The document defines vocabulary words that are relevant to an important event or process, including words like enrich, apologized, obliged, certificate, examiner, petitioners, and resounded. Definitions, synonyms, and examples are provided for each word to help explain its meaning in context.
This mathematics review for a 4th grade student covers geometry topics including identifying different line segments, rays, and angles. It contains 6 multiple choice questions asking the student to identify examples of a pencil tip, board edge, different angle types (acute, right, obtuse), and relationships between lines (intersecting, perpendicular, parallel). The review is meant to assess the student's understanding of basic geometry concepts.
This document contains a schedule and journal for a group of students on a multi-day trip to Wolf Ridge Environmental Learning Center. The schedule outlines the daily activities, meals, classes, and evening programs for the group. The journal pages provide spaces for students to record daily weather, class notes, things they learned, and sketches. Expectations for behavior and bus rules are also listed.
The document defines and provides synonyms and antonyms for 8 vocabulary words: equivalent, interpreter, irrigation, occasionally, appetizing, overwhelm, and hysterically. Equivalent means equal in some way. An interpreter translates language. Irrigation involves watering land to help plants grow. Occasionally means sometimes. Appetizing means appearing good to eat. Overwhelm means to overpower. Hysterically means with uncontrolled emotions.
The document provides definitions for 5 vocabulary words: pioneer, harmony, possibilities, fertile, and arbor. It defines pioneer as the first people to settle a region, harmony as an orderly arrangement of sound, possibilities as things that are possible, fertile as able to support plant growth, and arbor as a shelter of branches or vines. It also includes short example sentences using each word to provide additional context.
This document discusses expressions and equations with variables. It provides examples of writing expressions that match word problems, writing equations using variables, solving simple equations using mental math, and evaluating expressions by substituting values for variables. Key terms and concepts explained include expressions, equations, variables, and the equal sign. Examples given include writing expressions for problems involving numbers of balls, pages, and magnets and writing and solving equations for problems involving chairs, tables, and numbers divided among rows.
The document defines fire-related vocabulary words including dedication, loyalty, billowing, brigade, ventilate, flammable, and curfew. It provides the definitions, synonyms, antonyms, and example sentences for each word. The examples showcase firefighters working hard with dedication and loyalty as part of a brigade to ventilate smoke billowing from a building and discussing flammable materials and a curfew put in place after a storm.
The document defines vocabulary words including script, triumphantly, desperately, injustice, repentant, acceptable, discards, and circumstances. It provides the definition, a synonym, an antonym, and an example sentence for each word.
A pact could be an agreement between friends to do certain activities together over the summer like starting a business, such as a lemonade stand. Feeling queasy can be caused by being deprived of needs like food, water, or sunlight for a plant. A teenager might foist babysitting responsibilities onto a younger sibling without asking.
The document defines vocabulary words that are relevant to an important event or process, including words like enrich, apologized, obliged, certificate, examiner, petitioners, and resounded. Definitions, synonyms, and examples are provided for each word to help explain its meaning in context.
This mathematics review for a 4th grade student covers geometry topics including identifying different line segments, rays, and angles. It contains 6 multiple choice questions asking the student to identify examples of a pencil tip, board edge, different angle types (acute, right, obtuse), and relationships between lines (intersecting, perpendicular, parallel). The review is meant to assess the student's understanding of basic geometry concepts.
This document contains a schedule and journal for a group of students on a multi-day trip to Wolf Ridge Environmental Learning Center. The schedule outlines the daily activities, meals, classes, and evening programs for the group. The journal pages provide spaces for students to record daily weather, class notes, things they learned, and sketches. Expectations for behavior and bus rules are also listed.
The document defines and provides synonyms and antonyms for 8 vocabulary words: equivalent, interpreter, irrigation, occasionally, appetizing, overwhelm, and hysterically. Equivalent means equal in some way. An interpreter translates language. Irrigation involves watering land to help plants grow. Occasionally means sometimes. Appetizing means appearing good to eat. Overwhelm means to overpower. Hysterically means with uncontrolled emotions.
The document provides definitions for 5 vocabulary words: pioneer, harmony, possibilities, fertile, and arbor. It defines pioneer as the first people to settle a region, harmony as an orderly arrangement of sound, possibilities as things that are possible, fertile as able to support plant growth, and arbor as a shelter of branches or vines. It also includes short example sentences using each word to provide additional context.
