Students explore the life cycle of a frog, observing the transition from water (tadpole) to land (frog).
A lesson focused on the physics of hitting a home run in baseball. Students explore cause-and-effect relationships and vocabulary context clues through a reading passage, followed by comprehension questions and a creative writing prompt.
An introductory 3-day coding unit for 6th-grade students using Micro:bits. Students learn basic programming concepts like algorithms, loops, and event handlers through interactive physical computing and cooperative pair programming.
A 1st-grade science unit where students work in expert groups to explore Earth, the Moon, Jupiter, and Venus in relation to the Sun. Each group reads specialized text and sketches key observations to build collaborative knowledge.
An interactive STEM challenge and read-aloud experience based on Leo Timmers' 'Elephant Island'. Students design and build floating island rafts to rescue Arnold and his friends.
The complete 8-day camp program containing the comprehensive Teacher Manual, printable Challenge Task Cards, and the daily Student Camp Journal.
A 5th-grade viewing guide lesson centered around the ecological themes of The Bee Movie. This lesson provides tiered scaffolds (Emerging, Expanding, and Bridging) to support English Language Learners in analyzing pollination, human-bee interaction, and environmental responsibility.
An end-of-year science project lesson where 6th-grade students explore plant and animal cells through creative coloring worksheets and a student-designed cell analogy project. Includes high-quality coloring diagrams and a comprehensive graphic organizer guide.
A comprehensive STEM lesson where students design, build, and launch water bottle rockets to explore pressure, volume, and Newton's laws. Students apply physics principles and mathematical formulas to model trajectories and calculate apogee height from hang time.
A 2-day hands-on STEM engineering challenge where 3rd-grade students design, build, and test index card bridges to explore balanced and unbalanced forces, gravity, and load-bearing structures.
A promotional and planning resource bundle for Zeal Online School's 'AI Superstar' program. Includes a highly descriptive scene-by-scene video storyboard guide for the presenter and a vibrant promotional flyer and informational packet for parents.
A set of beautifully color-coded GLAD (Guided Language Acquisition Design) Here/There chants that introduce students to repeating solar and lunar cycles. Includes classroom-ready anchor chart posters for rotating Earth patterns and changing moon phases.
An interactive unit lesson plan implementing Guided Language Acquisition Design (GLAD) strategies to teach 1st graders about the Colville National Forest ecosystem. Students interact with pictorial charts, chant high-frequency science vocabulary, and earn literacy awards detailing local keystone species, food webs, and seasonal changes.
A dynamic science lesson on simple machines focusing on levers and fulcrums. Students explore the three classes of levers through hands-on scenarios, visual models, and interactive challenges.
An engaging lesson on insect collective nouns and terminology, featuring a word search, crossword, and hands-on matching and writing activities exploring how bugs gather in groups.
A comprehensive kindergarten science lesson where students explore summer using their five senses. The lesson includes a teacher guide, interactive slides, an outdoor sensory walk checklist, and a reflective sensory journal.
An interactive sensory science lesson where kindergarteners explore the seasonal changes of summer using their five senses through classroom discovery, an outdoor sensory walk, and journal reflections.
A modular, self-paced entrepreneurship project designed for alternative education students in work-study programs. It bridges real-world work experience with business planning, allowing students to design and pitch their own mock business.
A first-grade science lesson comparing the observable physical and behavioral features of frogs and toads. Includes dual illustrated reading passages, a picture-supported graphic organizer, a sentence-frame writing scaffold, and a teacher facilitation guide.
A comprehensive safety and preparation kit for students and teachers participating in a neighborhood trash pick-up community service project. It includes safety slides, a student contract and checklist, and a detailed teacher instruction guide.
An immersive 5th-grade exploration of Earth's water systems, connecting global bodies of water directly to the continuous cycle of evaporation, condensation, precipitation, and runoff. Students trace how thermal energy drives these transitions across saltwater and freshwater reservoirs.
A highly visual and tactile introduction to polymer chains, monomers, and everyday applications. Students explore how small repeating units form strong, flexible, and stretchy properties through hands-on modeling and scaffolded writing.
A rigorous assessment lesson covering Charles's Law, Gay-Lussac's Law, and the Ideal Gas Law. Students demonstrate understanding through conceptual multiple-choice questions and solve multi-step algebraic calculations with gas behavior formulas.
A comprehensive assessment lesson on the behavior of gases. Students demonstrate their understanding of Boyle's, Charles's, Gay-Lussac's, Combined, and Ideal gas laws through theoretical and quantitative problem-solving.
A hands-on STEM challenge based on The Wizard of Oz where students design and build a balloon-powered rescue vehicle to save Dorothy and her friends from the sleeping effects of the Poppy Field. This lesson guides students through the complete engineering design process, combining physical science concepts with literary connections.
Students explore principles of visual design, contrast, and visual hierarchy to design and sketch an advocacy poster that supports their persuasive argument.
Students translate their scientific evidence into a structured, persuasive editorial or proposal, mastering rhetorical appeals and learning to counter opposing viewpoints.
Students investigate the science of light pollution, explore its ecological effects on wildlife and human health, and analyze real-world data to formulate their core argumentative thesis.