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Monday, 25 November 2013

The Power of Popsicle Sticks!

Posted on 02:00 by the great khali
It's Deb back with you today...

What's the last professional book that you read that truly impacted your students’ experiences in your classroom?  The answer to that question for me is Embedded Formative Assessment by Dylan Wiliam.
Not a cover that really grabs you and shouts “READ ME!”, huh?  When I found it in my school mailbox, I was quite tempted to set it aside.  However, we had a new ESL director at the time, and she was the one who had sent it to me to read.  I must admit, I wanted to set a favorable impression with her, so I decided that I should at least take the book home over the weekend and skim it...enough to be able to comment on a few topics.  Besides that, in her original email about this book, she had really sung its praises. Was it really all that?

So, home it went with me that Friday afternoon.  Saturday morning, I stepped onto my elliptical machine and balanced the book on the stand so that I could "multitask" while reading.  Wow, was I ever in for a shock!  This book really resonated with me.  I actually couldn’t put it down!  In fact, I finished the book by the end of the weekend! (Keep in mind that I had a 7-year-old and 4-year-old at the time, so stealing time to read at that point in my life was a daunting task…. Who am I kidding?!  It still is!)

In Chapter 3, Wiliam describes a classroom where a handful of dedicated students constantly raise their hands and contribute to the discussion, while the remainder of students in the classroom doodle, daydream, or "fly under the radar". The ultra-engaged students perform extremely well in school, as one would expect.  They are discussing the topic and interacting with the learning materials. Unfortunately, the performance of the disengaged students is suffering, as one would expect. Furthermore, the achievement gap is widening in this type of classroom.

While reading, I found myself thinking about the upper elementary classrooms in which I co-taught.  I had a strong hunch that the low engagement levels Wiliam described was nearly identical to what would be observed in the classrooms I taught in every day.  When I returned to school that Monday, my hunch was 100% verified.  A handful of students constantly raised their hands, while the other students either sat quietly or very obviously “spaced out”.

The very next day, my co-teachers allowed me to put some of Wiliam’s engagement strategies into action, and we noticed a remarkable difference immediately.  Allow me to share a couple of these strategies with you today! Below I describe the #1 change we made that seemed to significantly improve student engagement during lessons.

#1- The Power of the Popsicle Sticks!!

I bet many of you are saying to yourselves, “I have a cup like this in my classroom already!” Of the four classrooms I co-taught in that year, three of them already had a cup of Popsicle sticks with one student’s name printed on each stick.  However, we either weren’t using them correctly or we weren't using them with enough frequency.

We started using the cup CONSTANTLY.  (I’m serious…. We even instituted a “no-hands-in-the-air” policy.  Students didn’t need to bother raising their hands; we drew Popsicle sticks instead of calling on students raising their hand.)  Whenever we asked a question, we would provide wait time (often giving students a chance to talk to a partner), and then draw a Popsicle stick and announce the name. That student was then charged with answering the question.

I admit, I got a kick out of picking up the cup full of sticks at the beginning of a lesson and giving it a little rattle.  Kids would immediately sit up and look around.  It was a nonverbal way of saying “Pay attention…. your name may be called on to answer a question.”

Yes, the “pass” reply was still an option, but if a student passed, the question would eventually be bounced back to them and they would be asked to repeat the correct answer that another student had just given.

One fifth grade teacher I worked with eventually created two cups of popsicle sticks.  She kept one on her desk, and one on the other side of the room.  With that, at least one of the cups could easily be spotted and picked up at any given time.

Have you implemented Popsicle sticks to increase student engagement?  I'd love to hear your comments on their effectiveness in your classroom!

Are you interested in learning about another strategy?  I've posted another one at my blog today, and it includes a FREEBIE.  I invite you to stop by!  I will also blog about this more in the future.
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Posted in Crafting Connections, engagement | No comments

Friday, 22 November 2013

Grading Vs. Noticing

Posted on 03:30 by the great khali
My post today is going to be about something that hit me several years ago, and it is very timely because these days schools are hounded about assessments, teachers are hounded about assessments, students are hounded about assessments, and parents are hounded about assessments. I agree that we over-assess our students, but I do feel that assessments have a special place in the classroom. Used the right way, assessments can allow teachers to see what students are or are not understanding……but only if we take the time to NOTICE.

