure to leave a review!
In an unprecedented act of blogging fanciness I decided to make a video documenting how I create the woodgrain texture (so thoroughly p...
Here are my most favorite experiments I've found for a three to four-year-old.
Elevate your playground with Log Hop from Playworld. Premier outdoor playground equipment. Browse our products and request a quote today!
Looking for fun Dinosaur Preschool Theme Activities? You will love this set of Preschool Dinosaur Centers and No-Prep Worksheets.
You’ve probably tried all the commonly recommended ways to quiet a chatty class, only to be left frustrated by the lack of results. If you’re anything like me, you’ve tried everyt…
A portfolio which shows my mindless drawings, doodles and patterns
After Jack and Annie spent an afternoon in the Amazon rainforest dodging mangos and facing perhanas, crocodiles, vampire bats, and army a...
Wondering how to sequence grammar instruction? You'll want this list that scaffolds grammar lessons so that one skill builds upon the next.
Let’s teach about the reflection and refraction of light for 5th grade. Even though this can be a confusing topic, your students will reach mastery in no time with these interactive activities for reflection and refraction, as well as absorption. What are reflection and refraction? I’ll be honest; before I started teaching 5th grade, the ... Read more
A portfolio which shows my mindless drawings, doodles and patterns
Introducing our Fingerprint Detective Worksheet - a perfect tool for young aspiring investigators who are curious about the science behind fingerprints! This engaging worksheet provides an interactive learning experience that will captivate their attention and develop their understanding of this fascinating subject.
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