Math Resources and Ideas for Upper Elementary Teachers

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Holiday-Themed Math: 4th Grade Activities to Spread Cheer

November 20, 2022 by Krejci Creations

'Tis the Season for Holiday Fun!

With December right around the corner, it’s time to prepare for a month of holiday festivities! Help spread Christmas cheer by incorporating these holiday-themed math activities into your classroom.

Let’s first acknowledge how CUTE this clipart is…I am obsessed! Your students will also be as they work through these Boom Cards on comparing fractions.

Boom Cards require NO PREP–just send students the link on Google Classroom, Schoology, Boom Learning, or whatever platform you use. Since they are self-checking, students receive immediate feedback after each question. They truly do learn from Boom Cards!

Another option is to use Boom Cards in your whole group lesson or display a few questions for a warm-up activity.

There are more holiday-themed math decks on factor pairs, simplest form, and converting improper fractions and mixed numbers.

Holiday-Themed Math Games

holiday-themed math games

Another way to add a touch of holiday cheer to your classroom is with games. Games work well as a math station or choice board activity. Students love playing them, especially when they are decorated in all things Christmas.

Holiday-Themed Math Crafts

Think Christmas crafts are for primary students only? Think again! These Christmas factor trees reinforce prime and composite numbers and extend into prime factorization.

This festive craft even comes with its very own “O Factor Tree” lyrics! Read this blog post for more info!

holiday-themed math craft

Holiday-Themed Math Centers

Finally, incorporate holiday-themed resources into your math centers. Task cards, clip cards, and matching activities are my go-to resources for small group centers.

1. Task cards are extremely versatile, easy to differentiate, and provide meaningful practice for students. Since they only solve one card at a time, task cards don’t feel overwhelming like a worksheet sometimes does.

holiday themed math subtract mixed numbers task cards

2. Clip cards are an effective resource because of their self-checking feature. Students can use paper clips, clothes pins, a dry-erase marker, or their fingers to clip and check their answers. They can also be used for quiz-quiz-trade, one of my favorite cooperative learning structures!

holiday-themed math centers

3. Matching activities have a game-like feel to them, which students love. This festive activity has students match the fractions on the colored ornaments to their simplest form on the tree.

holiday-themed math center
holiday-themed math center
holiday-themed math center

The level of difficulty varies within the trees (tree #1 is the least difficult and tree #10 is the most challenging), therefore allowing students to work at different levels. For a lower prep activity, use the digital version instead!

Want to know more about these holiday-themed math activities? Shop the Christmas section within my TPT store for detailed descriptions, previews, and teacher testimonials.

Until next time,

Happy Holidays!

annamarie krejci, elementary math teacher

P.S. Need holiday party and gift ideas for your upper elementary students? I share all of that and more in Episode 21 of Elementary Math Chat! Episode 21: 10 Holiday Party and Gift Ideas for Upper Elementary Students

Filed Under: Christmas, blog posts, Digital Resources, Math Centers, Winter Tagged With: 4th grade math centers, boom cards, christmas activities, christmas math, holiday activities

Winter-Themed Fraction Fun for Elementary Students

February 23, 2019 by Krejci Creations

If you teach fractions, chances are you teach them during the long, dreary, and cold winter months. While I’m not a huge fan of winter, I am a fan of using winter-themed fraction activities for my small group center. They bring me joy and provide instant engagement and excitement to the classroom!

Improper Fraction Snow Globe Sort

One of my favorite winter-themed fraction resources is this Improper Fraction Snow Globe Sort. It is hands-on, versatile, engaging, rigorous, and purposeful. I love seeing the look on my student’s faces when they realize they’ll be working with snowflakes and snow globes. They are always curious and anxious to discover what it’s all about! To prepare, simply spread out the improper fraction snowflakes and arrange the mixed number snow globes in order from least to greatest.  

improper fraction sort

The goal is for students to correctly sort the improper fraction snowflakes into the appropriate snow globes. To do this, they first convert the improper fractions to mixed numbers by either using division, mental math, or decomposing the fraction into wholes and parts. It always makes me proud to see students using more than one method!

Next, students compare the mixed numbers to the ranges labeled on the snow globes. This is where the wheels start turning in their heads! Since many snowflake values are close to more than one snow globe range, students must think carefully about where to place the snowflake. Hearing my students make justifications as to where they place their snowflakes, and the conversations that result gives me valuable feedback. 

improper fraction snowflake sort

Once all 48 snowflakes have been placed in the appropriate snow globes, the sort is complete! Even though students work independently with their snowflakes, it feels like a team effort. Therefore, we celebrate together when finished!

Assessing and Advancing Understanding

There’s no doubt this resource can serve as a great assessment tool. Throughout the activity, I use questioning strategies to assess and advance their understanding of the skill. For instance, if I see a student place a snowflake in the wrong snow globe, I’ll simply ask them to share their reasoning. I can also give students small prompts without revealing the answer to help steer them in the right direction.

In addition, I make sure my struggling students are working with simpler fractions and my advanced students are solving more complex ones. This helps to avoid any potential frustration and allows everyone in the group to feel successful.

For my early finishers, I often take it a step further by challenging them to convert improper fractions to decimals. This is proof that differentiating activities doesn’t have to be time-consuming!

Extensions

Once all snowflakes have been sorted, you can give students one more task to complete. Have them each take eight snowflakes, set up four fraction comparison problems, and write in the correct symbol. This can be their “exit ticket” from your small group table.  

Another extension is to have students place the improper fractions on a number line labeled 0-4. You can easily create this number line by using a dry-erase marker on your table. 

improper fraction comparison

Do yourself (and your students) a favor and try this hands-on, festive, and engaging activity in your classroom. It has been updated to include number lines on the snow globes, making it easier for students to understand. 

improper fraction snow globe fraction sort

 

Until next time,

Happy Teaching!

P.S. If you love using festive resources with students, read this BLOG POST all about Christmas-themed resources!

Filed Under: Math Centers, Winter Tagged With: 4th grade math, fraction centers, fractions, hands-on math, improper fractions, mixed numbers, small group instruction, winter resources

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