All-American Teacher Tools

Sunday, April 3, 2022

Earth Day Games and Activities for 4th - 8th grades

     by Renee Heiss, All-American Teacher Tools

Spring your students into Earth Day with these fun, yet educational, games, activities, and writing assignments. Keep them busy from one day to all week long!

Using a vocabulary, your students will:

1. Play bingo games (30 different game boards), including an EASEL bingo with moveable earth markers!

2. Play a vocabulary relay game

3. Participate in an Earth Day spelling bee

4. Play Earth Day password

5. Draw an Earth Day picture

6. Write an Earth Day story


Only $3.75 and all your Earth Day activities are done!  See it HERE.


Sunday, March 20, 2022

The Value of Project-based Learning - a solid gold learning nugget


Project-based learning (PBL) is the process whereby students take control of their own learning by participating in group projects.
  There is a difference, however, between assigning projects and project-based learning.  A project is an assignment usually added at the end of a unit to strengthen the knowledge learned through traditional educational methods like direct instruction, such as creating a model of the solar system following a unit on that topic.  Project-based learning, on the other hand, poses a specific goal that the students must meet throughout the unit.  Guidelines for completion and grading rubrics are given to the students.  From start to finish, the student knows what is expected and how to attain the goal, and subsequently, their grade.  PBL allows for continuous feedback from the teacher while the students work within their groups.  The unit usually ends with a classroom presentation so everyone can learn from each group's efforts.  And the best part is that not all presentations or product creations are the same.  You don’t have 25 solar system models around the room!

So, how are PBL units organized?  The teacher chooses 4-6 topics related to the unit.  Then the students are divided into the same number of groups.  Within those groups, 3-5 mini-projects guide the students to understand their topic and prepare them to present it to their class.  A week or so later, when all the students have completed their “tasks,” they explain their section of the topic to the rest of the class.  Do you see what happened here?  The students do all he work and all you have to do is the prep for each group.  AND, once you get the groups prepared and the tasks written, you can use this system from year to year!

Benefits to students

Aside from the obvious benefit of learning the PBL topic of the week, your students learn a number of other valuable life skills.

·       Cooperation – When students work in groups, they learn to cooperate with each other.  They can divide up tasks according to group members’ interests and abilities.  They learn to accept that other students may not be as skilled at certain tasks as others. 

·       Time management – When a PBL deadline is posted in the front of the room, students learn to divide up their time so that the project assignments can be done on time (with the threat of grade deductions looming if they are late!) They also learn that certain tasks take more time than others and would therefore deserve more attention, and perhaps even work at home to complete it.

·       Public speaking - On presentation day, students learn public speaking skills.  When they are prepared with their PBL activities, they are more likely to feel confident in front of the room explaining their section of the unit to the rest of the class.

·       Enhanced learning – Remember the learning pyramid?  People of all ages retain 90% of what they learned when they teach others.  If the students know ahead of time that they will be presenting their topic to the class, they will be more inclined to complete the tasks so they look good in front of their peers.

Benefits to teachers

If you are fortunate enough to have PBL activities included with your curriculum guide, you are among the lucky teachers who can lift the projects from the teacher’s guide and hand them out to the students. Most of us aren’t that lucky! And even if you do have that golden PBL unit in your curriculum guide, the activities may not appeal to you or to the climate of your classroom.  Other alternatives include ordering PBL units from TeachersPayTeachers and creating your own PBL units.  Either way, below are the benefits of using PBL in your classroom.

·       Less work/more learning – With a bit of advance preparation, you can allow your students to work at their own pace.  Your PBL packet for each group increases student learning of the topic without you standing in front of the room providing direct instruction.

·       An energized classroom – When students work in groups to solve a problem, answer a question, or create a 3-D or digital project, they become more engaged in their learning.  Boredom disappears as if by magic. Sit back for a moment and watch your students being actively engaged in their own education!

·       Ready-made lesson plans – With PBL, you can lift the objectives directly from the project guidelines for the students and drop them into your plan book.  You don’t need to list all the topics you will be covering and the manner in which you will do so.  The students do all this for you.  How great is that!!

