Scribbles… the best writing tool ever! (free download)

Scribbles picture

This is one of my absolute favorite teaching tools for writing. Kids love being creative and they love to share their creativity with others. These “scribbles” have been circulating for years, but I’ve added a ton of my own to make a big set of 27 scribbles. Here’s how they work:

1. Students turn the scribble at the top of the page into something (you can limit the amount of time if you need to).

2. Students write about what they turned the scribble into. This is your chance to help reinforce paragraph concepts, grammar, spelling, etc. I used to give my students a specific prompt and writing requirements that addressed something in the state or common core (persuasive, informative, etc.). We also used some of these as editing practice.

3. Have students share their writing (under the document camera, go read it to 2 classmates, whatever…). This part is CRUCIAL. It adds so much enthusiasm and energy to the project. When I didn’t let the kids share, they weren’t as excited the next time I passed one of these out. I had a space on one of my bulletin boards for the “Super Scribble” (the one I felt best completed the writing aspect we were focusing on).

4. I’d recommend not making a single book out of these and giving them to the students all at once. If kids see them ahead of time, it kind of kills the project. Some kids might also be tempted to draw on all of them before your class is supposed to do the scribble.

Like I said, this is one of my favorite writing tools. Let me know how it worked in your classroom!

Click here to get the 54 page PDF: Scribble writing- master set with back page of lines

Here are some (PDF) samples one 2nd grade teacher sent me: Scribble 1 and Scribble 2. Her class had fun doing these and the students wanted to send their work to me! So flattered!

Story Summary Graphic Organizer (lower grades)

story summary graphic organizer

When I was working in a 2nd grade classroom recently, the teacher and I came up with this simple story summary graphic organizer for the kids to complete on a decodable book during literacy centers time. It’s got the basics of the story: who, what, where, when, why.

Click here to get the Story summary graphic organizer- easy.

-ear, -er, -ir, -ur sounds (quick paper project)

I recently found these little paper/brad projects. My 2nd grade teacher used to to one every week (or day… I don’t remember which) and I absolutely loved them! She had tons of them, but I only found 4. So here they are, just for memory’s sake…

ear counds- earth project

er sounds- fern project

ir sounds- bird project

ur sounds- purse project

Writing Page for Stories (with picture space)

One of my teacher friends calls this page her “must have” for writing. It’s got a space for kids to draw a picture, and lots of blank lines for writing.

Click here for page: Writing page blank- picture frame and lines

You’re A Star (free printable blank certificates)

IYou're a Star certificate 1t’s always nice to have some blank certificates for spur-of-the-moment use in your classroom, or at the end of the year. These have a space for student’s name, teacher’s name, date, and the star is open if you’d like to write award specifics in it. Enjoy!

Click here for the free printable PDFs: You’re a Star – Blank Certificates

Don’t forget some cool pans to use when filling these certificates out! I recommend these “throwback to middle school” Gelly Roll Stardust pens!


Click the photo to grab them!
Here are some more blank certificates I’ve made over the years:

End of the Year Awards (#Awards for Upper Grades) 45 page set

End of the Year Awards (43 page set)

Build-A-Word Literacy Center for lower grades (time-saving genius idea!)

Here’s an idea I got from a 2nd grade teacher. First, save this Microsoft Word file of letter/sound cards to your computer. Then read the directions below.

Click here to download the sound cards.

How To Use This Literacy Center 

Students:

  1. Build words with the letter cards. Each word mush use the sound of the week (the double sized-card).
  2. Make a “T –chart” of the words you make. (If there are 3 sounds of the week, make a T chart with 3 columns).

Teachers:

  1. Save this template to your computer, so you can use it each week.
  2. Each week, change the sounds on the double sized cards to match the sounds your class is studying that week.
  3. Run off the set on cardstock paper (1 set on a different color for each student who attends the center at any given time).
  4. Use a paper cutter to cut out multiple sheets of cards at once (until all cards are cut out).
  5. Label an envelope so you can reuse these cards next year (“oi/oy sounds – blue cards”). This way, the kids will always know which set is theirs (color), which sounds they need to focus on (double sized cards), and what envelope to put them in when they’re done.
  6. Smile because you’ve set up a literacy center that will only take a few minutes each week for the first year, and then will be ALL DONE for every year after that! J

History of Valentine’s Day (grammar practice book for lower grades)

V-Day grammar book pictureI’ve gotten positive feedback from a few teachers on these grammar practice books, so I’ve decided to make a Valentine’s Day one for lower grades. It’s 5 days long, and the passages are fairly short. Look through the pages first to know whether this activity will be best for your class as an independent work activity or as a whole class activity. Happy Heart Day!

Click here for the PDF to download/print.

Parts of Speech Valentine’s Wreath (Paper Craft Idea)

You’ve probably seen Valentine’s Day paper crafts that look like this…

conversation hearts wreath(image source)

But have your ever thought of adding a parts of speech twist to the wreath project?

1. As a class brainstorm nouns, verbs, and adjectives that fit with Valentine’s Day.

2. Assign each color of hears a part of speech (yellow and green are nouns, pink and white are verbs, etc.)

3. Have students select words from the class brainstorm to write on the color of heart you’ve assigned.

The product is a cute, Valentine’s Day wreath, that looks like conversation hearts, but it really part of speech practice!