The Joy of Teaching

Sharing creative ideas and lessons to help children learn

December 18, 2017
by Evan-Moor
1 Comment

3 Benefits of Homeschooling While Traveling Overseas

My homeschooling adventures began ten years ago when my daughter was six years old. At the time, I had no idea that my personal life and career were going to change radically, requiring my daughter and me to travel frequently. We have experienced many life lessons on this homeschooling adventure. Here are 3 of the most surprising ones:

1. A new understanding and practice for connecting socially

I am frequently asked, by people who do not understand homeschooling, if my homeschooled daughter is missing out on social situations. I found the opposite to be true. Because of our travel, my daughter learned to communicate and interact with individuals of varying age, race, and gender. In my opinion, our travel provided unique opportunities for my daughter to learn social skills and provided her with the confidence to approach any individual. As she grew older, my daughter learned to be interested in conversations that were not age specific. She would also show immediate compassion for a person younger in age and have no qualms about intermingling socially with an older age group. Today, with ten years of experience in connecting with a variety of people, I can confirm she has developed a high level of social intelligence.

2. Language, geography, culture, math, history, and other subjects become relevant in practice with tangible action

Access to good educational material such as Evan-Moor resource books is necessary in assuring that a level of the curriculum is maintained for a child’s learning expectations. However, with travel, the brain is allowed to connect concepts within a subject matter to the surrounding environment, helping learning to come alive.

Here are a few examples of how to extend learning while traveling:

  • Start a journal with your child and have him or her use it for writing, drawing, or pasting pictures to express what he or she discovers while traveling.
  • Allow your child to manage the money for a day. Math lessons regarding money are best learned when the homeschooler is allowed to manage the day’s travel budget. Although the language of money is a universal one, we have to learn to communicate it in different currencies as well as accepting differing ideas regarding money.
  • Cook and prepare locally inspired food. Sourcing and preparing food in the country of travel allowed us to learn the extensive range of a food’s ingredients in a country and learn more about the local culture.

3. Adaptability – a necessary skill for the new world
Homeschooling while traveling overseas forces lessons in flexibility upon us. It provided multiple opportunities to create and design varied learning experiences. As we travelled, we learned to adapt ourselves to our changing environments rather than expect others to accommodate us.

There are still so many more lessons to be learned. Travel is on our life agenda. I believe this means that we will be learning for a very long time.


Lara Jay Hequet is a life entrepreneur, certified and qualified in many fields of knowledge. She is a single parent to a fifteen year old daughter who is ‘lifeschooled’ for the last ten years. Together, they travel the world creating life stories and capturing stories of other wonderful people via film and the spoken word.

She is the founder of wowageing.com, a community of people who choose to Live Older instead of growing older. She intends to inspire and support unique individuals and their parents in the art of homeschooling.

December 4, 2017
by Evan-Moor
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Every Snowflake Is Different: Snowflake Crafts and Writing Prompts for Your Classroom

Inspire creative writing in your classroom this month with paper snowflakes, lovable snowmen and winter writing prompts!

What is a winter wonderland without snowflakes? Turn your classroom into a beautiful paper blizzard with a fun and easy snowflake project for your students. All it requires is paper, scissors, and a little creativity. While making snowflakes can be simple enough, add a short writing prompt to encourage thinking. Let’s start with the snowflakes!

Snowflake Paper Craft Activity

How to make a snowflake with a circle:

  1. Start by cutting out a circle in your paper.
  2. Fold your circle into a semicircle with the curved edge facing you.
  3. Fold the left side over onto the right, forming a cone-looking paper.
  4. Cut out pieces from the outside of the paper. Be careful not to cut all the way through. You can also punch holes in your paper with a hole puncher.
  5. Unfold and behold your snowflake.

How to make a snowflake with a square:

  1. Start by cutting out a square with your paper, with the pointed side facing you, like a diamond.
  2. Fold the left point over to the right.
  3. Fold the bottom point to the top.
  4. Cut away from the edges. Be careful not to cut all the way through the paper.
  5. Unfold and behold your snowflake.

See this page for picture instruction.

