Friday, December 16, 2016

Day 5 of Holiday Cheer!

If you've been checking back every day this week to see what the new day of cheer has brought you, you're about to be rewarded!

Just click on the link below and you'll be taken to a ENORMOUS bundle of science teaching resources from many top science sellers on Teacher's Pay Teachers.  AND IT'S ALL FREE.

Happy Holidays!  

Click Here!

The file will be available until Dec. 19th.  Thanks for all you do every day!

Thursday, December 15, 2016

Day 4 of Holiday Cheer!

We're almost to the finish line!

During the holiday, I hope you'll take time to relax.  But when you start thinking about lesson planning consider this:  Students of all ages are engaged by novel activities they haven't done often.  And even secondary students enjoy coloring.

I'm going to make it easy for you to create a color-by-number activity for your next unit.  It really doesn't matter what the unit is.  If you can create multiple choices quiz questions for the unit, then you can create a color-by-number activity instead!

I've done the hard part for you.  I've created the images and inserted editable text boxes into the sections of the picture.  You will need the PowerPoint application.  All you have to do is write questions and link the correct answer to the correct color.  Complete instructions are included with each of my editable color-by-number templates.

Today only:  Purchase one of my color-by-number editable templates from this list.  Then, email me a copy of your TpT receipt to utahrootstpt@gmail.com - along with your request for a free template.  This offer is good ONLY on marked editable color-by-number templates from the list below.  It does not apply to non-editable products in which I have used my own color-by-number images.  It does not apply to any bundle of color-by-number products.

CHOOSE FROM THIS LIST!  

Bat                      Wolf                        Bear                     Camel                  Giraffe

Red Fox               Cats                        Misc Animals

Wednesday, December 14, 2016

Day 3 of Holiday Cheer!

It's hump day!  (And for some, the last day before the holiday break!)  I have to admit that being retired is especially sweet this week!

The last day or two before the holiday feels like hanging on by your fingernails.  In the back of your mind, though, is the idea that somehow before you come back to school you'll have everything reorganized and come back rested and ready with a couple of weeks of lesson plans ready to go.  Yeah, right.  Chances are decent that you'll start thinking about coming back to school around Jan. 1st - maybe.

Why not REALLY be prepared this year?  Take advantage of 25% off to get a bundle of resources that will give you a truly restful holiday, knowing you're all ready for coming back at the end of the holiday?
Check out one of these bundles:

Chemistry Unit                       Ecology Unit                     Heredity/Genetics

Cell Organelles                       Nonfiction Reading for Science        Pre-assessments and Reflections

Make-Your-Own
Color-by-Number

Tuesday, December 13, 2016

Day 2 of Holiday Cheer!

Happy Tuesday!  For Day 2 of the 5 Days of Cheer, I'm offering 50% off my Gingerbread Genetics activity!  

The holiday party is over and it's time for the Gingerbread kids and parents to go home.  But which kids go home with which parents?

Students use Punnett Squares to help them determine which kids and parents go home together.  It's a great activity just before or just AFTER the holidays because of the storyline that the holiday party is over.

At 50% off, you'll pay only $1.75!

Sunday, December 11, 2016


Happy Monday! It's Day 1 of the 5 Days of Holiday Cheer promotion! 
If your lesson planning mojo is waning, (or if this morning's shower did not result in inspiration) come take a look around and get 20% off anything in my store!  Check out these custom categories!

Earth Science (and be sure to pick up my FREE Winter Solstice puzzle!)

Chemistry        Environment/Ecology

Genetics           Human Body

Classification    Nonfiction Reading for Science

Cells                  Color-by-Number








Saturday, November 12, 2016

HAPPY HOLIDAYS!


 

I'm so grateful for all of the support you've given me this year! Since we're all counting down for the last day of school before our winter break, I'd like to make the week a little bit brighter by offering some gifts, deals, and a big surprise on Friday!  

Every day from Dec. 12 - 15 I'll announce right here a holiday give-away or discount.  Each deal will only be good for one day, so you won't want to miss visiting my blog beginning tomorrow morning (Monday Dec. 12)! 


A Safe Classroom

This week many of my teacher friends have shared heart-breaking stories about the acts and expressions of hate they have witnessed in their schools and neighborhoods.  All teachers want their students to feel safe, because we know that no child can learn when his or her basic need for physical and emotional safety is threatened.

I wanted to do something to help teachers help their students.  I wanted them to have something they could use to reassure their students that they are safe in the classroom.  And so I created two Safe Classroom door signs.  One is in English and one is in Spanish.  They're free.  Just click HERE  to be taken to the page where you can download them.  (They're both in the same PDF file.)

I hope they'll help you and your students to re-establish or maintain a safe classroom community environment.  Best wishes and virtual hugs to all of you.  Now, more than ever, you have the most important job in the world.



















Monday, August 8, 2016

Secondary Science Sellers' Back To School Blog Hop 2016


Welcome back!  It's always a bit sad to see summer coming to and end, but I hope that it's balanced with that flutter of excitement about the new year with a fresh start and eagerness to try all the new ideas and resources you've been storing up for the new school year.

It's funny how we always think that no matter how well a unit or lesson went last year, there's gotta be a way to make it even better!  We just can't pass up a new idea that we recognize as something our students will love and will learn from.  I've been busy this summer creating and uploading some new resources for you, that I hope will give you that moment of recognition that "this is good".   Here are a few of them:

This is the latest in my biomes series.  Like the others, it contains reading passages about the biome itself and about an iconic animal of the biome.  In this case -the timber wolf.  It also includes questions with a unique twist - the "answer sheet" is a color-by-number picture of a timber wolf!  Students LOVE and stay engaged with learning when you give them a fun way to demonstrate their understanding!


