Between the pressure to meet standards and the overwhelming number of different learning needs of students, planning math lessons has become more complex. In this Judith Storeygard provides proven approaches to understanding the behaviors of children with special needs and effectively teaching all students. Using research-based and field-tested methodology, this book’s teaching strategies include differentiated instruction, with an emphasis on co-teaching between general educators and special educators. Included are examples from teachers who have put these techniques into practice and guidelines for reproducing their successes in your classroom. Key topics include: Strategies for teaching students with autism, ADHD, and various learning disabilities Ways to develop students’ cognitive flexibility How to help learners plan, organize and self-monitor in mathematics class A new focus on mathematical strengths and learning ability rather than on deficits and labels There are numerous resources to help teachers address literacy needs, but few address mathematics. Count Me In! will bring out the full potential in all of your students—and in you as an educator.
Let’s start counting with the fun wipe-clean number activities in Let's Learn: Count with Me. This book includes a wipe-clean marker and an array of activities—from counting cars to tracing numbers—that help children develop first ...
A young girl explains why she loves math and how she finds it in her everyday life.
Curious George is a good little monkey, and always very curious.
A chunky board book format with push-button sounds along the side, plus gorgeous art from best-selling illustrator Kenard Pak, makes this a great first language primer for curious kids.
This book extends Debbie Diller's best-selling work on literacy work stations and classroom design to the field of mathematics.
Illustrations and simple, rhyming text tell the story of a year in the life of a tree.
Activities for Small Hands and Lively Minds Pamela Byrne Schiller, Lynne Peterson ... for Success Begin working on order by showing children items they can see as being long , longer and longest or tall , taller and tallest .
A young boy counts his way through his day at kindergarten.
This guide Provides the what, why, and how of each practice and answers teachers’ most frequently asked questions Includes firsthand accounts of how these practices foster thinking through teacher and student interviews and student work ...
One of the teachers asked Mr. Moore if he could explain what he would be looking and listening for as students worked that would help him know if the students were meeting his goal. Mr. Moore first focused on the creation of the ...