Thanksgiving Math Memory Game (free printable)

Here’s a great way to tie Thanksgiving into math practice.  I’ve made 2 options for the front of the card (simple addition and basic multiplication), and 1 option for the back of the card (Thanksgiving theme). The addition version is appropriate for kindergarten – second grade and the multiplication is appropriate for 3rd grade and up. Click here for all 3 pages: Thanksgiving math memory cards- add mult   Copy back to back, cut and you’re off! If you’d like to make your own math facts, only run off the back (Thanksgiving theme) and then hand write your own numbers on the other side. Enjoy!

  

 

Click here for more fun and free Thanksgiving stuff for kids!  Help support this blog and keep it completely free by sharing it with your friends! Thank you! 

Thanksgiving Grammar Practice Book for Upper Grades (free download)

Thanksgiving grammar book- upper grades STICKER

Here’s a great way to combine learning the history of Thanksgiving with some grammar practice! Start 9 school days before the Thanksgiving break. Students read a little bit of the story each day and do a few simple grammar exercises using the text for that day. Enjoy these Thanksgiving worksheets! Click here for the PDF workbook.

2021 update: if you can’t access the PDF in Google Drive right away, please request access when you’re promoted. Google will send me an email so I can grant your email address access to the PDF and I’ll respond to give you access as soon as I can. Thanks for your patience. I haven’t figured out why it’s sometimes unavailable now.

Holiday Math Hopscotch

Here’s a great idea I saw at a family fun night: Holiday math hopscotch.  This one was around Halloween, but you could easily adapt the game for Christmas, Valentine’s day… pretty much anything. The kids had to throw a cloth spider on a hopscotch square.  Then they had to tell the teacher a problem that the number in the square was an answer to.  Then they could hop to it and pick it up.  (Make your hopscotch as long as you want to provide the kids more numbers to work with.) Kids loved it! 

Submitted by an awesome teacher in AZ. Thanks!

Don’t Eat Pete! (Fun Party Game)

This game is one of my favorite games ever. It’s killer easy and it’s way fun. You can use candy (M&Ms are my favorite) or any other type of marker (I’ve used Cheerios, Goldfish, paper markers, etc.). Here’s how to play:

1. Using a grid game board (here is my Don’t Eat Pete Game Template or click here to download my other free holiday game boards), place one M&M on each square.

2. Send one player away from the board where they can’t see/hear you.

3. The remaining players choose 1 square or candy to be “Pete”. Make sure everyone (except the player sent away) knows what the square is.

4. Invite the player back and they get to take as many candies as they can until they get to Pete. When they touch Pete, everyone says “Don’t eat Pete!”

5. At the end, clear off the board (I give the candy to the kid that just played) and put new candy on for the next kid.

This is especially fun in a group and players who know which one is Pete can trick the guessing player by say “Don’t eat Penelope!” or something just to make them jump! Enjoy!

(You could turn this into a more academic game by requiring the player to answer a question before they get to take a piece of candy…)

Here are some of my favorite treats for this game:

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Vocabulary Game & Boards

The teacher I learned this idea from swears by it… and I totally see why! It doesn’t take very much effort on the teacher’s part, and it’s an entertaining way for kids to practice vocab! Here’s how it works:

Week Before: Using the week’s vocabulary words, write a few fill-in-the-blank style questions to test student’s vocabulary knowledge. For example, if the vocabulary list included the word “clumsy”, the teacher wrote this sentence: “The _____ girl bumped into the table and broke the vase.” Since the vocabulary list this teacher uses has 10 words on it, she writes 2 fill-in-the-blanks for each word. She says this takes her about 5 minutes a week to type and print these questions. She cuts them up into strips or cards on Microsoft Word and makes a set for each game board (see below). She uses the same game board for an entire season (changing to the next theme/holiday’s game board).

Week Of: When kids are done with an assignment (especially during the literacy block), they can play 5 in a row tic-tac-toe. Her game boards sometimes use a 3 x 3 grid, but when I talked to her, she suggested making 5 x 5 grids so the students have to practice more questions before the game ends. The teacher keeps each set so she can use it next year (their school uses the same vocabulary lists every year for each grade).

The Game Boards: I’ve made 8 game boards for different seasons. I suggest printing each one on different colored card stock so it’s easy to tell which ones go with which season and they will last longer than regular paper. In addition, laminate them if you can.

Click here for the free printable PDFs I made for this activity:
School themed game board
Valentines game board
St Patrick’s game board
Spring game board
Summer game board
Halloween game board
Thanksgiving game board
Winter game board

Here’s what the boards look like:

America Word Scramble (Free Worksheet!)

Need a filler that ties into your curriculum? How about American history, government or patriotic holidays? Here’s another word scramble that’s sure to keep your students busy for a while. Enjoy!

Right click, choose “save image as” to save this worksheet to your computer so you can resize it later (half sheet, full sheet, etc.).

Winter Word Scramble (Free Worksheet!)

!Another fun worksheet to kill a few minutes when you need it! Happy holidays!

Right click, choose “save image as” so you can save it to your computer and resize this worksheet later (half sheet, whole sheet, etc.)

Thanksgiving Word Scramble (free worksheet)

Teachers always need little “fillers” for when students finish a test early, you need to talk to a parent, etc. Try this Thanksgiving word scramble worksheet for fun! Click here for the free worksheet: Thanksgiving word scramble PDF