Snowflake-inspired Creative Writing Prompts

Now that your classroom is decorated with beautiful paper snowflakes, ask your students to look around at the designs. Ask them what they notice when they compare the snowflakes. Hopefully, with maybe a little hinting, they’ll notice that no two snowflakes are exactly the same. There is an estimated 1 in a million trillion chance of finding twin snowflakes.

Suggested writing prompts:

  • Like a snowflake, how are you different than those around you?
  • What makes you a special snowflake?
  • If you were a snowflake, where would you want to fall?

Snow man bulletin board with snowflakesSnowman Bulletin Board

Download this snowman bulletin board and make your classroom transformation complete. Option: add students’ paper snowflakes and creative writing samples.

Winter brings the perfect opportunity for your students to express their creativity in beautifying the classroom with decorations. It also allows for a chance for kids to embrace that everybody is different in their talents, looks, and personalities.

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Christine Wooler has experience working with children as a youth soccer coach and summer camp counselor. She is currently studying English Literature and journalism in college. She enjoys exploring educational topics that help students have fun while learning.

November 29, 2017
by Evan-Moor
1 Comment

How to Teach Evidence-Based Writing in 5 Easy Steps

Evidence-based writing is an important component in today’s writing curriculum. Students are expected to support their writing with text-based evidence and clear arguments. These writing lessons can become overwhelming and laborious for teachers and students alike. Keep confusion to a minimum by strategically scaffolding your writing lessons into bite-sized steps. Here are some strategies to help you scaffold your evidence-based writing lessons.

Strategies for text-based writing Looking for evidence for text-based writing poster

1. Identify the purpose 

Have students answer the following questions

  • What are we going to read about?
  • What are we going to learn about?
  • What are we going to write based on this article?

2. Read the article closely

  • Read aloud with the class modeling think-alouds. It is important for students to hear and understand your thinking process as you are reading.
  • Point out interesting information and underline it.
  • Re-read parts that are difficult to understand and highlight information relevant to the writing prompt.

compare and contrast graphic organizer for citing textual evidence3. Organize the information

Graphic organizers are the perfect visual tool to organize information. Explain to students that the graphic organizers guide students through the planning process of writing their paragraphs.

4.Write

  • Use a visual tool on the board to demonstrate to students how the information within their paragraphs is related. The hamburger model is a popular visual to demonstrate these connections. This model demonstrates how topic sentences and details are related.
  • Read examples of well-written samples and discuss the elements that create a quality text.writing hamburger visual

Evan-Moor Sentence Starters charttypes of conclusions poster

5. Feedback

  • Resist the urge to mark every missing detail in red. Before you grade your students’ papers, decide what the key concepts of the lesson are and focus on those (especially for young writers).

Text-Based Writing Sample Lessons

Text-Based Writing, Grade 3Frequent practice analyzing texts and identifying evidence is the best method to improve your students’ analytical writing abilities. Evan-Moor’s Text-Based Writing: Nonfiction is a comprehensive classroom resource that gives students continual practice with citing text evidence. Each unit provides a nonfiction reading article, vocabulary and comprehension questions, graphic organizer, and writing page to guide students through their writing. Get your free sample lessons here

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Heather Foudy is a certified elementary teacher with over 7 years’ experience as an educator and volunteer in the classroom. She enjoys creating lessons that are meaningful and creative for students. She is currently working for Evan-Moor’s marketing and communications team and enjoys building learning opportunities that are both meaningful and creative for students and teachers alike.

November 20, 2017
by Evan-Moor
0 comments

5 Screen-Free Kids Activities for Kids To Foster Critical and Creative Thinking

Critical and creative thinking, like any other skill, must be exercised and challenged to grow.  Combining creative and critical thinking activities is a great way to help prepare children to become effective problem solvers.  In the future, children must know how to use both creativity to come up with new ideas and critical thinking to focus and analyze processes.

Children are increasingly spending more time in front of screens, while studies are telling us they need more time away from technology to develop their imaginations. The American Academy of Pediatrics recommends that children between the ages of four and five have less than one hour of screen time per day while children six and older have consistent limits placed on their screen time.