When I began my teaching career, I would tote home loads of papers to grade. Grade, grade, grade. My time away from the classroom was not spent doing things I wanted to do because I had ALL.THESE.PAPERS.TO.GRADE. What was I grading? Daily work, homework, tests, quizzes. Then after I graded the papers, I would record the grade (back then it was numerical, now it is either a 1, 2, 3, or 4…which a 4 means perfect. Something I have  huge beef with, but that's for another post…I mean, who is perfect? I have mastered subtraction with regrouping, but I still make errors in my checkbook. So does that mean I shouldn't earn a 4?) Anyways, I record the grade, sent the papers home, students returned them, and I stuck them in their portfolios. I did look at the grades. I saw who had failed, who barely passed, and who obviously didn't need to spend anymore time on that skill. And I used the grades to make small groups: those who needed a lot of help, those who needed some help, and those who could learn new skills.

Flash forward a few years, and I was in my master's program taking an assessment course. And in this course, the professor said why give your students a whole page of addition with regrouping to see if they know how to do it? Give them 5 problems. That is enough to see if they have learned it. And as I thought back, I felt so dumb. Why didn't I realize that myself? Probably because my schooling had consisted of a whole page of addition with regrouping problems as a test. And some teachers say, "Well, if you only give 5 problems, it will be hard for them to make an A if they miss one. They need more problems so they can make a couple of mistakes and still get a higher grade." GRADE. Assessments shouldn't be for grades, they should be for understanding what a student doesn't get. They should be for figuring out the mistakes a student is making. I began to realize that I needed to take the time to NOTICE my students' work, NOTICE my students' thinking, NOTICE what they can and can't do. And, for those students who don't know how to add with regrouping, they are getting an entire page of problems that they will do wrong, and it will just further cement the wrong way in their minds, making a much harder habit to break and replace with a correct method (notice how I said A a correct method and not THE correct method….many ways to solve math problems besides using the standard algorithm). And for those students who already know how to do it, how bored out of their minds are they going to be to do an entire page of problems they already know how to do? Talk about busy work.

I vowed from that moment on to change the way I assess. Now some assessments you can't change, no matter how much you want. But you do have control over the assessments you create and give your students. Namely those formative assessments. Those quick checks to see if a student gets it or not, to see if they are ready to move on to a harder skill or if they need reteaching. My quick checks (as I called them) were going to be just that: quick.

Let's look at the difference between grading and noticing. Grade each row of problems. How did this student do?

1st row- Zero correct. Now notice what this student did. Quickly we go from thinking that this student can't add to realizing this student knows basic facts, but does not understand place value when adding.

2nd row- Two correct. Not too bad, but still failing. Now notice what this student did. We realize that this student knows basic facts including those that require regrouping as indicated by getting 17-9 = 8 correct, but this students doesn't understand how to extend using place value to subtract larger numbers.

3rd row- Two correct. Again, not great but not horrible. Now notice what this student did. This one may be a little trickier. If you teach a grade when student begin to learn multiplication, you probably know exactly what this student is doing. If we grade this row, we will think that the student needs more practice with subtraction and addition. But if we notice, we see that we just need to spend a few extra minutes with this students to straighten out the difference between adding and subtracting with zero versus multiplying with zero. This student has generalized the zero property of multiplication with addition and subtraction. Reteaching this student addition and subtraction would do him no good. However, doing a quick lesson or reminder about how adding or subtracting with zero does not equal zero would be a far better use of time.

