Showing posts with label writing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label writing. Show all posts

Sunday, October 10, 2021

Blue Ridge Babies 1, 2, 3: A (Non-babyish) Counting Book


My son and I were perusing the library shelves after story time and we came across a book titled Blue Ridge Babies 1, 2, 3. It had a cute cover and we have been working on addition, subtracting, and counting as well as reading number words, so I decided to look it over. Seeing the cute pictures and words were written in word form meant it went into our large check out pile. When I got it home, it was so much more than a book to read with my preschooler! 


Buy the Book  or watch the  Video



For those of you homeschooling, or teaching PreK-3, this book has so much to offer, including a song! I made a printable activity that I did with my son, and here is what we covered.






Click the images above or here to download.

If I was using this with my fourth grade class, we would locate the Blue Ridge on Google Earth. I'd ask, "Where else might a biome like this be found in America? Where might it be found in the rest of the world?" Then we would make our own books for other biomes.

Snag a free book template by clicking the image below or here. It's editable, so you can share a copy on Google Classroom, via email, or even adapt and print a copy for students to write and draw on.


Learn more about the writing, illustrating, and publishing process this book went through here:

 https://kathytemean.wordpress.com/2021/04/22/book-giveaway-blue-ridge-babies-1-2-3-a-counting-book-by-laura-sperry-gardner/

Tuesday, May 12, 2020

Digital Memory Book





Looking for a fun way to end the school year? This 18 page Google Docs digital memory book is such a fun and engaging writing activity. Students will love it. Create a digital Google Docs memory book for your younger students or with your child or have students create their own! This resource includes 18 pages of activities, including a place for students to publish their best story and poem, to record favorites and interests, awards for themselves and classmates, and to record events. Perfect for remote, virtual, or distance learning.

Easily editable! Currently set for 2019-2020 school year in fourth grade, but can be changed in minutes.





Monday, May 11, 2020

Meet an Author Opinion Writing

Are you tired of the same old opinion writing prompts? Here is one my students love. They write to tell which author they'd like to meet and explain why. They also tell what learn about the author from research as well as write about what they still want to know.

Students are expected to provide reasons and evidence to support their opinions. You can also have them write an introduction paragraph persuading their audience to fundraise money to bring the author to their school.

Click here to download the document.

Check out my author study on Teachers Pay Teachers!

Here are some famous authors I've met as well as their websites for research:

Patricia Polacco - read all about her author visit!

Lauren Tarshis (I Survived series)
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R.L. Stine (Goosebumps)
Image may contain: 3 people, people smiling

Kate DiCamillo (Because of Winn-Dixie, Mercy Watson series)


Image may contain: 6 people, people smiling

Dan Gutman (My Weird School, Flashback Four series) - I met him twice and he does amazing assemblies!
Image may contain: 5 people, people smiling
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Corey Rosen Schwartz (Ninja Pig and others)
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Looking for other digital projects and lessons? Check these out: 

-Bitmoji Bookmark Projects

-Digital Memory Book

-Digital Escape Rooms

-Concrete Poems

-Meet an Author Opinion Writing

-Digital Escape Rooms

-ABC Research Book

-Country Research Report


Monday, May 4, 2020

May the 4th Be With You

Here are some May the 4th writing prompts to use with students. 

Image may contain: 1 person, possible text that says '"Your eyes can deceive you. Don't trust them." Obi- -Wan Kenobi What is one thing you have read that is unbelievable? www.AlvsiaBattista.blogspot.com'


Image may contain: one or more people and text

We also did a Star Wars escape room via Zoom. We used knowledge of temperatures and energy sources to pick a planet to manufacture on, used what we knew about prefixes and shapes, deciphered a code, solved equations, used map skills, and worked together to complete the mission. Here is the mission, should you choose to accept it:



Make a copy of the Google Slides presentation or access it here.

If you've got Star Wars lovers in your class or family, check out these popular Jedi Academy books:
Jedi Academy Books Series 1-8


Sunday, March 10, 2019

St. Patrick's Day fun activities

Here are some things we've been doing this March to celebrate St. Patrick's Day! Click the links or images to go to my TPT store.

St. Patrick's Day Lucky Opinion Writing








                          
                        
Check out my old post for some more fun St. Patrick's Day ideas!

Sunday, February 24, 2019

Intermediate Roll and Write

Are you or your students out of ideas for writing? This product is just the thing for your class!

Students roll dice to determine what to write. Avoid the problem of taking forever to brainstorm by having students roll dice and select writing elements according to these charts. Options are included for both fiction and non-fiction writing. 


They are general enough to provide choice and creativity, but specific enough to point students in the right direction.

