Showing 721–740 of 1627 resultsSorted by latest
-
$1.00Buy Now
10 Experiments / Projects inspired by Edison – Including: A phonograph Pick-Up, The Relay in Action, A Pinhole Camera and 7 others!
-
$3.00Buy Now
Studying the state of Texas? Perhaps doing a unit on Ornithology? This project-based unit is designed to help students study and record information about Texas’s state bird – the Northern Mockingbird! To learn more, see details below or you can preview a similar product here.
-
$1.00Buy Now
There are many benefits to cutting with scissors, including:
- Independent movements of each finger
- Strengthens hand muscles
- Bilateral coordination skills (two-handed coordination)
- Visual motor skills (eye-hand coordination)
- Visual perceptual tasks (directionality)
- Fine motor skills (separation of hand, finger dexterity)
- Promotes grasp pattern
- Focus and attention
-
FREEBuy Now
Here is a free craft idea for those studying the vikings or (really) for anytime!
Using recycled materials from around your home, step by step instructions are given to help you create a viking longship.
-
$12.99Buy Now
Here’s a full year of lapbook and letter learning FUN! Fun, hands-on, creative learning as students study and learn letters and their sounds.
-
$2.00Buy Now
This cross-curricular (Science / Literacy – Writing ) product will have students creating their very own mini-books detailing the life cycle of a flower!
Knowledge students will learn: Students will learn what flowers (plants) need to live and grow (soil, water, sun, air) and how a planted seed becomes a sprout, then a seedling and then a beautiful flower.
Students will:— read the text — draw a picture — write (copy) the written text
-
$1.25Buy Now
Fraction strips to help students learn about fractions (1 whole, 1/2, 1/3, 1/4, 1/5, 1/6, 1/8, 1/10). These strips will help students visualize the equality of fractions.
Preparation: Print and cut.
(Optional: Laminate prior to cutting if you want the strips to last for a long period of time) -
$2.00Buy Now
Here are 3 analogy worksheets with a St. Patrick’s Day theme to get students to think critically! What is an analogy? An analogy is a comparison between two things, comparing two things which are comparable in significant respects.
Here is an example of the type of analogies that are included…Halloween : Orange
St. Patrick’s Day: _____These are multiple choice worksheets. Answer keys included.
-
$2.25Buy Now
Give your students the practice they need to reinforce and demonstrate fluency for addition with sums up to 20. This resource includes 200 problems – 10 worksheets with 20 problems each. Use as ‘normal worksheets‘ or give as timed drills! Answer keys provided.
-
$4.00Buy Now
Students love learning through interactive, hands-on games! This Science resource will help your students learn to identify and classify animals based on the habitat in which they live! Includes 8 habitats and 72 animal cards.
-
$1.50Buy Now
Grid art is a terrific way to practice using coordinates (A1) (D8) which is an important skill to master. Coordinates are a set of values that show an exact position which is used when graphing (Math) and reading maps (Geography). Your students will enjoy discovering the unknown, mystery picture…which happens to be a turkey!
-
$2.00Buy Now
This informational resource on Abraham Lincoln is designed to give 5th – 7th graders practice reading and comprehending content area text. There are two pages of text which will cover Lincoln’s life beginning in Kentucky and progresses through his life touching on his family, his career as a lawyer, his election in 1860 and finally his death by the hands of John Wilkes Booth. After reading both the text and two charts (quick facts and fun facts), students will complete a comprehension worksheet. Finally, there is a fun postcard writing activity asking them to write to President Lincoln.
-
$3.00Buy Now
This Math resource includes number cards with both numbers and number words from 1 to 120 and designed to help students develop number sense knowledge. Students can use to count, sort, match and more. Colorful and butterfly themed. Simply print, laminate and cut out individual cards to use again and again.
Need to add numbers higher than 120? I’ve included a complete set of blank templates so all you’ll need to do is add the numbers and number words.
-
$4.00Buy Now
Students will enjoy this ANATOMY / BIOLOGY / HEALTH resource as they learn about their bones and skeletal system! Using this product, students can create either a lapbook or a Science notebook.
-
$1.00Buy Now
Over 100 suggested book titles to be used with My Teaching Library’s Character Traits Units.
-
$2.50Buy Now
This is a downloadable copy of the book.
About the book: Jane Austen was at the height of her artistic powers when she wrote Emma, the fourth and last of her works to be published during her lifetime. The novel is a lively comedy of manners populated by some of Austen’s most entertaining and memorable characters, and it showcases her technical skills as a mature and experimental writer.About the Author: Jane Austen was an English novelist known primarily for her six major novels, which interpret, critique and comment upon the British landed gentry at the end of the 18th century. Austen’s plots often explore the dependence of women on marriage in the pursuit of favorable social standing and economic security.
-
$3.00Buy Now
This resource, Immigration – Ellis Island – US History Informational Text, has SIX parts: The Early Days, 1892-1954 Gateway to the United States, The Immigrant Experience, Why They Came, From WWII to the Present and Ellis Island Name Change Myth.
In each part, students will have one page of informational text and then a page of multiple choice questions plus one essay question to assess understanding / comprehension. Answer Keys provided.
-
$2.50Buy Now
Students will have a great deal of practice solving division word problems as this resource includes 96 problems designed for 4th-5th grades.
-
$5.00Buy Now
This Monthly Writing Prompts Journal is for the month of December and has been designed to help students think, create and express their own ideas and opinions on a variety of topics.
There is a separate journal page for each day of the month that provides students with writing prompt. Some prompts a light-hearted while others are designed to make students critically think about issues, values, etc.
-
$3.00Buy Now
Leander Stillwell was typical of thousands of Northern boys who answered President Lincoln’s call for volunteers. In January 1862, only a few months past his 18th birthday, and only after he and his father had sowed the wheat, gathered the corn and cut the winter firewood, Stillwell left his family’s log cabin in the Jersey County backwoods of western Illinois and enlisted in Company D of the 61st Illinois Infantry Regiment. For three and a half years he served in the Western theater of operations as a noncommissioned officer before being mustered out as a lieutenant in September 1865. His first—and biggest—battle, Shiloh, was the one he remembered most vividly. He also took part in skirmishes in Tennessee and Arkansas, as well as the Siege of Vicksburg. In The Story of a Common Soldier Stillwell tells of his Army experiences, as critic H. L. Mencken observed admiringly in a review, “in plain, straightforward American, naked and unashamed, without any of the customary strutting and bawling.” Small for his age and given to taking solitary walks in the woods beyond the picket lines, Stillwell was nevertheless an enthusiastic and obedient soldier. “Just a little mortifying,” was Stillwell’s reaction when his regiment missed two battles because it had been left to guard a town in Tennessee. But, he hastened to add, “the common soldier can only obey orders, and stay where he is put, and doubtless it was all for the best.”