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Christmas Poems to Read, Chant, or Sing
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Christmas Poems to Read, Chant, or Sing

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**Bring some Christmas cheer into your classroom with these short, easy-to-learn poems you can use for shared reading or guided reading lessons, as Christmas songs, or as part of a holiday display or performance. ** There are 11 original poems, each with only 4 lines, so your young learners can easily read, understand, and remember them. The rich Christmas vocabulary is combined with sight words so your students can learn to decode more difficult words in context. Included: Full colour version for classroom display or front of class teaching. Black and white version to print and give to students to read and color. Cover pages to create a Christmas Poem Book for each student Use these poems for: Shared reading Centres Early finishers (students can colour in the pages or prepare a recital for the class) Whole class reading activities Guided reading in small groups Class or school performances Chants or songs Fluency practice Poetry study A fun build-up to the Winter break Read Aloud or Circle Time Adding to a poetry journal These rhyming poems focus on the fun aspects of the holiday season, rather than the religious meaning, so they can be used by all. They feature: Food: candy canes, gingerbread, cookies, and cake Family Santa Rudolph, reindeer, and sleighs Gifts Christmas trees and decorations Winter/Snow Christmas stockings These poems are sure to be a hit this December with your Early Years, Reception, Year One and Year Two students, increasing their confidence and fluency as readers while still celebrating the Christmas season. Merry Christmas, everyone! All my resources are hands-on, open-ended, easy for teachers, and engaging for kids! As a 23-year veteran International School IB PYP teacher, former PYP Co-ordinator and School Visit Team Member, I focus on creating resources that are hands-on, open-ended, inquiry-based, easy for teachers, and engaging for kids! Click my shop name to see my other resources: Board Games for traditional folktales Home Reading - Parent Support letters and bookmarks Full-Sentence Classroom Labels
How Words Are Built Lesson / Unit - Visual Explanations & Practice Sheets
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How Words Are Built Lesson / Unit - Visual Explanations & Practice Sheets

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Teach your students how the English spelling system really works (beyond just phonics) - starting with how words are built (prefixes, bases, suffixes, and the ‘joins’ between them). This complete morphology lesson/unit is not ‘cute’ or babyish and it is open-ended, so it can be used with all levels and ages. Based on research by a dyslexic scholar, the explanations and ‘rules’ included will show your students that English spelling does make sense and that there are reasons why words are spelled the way they are. No more frustration, guesswork or rote learning required. This 45-page printable PDF includes: Lesson Plan Ideas for Use Open-Ended Pre-Assessment Open-Ended Post-Assessment 10 full-color visual explanations 10 blackline Practice sheets 10 answer sheets 11 blackline open-ended extension sheets The Lesson Plan is: Ready to use - all you need is a whiteboard and the print-outs Inquiry-based, starting with the gathering of evidence and the finding of patterns. Open-ended, with opportunities to extend the learning further. Balanced between inquiry, practice, and extension. The Visual Explanations, 10 Practice Sheets and 11 open-ended extension sheets cover: How words are built (morphemes: prefixes, bases, suffixes). Changes that can happen when you add a suffix. Prefixes Adding consonant suffixes Consonant suffix examples Adding vowel suffixes When vowel suffixes cause doubling (in monosyllables) When vowel suffixes cause doubling (in polysyllables) When vowel suffixes take away the <e> Vowel suffix examples The Highly-Visual Explanation Pages can be used as mini-posters, on screen, in student journals, or as a teaching aid. This explanation of spelling rules is backed up by decades of research by a dyslexic scholar into linguistics and the history of the English spelling system (orthography), including right back to when Samuel Johnson was choosing which spellings to use when he wrote the first definitive English language dictionary. You will not find bogus rules like ‘i before e except after c’ in this collection! An understanding of English orthography also develops strengths in vocabulary, reading, oral language and comprehension, and can be used to complement the Science of Reading, Orton-Gillingham, and Structured Literacy approaches. Suggested Lesson Plan/Structure: Optional: Students complete open-ended pre-assessment about their knowledge of why words are spelled the way they are.
Spelling Rules: c, k, or ck - visual explanations and practice sheets
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Spelling Rules: c, k, or ck - visual explanations and practice sheets