Temperate Forest Biome Reading, Mapping, and Color-By-Number








Would you like to create your own color-by-number worksheet for a different unit?  Maybe you have a great idea for using the wolf for an endangered species unit.  Or perhaps you have an idea for using it with a populations lesson.  You can get an editable wolf to create your own color by number activity.   Just click HERE to see the editable color by number wolf product.  Or see my entire collection of color-by-number products HERE








Another recent addition to my store is this Atomic Structure Flip Book.  Each page provides a short explanation of one of these topics:

     1.  Parts of an atom
     2.  Atomic Number
     3.  Atomic Mass
     4.  Electron Shells
     5.  Ions and Isotopes

Each page also has a question or two for students to answer.  It can be stapled as a flip book, or each tabbed page can be used for bell work or a quick end of lesson assessment.  And it goes really well with the companion product Atomic Structure Task Cards


You could get ALL of these new products (or any others you prefer) FREE by winning my $25 Rafflecopter Giveaway.  Look below for details. 

Entering is easy!   To enter my giveaway, just choose one of these options:  

1.  Leave a comment on my blog about what you think is the toughest concept for your students to understand, or for you to teach. 

2.  Follow me on Pinterest 
3.  Follow my store on Teachers Pay Teachers.



a Rafflecopter giveaway

You could also get a chance to win $100 worth of science teaching resources.  To kick off this new school year, I've joined with some other Teachers Pay Teachers science teacher/sellers to hold Rafflecopter contests.  After you enter my Rafflecopter giveaway, go to each blog pictured at the bottom of this post and enter their individual Rafflecopter giveaways. That makes 13 MORE chances to win individual TpT gift cards. 

In addition to our individual giveaways, we put together one HUGE blog hop giveaway, just for science teachers teaching grades 6-12 science: Four $100 Teachers Pay Teachers gift cards! 


Here's how to enter the $100 giveaway:  Each blog post has a secret code word and a number.  My clue word is Neil.  Is it astronaut Neil Armstrong? Physicist Neil deGrasse Tyson? Or maybe biologist Neil Hammerschlag? - keep collecting clue words and find out! Collect the words from each blog, write them down in number order, and copy the secret sentence into the joint Rafflecopter giveaway. My clue word (Neil) is #14 in the sentence.   This Rafflecopter form is the same on every blog, so you only need to enter once from any one of our blogs!  

Get started!



a Rafflecopter giveaway 


Terms and Conditions:


“Giveaway ends August 12th 2016 at 11:59 PM EST. Open to Residents of the US and Canada only.  Winners will be selected at random and be notified by email. Winners have 48 hours to confirm their email addresses and respond before a new winner is selected. The gift card offered for the giveaway is free of charge, no purchase necessary. My opinions are my own and were not influenced by any form of compensation.  Facebook, Twitter, Pinterest, and Instagram are in no way associated with this giveaway.  I do not share or sell information and will use any information only for the purpose of contacting the winner.”




Tuesday, August 2, 2016

When Wrong Answers Are More Important Than Right Ones



True or False? When water boils, the bubbles are air being released from the water.


In an American Association for the Advancement of Science survey, 29% of middle school students selected "true" on a similar question.

In a class of 30 students, that means about 9 of your students would not really understand phase changes well enough to know that the bubbles are water vapor, not "air".

But they've "learned" about phases of matter every year since kindergarten haven't they?

In theory, they have.  But obviously, their misconceptions are stronger than accurate conceptions.

Just for fun, I asked a few non-science teacher adults that same question. All of them said the bubbles were air being released from the water.  ALL of them.  A couple of them, on reflection, corrected themselves.  Still, it made me really think about the persistence and pervasiveness of misconceptions.

It made me realize that wrong answers can be more important to a good teacher than right answers. Wrong answers can actually make you a better teacher.


A few years of teaching will definitely teach you a few common misconceptions.  We probably all go out of our way to address those we know of when we are teaching.

But here's the problem with that. You might know that some students hold a specific misconception. But you don't know WHICH students hold that misconception.

Maybe none of them do. Maybe all of them do. Unless you pre-assess, you'll never know. And, because you're a science teacher, you probably don't hold many of the common misconceptions yourself. That fact, paradoxically, handicaps you by making it difficult to write a pre-assessment.

If you don't hold the common misconceptions yourself, how do you know what they are?

You can write a pre-assessment based on your own post-tests, or unit activities, but they will only assess whether students know what you know.  They might not tell you what students believe instead of what you want them to know.

Students don't come to you as empty vessels.  They already have conceptions about things like the phases of matter, some of which are misconceptions.  Pre-assessment shouldn't be just finding out that they have misconceptions.  It should tell you what those misconceptions are.

To make pre-assessment a little easier for teachers, I did research on common scientific misconceptions held by different age groups of students and created several pre-assessments that you can use.

Here's an example from my
Uncovering Student Misconceptions About Matter



Students are also asked to self-identify how sure they are of their answer.  That gives you a chance to identify the students who hold a misconception most firmly.  On the back side, they are given an opportunity to further explain their answer to you, or to clarify why they selected their answer.



To help you identify students who still hold a misconception at the end of your unit, before the unit test, you can return the pre-assessment to your students and have them reflection on the changes in their understanding.  That will help you to see if they get the "right" answer but for the "wrong" reason. Then you can address lingering misconceptions before the unit exam.



A teacher guide is also included with an explanation of the misconceptions commonly held:



Check out my Bundle of Pre-Assessments for these units:  Cells, Energy and Living Things, Matter, and Heredity.