The Joy of Teaching

Sharing creative ideas and lessons to help children learn

November 20, 2014
by Evan-Moor
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10 Ways to Save Money with Evan-Moor E-books

image that says 10 ways to save money with Evan-Moor e-booksEvery homeschooler (and teacher) I know enjoys saving money. Personally, I have found that Evan-Moor provides quality activities at a very reasonable cost. Here are 10 ways to save money by using Evan-Moor e-books:

  1. Explore e-book sample pages and free resources from the Evan-Moor website to see how much fun your children will have learning before you purchase.
  2. The instant download of e-books prevents having to drive to the store. This saves me time and fuel.
  3. Print only the pages that your child needs to practice or review.
  4. One e-book purchase can be used for multiple children as each child reaches the skill level of the e-book.
  5. View e-books on the computer screen and use no paper or ink.
  6. Once e-books are downloaded, students can add “sticky notes” to show their work to save paper, as well as making it quick and easy for parents to assess their child’s learning.
  7. Quickly search e-books for skills you want to teach, to be certain of exactly what resources you have. By quickly verifying what skills are taught in Evan-Moor’s e-books, you can make sure you are not wasting money buying additional resources unnecessarily.
  8. Students can take a screenshot of their work on the computer screen to create an electronic portfolio. Another bonus: the students are gaining technology skills, too.
  9. After we have completed activities in e-books, we go back and change the numbers or think of new questions to ask. This is a great money-saving tip with any resource! Homeschoolers can easily create different levels of difficulty for students of various skill levels. Simply use Adobe’s Comment and Mark-Up Tool Bar.
  10. Save just the pages you want to assign and easily share via your family’s home network.

BONUS TIP – Be sure to subscribe to Evan-Moor’s newsletter and follow Evan-Moor on Pinterest for more free resources.

Now, it’s your turn. What is your favorite way to save money on teaching resources? Please post your favorite tip in the comments. We would love to learn from your experience.


Contributing Writer

Amy Michaels is a certified teacher with 11 years of elementary classroom experience who is actively homeschooling her own children. Her mission is share the best teaching methods and resources with all homeschoolers. Amy supports parents through her podcasts, webinars, and online training for homeschoolers on her website http://www.thrivehomeschooling.com.

November 18, 2014
by Evan-Moor
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Ways to Teach Children Gratitude

Gratitude is like a muscle—it needs to be exercised often. The best thing we can do as parents is to model gratitude at home. Here are 6 tips that you can try for the upcoming holiday season and all year long to practice gratitude with your children.

  1. Say thank you at home. Say it to your partner, your children, when you are out to eat, and when checking out at the grocery store. Showing your children that you say “thank you” will help them see how and when it can be used.
  2. Make it a daily ritual. At dinner or bed time, review what each person in your family is most grateful for. This helps you to understand what your children appreciate, and they can also hear about what you appreciate.
  3. Don’t give in to every request. I often found myself buying unplanned items that my children requested. I soon found this was expected and they became less grateful. As a result, we now have looking days and buying days. When it is a buying day, we usually buy a gift for someone else, or my children contribute some of their own money.
  4. Show the giving process. As children outgrow their clothes and toys, we often donate them. Instead of doing the donation without your children present, be sure they go through the process with you so they can see the impact of their donation.
  5. Match gift requests with donations or gifts of kindness. As the holiday season is upon us and wish lists are being made, consider asking your child to write things or actions they are willing to give as they may receive some of the items on their list, not all. It will be good for them to see how easy it is to give and receive.
  6. Never underestimate the power of a thank-you card. Let’s not forget the lost art of writing thank-you cards, especially as our children get older. Do have them make and/or write thank-you cards for the gifts they receive.

Ready to start practicing gratitude in your home? Start today with these resources:

  • Three books to read:

The Giving Tree by Shel Silverstein

Thanks a Million by Nikki Grimes

An Awesome Book of Thanks by Dallas Clayton

  • Plus, here are some sample activities from Evan-Moor’s TeacherFileBox to help you bring gratitude into your home:

Grades K–1        What Are You Thankful For? minibook.

Grades 1–3        Write a Thank-You Card

Grades 3–5        A writing prompt to thank someone for doing something nice.