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Empower your students with an understanding of how the English spelling system really works (beyond just phonics) - starting with this simple and very easily-mastered rule - When to use C, K, or CK at the beginning or the end of a word. The Two Practice Sheets include: When to use a <c> or a <k> at the beginning of a word (initial sound) When to use a <k> or <ck> at the end of a word (final sound) A clear visual diagram explaining the rule A short and memorable written statement explaining the rule Opportunities to successfully apply understanding with multiple levels of words Answers keys for student self-marking or class discussion if desired The Five Highly-Visual Explanation Pages Include: When to use a <c> or a <k> at the beginning of a word (initial sound) When to use a <k> or <ck> at the end of a word (final sound) Why some words appear to not follow the rules (koala, kangaroo, etc.) Why we need to use a <k> and not a <c> before <e>, <i>, or <y> Which words can end with <c> (e.g. words with suffix <-ic>) Enlarge the explanation visuals to use as posters or teaching aids, or project them on your screen. Then have students complete the practice sheets. Students (and you) will be amazed how ‘easy’ it is to get every word right (even the more difficult words), once they know the rule. These explanations and practice sheets are not ‘cutesy’ or ‘babyish’, so they’re suitable for all ages. After your students have completed this lesson, encourage them to be on the lookout for more examples of <c>, <k> and <ck> words. You could even create an interactive Word Inquiry or spelling bulletin board for them to add their discoveries to throughout the year (post-it notes work really well for this). Ways to Use: Whole Class Teaching Focus on one spelling concept, pattern, or convention at a time. Enlarge each explanation page or project onto your screen. Have students complete the practice sheets afterwards. Individuals When students make a spelling mistake or ask you how to spell a word, you can now direct them to a poster explaining why the word is spelled the way it is, or remind them of the rules you have studied and the practice they have done. Small Groups Group students according to their spelling needs when you notice a few students making the same kinds of errors. Conduct mini-lessons using this resource. Display Set up a spelling or word study bulletin board - you and your students can add more examples to the display throughout the year, as you discover more words. Teachable Moments Seize each teachable moment during class read-alouds, science lessons, unit discussions, or any time an interesting word appears. Have students discuss what the word means (its etymology), how it is built (its morphology) and the letters used to represent how it sounds (its phonology). Add to a class word-study display or book. Links to resources for researching words are included.
Home Reading Parent Letter & Bookmarks
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Home Reading Parent Letter & Bookmarks

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Children learn to read better when they have support at home, but sometimes parents just don’t know how best to help their kids. Home reading can often be a battle, with parents unsure of how to help their child with reading at home (parents do not have teaching degrees, after all). I created these bookmarks to help my families avoid common parental mistakes that were often counter-productive or caused my students to stop enjoying reading at home. Help families support students in learning to read - Educate your parents about how they should be listening to reading. This is a great handout for Back to School Night, Open House, Meet the Teacher, Parent Teacher Conferences, or for when you send home reading books. These are also helpful for parent volunteers so they know how to listen to children read. Includes: 2 versions of my Pause, Prompt, Praise bookmarks Parent letter with detailed explanation of how they can support reading at home. These bookmarks help create a love of reading by making home-reading a joyful, positive, worthwhile experience for students and families. I’ve been using them for the last 5 years and parents are always grateful for the advice. The focus of these bookmarks is the Pause-Prompt-Praise process, which encourages listeners to help children independently use reading skills and strategies when trying to decode text. How to Use: Give out these “Pause-Prompt-Praise” bookmarks on Back-to-School night, or send them home early in the year, along with the included Parent Letter. I also often use them during Parent Teacher Conferences, because parents always ask how they can help their child with reading at home. The bookmarks will help parents know exactly what they can say to their child when listening to their reading. You can even use these as a basis for a Parent Education night or a demonstration video about how to support reading at home. They’re great for parent volunteers, buddy readers, or Teaching Assistants too. Your parents (and students) will appreciate the clear instructions and caring, positive tone of these “Help Me Learn to Read” bookmarks. There are 2 versions of the bookmark. Just print on card-stock and send home with the included parent letter. Thank you for supporting your students and their families as we grow great readers! As a 23-year veteran International School IB PYP teacher, I focus on creating resources that are hands-on, open-ended, inquiry-based, easy for teachers, and engaging for kids! ©HOTLIB, 2022 All rights reserved by author. For Single Classroom/Single Teacher Use Only.
Goldilocks and the Three Bears Board Game for ESL or Lower Primary
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Goldilocks and the Three Bears Board Game for ESL or Lower Primary

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Playing games is a fun way to help your students develop their reading comprehension, but it’s also a great Social Emotional Learning (SEL) activity which helps students learn to take turns, co-operate, be good winners and good losers (good sports). The questions on this fairy tale game board encourage students to practice their English reading and speaking skills while learning a whole lot of extra skills as well. Do you need an easy, no-prep, yet FUN reading comprehension activity for your young students or EAL / ESL / ELL learners? This fun Goldilocks and the Three Bears Board Game only requires printing and handing out - no dice are needed, due to the built-in spinner. Don’t we all just hate trying to find enough dice for students to play games in class? Students will be answering questions about the text, acting out some of the lines, learning to take turns, and having fun! This is prefect for ESL / ELL /EAL English Language Learners as well as Early Childhood / Early Years PreK, Kindergarten, and Grade One students. Use the game as a centre, a reading comprehension activity or for listening comprehension, a fun extension for early finishers, as a way to get kids talking and working together, or as an activity to send home for families. There’s a reason why fairy-tales and folktales are perennial favorites - they are great stories that kids love to read or listen to over and over again, and they teach important morals or life lessons. Instructions: Have your students read Goldilocks and the Three Bears, or you can read the book to them. Print the gameboard in your chosen size and version. I have included: full color, low-ink color black & white. No more lost dice! How to use the spinner: You will need: A pencil A paperclip Put the point of the pencil inside the paper clip, on the centre of the spinner. Hold the pencil with one hand and flick the paperclip with a finger of the other hand. The paperclip will spin then point to a number. This is the number of spaces you move. Your students will love this game! All my resources are hands-on, open-ended, easy for teachers, and engaging for kids! As a 23-year veteran International School IB PYP teacher, former PYP Co-ordinator and School Visit Team Member, I focus on creating resources that are hands-on, open-ended, inquiry-based, easy for teachers, and engaging for kids!
Spelling Rules 51 Posters Explaining the English Writing System
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Spelling Rules 51 Posters Explaining the English Writing System

