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📊 ChartMaster Pro — Custom Classroom Chart Creator for Teachers

📊 ChartMaster Pro is a powerful teacher tool designed to help educators create clear, engaging, and standards-aligned classroom charts with full control over chart type, scale, icons, labels, and styling.

Built specifically for classroom instruction, ChartMaster Pro makes it easy to create charts that students can read, analyze, and discuss—whether for math, science, social studies, or data talks.

Elapsed Time Number Line Game

Elapsed Time Number Line Game is an interactive, SEO-friendly math practice tool that helps elementary students master elapsed time, start time, and end time using a visual number line. The game features a time number line with 15-minute major tick marks and 5-minute minor tick marks, allowing students to place unlimited scratch marks as they count forward and backward.

Using a T-Chart Time to Find Elapsed Time Game

T-Chart Time Game is an interactive telling-time math game that helps students practice elapsed time, start/end time, and time intervals using a visual T-chart model. Students drag and drop minute and hour tiles, record each step, and submit a final answer under a teacher-selected timer (3–15 minutes). Correct answers unlock a fast-paced 20-second Math Fact Blitz (addition, subtraction, and multiplication) to build fluency while keeping engagement high.

Understanding Continental Drift and Pangaea

In this activity, students get to know Alfred Wegener and why and how he came up with the idea of continental drift and the super-continent Pangaea. Students will complete some internet searches to discover what type of fossils Wegener used to help him come up with his hypothesis. Students will find the time period the fossils lived, which continents they were found on, and describe both the current climate and the climate in which they prehistorically lived. Students will also cut out the Pangaea puzzle and fit the fossils, and rocks together.

Understanding Earthquakes through Analyzing and Plotting Data

In this Earth Science activity, students will gain a deeper understanding of the following Vocabulary: seismologist, seismograph, seismogram, epicenter, P-Wave, S-Wave, Wave Amplitude, Magnitude, and Richter/Moment Scale.

Students will create a digital spreadsheet that will help them calculate data they gathered by looking at actual seismograms. Technology is incorporated throughout the lesson.

Understanding How a Barometer Works with High and Low Pressure Systems

In this Earth Science lab, students will create their own homemade barometers using a canning jar, a balloon, and a straw. The barometers can show low and high-pressure systems. After they build their barometers, students will complete a daily log, by measuring the height differences of their barometers. They will determine rising and falling barometers. Students will also observe the weather that is currently outside.

Understanding Mass Movement Erosion Types

In this activity students will discover information about the four mass movement types: creeps, slides, falls, flows, slumps. They will discover the most costly and deadliest landslides in the USA. You can either print out copies for students or have them use Google Docs. Other words discussed are erosion, deposition, and lahar. Students will research what natural and human events can trigger landslides. They will also research methods that humans are currently using to try and prevent mass movement.

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