Author: TCR Staff

Goals, Objectives, and Unit Plans

The most important thing to do as a teacher is to organize your goals, objectives, and unit plans. Formulating goals and objectives is a major part of a teacher’s course of study, but they are only the beginning. The key is to take them and to give them real-world applications. These come in the form of your day-to-day lessons.

The chart below can serve as a mini-refresher course on the purpose and flow of goals and objectives. The next post will outline the basic steps involved in formulating a lesson.  You can find forms that can be used to develop and organize your plans in the Jumbo Book of Teacher Tips and Timesavers.  Remember, everything you do to prepare will be well worth it when the school day begins.

Halloween Activities

A Short Historical Overview of Halloween:

October 31st was the New Year’s Eve of the Celts who lived in Britain and northern Europe around 2,000 years ago. On that night they would gather with their priests, called Druids. They feasted and told stories of their ancestors. The Celts believed that the spirits of those who had died during the year were wandering about that night, cold, lonely, hungry, and apt to play tricks, so the Celts left offerings of food and drink on their doorsteps. Those who had to go outside on that scary night carried lanterns and wore disguises so the spirits would not recognize them.

When church leaders were trying to convert the Celts in the early days of Christianity, they made November 1st and 2nd All Saints’ Day and All Souls’ Day, both of which recognized the spirits of the dead. October 31st then became the Eve of All Saints’ (or All Hallows) Day, which was eventually shortened to Halloween. Although the customs have been modified over the years, they remain basically the same—lanterns, gifts of food, and scary disguises.

Activities

1. Discuss Halloween with the children. Explain that it is an enjoyable time, not a scary time.

2. Talk about trick-or-treating. Have the class discuss street safety and reflective clothing. Remind children that all of the “treats” they receive need to be checked prior to eating.

3. Have the students do some Halloween research. Assign the following questions to various individuals or groups of children. Upon completion, have all share their information.

  1. How did witches and black cats come to be associated with Halloween?
  2. Who was the original jack-o’-lantern and how did he get his name?
  3. Where did people first begin to trick or treat?
  4. Who brought this custom to the United States?
  5. In which modern country is Halloween a national holiday?

4. Create tissue paper ghosts. Ball up one tissue and then take another and lay it out flat. Put the ball in the middle of the flat tissue. Fold over and tie a piece of yarn around the ball to form a head. Put eyes on with a black marker. Finally, hang the ghosts from the ceiling.

5. Make sponge-paint orange pumpkins. Cut an old sponge into the shape of a pumpkin. Put orange tempera paint into a foam tray. Have the children stamp the design onto construction paper. They may add features of a jack-o’-lantern after the paint dries.

 ©Teacher Created Resources, Inc.

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For more Halloween activities, check out these e-books:

Election Activities

Here is a fun, engaging activity to teach your students about the upcoming elections.

Activity:  You are the Candidate

You are running for President of the United States in this upcoming presidential election year. You are going to represent the people you feel have been ignored or whose concerns you support. You intend to conduct a campaign based on issues which are important to you.

Make a list of every national issue you think is important. These issues might involve any of the topics
listed below plus other matters of concern to you. Next to the issue indicate your positions, opinions,
and solutions for dealing with the problem.

Sample issues:

  • war and peace in various parts of the world
  • terrorism at home and abroad
  • unemployment and job opportunities
  • equal pay for equal work and worker rights
  • treatment of women in the workplace
  • minority rights and racial preferences
  • taxes–who pays them and how much
  • opportunities for young people
  • medical care for the poor and the aging
  • the economy

Your Issues                                           Your Opinions and Solutions
_______________________          ___________________________________________
_______________________          ___________________________________________
_______________________          ___________________________________________
_______________________          ___________________________________________
_______________________          ___________________________________________
_______________________          ___________________________________________
_______________________          ___________________________________________
_______________________          ___________________________________________

Setting Priorities
1. Study the issues you listed above.
2. Choose five issues that are the most important concerns to you.
3. Write a reason to explain why each of the five topics you selected is more important than the
other issues.

Reasons
1. ___________________________________________________________________
2. ___________________________________________________________________
3. ___________________________________________________________________
4. ___________________________________________________________________
5. ___________________________________________________________________

©Teacher Created Resources, Inc.

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For more elections activities, check out these books:

Tips for Managing Student Behavior

Any experienced teacher will know good discipline does not just happen all at once. Managing student behavior is a learned skill, but classroom control will begin before the students even enter the classroom. Managing student behavior is no easy task. Each teacher will develop his or her own form of discipline. Remember that students need to feel valued and welcomed. They need to know that you have an honest interest in each one of them, not only as a class, but also as individuals. For good discipline, certain behaviors are necessary on the part of the teacher:

  • Be consistent; establish the rules and stick to them.
  • Consequences should be fair and consistently applied.
  • Be prepared for the students who will test the rules.
  • Do not threaten students with a consequence unless you are ready to carry it out. Students will view you as inconsistent if you fail to do what you say.
  • Do not be judgmental; look at each situation from all angles before you designate a consequence.
  • Never put off discipline. Handle any behavioral problem when it occurs.
  • Make sure students understand the rules and the consequences. Students need to know how to behave in any given situation. With some students, you may want to do role-playing at the beginning of the school year. In this way, students will see what is expected of them and see the consequences being applied.
  • Show a true interest in all of the students. Each one needs to be treated as an individual and with respect, not just another student. When giving praise to any student, use his or her name with the praise. Nothing pleases students more than to hear their names used in a good light.
  • Implement well-planned lessons. Know what you are going to teach and be well prepared.
  • Allow for flexibility. There will be many interruptions in a school year; you will not accomplish everything that is planned on a particular day.