Identify Main Idea an Supporting Details
This is a great video that can be used to introduce or review the main ideas and supporting details in a story or paragraph.
This is a great video that can be used to introduce or review the main ideas and supporting details in a story or paragraph.
This is an activity-based reading log.
My idea behind this type of reading log is threefold.
1. Keep track of the books that students are reading and the time they are reading each day.
2. Practice a skill-based on reading, writing, and science standards as well as a review of previously taught standards to add more practice.
3. To give students an opportunity to interact more with their parents and siblings, through instilling a little more patriotism, awareness of national events and ideas, and learn a little bit of charity and acts of kindness to others.
In this telling time worksheet, students will analyze 4 clocks and write down the time. They will take a look at 5 empty clocks with the digital time written and then draw the clock faces. At the bottom there is one division word problem that is used for a review and early finishers.
Students can either label or put the skeleton together in this online activity. The better they do the higher their score. They can practice it as man times as they want.
In this money word problems worksheet, students will add and subtract dollar amounts to find out how much they would spend altogether, how much change they need back and figure out if they have enough money to purchase the items. There are 8 money word problems in all.
You can also purchase the Google Doc version of this worksheet through Teachers Pay Teachers. The Google Doc version allows you to edit the names, money amounts and verbiage to fit your local students.
Students will find vocabulary that deals with metamorphosis. I use this when teaching 3rd-graders about how caterpillars turn into butterflies.
I use this Bingo activity as a review of multiplication strategies in my 3rd-grade classroom. There are 30 student cards and a teacher call sheet. This activity reviews groups of, repeated addition, using number lines to multiply and arrays. There are 16 squares per card and 25 different squares in the game. This way each card is unique and not all kids have all possible answers. When a student gets "Bingo" I actually have them go "Mmmmm, Multiplication" as if multiplication tasted good. It is fun.
Students will model arrays by painting them based on repeated addition equations.
Use this math worksheet with your students to teach or reinforces word problems while teaching adding, subtracting, and multiplying money while reading word problems.
Students will solve 10 products of multiples of 10. At the bottom, they will fill out a multiplication image of x6 and x3.