Grades 1–6         Create a Thank-You Card


Contributing Writer

Trisha Thomas is the mother of two and serves on the board of directors at a co-op preschool. She has also been a marketer of educational materials for grades PreK–8 for more than 15 years.

Elementary students points to location on a world map

November 13, 2014
by Evan-Moor
2 Comments

Geography Activities Give Students a Taste of the World

Elementary students points to location on a world mapKnowing where food comes from, recognizing foreign currency, and finding a southwest location on a map are all valuable life skills that can be conveyed in geography lessons to help prepare students for career- and college-readiness in an increasingly global economy. Yet national geography studies show dismal results on students’ geography knowledge.

In a 2010 national geography assessment of 4th, 8th, and 12th graders, it was found that only one quarter of students performed at or above the proficient level, and only 2% of 4th graders demonstrated superior geography knowledge. (The Nation’s Report Card, Geography 2010) A 2002 survey of 18- to 24-year-olds didn’t show much improvement in geography knowledge with age: “only 17 percent of young adults in the United States could find Afghanistan on a map.” (National Geographic–Roper 2002 Global Geographic Literacy Survey)

You can contribute to improving these statistics by including geography activities in your curriculum. Whether you’re seeking fun map activities for elementary students, or you’re interested in finding interesting high school geography activities, you can find resources that help you achieve your teaching goals.

Here are some geography activities and lessons to help you boost students’ geography skills, including a focus on food in relation to geography:

  • National Geographic has comprehensive teacher resources on all aspects of geography.
  • My American Farm lesson helps students research and understand international agriculture (for grades 3–5.)
  • Create your own daily geography quiz or a “Geography Fact of the Day” to help students improve geography knowledge. This world atlas site can help you get started in finding every fact you need, from the deepest lakes to the tallest mountains, and more!
  • Small-group oral or written reports: Have students research and present findings on food and geography topics such as “school lunches around the world” or “ways to reduce food waste across the globe.”
  • Create a menu or make a recipe to learn about another region: Have students research and make a restaurant menu from another country or region, or find recipes and plan a meal from another country. In this printable activity, students can learn about celebrations in Vietnam and how to make sweet rice.
  • Create a simple travel brochure that includes a map and geography facts about a location, or plan an around-the-world itinerary that includes stops at 6–10 locations and geography facts about each stop on the tour.
  • Make a map of national or international sports teams (e.g., football, baseball, hockey, or soccer). This activity from Daily Geography Practice may help you get started. It includes a map of the U.S. with the locations of 32 National Football League (NFL) teams.

These Evan-Moor social studies resources help students develop geography skills and awareness. Download the free sample unit for each title:

Daily Geography Practice (grades 1–6)

This unit presents activities using a map of the continent of Asia with the five leading rice-growing countries identified (grade 6.)

Beginning Geography book coverBeginning Geography (grades K–2)

This world map portrays the seven continents, the five oceans, and one example of animal life per continent.

Evan-Moor's geography centers book coverTake It to Your Seat: Geography Centers (grades K–5)

Students learn about the major continents of our world in this geography center activity (Grades 1-2).

Book cover of Evan-Moor's 7 Contient series for AfricaThe 7 Continents series (grades 4–6)

Go on a free trip to Africa with this fun installment in our series about continents!  This unit on the culture cuisine of Africa presents information on meals and popular foods in the various regions of the continent: students learn about Tagine from Morocco, Dodo from Nigeria, Wat from Ethiopia, Chikwange from Congo, Bobotie from South Africa, and others.


Contributing Writer

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

November 3, 2014
by Evan-Moor
0 comments

Thanksgiving Holiday and Making Connections with History

Try these Thanksgiving crafts and activities for kids that bring Thanksgiving history alive. The busy holiday season is the perfect time for introducing history in the classroom. Students are naturally excited and filled with anticipation.

Use resources that explore what the historical event was really like on a personal level, to develop context and background information. The following picture books by Kate Waters and Russ Kendall are a few of my favorites. They have real photographs of children reenacting how everyday life might have been during the Mayflower voyage and Pilgrim times.

