If you get stuck, use the powerups to help you clear the screen. Fill the empty square grid using the pieces on the right. Complete a row horizontally or vertically to make those blocks disappear. Turn the pieces to help the Eskimo boy find his way to the igloo. Can you get to the other side of the maze? Look at each picture math equation. Use the information from equation to solve for the question mark. What number should replace the question mark? Practice counting skills by matching the number of objects shown in each picture to the correct number.
Practice addition and subtraction skills in this fun puzzle game. Select from adding, subtracting or both and choose between a range of 10, 20 or It's color by Alphabet! To determine the color of each space, use the code at the side of the page. Guess the Winter word by choosing one of the letters. Find the correct letters to complete the word. It's color by number! To determine the color of each space solve each addition problem, then use the code at the side of the page.
Create a Winter picture using mosaic tiles. Copy the image shown to make your own Winter Mosaic. Get ready to test your great castle building skills in this brand-new game. How high can you go? Baby Elsa was ice skating when she suddenly fell and hurt herself really badly. Can you help nurse her back to good health? Online coloring pages for use in your classroom and home and parents. Color dozens of Winter pictures. What does this little piggy love to do?
Pig out! Help the pigs get the acorns as you progress through all four seasons. Winchester is headed out to gather food for his family before they hibernate for the winter.
Dress him up so he stays warm while on his adventure! Lilly has a snow day and she is building snowmen in Central Park! Help give the snowmen the missing items before they reach Lilly! Amanda is getting ready to go sledding with her besties! Dress her up in cute winter clothes so she can go play with her friends!
Jump, flip, and spin while bombing down a diamond! The bigger the tricks, the higher your score, so get out there and own that mountain! Settle families in the cabins. Provide the services they request as quickly as possible to get higher tips and move on to the next level. Your penguin needs to go the distance and catch fish to survive.
See how far your penguin can slide, and catch as many fish as you can to raise your score. Click on the polar bear to make him jump as high as possible. Keep clicking on the bear to reach the stars.
Snowy the Bear has a very difficult task - to defeat all of the strange monsters and come back to his Arctic. And, of course, to collect the bonuses, the more the better. In Mr. Carrot Face, you must shoot all the presents falling from the sky using your infinite supply of magical carrot noses. Prove your skills on 2 wheels in the winter time and see how good you are on some of the best BMX courses.
The snow filled hills and ramps await you! Push the pedal to the metal and perform some awesome stunts along the way! Oh no, this snowman has lost his head!
Help put the snowman back together again in this fun puzzle game. Therefore, it is even more important to plan for active learning opportunities. Keeping the kiddos up and moving around the room with winter activities, such as Write the Room, can also help keep behavioral students from acting out.
After you post leveled word cards around the room, the kiddos will use clipboards and recording sheets to become independent writers. They will practice writing January vocabulary words, such as snowman, boots, scarf, and so on. This Winter Write the Room comes with 2 levels to make differentiation a breeze. For level 1 , students will copy words from the picture cards onto their recording set.
Whereas, for level 2 , students will use inventive spelling to write the words, because the words are not posted on the level 2 picture cards. Choose between level 1 or level 2 recording sheet when expecting the kiddos to write the words independently. Level 1 recording sheet, they will look for picture cards that match the pictures on their sheet. Level 2 recording sheet, they will look for picture cards that start with the beginning sound shown on their sheet.
There are lots of ways to modify this Winter writing center for kindergarten and first grade students. We are so excited about this…these are the newest addition to the Winter Bundle for Kindergarten!
Your kiddos will absolutely love these January themed number talks. There are printable cards and digital slides included to get your kids talking and engaged in number talks. Simply print and go! This resource is great for Winter activities in kindergarten, because it comes with 10 worksheets and 10 illustrated Winter vocabulary cards. Use the January vocabulary cards in a pocket chart, with a sensory bin activity, in a writing center, or post on a Winter bulletin board.
If your kiddos need a challenge, beyond writing just the word, have them write a sentence using the word. Manipulating sounds within words is the foundation of phonological awareness; a pre-literacy skill taught heavily throughout preK, kindergarten, and first grade. Students work cooperatively to identify the unknown part of a whole group. Winter Shape-doku is a twist on the adult favorite. While many schools have stopped teaching money in Kindergarten, as educators we know that we have to meet children where their needs are.
If your kiddos are ready to work with money, meet them there! By comparing the two numbers, students decide which is greater. Your email address will not be published. Games can be scary. Games can especially be scary for teachers who feel that constant pressure to show accountability. Despite that constant nagging in the back of my mind and sometimes out loud , I have used math games successfully since my first year of teaching.
And I will never teach math without them! It all goes back to my first year of teaching. I was the math planner for my team — let me pause for a moment and express my sincerest gratitude to all of the teachers reading this post who plan math — and I can tell you it was no easy feat. I taught in a district that wanted to see results. Literal pencil and paper exit tickets, tests, benchmark assessments type results. I get the need for accountability, I really do.
But I was struggling with getting my students to connect to the math concepts I had spent hours and hours planning for my team. Something changed for me midyear.
I decided enough was enough.
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