Showing posts with label Task Cards. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Task Cards. Show all posts

Thursday, August 30, 2018

Do You Want Some Free Hands On Task Cards for Addition Facts Within 20?

Why use task cards for addition math facts instead of just printing of a worksheet? 


Kids pay more attention to things they can hold in their hands.  Task cards are more engaging. Kids enjoy using task cards more and when kids enjoy an activity more, they learn more and retain more.  Task cards are so versatile. Click here for a list of 20 Ways to Engage Students with Task Cards.


How can I hold my kids accountable when they are working with task cards?

Require students to use a recording sheet to keep them accountable for their work.  There is a recording sheet included in this set of free task cards.  Students enjoy being able to choose a card out of numerical order and then find the correct space for their answer on the recording sheet. I like to put the task cards in a container and have a rule of three.  The students may choose a card and put it back twice but if they do, they must complete the third card.  Eventually, if you they will complete all or most of the cards, depending on what you require. If you don’t want to use a recording sheet, another idea is to have a snap digital pictures of students’ completed task cards during the transition to your next activity.

Why are clip style cards special?

Students have a chance to develop fine motor skills while they practice addition facts.  Students can clip clothespins onto their answer choices.
They can also mark their answers with
  • ·        paper clips
  • ·        mini erasers
  • ·        math counters
  • ·        beans
  • ·        any small manipulative that you have on hand.


Laminate the cards and students can circle their answer choices with dry erase markers. I hope you and your students enjoy these free task cards. 

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First published at The Learning Harbor Resources for Teachers® blog

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 10, 2017

Holiday Traditions Around the Globe

by Learning Harbor Resources ™
for K - 2

The holiday season always brings such cheer to people far and wide. The time of year is filled with traditions that harken back to centuries ago. Christmas, Hanukkah, Los Posadas, Diwali, Kwanzaa, and St. Lucia are celebrated around the globe with great food and rich traditions and among family and friends.

Every year, at Christmas time, families of Christian faith celebrate in a myriad of sacred and secular ways. The advent calendar marks the days leading up to the birth of Christ, which is celebrated on December 25th. One of the most treasured traditions involves hanging stockings for Santa Claus to fill on Christmas Eve. Many families put up a Christmas tree, often fresh from the farm, and decorate with lights and ornaments passed down year after year. Christmas songs play on the radio and Christmas movies play on the TV. Many might dream of a white Christmas, but only some see it. Thanks to Irving Berlin, we can all sing about it though. 

Hanukkah is also called the Festival of Lights and is celebrated in the Jewish faith. Hanukkah lasts for 8 nights and commemorates the oil burned when Jews rededicated the Second Temple of Jerusalem where the Jews rose up against their oppressors. The first day of Hanukkah begins on the 25th day of the month of Kislev in the Jewish calendar. A menorah holds candles; one is lit the first night and another candle is added and lit each successive night. When the menorah is lit, blessings are sung or chanted. The kids look forward to one special gift each night. And there’s plenty of good food: potato lattkes, brisket, and sweet doughnuts are shared with family and friends.

Los Posadas is also celebrated over several nights by those of Mexican or Spanish heritage, and of Catholic or Protestant religions. It is a nine-day festival celebrated from December 16th through December 24th, leading up to Christmas. It is both a native celebration of the Aztec Winter Solstice and a religious celebration of the birth of Christ. Reenactments or Bible plays are staged to retell the story of Mary and Joseph trekking to Bethlehem in search of an inn (a posada) in preparation for the birth of Christ. Each night, in various communities, one family reenacts the pilgrimage and often children dress up as shepherds and angels. They are refused shelter until the pre-designated house is reached. Singing and praying continues indoors. After eating and celebrating, the night ends with a star-shaped piƱata.