On the Mayflower

Sara Morton’s Day: A Day in the Life of a Pilgrim Girl

Samuel Eaton’s Day: A Day in the Life of a Pilgrim Boy

Tapenum’s Day: A Wampanoag Indian Boy in Pilgrim Times

For ages 7-10, review the “If You Were There…” series to see if it meets your needs. It is part of an engaging series written for many historical events and topics. If You Sailed on the Mayflower in 1620 by Ann McGovern and Anna DiVito works especially well as a whole-group or small-group read-aloud. It is written in a question-and-answer format, which is conducive to discussion and a motivator for further research.

Hands-on projects and activities can help students engage and connect with Thanksgiving history. Here are a few examples:

  • Compose a menu from Pilgrim times and a menu for a modern Thanksgiving meal and compare meals.
  • Integrate art projects such as the pilgrim boy and pilgrim girl activities in this Thanksgiving art projects unit (from Art for All Seasons).
    directions for making a pilgrim boy from Evan-Moor's Art for All Seasons book

    From Evan-Moor’s Art for All Seasons

    Thanksgiving art project - pilgrim boy being colored by a student

  • Research online to find out what kinds of toys Pilgrim children used and games they played during Pilgrim times. Play the game(s).
  • Research what type of clothing Pilgrims wore for every day or for special occasions and why.
  • Download this history pockets unit to extend learning with activities such as: writing a newspaper article about settlers who disappeared from Roanoke Island, making a map of Jamestown, creating a journal about living on the Mayflower, and writing the Mayflower Compact (from History Pockets: Colonial America).
Mayflower image from Evan-Moor's History Pockets series

From Evan-Moor’s History Pockets

Student working on Mayflower history pockets project

  • Research online to find out details about the weather in the 1620–1621 time period. Discuss what impact the weather and seasons had, and how they affected the decisions and lives of the Pilgrims.
  •  Compare what a Pilgrim boy or girl might have felt thankful for and what your students feel thankful for now.
  • Research the conditions of travel on the Mayflower. Have students pretend that they are a children traveling on the Mayflower and write about what they do during a day on the journey.

Engage students in projects that encourage critical thinking about events.

For example:

  • What was life really like for people living during a specific time in history?
  • What impact did a historical event have on the way things went after?
  • How were people’s feelings, perspectives, and actions influenced by the event?

It is also a good skill for students of all ages to compare historical texts and check for consistency of information.

Here are additional resources from Evan-Moor that help students make connections with history:

History Pockets: Colonial America book coverHistory Pockets, Primary: Life in Plymouth Colony, Ancient Civilizations, and Native Americans.

History Pockets, Intermediate: Colonial America, The American Civil War, The American Revolution, Ancient Rome, Ancient Egypt, Ancient Greece, Explorers of North America, and Moving West.


Readers' Theater book coverReaders’ Theater
and Leveled Readers’ Theater (for grades 1–6) provide scripts on a variety of topics, including social studies themes.


Art for All Seasons
, (for grades 1–4) provides art projects from all four seasons to enhance your lessons, such as a harvest cornucopia, Chinese New Year dragon, portraits of Washington and Lincoln, colorful windsock, and patriotic mobile.


Image of contributor Marti BeeckMarti Beeck enjoyed volunteering in her three children’s classrooms so deeply, that she returned to school to earn her CLAD teaching credential. For the next thirteen years, she worked as a classroom teacher in grades 1-3. Her experience as a primary classroom teacher, as well as adult school and intervention for elementary and high school, was inspired by her background in psychology and interest in brain-based learning. Marti currently works in the field of educational publishing as an editor.

October 28, 2014
by Evan-Moor
0 comments

Reading and What It Means in the Content Areas

Pile of books in library scene“Why, oh why, are we being asked to teach reading in our content area classes?” I hear it time and time again, usually followed by some variation of, “But I don’t know how to teach reading!”

As teachers, we know that the ability to read is probably our students’ single most valuable tool in their quest for academic achievement. But here’s another way to look at it: students’ ability to read is our most valuable tool in our quest to introduce subject matter to students. We all have a stake in this. When students can’t read at grade level, no one wins.