In conclusion, I offer you this quote: "Two major new gold-standard studies conducted by researchers from the University of Southern California and Michigan State University, provide compelling evidence that project-based learning is an effective strategy for all students, outperforming traditional curricula not only for high achieving students, but across grade levels and racial and socioeconomic groups.”  Go here for more information: https://www.edutopia.org/article/new-research-makes-powerful-case-pbl

Look at my collection of Project-based Learning units on TeachersPayTeachers.  I think you’ll find a topic of interest for your classes.  They range from state histories (all 50 + DC) to middle school social studies to Women’s History Month: https://www.teacherspayteachers.com/My-Products/category:534947  Each is designed for 4-5 groups of 3-4 students.  Each tasks students to complete their assignments within a certain time frame.  Each has a variety of activities within each group: Develop a presentation, answer questions, research a topic, create a game, write an interview script, etc.  All groups have links to helpful Internet sources, so your students don’t waste time googling the information. AND, many of my PBL resources also ask the students who have finished their topic to go help those who are struggling to complete theirs.  It’s a win-win classroom where everyone cooperates to learn the topic you have chosen.  Also check out my FREE grading rubric for middle school PBL: https://www.teacherspayteachers.com/Product/Project-Based-Learning-Grading-Rubric-Middle-School-5113042

 


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Wednesday, November 17, 2021

Mix it up - STEM and Language Arts


The arts community has successfully combined STEM with art to create the STEAM movement.  But what about Language Arts?  Consider STREAM! That is the link between STEM, Arts, and Reading (and writing)! Certainly children need to learn STEM concepts but they also need to be able to communicate these concepts to others.  This is especially true when they grow up and find themselves in a STEM-related career.  

It is estimated by the US Bureau of Labor Statistics, that as many as nine million occupations will be added in STEM between the decade of 2012 and 2022. Today's learners need to be able to understand the vocabulary of their STEM careers in addition to being able to communicate their ideas to others at their place of employment.  Communication skills are just as important as STEM skills.

Some Language Arts teachers have included STEM in their curricula in several ways:

  • Design a house for the main character using that character's personality traits
  • Find the STEM in a guided reading passage and discuss what would happen if...
  • Design a game based on a book, to be used as a presentation method to share the book
  • Find the STEM in the daily news report and comment on the issue presented
Some Science teachers have included Language Arts in their classrooms in other ways:
  • Write a summary of a STEM article in a magazine or newspaper
  • Design a structure, and then write a verbal description of the process used to build it
  • Describe step-by-step instructions for another student to follow
  • Compare and contrast two STEM items from a list
A merger of the two curricula is essential to success as an adult in modern employment. In 2011, The National Writing Project published  "Turning STEM into STREAM: Writing as an Essential Component of Science Education" by Robert and Michele Root-Bernstein. In that paper, the authors feel that science teachers also need to add the thinking skills embodied in reading and writing. They also reveal that the average science course requires a student to learn the same number of new vocabulary words he or she would learn in a foreign-language course. 

How do children learn that STEM vocabulary when they are overloaded with other vocabulary in their language arts classes?  STEM vocabulary words probably are not included in the weekly lesson.  Consider things like the difference between "rotor" and "motor" or the meanings of "lever" and "wedge."  These are simple enough words to read but a little more difficult to understand.  When STEM is integrated with art and language arts, students learn STEM vocabulary and creative writing in one neat STREAM of knowledge.  

To add cooperation and respect to the mix, check out my STEM Stories activity for a whole-class effort that includes 160 STEM-related vocabulary words, 50 different settings for stories, and 40 literary devices to use in those stories.  This is a whole-class activity for grades 4-8 where 5 small groups each contribute a paragraph to the whole story.  What fun!  Picture Friday afternoon STEM day where your students work cooperatively and creatively while they learn about STEM vocabulary, literary devices, and the components of a mini-story.  

Renee Heiss

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