Teach students how to follow and decompose algorithms with these Build a Turkey digital activities. 2 types of digital activities ask students to follow an algorithm to put a Turkey together and then look at a pre-built Turkey and type their own algorithm for it. Perfect for before Thanksgiving or any time you want to practice coding concepts in the computer lab.
Using technology and problem solving skills, students decipher codes and complete activities to learn the internet safety topic of Passwords. The activities are housed in a Google Slides file and students enter their codes into a locked Google Form.
Are your students really struggling with basic computer troubleshooting? This 15 query unit is great for partner research or an extended individual research project. Each query is appropriate for upper elementary or middle school students. By the end of learning these 15 common computer troubleshooting problems, your classroom will run so smoothly without all of the “how do I…” questions. Feel free to add your own in addition to the 15 included. The queries on the slides are editable.
Students are going to love creating their own Digital Glyph for Dot Day and you’re going to love all of the technology skills work they are getting. This resource works on so many great technology skills. While students may be familiar with paper and pencil glyph activities, it takes it to a whole new level to do it digitally.
$22.00Original price was: $22.00.$17.60Current price is: $17.60.
Do you need your students to learn how to use Google Slides? In this 11 lesson complete unit, your students will learn all of the major components of using Google Slides for education. The best part is that these lessons are click and go. The instructional videos are done for you so your students will be able to work independently.
Using technology and problem solving skills, students decipher codes and complete activities to learn the internet safety topic of Online Friends. The activities are housed in a Google Slides file and students enter their codes into a locked Google Form.
Digital Pixel Art STEM Challenges work on so many great technology skills. While students may be familiar with using snap cubes (or counting blocks or whatever you call them) to make designs, it brings the skill to a whole new level to do it digitally. 10 Christmas designs in 4 different levels for differentiation between grade levels k-5.
Stop Motion Animation goes Digital with this Ugly Sweater Digital Animation Project! Students choose from background options and then add shapes, text, and clip art graphics to make a scene. Then they duplicate the slide and make a small change over and over (about 50 times) to animate the scene. Once the stop motion animation is complete students publish it to the web and can optionally make it into a GIF using a website tool.
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The clip art pieces can be used for many December events and holidays like Hanukkah, Kwanzaa, Christmas, Solstice, and New Year. You can add more customized options for your students if needed.
Using technology and problem solving skills, students decipher codes and complete activities to learn the internet safety topic of screentime. This is a great activity to introduce students to the escape the classroom challenges, and it is fully digital! I’m calling it a digital breakout because students enter the final codes into a locked Google Form.
Using technology and problem solving skills, students decipher codes and complete activities to learn the internet safety topic of Cyberbullying. The activities are housed in a Google Slides file and students enter their codes into a locked Google Form.
Using technology and problem solving skills, students decipher codes and complete activities to learn the internet safety topic of Private and Personal Info. The activities are housed in a Google Slides file and students enter their codes into a locked Google Form.
30 Technology Vocabulary Puzzles in both printable and digital format. Either print, prep, and have students complete on paper or use the PowerPoint or Google Slides file to have students complete them digitally. Either way they are great practice.
Digital Winter Themed Coding Activities for your grades 2-5 students. These are fully digital and can be used through Google Slides or PowerPoint. Let your students learn about computer languages in a fun and engaging way. These activities are independent click and go lessons on binary, coding, and problem solving. Perfect for the ISTE standard Computational Thinking. They would even be great for your STEM time in class or your Maker Space during the Hour of Code!
Do your students know the keyboard letters and numbers but need practice with the special keys? Do they have to take online assessments where they will be asked to key in numbers and symbols? Then this practice set is just what you’ve been looking for. 2 levels of special keys practice plus BONUS practice for online assessment skills such as click and drag, short answer text, and drop down menus.
Using technology and problem solving skills, students decipher codes and complete activities to learn the internet safety topic of privacy and security. This is a great activity to introduce students to the escape the classroom challenges, and it is fully digital! I’m calling it a digital breakout because students enter the final codes into a locked Google Form.