Consider these facts about student literacy:

  • The more students read, the more skilled they become at reading. That is why we can’t just support their developing skills in English language arts classes anymore. It has to be a school-wide effort. Realize that, from a literacy standpoint, learning to read the rules of field hockey in PE class, Madeleine L’Engle’s A Wrinkle in Time in English class, and California Invasive Plant Council’s “Invasive Plant Inventory” in science class is equally valuable.
  • Giving students a choice in their reading material increases their motivation. Remember, the textbook is not the curriculum! There’s a whole world of reading material out there—about every possible topic on your syllabus. It gives students a sense of ownership when they have a say in what they read. Think about it. We certainly have more incentive to read material that we ourselves choose, and our students are no different. Additionally, offering a choice of reading material makes it easier for you to differentiate and meet the needs of different-level readers in your classroom.
  • Using strategies that promote active reading will help build students’ content knowledge and reading comprehension skills. Doing active reading activities in your classroom doesn’t require a mysterious skill set, magic wands, or even an advanced degree. In fact, there’s a very good chance you’re already doing some of it. And it won’t take time away from the content, because your students will be actually reading the content.

If you’ve never used an active reading strategy before—things like anticipation, read-alouds, and summarization—how do you begin? Here’s a simple step: Take a few moments to find out what active reading strategies are being used in your students’ ELA classes right now. (Ask the ELA teacher to explain them to you if necessary. You can return the favor when he or she asks you for recommendations for informational texts that might relate to ELA literature selections.) Then pick one strategy and adapt it for your subject matter in your classroom. I bet you’ll be delighted with the results.


Contributing Writer

Contributor McKnightDr. Katie McKnight is an educator, author, and consultant. Her career in education began as a high school English teacher in the Chicago Public School system more than 20 years ago. She received her B.A. degree from George Washington University, her M.Ed. from Northeastern Illinois University, and her Ph.D. from the University of Illinois at Chicago. Today, she serves as a Distinguished Professor of Research at National Louis University.

October 22, 2014
by Evan-Moor
2 Comments

Educational Halloween Activities and Fun Classroom Ideas

From candy science to thinking skills to pumpkin poems, these free Halloween activities will help to keep students engaged and learning amidst the Halloween excitement and festivities on October 31!

Free Downloadable Halloween-Themed Lessons

pumpkin shape colored by student for story bookTry these Evan-Moor Halloween-inspired activities that also integrate reading, writing, and science skills:

  • Pumpkin Shape Book, Grades K–2: Pumpkin shape book forms, plus directions for student writing, a cute poem about pumpkins, and literature connections.
  • Halloween Thinking Skills Activities, Grade 1: Activities include writing about three things that scare you, adding up pumpkins, drawing a jack-o’-lantern, finishing a pattern, and making a picture.
  • “Pumpkins” Poem, Grades 2–3: A read and understand unit includes a poem, comprehension questions, and a page that asks students to identify how rhyming couplets & repetition are used.
  • Halloween Language Activities, Grades 3–5: Five Halloween-themed activities, including reading and drawing, solving a word search, answering a riddle by solving the code, and making words using the letters in “Jack-o’-lantern.”
  • pumpkin shape colored by a student for pumpkin storyHuman Body: Skeleton, Grades 1–6: Three pages of bones to cut out and construct into a large human skeleton.

(Like free activities? Subscribe to Evan-Moor’s monthly e-newsletter for more FREE lessons and activities! Subscribe here.)

Classic Ghost Story Read-Alouds

What’s even better than a good story to engage students? How about a riveting ghost story? Depending on the age of your students, they may enjoy listening to this classic haunted house story from Alfred Hitchcock’s “Ghost Stories for Young People.”

More Halloween-Themed Ideas

Activities that involve movement and/or small-group work help to release some of the energy that inevitably comes with Halloween. Some ideas include:

  • painted pumpkin pictureHosting a classroom or school-wide Halloween costume parade. Create a variety of categories for prizes like a homework pass, extra recess, etc.
  • Painting and decorating pumpkins. This is best for outdoors, if possible!
  • Creating a haunted house diorama in shoe boxes or designing a haunted house on paper (small-group activity)
  • “Predicting Pumpkins” hands-on activity
  • Science experiments with a Halloween theme, such as “Candy Chromatography” and “Glow-in-the-dark Chemistry” from Science Buddies

Healthful Halloween Snacks

Instead of sugary treats for class celebrations, our elementary school has encouraged healthful Halloween snacks, which helps to keep students on task. If you’re planning classroom parties, consider asking parents to get creative with “spooky” (mostly healthful) treats like these:

Check out this site for many more ideas for healthful Halloween snacks.

