Add like mad with our thrilling addition worksheet! This three-minute math drill gets your child racing to complete all the addition equations on the page.
By fourth grade, most students are familiar with story elements such as setting, characters, and plot. In this lesson, students will compare and contrast the elements in two stories with similar themes.
This lesson gives students foundational skills needed to identify the author's purpose in a variety of texts. Use the lesson as a stand alone or as a pre-lesson to What Were They Thinking?
Students will practice separating words into syllables and determining if those syllables are open or closed. Through the use of word sorts, whiteboard assessments, and more, your students will have fun while learning this skill!
Use Election Night to teach your child about politics and government, and have them add up the electoral votes each presidential candidate earns throughout the night.
This lesson walks students through the first few steps of crafting a personal narrative. Writers will start by going through a process to select an idea to write about, then begin to craft a hook that invites readers into their story.
Give your students a good basis in interpreting data with this lesson that teaches them about mean, median, and mode with plenty of practice and cute videos to keep them interested.
Close reading isn’t about just ticking through words on a page; it’s about absorbing ideas and expanding on them. In this lesson, students will use this strategy to make interpretations about a character's emotions through their actions.
In this lesson, your students will play with cards to practice giving fractions a new decimal name. They will be able to convert fractions to decimals by the end of this lesson.
Once students have selected a topic related to a piece of literature they have read and mapped out their argument, this lesson will help them turn their prewriting into an essay.
What do sea monsters eat? Solve the math problems in this worksheet to reveal the answer! This math worksheets gets kids to build math and spelling skills.
Learning how to check our work is essential to becoming strong math students! In this exercise, students will first solve the subtraction problems, then they'll practice checking their work by plugging the answers into an addition equation.
Students will use the inverse relationship between multiplication and division to complete an area formula in a real-world situation. Use this lesson on its own or as support for the lesson The Case of the Missing Rectangle Side.
Take math everywhere you go, even to the beach! Students will use subtraction, addition, and time solving skills to complete the beach-themed word problems.