Notebook Charts are an easy way to support your students during independent practice. This resource includes 44 Notebook Anchor Charts & Word Lists to support your students in developing their Language and Vocabulary Skills in Reading and Writing. The charts come two on a page so that they can be glued into an interactive notebook.
Ideas for Classroom Use
Reading Centers: If students are practicing a specific skill using a practice sheet or task cards, they can use the chart to help them remember how to use the specific part of speech, punctuation, etc.
Writing Workshop: I used the charts to teach a mini grammar lesson at the beginning of Writer's Workshop or at the end to help students revise and edit their work. If you do not use a Vocabulary Notebook, students could glue some of the charts in their Writing Notebook to help revise and edit for sentence structure, language, and conventions.
Small Group Reading and Writing: If I noticed all of my students were having difficulty with a particular skill such as verb tense, then I used that chart to pull a small group and teach this lesson. They used the chart to help them complete an activity independently to identify the correct verb tenses.
Quick Vocabulary & Grammar Lessons: If you are looking for easy ways to tuck in language, grammar, and vocabulary lessons, these charts can help! By providing students with a chart, you can quickly teach a short lesson and they have the chart in front of them to practice independently.
These are just a few ideas for using this resource in your classroom! I would love to see or hear how this resource works for you! Please let me know if you are still looking for something else in this resource. Thank you!
Charts Included
Perfect Punctuation
Relative and Demonstrative Pronouns
A or An?
Relative Pronouns
Relative Adverbs
Adverbs
Ordering Adjectives
Who or Whom?
Prepositions (with a dog for an example)
Prepositions (with a cat for an example)
Prepositional Phrases
Prepositions List
Types of Nouns
Plural Nouns
Modal Auxiliaries
Contractions
Types of Verbs
Irregular Verbs 1
Irregular Verbs 2
Verb Tenses
Coordinating Conjunctions
What makes a complete sentence?
Types of Sentences
Complete Sentences, Fragments, and Run-Ons
Compound and Complex Sentences
Tackle Tricky Words Tips Page
Commonly Confused Words 1
Commonly Confused Words 2
Commonly Confused Words 3
Homophones Word List
High Frequency Word List
Multiple Meaning Word List
4 square organizer (meaning, synonyms, antonyms, picture and sentence
4 Square Vocab (meaning, picture, sentence, part of speech
Prefixes (Word List Chart)
Suffixes (Word List Chart)
Suffix Sort
Suffix Sort (Blank)
Prefix Sort
Prefix Sort (Blank)
Latin Roots (Word List Chart)
Greek Roots (Word List Chart)
Shades of Meaning (Feeling Words)
🛑 Are you a member of the TLL Membership? These materials are already included. If you are not a member, click here to learn more. The TLL Membership gives you an all-access pass to hundreds of ELA resources for teachers in Grades 3-5.
Looking for something else? Let us know!
help@theliteracyloft.com
Are your students struggling to write complete sentences? This digital activity provides an interactive and focused practice in a short amount of time to construct complete sentences. Each Google Slide has a moving gif. Students use the gif (moving image) to write a complete sentence that describes the picture. This simple activity gives them an opportunity to practice writing complete sentences without worrying about a longer piece of writing.
What is included?
36 Google Slides with a gif
Paper Response Sheet (in case you want students to write their answers by hand)
Answer Key with Sample Responses
How can I use this resource?
The possibilities are endless for this digital activity. Some ideas to get you started:
writing center
literacy station
early finisher task during independent writing
homework
small group
daily warm-up for writing workshop
sub plans for writing
🛑 Are you a member of the TLL Membership? These materials are already included. If you are not a member, click here to learn more. The TLL Membership gives you an all-access pass to hundreds of ELA resources for teachers in Grades 3-5.
🛑 Are you a member of the TLL Membership? These materials are already included. If you are not a member, click here to learn more. The TLL Membership gives you an all-access pass to hundreds of ELA resources for teachers in Grades 3-5.
Are your students struggling to write complete sentences? This digital activity provides an interactive and focused practice in a short amount of time to construct complete sentences. Each Google Slide has a moving gif. Students use the gif (moving image) to write a complete sentence that describes the picture. This simple activity gives them an opportunity to practice writing complete sentences without worrying about a longer piece of writing.
What is included?
36 Google Slides with a gif
Paper Response Sheet (in case you want students to write their answers by hand)
Answer Key with Sample Responses
How can I use this resource?
The possibilities are endless for this digital activity. Some ideas to get you started:
writing center
literacy station
early finisher task during independent writing
homework
small group
daily warm-up for writing workshop
sub plans for writing
Punctuation & Capitalization Task Cards | Google Slides & Forms
This resource includes 36 task cards for Punctuation & Capitalization
36 Task Cards
Answer Sheets
Answer Key
Grades 3-5
Digital Options (Google Slides and Forms)
Standards Addressed:
3rd Grade Standards L.3.2Demonstrate command of the conventions of standard English capitalization, punctuation, and spelling when writing. L.3.2aCapitalize appropriate words in titles. L.3.2bUse commas in addresses. L.3.2cUse commas and quotation marks in dialogue.
4th Grade Standards L.4.2Demonstrate command of the conventions of standard English capitalization, punctuation, and spelling when writing. L.4.2aUse correct capitalization. L.4.2bUse commas and quotation marks to mark direct speech and quotations from a text. L.4.2cUse a comma before a coordinating conjunction in a compound sentence.
5th Grade Standards L.5.2Demonstrate command of the conventions of standard English capitalization, punctuation, and spelling when writing. L.5.2aUse punctuation to separate items in a series.* L.5.2bUse a comma to separate an introductory element from the rest of the sentence.
🛑 Are you a member of the TLL Membership? These materials are already included. If you are not a member, click here to learn more. The TLL Membership gives you an all-access pass to hundreds of ELA resources for teachers in Grades 3-5.
I hope you enjoy this resource as much as we did! As always, if you have any questions or concerns, please email me at help@theliteracyloft.com.