When I finally began noticing my students' quick checks and not just grading them, I became a much more effective teacher, and my students began to progress and excel like they never had before. Why? Because I was noticing their errors. Instead of looking to see if they got it right, I began looking to see if they got it wrong, and, more importantly, WHY they got it wrong. I began noticing and stopped grading. I began giving no more than 4-5 problems during a quick check. Four or five problems is plenty to see a pattern in errors or to make sure they understand. I didn't spend time reteaching a skill when they didn't need reteaching. Sometimes all they needed was a quick one-on-one meeting with me to discuss their mistake.

What do you think about noticing versus grading? I would love to hear your thoughts and stories!

Until next time!

Heather
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Posted in 2 Brainy Apples, assessment, grading versus noticing | No comments

Wednesday, 20 November 2013

Interactive Notebooks and the Common Core

Posted on 03:30 by the great khali

Hello friends!  Jen Bengel here from Out of This World Literacy.  I hope everyone is having a wonderful November with their students!  

http://www.teacherspayteachers.com/Store/Jen-Bengel

As teachers, we all know that one of the best ways to learn is through active involvement.  Students learn best through creating, making connections, and thinking critically.

Interactive lessons and activities are great ways to keep students actively engaged in their learning.

Most of us are accountable for teaching the Common Core State Standards to our students.  But, HOW we teach the standards is usually up to us, the teachers.

Interactive Notebooks in Guided Reading
I have found that using interactive notebooks to teach the reading informational and reading literature standards is one of the best ways for students to learn. 

Some Reasons Interactive Notebooks are so Effective:

1. Students are actively involved in their learning.
2. All learning is kept in one spot and easily organized.
3. It is easy for students to review, and reflect on their new thinking.
4. The lessons are a great way for teachers to quickly assess if students understood the lesson at the end of class.
5. Students can easily share their new learning with other classmates.

 

Different Reading Times Interactive Notebooks can Be Used:

1. To introduce a lesson during a whole group mini lesson
2. As support during a guided reading lesson
3. Working with partners
4. Working in centers
5. During independent reading
6. During a literature circle
7. To share thinking at the end of a lesson
Talking About New Learning with Interactive Notebooks

Ways to Use Interactive Notebooks:

1. Teach the lesson to the whole group
2. Support the skill through guided reading
3. Ask students to try the skill during independent reading
4. Have students work with a partner 
5. Conference individually with students during independent reading, asking them questions about their new learning and noticing their work in interactive notebooks.
6. Gather back together as a class at the end of the lesson.  Ask students to talk with a partner about what they did in their notebooks.  Have some of the students share their thinking with the class.

Interaction Between the Student and the Text

To learn more about teaching the Reading Common Core State Standards through the use of interactive notebooks, click on the links below:

 

Grade 2
Grade 3
Grade 4
Grade 5

Also, I wanted to share that today is my birthday!  I will NOT reveal my age, but I will say that I am having a one-day sale to help celebrate!  You can click on the image below to visit my store and save 20% off all my resources today (November 20).
                                 It's my birthday on November 20.  And to celebrate I am offering 20% off all my resources for one day only!
I wish everyone a very wonderful week and Happy Thanksgiving!!

Jen
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Tuesday, 19 November 2013

Free Thanksgiving Parts of Speech Cards!

Posted on 02:00 by the great khali
Happy November, friends! It's Blair from One Lesson at a Time, here to bring you a fun Thanksgiving freebie!
Like many teacher-bloggers out there, I am officially a clip art ADDICT. Can't get enough. I love JC Sweetpea's clip art and when I saw her option to "buy the store" - I pounced. A girl can never have TOO much clip art! I wanted to get to work using her beautiful art  right away so I created this fun little set of Thanksgiving word cards. They are organized by part of speech:
One reason I pre-sorted them by parts of speech is because it facilitates one of my FAVORITE word card activities: Silly Sentences! Super easy - basically dump all the words on the rug or a table and let the kiddos go to town. They can make the sentences as silly as they want to, as long as they are grammatically correct. I also allow students to change the word to make it fit by pluralizing singular nouns, putting present tense verbs in past tense, etc. Always a big crowd pleaser. 