Diwali is celebrated by Hindus, Jains, and Sikhs and Newar Buddhists. It is a 5-day celebration of the victory of light over darkness, good over evil, hope over despair,and knowledge over ignorance. The date varies from year to year based on the Hindu calendar, but it is often in late autumn. The first practice during these festive days is  cleaning, renovating, or decorating of the house. People will dress in their finest clothes, candles are lit and prayers, often to Lakshmi, the goddess of wealth and prosperity, are spoken. Gifts are exchanged and ‘mithai’ or sweets are shared. Often towns and cities will have celebrations with special performances, parades and gatherings. It’s a festive and happy time
Kwanzaa is known as a celebration of family, community, and culture and is celebrated by the African-American and the Pan-African communities. Dr. Maulana Karenga, professor and chairman of Black Studies at California State University, Long Beach, created Kwanzaa in 1966. He had been looking for a way to bring together the community and unite people after the terrible events of the Watts Riots in California. He used traditions from several harvest celebrations among various African tribes, such as the Zulu and Ashanti to form the basis for traditions for Kwanzaa. The name is derived from a Swahili word for ‘first fruits’ or harvest. For that reason, African drumming, a large feast, and storytelling are often part of the celebrations. Seven principles form the core values of the celebration: Unity/Umoja, Self-determination/Kujichagulia, Collective Work and Responsibility/Ujima, Cooperative Economics/Ujamaa, Purpose: Nia, Creativity/Kuumba, and Faith/Imani. Each year, Kwanzaa falls between December 26 and January 1.

St. Lucia’s Day is a festival of lights celebrated in SwedenNorway, and Swedish-speaking areas of Finland on December 13 in honor of St. Lucia. In the Scandinavian countries, this day marks the beginning of the Christmas season. Usually there is a procession on December 13th with girls dressing in simple white dresses, wearing a lighted wreath on their heads. Boys also take part and wear a simple white outfit. Coffee and baked goods are served to the family by the eldest daughter, all dressed in white. Her white dress, wreath of candles and lingonberry greens represents light and new life in the long, dark nights of winter.
All these festivities carry with them the love of sharing time, faith, and food with family and friends. It is a time to strengthen those ties that bind us together as a community. We celebrate and rejoice in our faith and our time spent with each other. Holiday traditions are passed down, from generation to generation to instill and perpetuate the values of our groups within society. We hold them dear and hope our children’s children will as well. 
And of course who could have a Holiday without the Nutcracker Theme. Students will have fun with the Interactive Self Correcting resource with the Tin Soldiers, Christmas Tree and Ballerina while learning about Adding Doubles and Doubles Plus 1 for Google Classroom™


Sunday, March 19, 2017

Noun and Verb Task Card Bundle

by Kathy Babineau
Grades 1-6



This money saving bundle contains the complete Noun Task Card Set (32 cards) and the complete Verb Task Card Set (72 cards) along with answer keys at a money saving discount.

Just print, cut apart, laminate (optional) and you're ready to go!

These are great for small groups, centers and individual review/practice!

Kathy Babineau MS, CCC-SLP

These sets can be purchased separately if you prefer:

Irregular and Regular Plural Nouns

Task Cards Irregular and Regular Verbs

Visit my TPT store here
and my Pinterest page here

Sunday, January 10, 2016

Let's Celebrate the Life of Martin Luther King Jr.

By Deann Marin of Socrates Lantern


As a child of the 60’s I remember so vividly that fateful April day in 1968 when Martin Luther King Jr. was brutally gunned down by James Earl Ray. I remember sitting by the television set, just horrified by what I had just witnessed. Thoughts kept racing through my mind about our freedom, I just couldn’t understand why such a heroic person was dead because he had “a dream.” When Bobby Kennedy was murdered in June of that year, again I sat with disbelief as I watched his assassination, live, on the television. Their deaths as well as the killing of John F. Kennedy in November of 1963 were the turning points in our lives. I felt enraged that these things could happen in our day and age.


 In January,  we remember Martin Luther King Jr. and what he stood for. Equal rights, de-segregation, tolerance of other races are essential especially now-a-days with so much persecution of human beings.

It is so important to stand in another’s shoes and feel what they have felt. The old adage "one picture is worth a thousand words," is so true, you can discuss racial injustices, but to actually see a film about it will bring it to life. An excellent flick that will get this point across to your students is Selma.  After viewing it, have an open discussion about it. Have the children role play different people from the film, such as Dr. King, Coretta King, a black/white civil rights marcher, a black person living then, Annie Lee Cooper, President Lyndon B. Johnson, etc. Finally, have them write a paper from the perspective from one of the characters they encountered in the film. 

I’ve just finished a Martin Luther King Jr. History and Literacy Bundle with many activities that you can use with your 5-8 grade classes. Here is a study guide with historical facts about him.
Thanks for stopping by
Deann






No Prep Martin Luther King Literacy Activities
http://teacher.scholastic.com/writeit/PDF/master_class_king.pdf
Http://www.scholastic.com/teachers/lesson-plan/martin-luther-king-jr-interactive-timeline
https://kinginstitute.stanford.edu/king-resources/major-king-events-chronology-1929-1968

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