I love anchor charts. I hate hanging anchor charts on my walls. They either take up precious bulletin board space, or they constantly fall down (or just wave at me from one droopy corner). So, a few years ago, I created a set of mini anchor charts for my tables using IKEA’s Tolsby Frames. After much frustration to get everything just the right size, I finally had a small set of charts. Multiplication chart, synonyms for overused words, math talk stems, commonly misspelled words, and more. And I also made some cute motivational cards to keep it fun and positive! […]

A friend asked if I had ever used or created printable Post-Its to use in my classroom. A logical question, since I do love Post-Its! While I had never printed on them before, my curiosity was piqued and I was on it the next morning! It took a few days, but I finally had a full set of printables that I could see myself using in the classroom (whenever we head back, that is!) Positive notes of praise, notes of encouragement to keep going, sentence starters for those days when I want to be more specific, writing checklists (my stamp

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I have posted before about taking on the NaNoWriMo challenge with my students. For the last two years, I have spent the month of November plugging away at a novel with a goal of 30,000 words. They wrote and published their own books and told me that I should do the same with my two novels. So I figured, why not? It was many hours of proofreading, formatting, researching information about self-publishing, more proofreading, and more formatting, but I think it was all worth it in the end. The proof of the second book is already on its way, and

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NaNoWriMo

NaNoWriMo stands for National Novel Writing Month. During the month of November, people from all over get together and set their own personal word count goals, with the big idea being that you get a novel drafted in a month (or at least a good start to a novel). Last year, I happened to find the NaNoWriMo website just a tad late, on November 1st. But as it was a weekend, I figured I had a whole day and a half to revamp my writing plans for the month and bring out a new challenge! My students had mixed reactions,

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November is a time for Parent-Teacher conferences, which I must admit are not my favorite. I spend so much time trying to think of everything I need to say to a parent, organizing my ideas, gathering work samples and finding just the right way to phrase some of those difficult messages. And inevitably, the minute a parent leaves or an hour later it hits me… the one thing I forgot to tell them! Spring is another conference, but this time around students are leading the way. Over the next few weeks I will spend time reflecting with my students, sharing

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A second grade teacher at my school found a set of phonics cards that she thought would be great to hang on the wall behind the table where she pulls small groups, but the cards were only sold in the UK.  She scoured TpT for something similar and found nothing, so she told me about it, knowing that I’m always looking for new stuff to create. So, after days of searching for graphics that would fit each vowel and digraph, it’s finally complete! And, now that TpT is allowing you to correlate your items to the Common Core standards, it’s

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I designed this packet to use as reader’s response homework for my students, which I assign once or twice a week. Included are a rubric, an example heading, directions for 15 different types of responses, and a recording sheet so that students can keep track of which responses they’ve completed and the number of points they earned for each. I have included the same set of materials both in cursive and print. Here is a list of the responses:Book RecommendationCharacter ComparisonCrossword PuzzleDiary EntryI Figured It OutI WonderInterviewLetter to the AuthorMake Me LaughNose for NewsPredicting the FutureThat Reminds MeTrading PlacesWrite Me

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Moving to third grade this year, I needed some different graphic organizers, and it was one of those projects I kept wanting to do, but never got around to… creating a new set of graphic organizers!  Now that school is out, it was an easy summer project to get started with! I’m sure I will add more as time goes on, but it’s a good start! Click to view the file in my TpT store or in my Teachers Notebook store. So here it is, a compilation of 22 graphic organizers, covering story writing, research, comparisons, timelines, the 5 W’s

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Well, it’s been a busy few months, and I’ve added a few anchor charts to the list as the months have gone on, and finally got around to putting an updated version on TpT and on Teachers Notebook.  The new charts include: Reading:Homophones Writing:Their, There and They’rey to i (adding endings)Crazy for CommasWhen Do I Need a New Paragraph?Fiction Writing Math:Math Mistakes (and How to Fix Them)

Am I the only one who dislikes making those big anchor charts? Inevitably, I run out of space somewhere, or smudge marker when the poster is all but finished. Well, no more for me. I’ve started moving all of my anchor charts into small, digital format. With the Apple TV (which I LOVE by the way), I can put the digital copy up on the TV for my mini-lesson and then print a copy to put in our class anchor chart binder. Some of the charts I can print for individual students to keep in their own writing binders, too.

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