Grade 5

Students fill in this outline and use the key points in their oral report on their current event.

Published in Social Studies

This activity involves cutting out the cloud wheels and windows before fastening them together.  Cloud names on wheel are cirrus, stratocumulus, cumulonimbus, stratus, cumulus, and altocumulus.

Published in Science

A blank Bingo card can be used for any variety of Bingo game!

Published in Teaching Tools

Rubric includes a 1-4 rating scale for the writing areas (focus, content, organization, style, conventions).

Published in Writing

This reading log allows the student to keep track of the different books they read in order to reach their goal.  Student and Parent signatures required.

Published in Reading

This reading log lets students track the number of pages they read to see if they can reach their goal for the month.  Student and Parent signature required at the bottom.

Published in Reading

A simple pictograph with 5 questions and a bonus question.

Published in Math

Each puzzle has two "rules" (multiply by _ ; divide by _) that are used six times to end up with the last number.

Published in Math

What are your dreams for the world?

Published in Holiday Worksheets

Money Word Search

Published in Math

Share a little history with your students!  This sheet is filled with details about the Chinese New Year.

Published in Holiday Worksheets

Learn more about your students using this simple survey.  Students can fill it out to help you understand them and their feelings about school.

A great way to create a unique classroom management system!

Published in Teaching Tools

A great visual for how to remember the parts of a letter.  Main parts include:  header, greeting, body, and closing.

A letter usually includes the following parts:

  • The heading of the letter usually includes the address and date at the top of the letter.
  • The greeting is the opening like Dear Mom followed by a comma for a friendly letter or a colon for a business letter.
  • The body is the heart of the letter. This is where you write your message. Remember to keep your writing clear and easy to read. Write for your reader!
  • The closing is the ending of your letter. Sign your name at the end of the letter under a closing word such as Sincerely followed by a comma.
Published in Language Arts

This simple chart has a line for the child's name along with five columns: date, title (or type of material read), minutes, pages, and parent initials.

Published in Reading

Use this reward to reinforce positive behaviors.

Published in Teaching Tools
Use this note to send home with a student who is missing work.
Includes missing assignment, student explanation for incomplete work, student's plan to avoid a recurrance, due date, and parent signature line.
Published in Teaching Tools

This visual shows what students gain by reading 20 minutes vs. 5 minutes vs. 1 minute a day.  

Published in Reading

Incorporate all winter holidays with these classroom projects, books, songs, crafts, and more!

Published in Holiday Worksheets

Three separate pages of butterfly vocabulary.  Each page adds more challenging words.  

Published in Science

A review of all basic grammar components.

Published in Language Arts