This resource works on so many great technology skills. While students may be familiar with using snap cubes (or counting blocks or whatever you call them) to make designs, it brings the skill to a whole new level to do it digitally. 10 Thanksgiving designs in 4 different levels for differentiation between grade levels k-5.
Teach students how to create and decompose Algorithms with these print and digital activities. 2 types of printable activities ask students to color pictures following an algorithm. 2 types of digital activities ask students to order the steps of an algorithm, identify the bug or an extra step, and then write their own 5 step algorithms for a given topic.
Use these activities as a crash course to understanding what an algorithm is, how to write one, follow one, and decompose one. I even included a simple assessment. See the table of contents for what is included.
Using technology and problem solving skills, students decipher codes and complete activities to learn the internet safety topic of Permission to Post. The activities are housed in a Google Slides file and students enter their codes into a locked Google Form.
$18.00Original price was: $18.00.$6.00Current price is: $6.00.
The goal of this kit is to provide everything you need to make your classroom ready for the Hour of Code event during computer science week. It includes vocab posters, pre and post assessments, encouraging quotes posters, choice boards with hour of code activities, editable parent letter, and bulletin board header letters.
Coding Pixel art lessons and activities. This resource brings art and math into computer science because each activity results in creating pixel art and patterns. Students will learn three different ways to program or code throughout the activities. Perfect for problem solving or STEM time in the classroom.
Students are going to love discovering what Halloween themed design is hidden in the spreadsheet software mystery picture and you’ll love that they are practicing so many different skills. While students may be familiar with paper and pencil mystery pictures, it takes it to a whole new level to do it digitally. Students will really master the toolbar in Google Sheets or Microsoft Excel. The activity has them filling 100 cells in the table per design, making it a mastery activity.
Using technology and problem solving skills, students decipher codes and complete activities to learn the internet safety topic of Copyright. The activities are housed in a Google Slides file and students enter their codes into a locked Google Form.
Using technology and problem solving skills, students decipher codes and complete activities to learn the internet safety topic of Group Chats. The activities are housed in a Google Slides file and students enter their codes into a locked Google Form.
Teach students how to follow and decompose algorithms with these Build an Ice Cream digital activities. 2 types of digital activities ask students to follow an algorithm to put an Ice Cream together and then look at a pre-built ice cream and type their own algorithm for it.
Use these activities as a crash course to understanding what an algorithm is, how to write one, follow one, and decompose one. I even included printable posters and vocabulary cards.
$5.00Original price was: $5.00.$4.00Current price is: $4.00.
Bring hands on learning into your computer science and technology education with Coding Quests board games.
This board game practices If/Then/Else language while students move their pirate characters through a path filled with obstacles. Can they get their treasure safely back to the port?
Using technology and problem solving skills, students decipher codes and complete activities to learn about computer keyboards. The activities are housed in a Google Slides file and students enter their codes into a locked Google Form. If you’ve been wanting to try an escape room or digital breakout with your students, this is a great place to start.
$50.00Original price was: $50.00.$42.50Current price is: $42.50.
Using technology and problem solving skills, students decipher codes and complete activities to learn the internet safety topics. The activities are housed in a Google Slides file and students enter their codes into a locked Google Form.
$180.00Original price was: $180.00.$126.00Current price is: $126.00.
180 Spiral Review technology lessons that teach presentation, word processing, and spreadsheet software over 36 sessions for each grade level. These will make a great addition to your technology curriculum for the computer lab. The skills build on each other throughout each unit so students really master the programs.
On each printable worksheet there are 3 keyboards for a total of 60 fill in the keyboards activities. There are 3 different keyboard layouts (PC, Chromebook, and Mac) so that students are exposed to different keyboard types. Great for exit ticket, sub activity, early finisher option, low-tech day, and the list goes on!
Learning keyboarding can be super boring and tedious for students. This set of formatting activities aims to bring engagement and a sense of purpose to the practice of typing. By the time students finish all 11 U.S. Holidays they will have practiced each of the keyboard rows four times. Students will also (hopefully) have a sense of pride over the final outcome and an understanding of the learning objective.