Recently added

Spread the Love
Submitted by: Beth
February 3rd, 2010
Categories: 4th Grade | 5th Grade | Special Education
Estimated Time: 30-40 minutes
Description: Our class is using Post-it® Notes to "spread the love" at our school for Valentine's day. We are inviting other classes to write nice notes to friends or teachers on colored Post-it Notes that we can display in the shape of a heart on our HUGE classroom windows that face the entire campus' main walkway. We are a self-contained special education class for 4th & 5th grade students with autism and this is our way to give back to our school. We will start by "using our words" to write how we feel about our friends and teachers on Post-it Notes to start the project. From there, we will use our social skills to ask other classes to help us with our project. Before we put each note up, we will read it to make sure that it is nice AND write a thank you note to thank them for participating. At the end, we will count to see how many nice notes we collected!

Laboratory Graphing
Submitted by: Rochelle
January 24th, 2010
Categories: 7th Grade | Science
Estimated Time: 60+ minutes
Description: To be used for any collection of numbers (polls, laboratory results, frequency, etc...) I had my students do an inquiry-based activity/laboratory "How Many Drops of Water Fit on a Penny". To do this, they were given only a simple task, "to use a dropper and water to see how many drops of water will fit on the surface of the penny before it spills over". From there, students were asked to log their number of drops. Students shared their results and we put on data table and calculated the range, mean, median and mode using all compiled student data. Students were also asked to place their number of drops on a yellow Post-it® Note and place it on a number line that was displayed on the wall in class (10-150 with 10 unit increments). We then had a discussion on why the range of numbers were so large and brainstormed ideas on how this range could be adjusted (to be made smaller) NOTE: to lessen the number of variables (size of drop, height of water, pressure on bulb, age of penny, location of drop etc...). The number line with Post-it Notes not only gave a students a visual of the range of data but confirmed the calculations of mean, median, and mode with the use of the Post-it Notes. (Note: students were asked to stack Post-it Notes if there was more than one of the same data point on the number line. In other words, if 15 appeared 3 times, there were 3 Post-it Notes stacked one on top of another). This process visually and most obviously pointed out the mode as well as made it clear how median could be viewed readily. After two more trials of getting rid of variables and becoming more consistent with laboratory procedures, students were asked to put the class averages for trial 2 this time on a blue Post-it Note, and trial 3 on a bright pink Post-it Note. Each time as the Post-it Notes were placed on the number line, they were to cover any Post-it Note that was there before the next trial. This made it clear to see how results were becoming more consistent and the range becoming closer. It also showed that with trial 3 (bright pink), the Post-it Notes were now stacked higher and closer together (mode and mean) on a number line. After each student placed their 3 colored Post-it Notes on the number and after wrap up discussion, it was also noted and discussed with students that if the number line were rotated from a horizontal position to a vertical position, it became a bar graph. The Post-it Notes really served as a visual aid to help students understand the concepts of not only mean, median, mode, range and bar graph but it also helped in the process for students to set a "goal" in decreasing the range by focusing on decreasing variables in an experiment. It made what could be a confusing concept (filled with calculations and numbers) into a visual, fun, easier to understand activity...not to mention students LOVE getting out of their seats!!

Fraction Fun
Submitted by: stacy
January 11th, 2010
Categories: 5th Grade | 6th Grade | 7th Grade | 8th Grade | Math
Estimated Time: 40-50 minutes
Description: Students will work with a partner/small groups to find equivalent fractions, to place fractions into lowest terms, change mixed numbers to improper fractions, and improper fractions to mixed numbers.

Get a Taste of Diagramming Sentences
Submitted by: Post-it® Brand
January 7th, 2010
Categories: 4th Grade | 5th Grade | 6th Grade | 7th Grade | 8th Grade | Reading & Writing
Estimated Time: 0-10 minutes
Description: This activity teaches sentence structure by learning diagramming sentences with Post-it® Notes.

Addition Dominos
Submitted by: Post-it® Brand
January 7th, 2010
Categories: 1st Grade | 2nd Grade | Math
Estimated Time: 0-10 minutes
Description: This is a fun activity to review addition of numbers using Post-it® Notes as Dominoes.