Fore more Halloween ideas see:

Halloween Lessons and Activities for the Classroom

Halloween Fun: Skeleton Art Project and Science Activities

Have fun!


Contributing Writer

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

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October 15, 2014
by Evan-Moor
0 comments

What This Teacher Wants Parents to Know

photo of a teacher at a table in a classroomThe main reason I became a teacher is that I wanted to help children learn. Empowering students’ learning and watching them grow brings me joy. Diversity and differences in learning needs are what make my job fun.

If I could speak candidly to parents, I would also want them to know:

It is my goal that every child achieve a minimum of one year’s academic and social development growth. If your child is performing below grade level, we will work with him/her to close the gap. If your child is high achieving, we will provide additional challenges in our differentiated instruction. My goal is to get to know your child so that I can personalize instruction so your child can be successful.

Education works best when teacher, parents, and student work together toward common goals.

Communication is important, but it is usually difficult for me to talk spontaneously before class or after school. In a classroom setting, I am working to maintain communication with a large number of people, so we have a few options: notes, email, and appointments in person or by phone.

It is likely that I am just as frustrated as you are regarding issues in education and some of the decisions/policies/procedures that are made on behalf of students.

Most often, parents have more power than teachers when advocating for students regarding issues to administrators and school district, state, or national policy.


Image of contributor Marti BeeckMarti Beeck started her career in education as a parent volunteer in her three children’s classrooms. Her teaching experience, including adult school, intervention, and the primary classroom, was inspired by her background in psychology and interest in brain-based learning. Marti currently works in the field of educational publishing as an editor.

October 7, 2014
by Evan-Moor
1 Comment

How Watching Football with Your Child Can Be Educational

child in football helmet and jerseyDid you know that watching football with your child can be an opportunity to practice math, geography, and writing skills? Watching sports on TV was a tradition in both my and my husband’s childhood that we continue with our own children. We take the opportunity to use sports as a way to engage our children in practicing some basic skills and as a way for them to learn new skills. Here are some examples:

Practice math skills: As you see the score changing, use it as a way to compare the teams’ scores and discuss which is higher, calculate the difference between the scores, and even practice multiplication and division.

Here is a short video about using sports to help your child’s math skills.

Learn geography: As different teams are competing, compare where each team is located on a map. Discuss if the teams are north, south, east, or west of each other as well as from where you live. Practice matching cities to states and ask your child to tell you or to write the abbreviation for each state.

Practice technology literacy skills: Ask your child to research the following information about a team’s state: the state flag, the state bird, the state flower, and a famous person from that state.

You can keep this information in your children’s own sports journal, where they can look back on the season to see all that they’ve learned. A small bound notebook is perfect for this.

Ohio State logoFor football-themed educational activities for the classroom or home, see:

What am I? A Football: a “clues to comprehension” activity ($1.99, TeachersPayTeachers)

Football player drawing and writing activity  ($1.99, TeachersPayTeachers)

For more basic skills practice at home, check out Evan-Moor’s Skill Sharpeners for grades PreK–6:

Skill Sharpeners: Math

Skill Sharpeners: Reading

Skill Sharpeners: Spell & Write


Contributing Writer

Trisha Thomas is the mother of two and serves on the board of directors at a co-op preschool. She has also been a marketer of educational materials for grades PreK–8 for more than 15 years.

October 1, 2014
by Evan-Moor
0 comments

Anti-Bullying Classroom Activities for National Bullying Prevention Month

When teachers or students hear the word October, the first thing that comes to mind is Halloween. Yet this month is more than Halloween! In 2006, October was designated as the National Bullying Prevention Month. What more important topic could there be for a teacher to address at a crucial time of the school year?

