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Sunday, January 10, 2016

Red Herrings

Don't you love those students who can finish problems or tasks before the rest of the class has written their name on their paper? You either love them or they drive you crazy and sometimes it is both at the same time. Instead of giving them a ton of extra work, which makes more work for you, why not get them thinking critically? 



Enter.. Red Herrings.




Wait. What?



A "red herring" presents four different problems and asks the students to figure out which one doesn't belong and why. In the picture above, the students had to figure out that 70+10=80 doesn't belong because the numbers in the ones column don't add up to 10. In all of the other problems, the numbers in the ones column add up to 10. But first, most of the students thought the problem that didn't belong with the others was 85 + 15 = 100 because it was a three digit number.


The great thing about red herrings is that students may figure out other "rules" or reasons why some other problems don't belong before they come to the correct reason. They may or may not be right, but either way it is great to get them thinking critically!


Red Herrings could be used in any subject, too!


Word work:


handwriting           handkerchief        photograph          cupcakes


Which one doesn't belong and why?


P.s. it's handkerchief because it is the only word that isn't a compound word.




Language Arts:

1. The children ran to the park on Saturday morning.
2. The mice are in the cage.
3. The tooth fairy found three teeth under the pillow.
4. The cats were scared of the dog and ran under the bed.


Which one doesn't belong and why?

P.s. it's sentence four because it is the only sentence without an irregular plural noun



Social Studies (Native American Tribes):

Sioux          Hopi         Apache          Navajo


Which one doesn't belong and why?

P.s. it's Sioux, because it is the only Native American Tribe that isn't found in Arizona.



Science (Animal Classifications):

Octopus          Gila Monster          Round Worms          Butterflies


Which one doesn't belong and why?


p.s. it's the Gila Monster because it is the only animal that is a vertebrate.



The possibilities are endless! It works for any grade, and any subject. How can you use red herrings in your classroom?

Wednesday, January 6, 2016

January Mixed Up Sentences

I think mixed up sentences are a great activity for younger students. Well, all students really. They need to figure out what order the words make sense, and which words go at the beginning or end of the sentence. You can even take it a step further by having the students put the sentences in the right order to form a paragraph. 

This product contains 6 sentences about January themes such as Martin Luther King, Jr. day, the 100th day of school, etc. AND it is on sale for 20% off until the end of the week! Click the image to pick this up in my TpT store.




Monday, January 4, 2016

Ideas for Teaching Word Problems

Today I'm linking up with  K's Classroom Kreations and Theresa's Teaching Tidbits  for Math Tip Monday. This post is all about teaching word problems! 


The math curriculum we use at school has a huge emphasis on teaching word problems. Needless to say, my students get a ton of practice with making sense of word problems!

The key to teaching word problems is to get the students to really consider what the problem is saying and asking you to do. I've found that best way to do this is annotating the problem. We already do this in reading all the time so why not do it in math, too?



This could be glued into an interactive notebook as a resource. The chart in my classroom looks just like this, except not as cute. Click the picture to download this FREEBIE in my TpT store!

We go through each of these steps every time we solve word problems. It is a systematic way to get students to consider the problem, and figure out the best strategy to solve it. The best part - it can be used for any grade or operation! 

Check out some of the other ideas for teaching those dreaded word problems:

Thursday, December 31, 2015

Looking Back at 2015

Wow. I can't believe it is the end of 2015 already! This sure has been a great year.. I got a new car, started a blog, and launched my TpT store... all things that I wanted to do for a while. I can't wait to see where life takes me in 2016!



I don't really do new year resolutions. But here is my "to do" list for 2016:


1. Blog more. I think I'm starting to figure this whole blogging thing out so you should definitely expect to see more posts from me in 2016!


2. Design more TpT products. Just like the blog, I think I'm starting to figure this out. And I'm having a fun time designing my products! 

Side note about that.. While I was student teaching I had a student notice that I gave different worksheets (differentiation) so students could show their knowledge in different ways. I made a joke that I made worksheets for fun, and at the time I was kidding, but it seems like that's kinda true now. 

Anyways.. back to my list!


3. Keep the house clean. Over winter break, I've FINALLY cleaned the place and it was so bad before I was too embarrassed to take before and after pictures so now it's time to really start decorating it. 

That's about it! Well, of course the whole spending time with friends and family, travel, eat healthy, read, but that's old news. 


Stay safe out there tonight & cheers to a great year!

Wednesday, December 2, 2015

Learning Contracts


Gifted students. Early finishers. We all have those students who sometimes need that extra push, another challenge that they can conquer. The question is – how do we challenge those students with

meaningful work, without having the teacher do a ton of extra work?



I use "Learning Contracts" with my students to challenge my gifted students, and also any high achieving students who can handle an enrichment project. These contracts are a simple solution to keep the high achieving students engaged and challenged, AND they can be used for any grade, any subject, or any standard. It takes the current objective to the next level for the students who have already mastered or have some level of proficiency with the topics you're teaching in class. 






You choose the learning objective, and how the students will show what they have learned. I usually include a few activities, but this could also be one larger project. There are "checkpoints" where you meet with the students and review the work they have completed so far. This keeps you updated on where your students are as they complete the project, and if you see a student is very behind then it will let the students who are behind know that they need to use their time more wisely. This is probably the most important part of the project because the students need timely feedback so they can complete the project correctly and finish by the due date. 



This year I have used learning contracts a lot with phonics. In the past I have used contracts in math, science, social studies, and reading. I have a lot of strong readers in my class this year who don't need as much of the "word work" when learning new phonics patterns, and get bored easily when working through centers. Instead of having these students write words various ways, they have done tasks such as reading through the decodable to highlight the words with the pattern, rewriting them, and sorting into categories when applicable. Many of my other reading groups complete this, but this is done at the end of the unit after teacher directed instruction. The students who complete the contract do this independently without the targeted phonics instruction in small groups. Now I am having my students write their own decodable with words with the phonics. 


This is not intended to be a whole class project. It is designed to challenge the few students in your class who constantly finish early and need an additional challenge. There is no way you could manage 30 learning contracts and keep your sanity at the same time!


This product is on sale in my TpT store for 20% off until Friday. Click here to check it out!

Sunday, November 29, 2015

Cyber Monday Sale

Just stopping by for a quick post to say that I'm putting my store on sale for Cyber Monday. 


Happy Shopping!

Friday, November 27, 2015

Black Friday Sale

Oh. My. Goodness. 




Wow.




Life has been busy these past few weeks! Well, months really. I'm sure you're all in the same boat. All I can say is I sure am ready for Winter Break! How many more days to go? Not that I'm counting down or anything... #14schooldays #icanmakeit


I have some new ideas in the works, and I can't wait to write about them. I just have to find time between wrangling 28 2nd graders, my graduate class, report cards, and cleaning my house. Just thinking about all of this is enough to make my head spin.. so in the meantime.. I'm having a sale!

https://www.teacherspayteachers.com/Store/The-Corriganite-Nation


Click the image to visit my TpT store. 



Happy Black Friday Shopping!