Have you heard the great news? Teachers Pay Teachers is offering a 10% off promo code for the week of 8/1-8/6 for Back to School, and many sellers are placing their entire stores on sale for an additional percentage to add to your savings! The Smarty Pants Teaching Resources store (Anna's store) will be 20% off, making your total savings 30% off! What a great deal! Don't miss out on the sale, and please check out all of the other stores on sale below!
The TpT promo code for 10% off is: B1T1S
Game Subject Predicate Grammar File Folder Center Literacy Sentences
Fall -Winter Ordered Pairs Pack Bundle Halloween-Thanksgiving-Christmas
Smarty Pants Teaching Blog
Smarty Pants Teaching Store on TpT
Special thanks to Carolyn Wilhelm from The Wise Owl Factory for creating the graphics and compiling all of the links for this list!
Wise Owl Factory on TpT
Wise Owl Factory Book a Day Blog
Sunday, July 31, 2011
Saturday, July 30, 2011
Back to School Giveaways!
My friend Lisa from Effective Teaching Solutions is doing daily giveaways on her blog next week, and Smarty Pants Teaching is participating! She'll have free printables you can download each day, along with daily prizes like handmade jewelry, gift cards, and free items from Teachers Pay Teachers! What's more, if you blog about the contest, Lisa will give you something free from her store! What?! That's a great deal!
Details about Lisa's Contest
Details about Lisa's Contest
Friday, July 29, 2011
Friday Five: 5 Ways to Use Images in Your Classroom
Looking for a way to spruce up your lessons for the new school year? With digital images readily available from several sources these days, try one of these quick tips to bring the power of nonlinguistic representation to the forefront in your classroom.
- Build background by showing photos of ideas, items, or vocabulary that may be new to some of your students. Once as a part of a poetry unit, my students and I examined Spam Haiku. A few minutes in, a student asked, “What’s Spam?” I had no idea they didn’t know! A photo helped bridge the gap. The next day, I brought some in for them to try.
- Help students remember concepts or vocabulary by pairing key terms with an image. I used a PowerPoint to do this, and let it run on a loop on our TV or projector during work times. It was a little distracting the first few minutes, but once everyone got used to it, I found that early finishers were watching it, reviewing all of our key concepts. It helps to throw in some trivia to keep them watching. One diagram I made with the basic shape tools in PowerPoint helped my students remember the relationship between force and distance, shown here. To set your slide show to loop continuously, go to the Slide Show tab and click the Set Up Show button. Check the box for Loop continuously until 'Esc'. Make sure you set timings for the slides on the Animations tab. Go to the far right side where it says Advance Slide and then Automatically After: and enter a number of seconds to view each slide. Click Apply to All just to the left and you are all set!
- You say your room was perfectly organized and arranged before the kids came in and messed it all up? Take photos of the problem areas when they’re neat and orderly, and post the photos in the area with a note: “It should look like this.” This works great for areas like your classroom library, storage cabinets, and art supply shelves.
- Use images to prompt students to write a few sentences as guided practice for a skill. For example, one interactive whiteboard lesson I have used teaches students about types of figurative language, and then asks them to come to the board and write an example using a photograph as a prompt.
- Use images to create independent learning activities. You can use PowerPoint to create flashcards by putting one word on each slide and choosing "Handouts" when you print, like I did in my Simple Machines Resource Pack. Another option is to create a matching game where students match images with vocabulary. You can create actual cards that students can manipulate. (Here's a website with directions: Make Your Own Memory Game.) If you have a Quia account, you can also make custom computer memory matching games, or use games that others have created. You can also create memory games using interactive whiteboard software by hiding images and matching vocabulary behind interactive elements. For example, Mimio software has "balloons" that you can place in front of an object. Clicking the balloon "pops" it to reveal what is behind. With ActivInspire (Promethean) software, you can use the magic eraser.
Wednesday, July 27, 2011
Web 2.0 Wednesday: Kerpoof! Your computer lab lesson plan is done!