Here are 10 other ideas for ways to use the cards with upper elementary students:

1) Make a Sentence: Separate the cards into decks for each part of speech. Have students choose one card from each deck and construct a sentence.

2) Vocabulary charades

3) Practice putting words in alphabetical order

4) Words-in-a-word hunt: Choose a card. See how many other words you can create using the letters in that word.

5) Dictionary practice: Have students identify unknown words and look them up in a dictionary.

6) Interactive Word Wall: Post the words on a bulletin board or other display area. As students encounter the words in their independent reading, they add an index card under the word. On the index card, write the title of the book, the page number, and the sentence that includes the word.

7) Act it out: Students work in groups of 3-4. Each person chooses a card and the students work together to act out a scene that includes each word.

8) Find the value of the word: Create a simple Letter-Number code (A=312, B=297, etc.). Have students find the value of each word by finding the sum of the letters.

9) Word work: Write all the singular nouns in plural form. Write all the present-tense verbs in past tense. Write the comparative and superlatives forms of each adjective.

10) Synonyms and Antonyms: Find synonyms and antonyms for each word. 

If you want to download these free Thanksgiving Word Cards, just click on the picture below!


If you are looking for more Thanksgiving grammar ideas, make sure to check out my Thanksgiving Grammar Packet! Click on the pictures below to find it at my TpT store:


If you are a planner and already thinking ahead to winter break (and who can blame ya?), I have a Winter Holidays version as well! Click on the pictures to check it out:


Thanks so much for stopping by ATUE today! Make sure to head over to my blog, One Lesson at a Time, to check out my Thanksgiving FREEBIES Linky Party - some awesome resources have been linked up! Happy Turkey Day!
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Posted in Blair Turner, FREEBIE, grammar, One Lesson at a Time, thanksgiving | No comments

Sunday, 17 November 2013

Dabbling With Informational Texts

Posted on 21:00 by the great khali
We are getting started with our big unit on informational texts (you know--what USED to be called "nonfiction"!), and I thought I'd share a misconception that I noticed many students had when we first started talking about this genre.

We started by brainstorming what we knew about informational texts and I got lots of what you would expect...

  • "true stuff"
  • photographs
  • captions
  • tables of contents
  • an index and glossary

You get the picture.

So...as someone who is more than a little addicted to looking at books, I knew very well that MANY informational texts do NOT have all or even SOME of these features, so I decided to run a little test with my class.  I went to our library and checked out about 100 informational books to keep in our room for the next few weeks so I could really immerse the kids in the genre.  Kids BY NATURE love nonfiction, so I looked to get a huge assortment of books on topics from tarantulas to ballet to monster trucks.

I then went through and deliberately picked some that did NOT look like "traditional" information books--books that didn't have the expected text features as listed above.


These books had everything from drawings to cartoon characters to what one might call "narrative" format.  We looked at all of them together and worked to see how sometimes information texts might not look the way we expect them to look.

I then plopped piles of books on each desk group and asked the students to spend some time together looking at the books and checking to see what features they included and which they did not.  They sorted the books into piles of "traditional" information books that they felt were obviously nonfiction and those that were trickier!



The students had a blast, realized that "narrative nonfiction" and graphic picture books very well might be informational texts, and found a bunch of new books they were super excited to read!  

It was a great way to get them thinking critically about what this genre involves--and we will be digging in much deeper over the next weeks!



www.theteacherstudio.com
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Posted in informational texts, Meg Anderson, Reading, The Teacher Studio | No comments

Friday, 15 November 2013

Abstract Noun Poetry- Making It Concrete!