When my children were young, my husband and I agreed to limit the time our children spent in front of screens and to encourage creativity, personal interaction, and critical thinking. We still allow monitored television and tablet games during the weekend, but our primary focus is teaching our children to tap into their own imaginations.

Television and the Internet offer so much uncensored content and information. How is your child assimilating and evaluating that information? In this digital age, it is important for children to learn how to screen out the distractions in their environment and critically analyze the world around them. Improving analytical and creative thinking through mental exercises develops the habits of imagining, experimenting, and questioning and builds internal tools within our children to evaluate the world around them.

5 Alternatives to Screen Time

  1. Top Kid’s Board Games: Some of our favorites are:
    • Apples to Apples
    • Connect Four
    • Aggravation
    • Clue
    • Yahtzee

Create your own board game! Working backward is a great exercise that combines creative new ideas with careful analysis and organization.

  • Using cardboard, cut out a game board and pieces.
  • Create a goal and theme.
  • Develop a set of rules that participants must follow to win.
  • Create a catchy title.

2. Switch up reading routines: Encourage reading with a variety of reading materials. Sometimes unconventional reading options are the best to help reluctant readers with their daily reading.

    • Calvin and Hobbes comics
    • Garfield comics
    • National Geographic Magazine for kids
    • Check out the New York Library of top reading books for kids here.

Let your children build or create a fun reading nook at home, even if it is temporary.

  • Build a fort with sheets under a desk
  • Pitch a tent in the backyard
  • Use pillows to create a reading space in a bedroom
  • Transform a large cardboard box into a cozy reading space
  • Hang a hammock chair from the ceiling

3. Let kids get messy and creative with art: Inspire the inner artist with these free art activities.

4. Family Reading night: Designate a family reading night with fun treats and read-alouds. Stories provide opportunities for children to imagine the impossible and allow their creative minds to roam with possibilities.

    • Where the Red Fern Grows
    • Harry Potter and the Philosopher’s Stone
    • Little House on the Prairie
    • Stuart Little
    • Charlie and the Chocolate Factory

Create a festive mood with a fun treat like a popcorn, pretzel and chocolate mix!

 

5. Set aside 15 minutes for quiet time with activity books. Quiet time allows children to process and synthesis new information. It increases creativity, focus, mindfulness and confidence. Allowing children a few minutes at the end of every day is a wonderful activity to foster their creativity and critical thinking.

    • Never Bored Kids activity book coverThe Never-Bored Kid  activity books for ages 4-9 fosters creativity and higher-order thinking with puzzles, mazes, crafts, word games, art projects, and games. Perfect for summer fun, evening boredom busters and road trips, the full-color activities provide fun and easy entertainment that doesn’t involve a screen.
       
    • Skill Sharpeners Critical Thinking Cover of kids activity bookSkill Sharpeners: Critical Thinking activity books offer creative and fun activities that challenge your child to use higher-order thinking skills such as analyzing, inferring, solving, and creating.
       

 

 

 

Education is not the learning of facts. It’s rather the training of the mind to think.
-Albert Einstein

Education should not be left to the classroom alone. As parents, we are instructing our children every day in our conversations, interactions, and habits. How are you educating your children?

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Heather Foudy is a certified elementary teacher with over 7 years’ experience as an educator and volunteer in the classroom. She enjoys creating lessons that are meaningful and creative for students. She is currently working for Evan-Moor’s marketing and communications team and enjoys building learning opportunities that are both meaningful and creative for students and teachers alike.

paint and paint brushes laid out

November 13, 2017
by Evan-Moor
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The Case for Art in Schools and Ways to Integrate Art into Your Lessons