It's my intention to highlight a different Web 2.0 tool each Wednesday, with ideas for how to use that tool in the classroom. Today’s Web 2.0 tool is a website called Kerpoof! On Kerpoof!, students use multimedia tools and their own creativity to engage in storytelling, art, and writing. No account sign-up is required to use Kerpoof, though you can have students sign up for an account if you want them to be able to save their creations on the website. No sign-up is required to save offline versions such as a JPEG of a card.
In the preschool computer lab, we have used the card making tool to create cards for special occasions such as Mother’s Day, Father’s Day, and Valentine’s Day. Students who are beginning readers or who can use a word bank can practice typing in relevant words to search for specific images they want to use. We also practice audience awareness by thinking about what the card recipient likes best rather than what we like best. The Make a Picture tool would also be great for my preschoolers to create scenes relating to the curricular theme of the month. Teachers or parents can extend the learning by having students dictate or write a sentence describing the picture.
The other tools are great for older kids. Students in the lower grades can practice spelling skills in an authentic way using the Spell a Picture tool. My rising 3rd grade daughter adores the Make a Movie tool, and has learned to write scripts, combine multiple scenes, and manage a storyboard timeline, even adding a soundtrack! I have yet to check out the Tell A Story tool, but it looks really interesting too. Check below for the grade recommendations for each tool.
Spell a Picture K-3
Make a Movie, K-8
Make a Card, K-8
Make a Drawing, K-8
Make a Picture, K-3
Tell a Story, 3-8
What ideas do you have for using Kerpoof! with your students? Leave your thoughts in the comments!
In the preschool computer lab, we have used the card making tool to create cards for special occasions such as Mother’s Day, Father’s Day, and Valentine’s Day. Students who are beginning readers or who can use a word bank can practice typing in relevant words to search for specific images they want to use. We also practice audience awareness by thinking about what the card recipient likes best rather than what we like best. The Make a Picture tool would also be great for my preschoolers to create scenes relating to the curricular theme of the month. Teachers or parents can extend the learning by having students dictate or write a sentence describing the picture.
The other tools are great for older kids. Students in the lower grades can practice spelling skills in an authentic way using the Spell a Picture tool. My rising 3rd grade daughter adores the Make a Movie tool, and has learned to write scripts, combine multiple scenes, and manage a storyboard timeline, even adding a soundtrack! I have yet to check out the Tell A Story tool, but it looks really interesting too. Check below for the grade recommendations for each tool.
Spell a Picture K-3
Make a Movie, K-8
Make a Card, K-8
Make a Drawing, K-8
Make a Picture, K-3
Tell a Story, 3-8
What ideas do you have for using Kerpoof! with your students? Leave your thoughts in the comments!
Tuesday, July 26, 2011
Welcome to the Smarty Pants Teaching Blog!
Welcome to my blog! I'm glad you came by. Let me introduce myself. My name is Anna Colley. I am a Christian, a wife, a mother, and an educator. I taught 4th grade in a large metro Atlanta district for 11 years before taking a position last year as a school technology coordinator, my dream job. I now manage the technology program at a state-of-the-art public special-needs school serving preschoolers (ages 3 and 4) and young adults (ages 18-21). As a part of my job, I also teach computer lab to the 3 and 4 year old students. It has been an exciting change for me and a breath of fresh air! Now that I have a year under my belt, I'm feeling much more confident in my abilities as both an educational technology professional and a teacher of preschoolers.
I am also a Teachers Pay Teachers seller, which is a hobby that I really enjoy. I stumbled into this side job as a way to make a little extra money, and soon found that I really enjoy designing quality curriculum materials to share with other educators. Putting an extra polish on the teaching resources I was already using has been fun for me, and I have discovered a latent talent and interest in design in the process. I hope that you'll check out my materials, and let me know what you think!
Here are some FREEBIES that are available in my store:
Yearlong, Semi-Quarterly Book Share Project (Downloaded over 34,000 times! Also available in a comprehensive, editable version for $3.50)
Here are my most popular paid items:
Graph the Constellations, $3.00 (Over 150 sold!)
Fact and Opinion Card Sort, $2.50
Down on the Farm File Folder Game / Center (Cause and Effect), $3.00
Space Adventure File Folder Game / Center (Science: Solar System), $3.00
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