Posted on 03:00 by the great khali

 Howdy Friends!
     Mr. Hughes here from Created by MrHughes and An Educator's Life blog. As many of know, I am the writing/language arts teacher for the 4th, 5th, and 6th grade students of my school (I also teach science to each of those grades...phew...).
     This is the second year of do rotations with our students and so I have been working with a majority of my students for two years now. Can I just tell you how much I love having the same students for three years in a row. I get to know them so well and I know where I need to start each year with each student.
     Well, last year, we had to learn just the basic parts of speech! Yes, I am talking about nouns, verbs, etc. Nothing extra or fancy, just the simple definitions.
     I started with nouns again this year with my 6th graders, only this year we are focusing on concrete and abstract nouns. It took a bit of work, but nearly all my students can now tell me the difference between a concrete noun (a noun that you can see, hear, smell, touch, and/or taste) and abstract noun (also known as Idea nouns).
     I wanted to push their thinking a bit more, so I found a poetry form that required the students to present an abstract noun using concrete ideas. It was interesting to watch and listen to the students as they worked to define an idea with tangible things. Below are several examples. Some are definitely better than others but I love how they turned out. Take a minute and read over a few of these.







     After I was able to collect all 22 of them, I hung them on a bulletin board in my classroom. I have had many students from my other classes read them and discuss them (during breaks and recess time). Because of the unique choices many students made, there have been many lively debate/discussions- Something I consider a total bonus!

     If YOU are interested in trying this poetry form with your kiddos, it's easy. Have each student chose an abstract noun and write it at the top. Next, have the students use the following format:

(Abstract Noun)

Smells like...
Feels like...
Tastes like...
Sound like...
and Lives in...

I had the students write and draw on 9 x 12 art paper. I also required them to use color and provide small illustrations for each of the concrete words. (You can also Google abstract poetry forms if you would like other options).

I hope you will take your students on a noun adventure and give this poetry a whirl!

Cheers!
-Mr. Hughes
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Posted in Abstract Nouns, Concrete Nouns, MrHughes, Poetry | No comments

Thursday, 14 November 2013

Free Educational iPad App: Educreations

Posted on 03:00 by the great khali


Have you tried Educreations yet?

At the beginning of last year I started a classroom blog that was tailored more to my fourth graders than to their parents.  I posted photos of anchor charts as well as educational online games to keep them coming back to it on a weekly basis.  Then, later in the year, when the PTO bought all the teachers at my school iPads, I was determined to put mine to good use.  I wanted an app that was going to enhance my instruction in a new way, and that's when I found Educreations. 

Educreations is like recording yourself teaching a whole class lesson on a white board, except your audience won't see you.  They'll hear your voice and see what you draw.  You can also embed pictures into your presentation, and on the iPad you can add text (typed) instead of writing words. 

It takes a little bit of practice to find the possibilities and limitations to the program.  For example, I love that it lets me pause my recording so I can collect my thoughts after each slide.  However I don't love that if I make a mistake in the recording I can't go back and redo it!  There have been a few updates to Educreations, such as the addition of an eraser tool (because users begged for it) and you can now use Educreations on your computer as well!  I love a product that is regularly updated based on user feedback.  It's rare when a product is FREE.  That's right, it's a free app. 

So how has this changed my teaching?  Well, although I'm not sure my district would approve of going the flipped classroom route (hard to do when not every child has internet access at home) it really has helped my kids learn some tricky, multistep processes in the following ways:

  1. Kids love anything novel.  Sitting in front of the computer (no, I don't have a projector either) for 4 minutes to watch a video is more interesting than the other 179 math lessons at the rug listening to me.  Suddenly no one needs to go get a drink of water!
  2. If a child needs reteaching, all they need to do is go back over to the computer with a small group of students and rewatch it.  Obviously I am available to answer questions, however sometimes, as one boy told me this week, "I just want to watch it a bunch of times until it REALLY sinks in!"
  3. Two words:  Sub Plans!
  4. Two words:  Homework help.
  5. If a student is absent of course they can watch it at home and learn without spreading their germs around!

If you're not sure you're up to creating videos, keep the following in mind:

  1. Don't feel you have to make a video on EVERYTHING.  I started out with the idea of 2 math procedures that I really wanted kids to see in action because historically their written notes just weren't enough.  This year I added another video for a third concept.
  2. You don't have to make videos for your class to benefit from Educreations.  The site is searchable, which means there are TONS of free, public presentations available.  You can show them in class or link up on your classroom website.  Once you start finding great videos you'll get a good sense of what you really want in a video, and then you can rethink the idea of creating your own.

