
3 Great Suggestions for Teachers at the End of the Year
You might be done or very close to being done for the school year. Still, I wanted to cover 3 great suggestions I highly recommend
You might be done or very close to being done for the school year. Still, I wanted to cover 3 great suggestions I highly recommend
A major driving force of schools that adopt a year-round calendar is to prevent the Summer slide. The backward step students take in their learning
I recently made a salt dough map as an example for one of my resources, and I was amazed at how quick and easy it
As I set out to write about Colorado history, I knew I needed to cover Colorado landforms. Little did I know this unit would become
I’ve been celebrating Pi Day for years. I have tried loads and loads of different activities throughout all my time. Yet, there are 3 Pi
I have three interactive notebook rules that must be followed in my classroom. They not only bring about calm and strengthen classroom management, but they
Games, like Caravan, Fraction War, and others, are an effective way to engage students in mathematics. It gets them to discuss mathematical principles and interact
Card sorts are a mental process where educational material is analyzed and categorized based on given or created criteria. Utilized throughout multiple subjects with lots
It’s no secret that interactive notebooks have my unwavering support. I discovered them in my first teaching assignment, and they were our main way of
This post on gay books is co-written with my daughter, Reagan Naujok. She, herself, is a queer young adult and features books on her blog,
Interactive notebooks have been around for years and years, if not several decades. Digital interactive notebooks, on the other hand, have just recently burst onto
Returning for the final installment in the bite-sized learning blog series, this week we’ll be looking at some sample schedules from my experience with bite-sized