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| Wren mother teaches her young to sing. |
Wednesday, November 23, 2022
Wrens Learning to Sing
Apple Math Game for Bulletin Boards
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| This Apple Math Pattern Illustration is in Creative Commons. |
The Game Rules: Above is a illustration of how teachers might assemble an apple tree on a bulletin board in their classrooms for students to participate in math exercises. One the left is a simple apple shape for cutting from red, green or yellow construction paper. Teachers may post either the answers or problems in advance to the board on her own set of apples. Then students may write out the answers to the apple math game on their own apples and post these on top of the teachers sample problems. For those who get the answers or questions wrong...their apples will fall beneath the tree when the teacher checks their answers.
Printable Clock Face with Hands
The printable clock can be arranged to keep the scores of school games and contests. Individual teachers will undoubtedly have many other ideas for adapting this template to their classroom work. When each student has his own clock with which to work, he or she can be taught the way the hands move, how the big hand goes fast while the little one moves more slowly, and how the clock shows but half a day's time, etc...
- "L is for lost time" alphabet coloring page
- Color-by-number: Time for bed
- Funny furniture friends to color
- "W is for wake up!" alphabet coloring sheet
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| A traditional clock face with minute and hour hands. |
Friday, November 18, 2022
A squirrel pattern for classrooms
Thursday, November 17, 2022
Patterns for A Plains Indian Village
Both an illustration and a pattern with instructions for a Native American canoe are included below. There are also two native people, a man and a woman, that may be cut out and added to the canoe as well.
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| Plains native paper dolls for your reconstruction of their village encampment. |
Print and cut from paper then trace around the teepee on top of cardboard to craft a template for young students to use while assembling a village representing Native Americans who once lived on the plains.
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| A picture of what a Native American village might have looked like on the plains. |
The Dog and Goose
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| A grateful companion. |
While the dog was ill, the goose never quitted him, day or night, not even to feed; and it was apprehended that she would have been starved to death had not a pan of corn been set every day close to the kennel. At this time the goose generally sat in the kennel, and would not suffer any one to approach it, except the person who brought the dog's, or her own food. The end of this faithful bird was melancholy; for when the dog died, she would still keep possession of the kennel, and a new house dog being introduced, which in size and color resembled that lately lost, the poor goose was unhappily deceived, and going into the kennel as usual, the new inhabitant seized her by the throat and killed her.
A Canine Sheep Stealer
Canine Smugglers
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| The night delivery. |
Windmill Pattern for The Classroom
A variety of uses are intended for this design, in addition to the development of art projects, students may adapt it for a sand table or if the sails are attached separately at it's back with a pin, it could be placed where a current of air would make them move. Students might also enjoy painting cardboard versions of the windmill on a day when discussions about different countries is a part of the curriculum.
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| A simple pattern of a windmill and gate for the classroom. |
Boy Pilgrim Pattern for Thanksgiving
The pattern of the boy pilgrim below shows a the place where the printed pattern may be folded in half and be placed alongside another folded paper and traced around before cutting. Make an entire set of paper cuts for your students. Then use the pattern as a guide to fill in the boy pilgrim's features before coloring.
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| This simple pattern of a boy pilgrim has a collar, a hat, and a face. |
Odd Fraternity
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| Eating soup together. |
A gentleman traveling through Mecklenburg was witness to the following curious circumstance in an inn at which he was staying. After dinner, the landlord placed on the floor a large dish of soup, and gave a loud whistle. Immediately there came into the room a mastiff, a fine Angora cat, an old raven, and a remarkably large rat with a bell about its neck. These four animals went to the dish, and without disturbing each other, fed together; after which the dog, cat, and rat lay before the fire, while the raven hopped about the room.
A Singular Interposition
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| Cat to the rescue! |
A lady had a tame bird which she was in the habit of letting out of its cage every day. One morning as it was picking crumbs of bread off the carpet, her cat, who always before showed great kindness for the bird, seized it on a sudden, and jumped with it in her mouth upon a table. The lady was much alarmed for the fate of her favorite, but on turning about instantly discerned the cause. The door had been left open, and a strange cat had just come into the room! After turning it out, her own cat came down from her place of safety, and dropped the bird without having done it the smallest injury.