To get you started, here is a video I created to help my fourth graders multiply 2 digit numbers by 2 digit numbers.   

It's a nice lead in to some hands on practicein class (this is a paid for product).  By keeping the direct instruction short, sweet, and engaging, we can get into the practicing quicker, which I love.  The work you put in creating or researching videos will make your job during class time much easier; you can focus more on the kids' learning than the subject matter itself.

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Posted in Amber Thomas, Amber Thomas's Classroom Favorites, Educreations, iPad apps | No comments
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  • Fourth Grade Studio
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  • fraction equivalents
  • Fraction of a set
  • fractions
  • free
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  • FREEBIE
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  • Friday Free Writing
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  • Gabrielle Dixon
  • game
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  • grammar
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  • Heather LeBlanc
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  • How to Clean Your Desk
  • hundreds charts
  • Hunter's Teaching Tales
  • I Love My Classroom
  • idioms
  • IEP Cheat Sheet
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  • INB
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  • informational texts
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  • integrating content
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  • intro
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  • Jamie Riggs
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  • Journey Through the Text
  • Kate's Classroom Cafe
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  • kindness
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  • Labels- Learn With Leah
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  • Language Arts
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  • leadership
  • Leah Fullenkamp
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  • learning goals
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  • Lesson of a Story
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  • life science
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  • linky
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  • literacy
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  • logic
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  • lowest terms
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  • Martin Luther King
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  • matching
  • math
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  • Math in Focus
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  • measure to the nearest quarter inch
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  • Memories
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  • multiplication
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  • national archives
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  • Number Lines
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  • podcasting
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  • problem solving
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  • Rachael Parlett
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  • real world
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  • RebeccaHallock
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  • Short Stories
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  • sight words
  • Sign Up Board
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  • Social skills
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  • solar system
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  • spaghetti and meatballs for all
  • Spain
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  • Square Numbers
  • squares
  • St. Patrick's Day
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  • standards-based
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  • summer
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  • teaching
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  • teaching elementary math
  • Teaching Special Thinkers
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  • team building
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  • technology
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  • testing
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  • thank you
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  • the balanced classroom
  • The Brown Bag Teacher
  • The Peanut Gallery
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  • Theme
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  • thesaurus
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  • Vertebrates
  • video
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  • Vista Print
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  • Warm Ups
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  • White Boards
  • Whole class game
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  • Wild About Fifth Grade
  • word problems
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  • writers workshop
  • writing
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  • Writing Workshop
  • Yearn to Learn
  • YouTube

Blog Archive

  • ▼  2014 (62)
    • ▼  April (13)
      • Guest Post, Beyond Traditional Math: Common Core ...
      • Easy Fraction of a Set Game
      • Introducing Division Concepts
      • Testing Time is Upon Us!
      • Fun, Quick, and Easy Reading Comprehension Games f...
      • Guest Post: Kimberlee Fulbright, Close Reading J...
      • I Have... Who has.... {Freebie + Giveaway!}
      • Number Line Frustration? Walk the Walk!
      • Creating polygons in the classroom
      • Bringing Earth Day into the Classroom
      • Guest Post Lucy Ravitch: How Decimals and Fractio...
      • Test Incentives and Motivational Ideas
      • Guest Post from The Brown Bag Teacher: Augmented ...
    • ►  March (16)
    • ►  February (15)
    • ►  January (18)
  • ►  2013 (241)
    • ►  December (15)
    • ►  November (18)
    • ►  October (24)
    • ►  September (19)
    • ►  August (15)
    • ►  July (20)
    • ►  June (20)
    • ►  May (25)
    • ►  April (19)
    • ►  March (21)
    • ►  February (18)
    • ►  January (27)
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the great khali
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