Helping your school in its efforts to stomp out bullying is a worthwhile effort, and you can directly address the issue with students through a series of anti-bullying activities for kids. Let kids know that the class is going to focus on a variety of bullying prevention activities throughout October, and perhaps, plan a special prevention activity right before, or on, Halloween.
First, familiarize yourself with bullying prevention ideas and resources by checking out the following resources.

sign that says be a buddy not a bullyHere are links to some amazing sites that feature anti-bullying learning activities and information:

Pinterest site for anti-bullying classroom ideas and worksheets

Kid Activities site: tips, articles, and advice on bullying

StopBullying.gov

Here is a related book list, ranging from grades K–8:

The Skinny on Bullying (grades 4–8) by Mike Cassidy

The Bully Blockers Club by Teresa Bateman

Stargirl by Jerry Spinelli

Jake Drake Bully Buster by Andrew Clements

Oliver Button Is a Sissy by Tomie dePaola

The Brand New Kid by Katie Couric

Don’t Be a Bully, Billy: A Cautionary Tale by Phil Roxbee Cox

How to Lose All Your Friends by Nancy Carlson

King of the Playground by Phyllis Reynolds Naylor

Stop Picking on Me by Pat Thomas

We Can Work It Out: Conflict Resolution for Children by Barbara Polland

Here are some classroom activities to teach students about the harmful effects of bullying:

Make a chart. Draw a line at the top. Then have the students brainstorm behaviors/words that “cross the line” into bullying.

Put a strip of masking or blue tape across the length of a table or desk. Choose a student to squeeze toothpaste across the top of the tape. Then tell the student to put the toothpaste back in the tube. (It can’t be done and that is what happens with the words or actions of a bully! The damage can’t be taken back.)

Trace the body of a student. Have students brainstorm the words of a bully. Afterwards, crinkle up the paper and post it on the wall to illustrate the damage. Then, trace the body of a student again and have students brainstorm the words of a kind, supportive student. Hang that one up next to the other. (You could draw happy/unhappy faces on the bodies.)

Role play scenes of times students feel they have been bullied. Discuss the best ways to respond to a bullying situation and what to do after the occurrence.

Have your students make posters to distribute around the school.

Create an anti-bullying certificate/pledge for each student to sign. Or, make a classroom chart for students to sign and post in your classroom.


Contributing Writer

Image of Blog Contributor Alice EvansAlice Evans is a forty-year veteran National Board Certified elementary classroom teacher and a published author. She recently retired from the San Diego Unified School District and has published a children’s chapter book entitled Torrey Pines Summer.

September 23, 2014
by Evan-Moor
0 comments

Quick Bulletin Board Ideas for Fall

image of fall fun bulletin board ideaThis blog post is for busy teachers who need a quick bulletin board makeover to give the classroom an autumn feel. Whether you need informational, interactive, or decorative bulletin boards in your classroom, we hope these simple templates and ideas will help! Click the links below for your free Evan-Moor bulletin board templates.


Save these free bulletin board downloads: PIN IT!

Fall Fun Bulletin Board: Leaves change color and fall to the ground on this autumn bulletin board that displays student work. Included are templates and caption letters. Variation: The leaf templates could also be used for students to answer math riddles or to add a word a day to the display.

“Pick of the Patch” Pumpkin-Themed Bulletin Board: A field of pumpkins provides a bulletin board area for displaying student work. Includes teacher and student directions, caption letters, and a pumpkin poem.

spider web bulletin board directions

Spider Web Bulletin Board

“All Caught Up in Good Work” Spider Web Bulletin Board: A display of student work is suspended from a large web on which three pipe-cleaner-and-paper-plate spiders dance. Included are teacher directions (with a suggestion for students to write nonfiction paragraphs about spiders) and caption letters.

October Bulletin Board Ideas: Three bulletin board ideas and patterns for October, including Halloween symbols, pumpkins, and bats – with ideas to have students add to the boards.

owl theme bulletin board ideaOwl-Themed Bulletin Board: A quizzical owl sitting on a branch of a tree asks about the good student work displayed on this bulletin board. Included in the unit are teacher directions (with additional suggestions for writing riddles), caption letters, and an owl.

For over 200 bulletin board ideas and templates, subscribe to TeacherFileBox, Evan-Moor’s online lesson library. Or, visit Evan-Moor’s Teachers Pay Teachers store and download our bulletin board templates for $1.99 each.


Contributing Writer

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

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