3/24/2023 0 Comments Wordwall for people to write on![]() ![]() Shared by Roberta/1/ME īrowse the latest 25 posts from the 4 Blocks Chatboard: These are available for the children to manipulate and take to their seats or the writing center as needed. I also put a copy of each word, as it goes up onto the wall, on an index card placed into library pockets under each letter. Hopefully they'll be fine for more than one year. They were still fine, but I wanted them computer printed this year. Now I'm all set for this year! I did my five words every week last year, and that got to be a big hassle. Then I cut out the outline of each word and glued them onto black construction paper rectangles. I arranged them so the colors wouldn't be close to each other under each letter on the wall as they went up. I took my first grade word list, divided it up by week, and then printed the words on colored paper. I have to be very careful of glare this year since I'll be having a sight-impaired student. on 3 sheets of paper! I just tried to match the font and size from the words I had purchased and I have many, many places in my classroom where magnets will stick. I did all the letters, 4 sets of names, math words, calendar sentences, etc. You can get many, many words on the magnetic paper. This year, I bought the magnetic paper and added the children's names so we will have a smaller magnetic word wall as well. I had also bought a set of magnetic words last year that my kids loved to use towards the end of the year. I printed mine out on the computer, cut around them and put them on different colored paper last year and they are fine to use again without laminating them. I did the entire year of word wall words, and put them in manilla envelopes labeled for the correct month and filed in my file cabinet. I did this for third grade: I printed them on donated cardstock, cut them out, following the contour of the letters, pasted them onto various colors of construction paper, then laminated them. ![]() Go to the following web site:, you can download the words and print them on your computer's printer. I have my word wall painted with magnetic paint so that has worked very well. That way I can either place tape I can take out without ruining the word or, what I have done lately, place rectangles of magnetic tape. I make my own words on the computer, cut around them, glue them on different colors of poster board, then place transparent contact paper on the back only. Making Word Wall word cards durable/reusble without creating glare Take Home Literature Activity Bags by Paulieįavorite October Activities for the Classroom from Teachers.Net Mailrings Pumpkin Math and Writing Activities by Michele Nash Librarians, Deaf Students and Hearing Students by Linsey Taylor The Freedom Box, Technology for the Blind and Visually Impaired by Dave Melanson Simple Science Center Ideas from the Early Childhood Mailring Teaching Gayle To Read (Part 8) by Grace Vyduna-Haskinsĭear Old Golden Rule Days, Chapter 4 - Creative Writing by Janet Farquhar Word Wall Tips from the 4 Blocks Mailring Non-Conventional Techniques in Teaching Science by P R Guruprasad Through the eyes of a child - Reflections on teacher and student motivation by Sheree Rensel The funny thing about control: Or to gain control you have to give up control by Karin Ford There IS a Printer and a Xerox Machine in Your Classroom That You Can't See! by Dr. The Hurried Child, Book Review by Sonja Marcuson How Many Environments Does a Child Have? by Judith Rich Harris ![]() Belinda GimbertĪttitudes Toward Numbers Through History by Daniel ChangĬlassroom Photos by Members of the Teachers.Net Community The Responsive Classroom: A Practical Approach for Teaching Children to Care by Dr. USCG LT Marshall Branch by Kathleen Carpenter, Editor in Chief Meet our Antarctic Guide - A conversation with That quote from a classroom teacher is the basic premise of Operation RubyThroat: The Hummingbird Project. "Everybody loves hummingbirds, and they are wonderful tools to excite students about learning." WORD WALL TIPS - Teachers.Net Gazette - PARENT CONFERENCE TIPS, TEACHING TIPS, ORGANIZATION IDEAS, CLASSROOM MANAGEMENT, LESSON PLANS, DISCIPLINE, AND MORE - featuring columns and articles by top names in education and your teacher colleagues around the world! The Teachers.Net Gazette is a clearinghouse for teacher writing, from well-reasoned education essays to teacher prose, poems and humor! Bookmark the Teachers.Net Gazette and tell a friend!Ĭurrent Issue » Table of Contents | Back Issues ![]()
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