Art is getting squeezed out of the curriculum. Yet art shouldn’t be an afterthought in our children’s education, but integrated into every subject to inspire students’ creativity, emotion, and higher-level thinking. Evan-Moor Educational Publishers was founded by two teachers who were passionate about incorporating art into the curriculum. The first book ever published by Evan-Moor, in 1970, Art Moves the Basics Along, incorporated basic drawing activities into lessons to motivate children to learn. We still believe that art is an important component of today’s curriculum! Here are three top reasons to preserve art lessons in schools and suggestions for integrating art activities to inspire children to learn: Why We Should Keep Art Lessons in Schools
  1. The arts are an important component of learning and brain development in young students. Art lessons develop students’ essential thinking tools, such as pattern recognition and symbolic and abstract representations, while supporting core content areas.
  2. Art influences all areas of the curriculum. The Arts and Achievement in At-Risk Youth Study revealed that access to arts in education improves children’s psychological, social, and academic outcomes, especially for low-income students.
  3. Art can improve students’ motivation, concentration, and collaboration with peers and build lasting connections between students and their community. Integrate the Arts, Deepen the Learning demonstrates how one school developed their students’ critical thinking and collaboration skills through thoughtful integration of the arts into their curriculum. Student engagement increased significantly within the school with the infusion of art-related lessons and content.
Ways to Integrate Art into Your Curriculum Even if your school does not have an art instructor, you can still find simple ways of incorporating art into your busy school day. By taking the time to complete an art project, you can encourage creative thinking and expression within your classroom. For example, combine your math lesson on repeating patterns and geometry with an art lesson on tessellations. (A tessellation is a repeating pattern of geometric shapes.) Download your free tessellations art activity here (from How to Teach Art to Children). This art lesson includes a brief study of the famous artist M.C. Escher and additional literature references about his work.   If you are looking for simple, age-appropriate art activities, How to Teach Art to Children and ArtWorks for Kids are great options with hundreds of art project ideas. These resources include step-by-step instructions, teach the elements of art, and include accompanying literature describing the famous artists who used these techniques.

From: How to Teach Art to Children

From: How to Teach Art to Children

From: ArtWorks for Kids

              How do you incorporate art into your lessons? Please share.
Heather Foudy is a certified elementary teacher with over 7 years’ experience as an educator and volunteer in the classroom. She enjoys creating lessons that are meaningful and creative for students. She is currently working for Evan-Moor’s marketing and communications team and enjoys building learning opportunities that are both meaningful and creative for students and teachers alike.

November 7, 2017
by Evan-Moor
0 comments

Patriotic Lessons and Activities for Veterans Day

Veterans Day lessons and activities teach our students about the sacrifices and patriotism of American soldiers who have served our country. American history lessons are important to help students understand the meaning and significance behind this holiday.

November 11 marks a national holiday that honors the men and women who have served in our armed forces. It was originally called Armistice Day to commemorate the end of WWI and the signing of the armistice in 1918 “on the eleventh hour of the eleventh day of the eleventh month.” It was renamed Veterans Day in 1954 to include veterans of all wars.

Honor veterans in your community by engaging in one of these Veterans Day activities:

  1. Invite a local veteran to come to your classroom and share his/her experience.
  2. Write thank-you letters to local veterans within your community.
  3. Teach about the origins of the American flag and what it symbolizes. Download this free unit for grades 1–3: Name That Flag
  4. Give students a brief history of Washington D.C. and take them on a map tour of our nation’s capital. Download this free unit for grades 4–6: Our Nation’s Capital.
  5. Brainstorm and write about ways students can serve their community and country.

Cover image of U.S Facts and Fun activity book Name That Flag lesson for grades 1-3
U.S Facts and Fun cover image of workbook for grades 4-6 Our Nation's Capital lesson for grades 4-6

Carve out some time in your classroom to reflect on the service and sacrifice of our veterans.

Save this Patriotic Lessons and Activities pin on Pinterest.


Heather Foudy is a certified elementary teacher with over 7 years’ experience as an educator and volunteer in the classroom. She enjoys creating lessons that are meaningful and creative for students. She is currently working for Evan-Moor’s marketing and communications team and enjoys building learning opportunities that are both meaningful and creative for students and teachers alike.

Thanksgiving writing prompts

November 1, 2017
by Evan-Moor
0 comments

Pie, Please! – Creative Writing Prompts for November and Thanksgiving

Thanksgiving writing promptsKeep students writing in November with Thanksgiving-themed creative writing prompts. These topics can be used as journal free writes or paragraph-writing practice.

Free Creative Writing Activity – Pie, Please!

In this Thanksgiving creative writing activity, students are asked to imagine their favorite kind of pie and describe what happens next when they see the pie sitting on the counter, just waiting. Ideal for grades 2–6.

