Summer Reading Chart

Summer! The time everyone dreams about all year long.  It’s the time for swimming, ice cream cones and forgetting everything you learned in school the year before. Wait!? What!? That’s not how summer should be! Summer should be a time when kids (and adults) continue to learn and explore the world around them. If that’s too tall an order, at least read. That’s bare minimum.

Every summer there are a number of programs with rewards systems set up to help keep kids reading and learning. Two notable summer reading programs are the Scholastic Summer Challenge and Barnes and Noble Summer Reading. Many local libraries have something every summer too.

Here’s my printable summer reading chart to help kids set and track summer reading goals. I chose to track Monday through Saturday. Older kids should read for longer periods of time than younger kids. Ask your child’s teacher what a reasonable daily goal is for your child.

Summer Reading Chart

To motivate your child, have them choose an activity to do the following week if they meet their reading goal. The top line is for your child’s name. Use stickers, smiley faces or anything else to mark down each day they accomplish their reading. Happy summer!

End of the Year Book (10 Page Printable)

I love reading my husband’s end of the year books from elementary school. They absolutely crack me up! So I made one in case you didn’t have one.  Here are 10 printable pages to use the last week or the last day of school to review the year and make a fun memory for kids to read years down the road. Congratulate yourself- you’ve made it to the end of the school year!

Click here to get the End of the Year Book- PDF

Here’s what the pages look like:

End of the year book 1End of the year book 2End of the year book 3 End of the year book 4 End of the year book 5 End of the year book 6 End of the year book 7 End of the year book 8 End of the year book 9 End of the year book 10

Book Report Poster (UPDATED)

Thank you to Diane for submitting this fun book report poster. It’s legal size (paper) worksheet and is great for lower grades (or as an easy project for upper grades). Great end of the year project (present on your favorite book from the year) or as an end of the quarter/semester project.

Click here for the Word Doc: Book Report Poster- legal size

11 x 17 book resport page

I recently made a similar page that’s formatted to fit regular 8.5″ x 11″ paper. Here’s the PDF: My Book Report – Squarehead Teachers

Book Report STICKER

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Our Family Garden (grammar worksheet)

I visited with a friend recently who has started their own family garden. Such a great idea! An idea great enough (in fact) to inspire this free grammar worksheet! When kids finish the front, they can turn the page over and write about/draw what they would put in their own garden. Enjoy!

Our family garden- grammar worksheet

 

Here’s the last batch (6) of Squarehead grammar worksheets in a Google Doc.

Summer at the Beach (grammar worksheet)

Kids are so focused on summer at this point in the school year, so why not harness that energy and use it to work on grammar? When kids finish this side of the free grammar worksheet, they can flip it over and write about their summer plans. Fast finisher activity? Check!summer at the beach- grammar worksheet

 

Here’s the last batch (6) of Squarehead grammar worksheets in a Google Doc.

The Rope Jumper (grammar worksheet)

I love how little kids exaggerate with numbers (like “it’s gonna take me a million years to finish this book”). That was the inspiration for this little jump rope cartoon. Have another free grammar practice worksheet (since you can never have too many)!the rope jumper grammar worksheet

The Wagon Adventure (grammar worksheet)

I just got off the phone with my Grandpa, who reminded me of a story of my dad’s youth. So in my dad’s honor, I present this grammar worksheet that reminds me of something he and his brothers would have done. Enjoy!

the wagon adventure- grammar worksheet

3 Websites Every Teacher Should Browse

3 websites to browseTeaching is much easier when you know where you can look for help. So this summer, spend a few minutes each day browsing teacher resource sites. Anything you see that you like should be bookmarked on your browser (make a folder called “teaching resources”), or written down in an organized way so you can find it later. Here are some websites to start with:

1. http://www.pbs.org/teachers/– Tons of stuff (including videos) for teachers

2. http://free.ed.gov/– Free teaching & learning resources from federal agencies

3. http://www.smithsonianeducation.org/educators/– Smithsonian… need I say more?

There. Those 3 links should lead you to enough discovery to last you a looong time! 😉  But if you’ve still got “extra” time, here’s a huge list to browse (collection of links posted by a fabulous home school mom): Huge list of links