Students dive into math fraction concepts by partitioning circular ice cream pies, building multi-scooped waffle cones to represent fractions of a whole, and plotting ice cream truck routes on a fraction number line.
A premium, cohesive collection of beautifully designed spiritual and religious reminders for daily, weekly, and seasonal practices, featuring high-contrast connected Arabic typography, elegant arches, and glowing celestial themes.
Unleash sensory and procedural writing skills as students describe the taste, texture, and aroma of guacamole and write their own step-by-step master recipe.
Scale a delicious guacamole recipe using fraction models, addition, and multiplication to feed various group sizes, focusing on measurement units.
Investigate the plant life cycle and physical structures of avocados, limes, cilantro, and tomatoes to understand how green plants grow and produce food.
Explore the ancient Aztec roots of guacamole, mapping its geographic journey and analyzing historical texts to understand how this beloved dish came to be.
Students apply social studies economics concepts (producers, consumers, goods, services, productive resources) and math fractions to design, cost, and budget their own dream ice cream parlor business.
Students explore states of matter (solids, liquids, gases) and physical changes through a hands-on lab making ice cream in a bag, investigating how salt alters the freezing point of ice.
Students explore the origin and evolution of ice cream from ancient snow-chilled treats to modern factories, practicing identifying the main idea and supporting details in ELA, and understanding goods, services, and historical timelines in social studies.
A lesson exploring the life and contributions of Buffalo Bill Cody, featuring a simulated trifold presentation board for historical analysis.
An introductory exploration of the United Kingdom's geography, focusing on its four constituent countries and major landmarks like the River Thames.
An informational lesson about the history and significance of Memorial Day, focusing on vocabulary development through context clues and identifying main ideas with supporting details.
A lesson focused on European explorers of North America, specifically designed for third-grade students to practice identifying cause and effect relationships within informational texts.
A comprehensive lesson covering the geography, culture, government, and economy of Japan, including a detailed presentation and a guided research log for students to record findings in complete sentences.
Students embark on a scavenger hunt quest to distinguish between rules and laws while discovering how they ensure community safety. The lesson concludes with a personal pledge to uphold safety standards.
A lesson focusing on life in a medieval castle, featuring a reading passage adapted for Grade 3 reading levels that aligns with Grade 4 CKLA social studies standards. Students will practice vocabulary, answer comprehension questions, and use the RACER strategy for an open response.
A lesson introducing the concepts of push and pull factors of migration through simplified text, visual icons, and structured response tasks designed for IEP support.
A lesson about the history and landmarks of Bedford, Massachusetts, featuring a simplified story with visual supports and a comprehension assessment.
Explores the transition from bartering to modern currency, defining the fiat system and the stages of production. Students will understand why money acts as a medium of exchange and how resources are transformed into goods.
Concludes the week with a study of canyons and deserts, emphasizing inferences and the use of text features to understand extreme environments.
Examines the journey of water through rivers and the formation of deltas, focusing on cause-and-effect relationships within geographic processes.