Showing posts with label Interactive PowerPoint. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Interactive PowerPoint. Show all posts

Sunday, October 7, 2018

Which is 10 More? Halloween fun with PowerPoint and Google Classroom™

I love cute friendly Halloween activities.  Here is an adding ten more interactive PowerPoint resource with an adorable adorable friendly little witch.  Students add 10 to two-digit numbers. 
                                                                 
                                   

Kids will love the cute theme.  With this easy to use self-correcting, interactive PowerPoint activity, they will be improving their mental math skills and their computer dexterity at the same time.
This activity is also available for Use with Google Classroom™

                                                 

Thursday, October 4, 2018

Friendly Trick or Treat Interactive PowerPoint Doubles and Doubles Plus One

I love cute friendly Halloween activities.  Here is a doubles and doubles plus one with adorable children dressed for trick or treating. With this activity students practice doubles and the near doubles of doubles plus one.


 
Kids will love the cute theme.  With this easy to use self-correcting, interactive PowerPoint activity, they will be improving their mental math skills and their computer dexterity at the same time.
Visit Learning Harbor® Resources for Teachers for more great resources and check out the FREE Growing Learning Harbor® Library.

Tuesday, May 15, 2018

Subtraction Within 10 Back to School Theme Interactive PowerPoint




This interactive PowerPoint has a cute school kids theme that works for back to school or any time of the school year.  


Students will have fun subtracting within 10 while playing this interactive PowerPoint game.  This subtraction activity can be used with any computer or device that runs PowerPoint. 

Students will click on a random symbol on the home page and be taken to a subtraction problem. Students work the problem, record their answer, and check their work by clicking the picture next to their answer choice on the slide. If the student clicks on a correct answer, a slide with “Way to Go!” will pop up and the student will hear applause. If the student clicks on an incorrect answer a slide with “Oops Better Luck Next Time” will pop up and the student will hear a breaking glass sound effect.

CCSS 1.OA.C.6 Add and subtract within 20, demonstrating fluency for addition and subtraction within 10.

Sunday, May 13, 2018

A Fantastic Free Resource


Spend Less Time Preparing Lessons
Are you spending hours each week planning and preparing lessons?  Do you want to save time searching for and creating lesson materials?  Join our Growing Free Resource Library.  Don’t spend time scouring the web for the best online materials to incorporate into your lessons.  Find top quality, printable, hands on materials as well as interactive PowerPoint games and games for use with Google Drive™ and Google Classroom™ that align with grade-level standards to teach and supplement lessons.
We’ve compiled an ever-growing library of resources for teachers, so that all this great content is accessible in one place.  There is a wide range of materials including seasonal and themed resources such as Earth Day, summer and basketball. You’ll find resources of many kinds for math and literacy.  Now you can spend less time searching for and creating your own lesson materials and have more time to enjoy the other parts of your busy life.
Growing Free Library
New resources are added frequently. Subscribe to this totally free library and you will receive an email when new resources are added. Or check back often to find new resources.
Free Printable Classroom Resources
The library has printable task cards in both traditional and clip card styles designed to meet many different math and literacy standards for grades K-2.  When laminated the cards can be used many times by small groups and individuals.  They can also be used year after year.  Students can show their answers in a variety of ways on the clip style cards.  You can choose for your students to mark their answers with paper clips, clothes pins, counters or dry-erase markers. They are great for early finishers, enrichment, review, small group games, centers, and more.
Free Interactive Resources to use with Google Classroom™ and PowerPoint
The self-correcting PowerPoint games work well on interactive whiteboards for whole class instruction.  They also lend themselves to individual practice using any device that runs PowerPoint.  Resources for use with Google Classroom™ and Google Drive™ are also available in the library.  The interactive resources are self-correcting.  They can be used for whole class lessons as well as small groups, centers and stations.  Individuals or small groups of students can play the games as part of computer time.  Once the students have learned the basics of playing these games, these resources can be used as a fun activity for early finishers.
How to Access the Library
The Library is stored in a password protected Dropbox file.  To enter the library, click on the Access the Library link.  Submit your email address, and check for the confirmation email.  After receiving your confirmation email, click on the Learning Harbor logo to be take to the Dropbox file.  Use the password provided in the email to get fabulous free teacher resources. School emails may be blocked by your district.  Please use a personal email.
This library is a windfall for elementary teachers.  Gain access to pre-made, free resources that you can easily incorporate into your lessons, saving you time and money.  It’s all right there…just choose the resource you want, download it and teach!
To see more about the Free Resource Library just click the link below