Click the link below to download and be sure to leave a comment either here or on Teachers Pay Teachers after you use it. I'd love to see how creative your students get!


https://www.teacherspayteachers.com/Product/Intermediate-Grades-Roll-and-Write-4401536

Monday, February 18, 2019

Black History Month: Compare and Contrast MLK and Nelson Mandela

In honor of Black History Month and reading My Brother Martin and Me by Christine King Farris (Martin's sister) in our fourth grade Journeys book, we decided to compare and contrast Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. and Nelson Mandela. 

My class is a 1:1 Chromebook class, so we did this assignment together as a class on Google Docs. 
If you purchase this item on TPT, you can easily copy and paste from the PDF into Google Docs.
If you haven't used Google Docs as a class, I suggest going over a procedure for erasure. If someone accidentally deletes the graphic organizer, we all stop immediately and take hands off the keyboards until the mistake can be fixed by the person who deleted or until the previous version can be restored.

The great thing about this lesson is that I have adapted it for you so that it can be used in whole or in parts, independently or in small or whole groups. This would even be great if you homeschool! Rubrics are included for different expectations. You also don't have to search for resources to make sure they are appropriate since I've included links for you!

See more pages and download this resource in my TPT store.

We also watched his I Have a Dream speech 


and made this beautiful dove bulletin board. 

Students wrote ways they will and already do use peaceful, powerful words.


Who else would you like to see included in another compare and contrast project?


Monday, January 7, 2019

Oliver K. Woodman Letter Writing Project


In third grade, we read The Journey of Oliver K. Woodman by Darcy Pattison.


A fun extension we did was to write letters to friends and family across the U.S., North America, and all around the world. We asked them to send us a letter or email back tell us what they did with Oliver.
 https://www.teacherspayteachers.com/Product/Oliver-K-Woodman-Letter-Writing-Project-4401747

We posted mini Olivers on a map with their location so that we could learn more about geography and landmarks.


It was a blast! If you want to join in, here is a link to our letter as well as a map and printable Oliver you can mail out to others.


Here are some other cool resources we used to track Oliver's journey in the book, plus a neat video of the book in case you don't have it.


Monday, December 3, 2018

Winter Cinquain Poems

Every year, I feel the time crunch between Thanksgiving break and December winter break. This fun poem writing activity helps us practice poem writing and parts of speech. Plus, it's fun to color and stick up on a bulletin board!

Students get to pick a Google Slide and then they type their poem in the text box. It's easy to print all of them because they are all in one presentation. No one has deleted anyone else's slide, but it's a pretty easy fix if they do because I keep a master copy and then share an editable one with them in Google Classroom / Drive.




Before doing this writing assignment, we practice the Eight Parts of Speech song, which comes from Scholastic's Memory-Boosting Mnemonic Songs

Here are a couple of slides from the Google Slides presentation I created to go along with the song.




Find the editable poem presentation in my TPT store here

This 30 slide PowerPoint presentation includes 28 editable fill-in-the-blank poem pages with directions an examples. You will also get a link to the editable Google Slides presentation. These poems look great as a bulletin board. Just print, color, cut, and glue onto construction paper!


Saturday, February 7, 2015

Using highlighters to create independent learners

Do you find yourself spending a lot of time with students who can't seem to write reading responses, read maps, or solve word problems? I have found something that really works for my students - color coding.

Close reading is a big thing in the Common Core. Deciding what is important to highlight is an important and hard skill for students. I teach my kids by going through questions first and kicking out unusual or important words. They get a good idea of the story's plot before even reading. It also improves their comprehension because they know the questions they are going to answer ahead of time. It helps them find answers much more easily, too!
Next, they read the story. Then they answer the questions, highlighting answers in the text. Some kids  "just don't get" what to do when the answer isn't obvious. I have them highlight clues that helped them make an inference or draw a conclusion.


This is a Deepen Comprehension question from Journeys Grade 4 Lesson 5. We were working with the story Stormalong and analyzing characters. 
I projected this on the Promethean Board and we worked together to show the process of turning prewriting into writing. I used colored text and the highlighting tool to show where the information came from. Some students really do need modeling of this!!

Here we used crayons and symbols to answer questions on this Common Core sheets page.
Some of my students really aren't strong readers and typically ignore graphic features. My higher learners can color code themselves. I do it ahead of time for the couple of kids who struggle and over time they learn to do it by themselves.


Now you see another way to use highlighters to draw attention to map features.
Believe it or not, some of your struggling learners don't actually realize that they need to use the picture / map to answer the question. You can do some of the highlighting for them or with them. Eventually they will become independent at it.


How do you use highlighters and color coding to help your children?