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This set of 51 posters includes visual explanations of every major English spelling rule, convention, and pattern. Teach your students how spelling really works! With a focus on meaning, word structure, and graphemes/phonemes - etymology, morphology, and phonology - it is more than just phonics. Explanations include: How spelling works: 3 questions to help you spell: *What does the word mean? (what are the related words?) *How is it built? (prefixes, bases, suffixes - and the joins in between) *What letters can you use to show how it sounds? (What are the rules for the use of each letter?) The spelling of the base stays the same even when pronunciation changes. Where a word comes from will affect its spelling (etymology). The history of a word and how it has changed over time will affect its spelling. Silent letters - using related words that are connected in meaning. Homophones - words with different meanings will have different spellings. How words are built (prefixes, bases, suffixes). Changes that can happen when you add a suffix. Vowels Consonants Prefixes Adding consonant suffixes Consonant suffix examples Adding vowel suffixes When vowel suffixes cause doubling When vowel suffixes take away the <e> Vowel suffix examples When to use the plural -s or -es suffix. The -ed suffix and its 3 sounds: /t/, /id/ and /d/. Compound words <C> or <K> to represent /k/ at the beginning of a word. When <C> represents /k/ and when it represents /s/ Words that start with <K> not followed by <e>, <i> or <y>. Writing the /k/ sound at the end of a word. When to use <K> or <CK> at the end of a word. When to use <CH> or <TCH> at the end of a word. When to use <GE> or <DGE> at the end of a word. When to double the <L> at the end of a word. When to double the <Z> at the end of a word. When to double the <F> at the end of a word. When to double the <S> at the end of a word. You can’t end a word with <V>. Why you can’t write <UU>, <VV> or <UV>. You can’t end an English word with <J>. Why some words do end with <U>, <V>, <I> or <J>. The only word that ends with <U> is <YOU>! The only complete English word that ends with <I> is <I>! Using <Y> or <IE> at the end of a word, instead of <I>. Why and how <I> and <Y> share their job. When to replace a <Y> with an <I>. Reasons to keep a <Y> in the middle of a word. Why we don’t write <ii>. Changing <Y> to an <I> when adding a suffix. <Q> is always followed by <U> to make <QU>. Don’t write the same letter three times in a row. Why <VV> and <UU> = <W> Why <W> does not double. Why <X> does not double. The many jobs of the single, silent <e> at the end of a word. Digraphs and Trigraphs. The Trigraph <igh>.
Three Billy Goats Gruff Board Game for ESL and EYFS / Lower Primary
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Three Billy Goats Gruff Board Game for ESL and EYFS / Lower Primary

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Do you need an easy, no-prep, yet FUN reading comprehension activity for your young students or EAL / ESL / ELL learners? This fun Three Billy Goats Gruff Board Game only requires printing and handing out - no dice are needed due to the built-in spinner. Students will be answering questions about the text, acting out some of the lines, learning to take turns, and having fun! Playing games is a fun way to help your students develop their understanding of the text, but it’s also a great Social Emotional Learning (SEL) activity, helping students learn to take turns, co-operate, be good winners and good losers (good sports). The questions on the fairy tale game board encourage students to practice their English reading and speaking skills as well. Use the game as a centre, a reading comprehension activity or for listening comprehension, a fun extension for early finishers, as a way to get kids talking and working together, or as an activity to send home for families. There’s a reason why fairy-tales and folktales are perennial favorites - they are great stories that kids love to read or listen to over and over again. Instructions: Have your students read The Three Billy Goats Gruff, or you can read the book to them. Print the gameboard in your chosen size and version. I have included: full color, low-ink color black & white. No more lost dice! How to use the spinner: You will need: A pencil A paper clip Put the point of the pencil inside the paper clip, on the centre of the spinner. Hold the pencil with one hand and flick the paperclip with a finger of the other hand. The paperclip will spin then point to a number. This is the number of spaces you move. All my resources are hands-on, open-ended, easy for teachers, and engaging for kids! As a 23-year veteran International School IB PYP teacher, former PYP Co-ordinator and School Visit Team Member, I focus on creating resources that are hands-on, open-ended, inquiry-based, easy for teachers, and engaging for kids!