This is a great resource to allow students to work at their own pace. It reinforces quick recall of addition, subtraction, multiplication, and division problems. It is great for both elementary and middle school students.
This site provides specific tactics to help alleviate the attention-deficit woes of your most inattentive students. Typical suggestions include decreasing the length of your lessons and structuring some guided daydreaming time.
This site provides lesson plans for English/Language Arts teachers of all grade levels. The lesson plans have preview, standard attached to the lesson, resources and preparation, instructional plan, related resources, and a comments sections.
Research suggests that small-group teaching is the most effective way of having new information learned. In addition, there is plenty of evidence suggesting that reading centers that focus on specific sub-skills are an excellent approach to teaching reading, comprehension, and fluency well. Therefore, I particularly benefit from this website, as it offers a wide variety of sub-skill targeted reading centers for kiddos in grades k through 5. Again, this is a WINNER of a site (with a lot(!) of resarch to back it up)!
Reading A-to-Z is a popular and effective reading resource. Not only are the texts leveled, but each text includes an extensive lesson plan, teaching strategies, and extension activities. OVerall, a total winner!
A complete reading program with affordable books, lesson plans, worksheets and assessments to teach leveled reading, phonics, phonemic awareness, alphabet, vocabulary, and comprehension to K-5.
I've used it mainly for the reader's theater for a club I am running. There is a small fee to use the resource, but if you contact me, I can give you my login!
great worksheets and activities for students in Elementary grades. This website has both math and ELA activities as well as many holiday and seasonal activities.
Excellent interactive planner for scholars in grades 1-5. It defines the steps needed to conduct research in developmentally appropriate concrete and sequential terms.
Here is a great song that I taught to my students and that we do as a break in between lessons. It is song to the melody of farajaqua. There are also hand movements:
North America: lift your right arm up
South America: right arm down below the waist
Africa: arms rocking back and forth across your midsection
Europe: lift your left arm up
Asia: keep your left arm up high, and move it to the left
Australia: bring your left arm down below the waist
Antarctica: waddle like a penguin (they can also turn around as they waddle)
This song really is great for play breaks, and when we are done, students are more focused. We sing it four times: First is in a medium voice, second in a low voice, third whispering, and fourth silent, just hand movements.
Standards based links and our grade level "Skillbuilders" to help students practice, either at home or in the classroom, what they have been taught. Several large collections of links for PreK-12 teachers, students and parents.
This document provideds simple, practical ways to implement brain based learning strategies in your classroom. It offers you something different for each letter of the alphabet.
RubiStar is a tool to help the teacher who wants to use rubrics, but does not have the time to develop them from scratch. I use it at the elementary level but it is great for all teachers!
This is an amazing resource - I've used it for years. Note also that rubrics can be saved on Rubistar and shared, or just use the tool to get a jump start on your rubric and copy and paste into Word.