Story Starters:

  • Five things I am most thankful for
  • Compare the first Thanksgiving to the way your family celebrates
  • Pretend you are living in Plymouth Colony and write a letter to a friend in London
  • If I could speak to Squanto, I would ask…
  • If I were a child on the Mayflower…

Quick Write Topics:

  • If I were an animal, I would be…
  • Lost in the woods
  • The food I like the most
  • If I had lived in 1620
  • How to grow a pumpkin
  • Grandma’s house

These creative writing prompts are from Giant Write Every Day: Daily Writing Prompts, grades 2–6.

For more Evan-Moor writing resources for the classroom and home, browse these Writing workbooks and teaching resources.


Image of Theresa WoolerTheresa Wooler has more than 10 years’ experience in K–6 classrooms as a parent volunteer and homeschool educator, has taught high school English, and is currently involved in education through Evan-Moor’s marketing communications teamSave

Beginning cursive instruction paper

October 31, 2017
by Evan-Moor
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Cursive…Is It a Necessity or a Waste of Time?

Beginning cursive instruction paperMany argue that cursive is an obsolete skill in today’s technology-driven world. What is the best way to approach handwriting instruction in schools? Should cursive instruction be replaced with technology?

Handwriting, both manuscript and cursive, are important foundations in children’s development of thinking, language, and memory. Studies have repeatedly proved that writing verses typing stimulates the connections between the right and left hemispheres of the brain in areas of memory and language. In a 2014 study from The Pen Is Mightier Than the Keyboard: Advantages of Longhand Over Laptop Note Taking, students who hand wrote their notes outperformed their typing peers on conceptual questions in three separate studies. However, is it necessary to teach both?

Hidden handwriting benefits

“I don’t want my children wasting their time on something they will never use,” is a common phrase I hear. However, what these parents are not taking into account are the hidden benefits to children of written expression.

All children develop their own type of writing by the time they enter middle school. The method they choose for taking notes and writing is the fastest and most efficient method for them. Differentiation within education allows children the freedom to study with the learning method that best suits their brain development. If we eliminate cursive in support of more technological pursuits such as coding, we will be handicapping a generation of young learners.

Teach it and let the students decide

Schools should make a little time in their curriculum for cursive instruction. Just as we support music, art, technology, and physical education within our schools, we must include this learning tool as a foundational stepping stone for students to make discoveries about themselves and how they learn.

In your child’s school, typing should not replace handwriting instruction. Studies show that these two skills activate very different parts of the brain. In a study conducted by Virginia Berninger, a psychologist at the University of Washington, they found that neural development increases in language, memory, word recognition, and emotion with handwriting verses typing.

Easy methods for teaching handwriting

Cover of cursive handwriting bookIf you are looking for simple and easy resources to practice handwriting at home or school, check out Evan-Moor’s Daily Handwriting Practice. Available for grades K–6, Daily Handwriting Practice is available in four titles: modern manuscript, traditional manuscript, traditional cursive, and contemporary cursive. Daily writing exercises help students master handwriting skills in 15 minutes a day or less.

What does the research say?

Campaign for Cursive research

What’s Lost as Handwriting Fades

The Pen Is Mightier Than the Keyboard: Advantages of Longhand Over Laptop Note Taking

 


Heather Foudy is a certified elementary teacher with over 7 years’ experience as an educator and volunteer in the classroom. She enjoys creating lessons that are meaningful and creative for students. She is currently working for Evan-Moor’s marketing and communications team and enjoys building learning opportunities that are both meaningful and creative for students and teachers alike.

Hsitory Pockets Ancient Egypt crafts laid out

October 24, 2017
by Evan-Moor
0 comments

Hands-on History Projects for Ancient Egypt

Hsitory Pockets Ancient Egypt crafts laid outInteractive social studies lessons will bring history to life in your classroom. History Pockets are an easy way to incorporate fun, hands-on learning in your social studies curriculum.

As a classroom teacher, I loved units like History Pockets because they provided artistic and engaging lessons for my students—with minimal prep work for me. The construction paper pockets are simple to create with students and easy to store. The pocket projects also create instant displays for parent nights and open houses!

