Early math instruction teaches enumeration - the designation of a numeral for a given number. This helps with visualization of quantity when listening to a story or reading a written passage. Include
...s fillable materials and activities for drawing numbers, answering questions, drawing numbers and critical thinking skills.
Identifying the main idea and supporting details can be tricky for younger students. This 12-page PDF resource helps make it a little easier. Included are six winter-themed non-fiction topics that wil
...l engage and interest little learners. Each topic includes two versions (multiple choice and open-ended) to best meet students' needs.Students will read each non-fiction topic, identify the main idea, and provide one supporting detail. There is also one sentence in each passage that doesn't support the main idea that students are asked to identify. Topics included are winter solstice, how snow is formed, winter holidays, ice fishing, building a snowman, and hibernation.What's included:(6) non-fiction passages with multiple-choice questions.(6) non-fiction passages with short-answer questions. Answer key
Describes how adjectives help us more clearly visualize the person, place or thing being described. Includes activities, book suggestions, and 9 worksheets to develop use of adjectives in speech and w
...riting. Worksheets include: adjective picture cards for pre-k and K-1; color and describe a chair; using comparative and superlative adjectives; create an adjective bank; using cumulative and coordinate adjectives for advanced readersGives an adjective rubric and sample IEP goals.
These instructional strategies and activities are designed to introduce and/or reteach identifying syllables. Activities include change the vowel, change the word, number or sounds v. number of letter
...s, and number of syllables.
Age-appropriate listening and language skills are required for any child to succeed at school. At school, more advanced developmental skills, namely literacy and numeracy skills, are developed. A pare
...nt can already start to introduce basic literacy and numeracy concepts to a child as of birth. Parents do not always realize that preparing the child beforehand to learn each of these skills, is vital. Before children go to school, they need to acquire certain skills that will help them to read and write. This is the joint responsibility of the parents and the child’s educational team, such as the teacher of the deaf/hard of hearing, early intervention provider, speech-language therapist, and/or preschool teacher.Emergent literacy: Before teaching reading and writing skills, a child needs to know the processes and concepts involved in reading and writing. Emergent literacy skills discussed in this lesson include literacy socialization, phonological awareness, as well as printed word and alphabet knowledge. Reading is the process through which meaning is attached to written symbols and letters. It is about comprehending and actively responding to the content.Writing is the use of symbols to communicate thoughts and ideas. It is a way to represent language in a visual and tactile form. The development of the different components of emergent literacy, reading and writing is discussed in this lesson.
Sound patterns within words are used in oral and written language to create emphasis of thought and attention the rhythm and tone of language. Instructional strategies include ideas for teaching word
... families, riddles, and word family sentences.
Support development of foundational reading skills with activities and materials to practice: 1) vowel perception in isolation and in words, phoneme blending and sound-letter association; 2) discrimin
...ation of vowels in words, sorting long & short vowels.
Information for teachers about the auditory / acoustic components of phonemic awareness, including similarities among vowels and among consonants. Activities include vowel & consonant perception, phon
...eme isolation(initial, medial and final consonants), phoneme segmentation, and phoneme manipulation. Six levels of difficulty are addressed. Teacher scripts, including 91 word prompts and 108 picture cards.
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