This document discusses expressions and equations with variables. It provides examples of writing expressions that match word problems, writing equations using variables, solving simple equations using mental math, and evaluating expressions by substituting values for variables. Key terms and concepts explained include expressions, equations, variables, and the equal sign. Examples given include writing expressions for problems involving numbers of balls, pages, and magnets and writing and solving equations for problems involving chairs, tables, and numbers divided among rows.
The document defines fire-related vocabulary words including dedication, loyalty, billowing, brigade, ventilate, flammable, and curfew. It provides the definitions, synonyms, antonyms, and example sentences for each word. The examples showcase firefighters working hard with dedication and loyalty as part of a brigade to ventilate smoke billowing from a building and discussing flammable materials and a curfew put in place after a storm.
The document defines vocabulary words including script, triumphantly, desperately, injustice, repentant, acceptable, discards, and circumstances. It provides the definition, a synonym, an antonym, and an example sentence for each word.
A pact could be an agreement between friends to do certain activities together over the summer like starting a business, such as a lemonade stand. Feeling queasy can be caused by being deprived of needs like food, water, or sunlight for a plant. A teenager might foist babysitting responsibilities onto a younger sibling without asking.
The document contains short statements about a pristine sweater, a delectable granola bar, a basketball player not being seasoned enough, and someone giving advice to another person. It concludes by mentioning "the peeps that made this."
This document contains a math review worksheet with multiple questions about calculating the area, perimeter, and volume of various shapes. Some of the questions include:
- Calculating the area and perimeter needed to carpet a room that is 4m by 3m
- Finding the length of lights needed around the perimeter of a room
- Determining if there is enough framing material to make a picture frame of a certain size
- Calculating the volumes of different rectangular prisms
- Finding the new volume if the height of a rectangular prism is increased
This document is a mathematics review for a 4th grade student. It contains 6 multiple choice questions testing concepts of geometric shapes including rays, points, lines, line segments, and different types of angles such as acute, right, obtuse and straight. The questions also cover properties of lines such as intersecting, perpendicular and parallel.
The document discusses carnivorous plants and their adaptations for trapping and digesting animal prey. It describes how some plants have developed traps like pitfall traps or sticky leaves to capture insects and other small animals. The plants secrete enzymes to digest their prey and absorb the nutrients, as their natural habitat of bogs is low in nutrients. Some of these adaptations that help the plants obtain nutrients otherwise absent from their environment include traps, digestive enzymes, and mechanisms to attract prey.
This document contains a unit review with multiple choice and short answer mathematical questions covering topics like order of operations, evaluating expressions with variables, writing and solving equations, creating tables and graphs from rules, and representing word problems mathematically. The review has questions to simplify expressions, evaluate expressions with given values, choose the correct equation to represent word problems, complete tables and identify their rules, graph lines, and write and solve an equation to match a word problem about phone bills.
This document is a unit review worksheet containing math problems involving fractions, decimals, ordering numbers, and probability. The worksheet has the student's name and teacher listed at the top and contains 15 problems of various types for the student to solve including adding, subtracting, ordering and converting between fractions, decimals, and mixed numbers. It also includes one word problem about probabilities and one extended response question about adding time durations expressed as fractions.
This document provides examples of multiplying different types of numbers, including: multiplying numbers by powers of ten, multiplying one-digit and two-digit numbers, multiplying decimals by placing the decimal point correctly in the product, and multiplying larger numbers by moving the decimal point in the factors to the right before multiplying and then back to the left in the product. The examples show multiplying numbers with and without zeros as factors, as well as multiplying decimals and whole numbers.
The teacher welcomes the 4th graders and their families to the new school year. He encourages them to check the class blog for updates on classroom happenings, homework assignments, and more. The first day will include an early recess and lunch period, and students should bring a healthy snack. Planners will be used daily to communicate assignments and will need to be signed and returned each day.
This document outlines the daily schedule and curriculum for a 4th grade classroom. It includes the following:
- Each student has an iPad which will change instructional methods.
- The daily schedule covers subjects like math, language arts, science, social studies, and includes times for recess, lunch, and silent reading.