History Pockets include more information than the average classroom teacher has time to teach in detail. There are many different ways to utilize these resources in your classroom without getting overwhelmed:

  • Introduce the topic to the class and then assign groups of students to study specific units. Each pocket unit includes facts and background information for teachers and students.
  • Assign a unit or part of a unit for homework over a long break. Parent involvement is a wonderful method to get students excited about homework.
  • Complete one or more pocket activities together as a class. Activities include arts and crafts, writing, maps and timelines, and more to give you many options.

For example, History Pockets: Ancient Egypt, for grades 4–6, includes 7 units covering: Introduction to Ancient Egypt, Daily Life, Government and Leaders, Religion, Architecture, Language, and Arts and Recreation. The units provide ample study materials that cover the geographic, political, economic, religious, and social structures of ancient Egypt. Each unit includes background information in addition to interactive visuals and step-by-step projects, such as a menagerie of gods book, mummy art, pyramid construction, and pharaoh studies.

Book of Egyptian Gods Egyptian God Hathor Booklet lesson Pharaoh, mummy sarcophagus from Ancient Egyptian Tomb for social studies report  Mummy sarcophagus   

Pharaoh tomb booklet for social studies lesson 

Hieroglyphic alphabet

Free Hieroglyphics Activity 

Students will love writing and decoding messages using hieroglyphics in this free activity from the language unit in History Pockets: Ancient Egypt!

We know that children learn more when they are actively involved, and providing hands-on report building is a great method to support learning.

Additional Resources

If you would like to replicate a true Egyptian experience for your students, create a clay cartouche with your lesson on hieroglyphics from How to Teach Art to Children.

For more ideas with History Pockets, visit Thanksgiving Holiday and Making Connections with History.

Check out these additional History Pockets titles: Ancient Civilizations, Life in Plymouth Colony, Native Americans, Ancient Greece, Ancient Rome, Colonial America, Explorers of North America, Moving West, The American Civil War, The American Revolution


Heather Foudy is a certified elementary teacher with over 7 years’ experience as an educator and volunteer in the classroom. She enjoys creating lessons that are meaningful and creative for students. She is currently working for Evan-Moor’s marketing and communications team and enjoys building learning opportunities that are both meaningful and creative for students and teachers alike.

Pilgrim turkey holding Thanksgiving lessons

October 23, 2017
by Evan-Moor
0 comments

Easy and Inspiring Thanksgiving Lessons and Activities

Keep students focused through the holidays with quality Thanksgiving lessons, crafts and games on the pilgrims, Plymouth, and the Mayflower. These Thanksgiving lessons and activities are a great addition to the classroom and don’t require too much prep work to re-create.

Thanksgiving Holiday and Making Connections with History
The busy holiday season is the perfect time for introducing history in the classroom. Students are naturally excited and filled with anticipation. Take advantage of this winning combination by providing hands-on activities and projects that bring Thanksgiving history alive! This post includes free Thanksgiving printables including Thanksgiving paper art projects (cornucopia, Pilgrim girl and boy, a Native American, Mayflower) and History Pockets: Colonial America activities.

10 Thanksgiving Activities That Don’t Require Worksheets
November is a busy month for teachers. Between assessments and fall conferences, it can be difficult to factor in holiday activities and crafts. Here are some fun Thanksgiving-themed activities to inspire you that don’t require a lot of time in front of the copier.

Turkey Craft and Activities for Thanksgiving
Get a new twist on turkeys this year with this 3D wall art. The colorful feathers, simple materials, and easy instructions will have your students creating display-worthy Thanksgiving art. Incorporate some fun turkey facts and writing activities to craft your own thematic unit for the season.

Let’s Talk Turkey (Animal Research for Kids)
Do you have kids who enjoy learning about animals? When kids are interested in a topic, their motivation is golden! Create your own turkey research report with these resources and free printables!


Heather Foudy is a certified elementary teacher with over 7 years’ experience as an educator and volunteer in the classroom. She enjoys creating lessons that are meaningful and creative for students. She is currently working for Evan-Moor’s marketing and communications team and enjoys building learning opportunities that are both meaningful and creative for students and teachers alike.

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