Friday, November 3, 2017

Thanksgiving Traditions and Two Fun Classroom Resources for K - 2

by Learning Harbor™ Resources for Teachers
for grades K - 2


Thanksgiving has some pretty interesting traditions, from Pie Eating Contests to 5K Turkey Trots, this holiday is filled with more than just stuffing! It all started way back with the pilgrims. In Plymouth, Massachusetts, November of 1621, the Wampanoag tribe shared their food and their cooking with the English Pilgrims, who shared their food cache and cooking styles in return. It was a time to celebrate the autumnal harvest. Life was good. Or, well, as good as it can be in 1621. Wild game was definitely on the menu for that first Thanksgiving. We’re unsure whether it was turkey, but that fowl was plentiful near where the festivities took place. There were root vegetables and, surprisingly, a fair amount of fish and fruit, such as shellfish and berries. Although there could have been a turnip or two, there were definitely no potatoes. They didn’t become a sustainable crop in the new colonies until much later. And as for that pumpkin pie, that came later. With no butter, wheat flour, or even an oven, pie was out of the question.

Today we know the menu must-haves: turkey, potatoes and pie. These are staples among Thanksgiving fare. They grace the table every fourth Thursday in November. Seventeenth-century citizens kept up the custom; George Washington named a November 26 as a day of thanks. In 1864, Lincoln made Thanksgiving a Federal Holiday the last Thursday in November. In 1939, there was a fair amount of scuttlebutt over which Thursday was the Thursday to celebrate Thanksgiving. Finally in 1941, FDR made the fourth Thursday in November a National Holiday. The day has accumulated a fair amount of other traditions since then.

These days, Thanksgiving typically involves travel. In fact, air travel for Thanksgiving is the busiest time of the year for most airlines and airports. The Sunday after Thanksgiving is projected to see 2.88 million people take to the skies in 2017. The Wednesday before Thanksgiving will also super busy. Plane, train, or automobile, we take to the air, rails, highways in order to get the friends and relatives in time for the feast! There are other thanksgiving traditions that stem from the feast. It’s the cracking of the wishbone. Every turkey has a wishbone. Tradition has it that the wishbone is removed, dried and then wished on. Whoever gains the larger piece of the wishbone will see their wish come true so says the legend. This cracking or snapping of the wishbone, in general, goes back to ancient Roman times.

In more recent times, one tradition has proven to be most beneficial to the turkey! It’s the Official Presidential Pardoning of the Turkey. Reagan treats his gift of a turkey to a long and happy life on a farm. The first President Bush continued the legacy, and so on. But the eating (or not eating!) of the turkey isn’t the only activity on the actual holiday of Thanksgiving. Many people will donate their time to soup kitchens or other non-profits in order to give back and give thanks. Some run in road races, having raised funds for others. While still others work the holiday, in order to let coworkers spend time with their family. One set of coworkers have been working the holiday for almost 100 years. The Macy’s Thanksgiving Day parade is hosted by Macy’s employees who march through the streets of NYC in order to bring floats and fun down to Macy’s landmark store at Herald Square. Decade after decade, colorful balloons have flown past the skyscrapers as the people line the streets for a glimpse of the parade. Floats and Broadway show numbers traipse down the avenues until they meet Macy’s Herald Square to applause and cheers. Many watch from home on television. The spectacle is grand and fun as Santa Claus makes his way down the parade route at the very end.

Thanksgiving traditions give us the perfect opportunity to share our pleasures and our gratitude with family and friends. We gather, we feast, we play, and we applaud the beginning of winter and all its glorious festivities are announced. But let us not forget the preamble, the day of giving thanks for all we have and all we can share.

In the classroom, we teach young students to sing songs about turkeys and pilgrims.  Turkeys are very popular in classrooms in November, and students love playing learning games that include turkeys and pilgrims.  Here are two products, one for kindergarten students and one for first and second graders to help celebrate learning during the Thanksgiving season.