- The curriculum overview provides details on what topics will be covered in each subject over the school year, such as regions in social studies, electricity and magnetism in science, and fractions in math.
The document provides sentences with mistakes and their corrections. It asks the reader to rewrite 3 sentences fixing errors, which are then shown corrected. It then asks to rewrite 5 sentences, showing the first 3 already corrected and leaving the last 2 uncorrected for the reader to fix. The purpose is to practice identifying and correcting common grammatical mistakes in short sentences.
This document appears to be a short vocabulary quiz containing 4 multiple choice questions with 3 answer options each. The questions test word meanings and relate to prepositions of location, adjectives describing stories, occupations related to writing, and emotions related to rollercoasters. The quiz seems designed to assess basic English vocabulary knowledge on common topics.
The document discusses capitalization in 5 sentences. It provides examples of sentences that would be rewritten with capital letters at the beginning of sentences and for proper nouns such as months, places, and schools.
This document appears to be a short vocabulary quiz containing 4 multiple choice questions with 3 answer options each. The questions test word meanings and relate to prepositions of location, adjectives describing stories, occupations related to writing, and emotions related to rollercoasters. The quiz seems designed to assess basic English vocabulary knowledge on common topics.
The document discusses capitalization in 5 sentences. It provides examples of sentences that would be rewritten with capital letters at the beginning of sentences and for proper nouns such as months, places, and schools.
The document provides sentences with mistakes and their corrections. It asks the reader to rewrite 3 sentences fixing errors, which are then shown corrected. It then asks to rewrite 5 sentences, showing the first 3 already corrected and providing 2 additional erroneous sentences for correction. The purpose is to identify and correct grammatical mistakes within short phrases and sentences.
Proper nouns name specific people, places or things and are always capitalized, while common nouns refer to general categories and are not capitalized. Examples of proper nouns given are Tommy, Shirley Hills, Thomas Edison, while boy, school, inventor are common nouns. The document then provides a brief exercise asking the reader to identify 12 given examples as either common or proper nouns.
The teacher welcomes students and families to the new school year. He notes that the school has been remodeled over the summer and should be a great place to learn. The teacher provides information about class blogs that will contain class materials and updates. He also shares some important details for the first day, including recess and lunch times, daily snack breaks, and the use of student planners. The teacher concludes by sharing what he did over the summer and expressing his excitement to meet the students and have a great school year.
Fourth grade classroom procedures include the following:
- Students will have recess for running and playing, and lunch for talking with classmates quietly in the cafeteria.
- Restroom breaks should be taken before and after lunch, during snack and recess. Students should bring a water bottle to keep by their table.
- Library time is once a week for checking out books, which should be returned on time before their due date.
- Homework includes weekly vocabulary and spelling, along with daily math. Students are expected to turn in homework that is readable, complete, and on time.
This math worksheet asks students to find the least common multiple (LCM) of 10 different number pairs. The number pairs are: 15, 18; 25, 15; 2, 63; 36, 3; 99, 33; 30, 8; 9, 24; 64, 4; 5, 3; 22, 55. Students are instructed to find the LCM of each pair of numbers.
This document contains a math worksheet that lists 10 numbers and asks the student to provide the prime factorization for each. The student's responses show that number 44 factors into 2 x 2 x 11, number 75 factors into 3 x 5 x 5, and so on for each of the 10 numbers listed.
Cindy, Joe, and Elayna showed data about hours of sleep for different animals (giraffe, raccoon, squirrel, bear) in different graphs. The document discusses which graph best displays this type of data and provides examples of different graphs that would be best to display other types of data, such as comparing speeds of animals, election votes, heights over time, math grades, favorite subjects in classes, plant growth over time, favorite student activities, and monthly temperatures.
The document discusses expressions and how to write and evaluate mathematical expressions based on word problems. It provides examples of word problems that can be represented by addition, subtraction, multiplication, and division expressions. It then gives practice problems for the reader to write the appropriate expression and calculate the value based on word problems about quantities of stamps, money, markers, and other items.
This document contains a math review for Chapter 22 with 5 questions. The review covers fractions including addition, subtraction, and comparing fractional amounts. It tests skills like adding and subtracting fractions with the same or different denominators as well as comparing fractional quantities to determine if statements are true or false.