Monday, May 16, 2016

Grade 1: Habitat Presentation

You are going to create a book about Habitats. Choose a Habitat below to learn more about.


Use the research tool in Google Presentation to find the following.  Complete the graphic organizer before you make your slide!
1.  Picture of your habitat
2.  Animal you would find in your habitat
3.  Plant you would find in your habitat
4.  One fact about your habitat

Click here to go to the presentation
Log into your Google Drive account
Drag your images onto your slide.
Create a textbox to write your sentence about your habitat

Grade 2 & 3: Final Habitat Project

Final Habitat Project













You have studied Habitats in your classroom, created at least one habitat presentation in Tech class.  Now you are going to create your own Habitat Presentation to share with the class.
1. Create a slide for each of the major habitats.
  • rainforest
  • wetlands
  • polar
  • desert
  • marine
  • grassland
2. Include pictures of the habitat and animals that would live there.
3. Include some information:  Where is this habitat located in the world.  What type of climate is found there.
Go to Google Classroom to get your copy of the presentation
Clck here to go to Google Classroom
Click here for a good resource for your research

Sunday, May 8, 2016

Grades 1-3: Preparing for Plymouth Plantation

This week, students in grades K-5 will be visiting Plymouth Plantation.  Today, we will explore the website, take a virtual trip using Google Earth, view a slideshow of some of the highlights of Plymouth Plantation and learn how to talk like a pilgrim!

Click here to view a Pilgrim Village and the slideshow (If you have problems viewing, open in Safari)

Click here to print worksheet that goes along with the slideshow.


"Good Morrow"
 "How Do You Fare, Goodwife?"

The Pilgrims talked a little differently than we do today. If you visit the Museum's 17th-Century English Village, you will notice that the townspeople say words you know in a funny way, or even say some words you don't know at all! That's because they are speaking in 17th-century English, not 21st-century modern English.  Click here to learn more!