FREE Sample: Long Division Worksheets

Three FREE sample worksheets from my new long division series:

It’s Only Long Division Lesson 1

The set (with 9 worksheets) is available here for $1: https://www.teacherspayteachers.com/Product/Long-Division-Worksheets-Set-1-2583526

The complete set (with 9 worksheets and 3 PPTs) is available here for $3: https://www.teacherspayteachers.com/Product/Long-Division-Set-1-2497931

Division WS 1Division WS 2Division WS 3Division WS 4

TPT Freebie: Long Division PowerPoint

Long Division FREE Sample Title

This item is an introductory sample for my new Long Division series. The FREE product is available here:

https://www.teacherspayteachers.com/FreeDownload/Long-Division-FREE-Sample–2495918

A slide from the lesson…

 

Long Division Slide

Here’s a link to the first installment in the series: 

https://www.teacherspayteachers.com/Product/Long-Division-Set-1-2497931

The product offers 3 interactive PowerPoint lessons and 9 worksheets for the low price of $3.

A “How To” for Multiple Choice Reading Tests

While I’m not an advocate of the modern testing culture, I do believe that children who are subjected by law to having the quality of their minds assessed by state-mandated multiple choice tests should be given the best possible chance to prove that they are valuable commodities.

Multiple Choice Title The following products were designed to help students navigate their way safely through the common snares found in multiple choice reading tests:

Introducing the Common Types of Multiple Choice Reading Questions: 

https://www.teacherspayteachers.com/Product/Introducing-Types-of-Multiple-Choice-Reading-Questions-Practice-2366941

Multiple Choice Reading Practice Set #1:

https://www.teacherspayteachers.com/Product/Multiple-Choice-Reading-Practice-Set-1-2404994

Free Sample:

https://www.teacherspayteachers.com/Product/Multiple-Choice-Reading-Practice-Series-Free-Sample-2384103

What If?

Originally published by AMERICANSCAPEGOAT.COM

January 7, 2016

book-933280_960_720Approximately 2.4 million students who attended American public schools in 2011 were classified as learning disabled.

Approximately 80% of those students (or nearly 2 million) had a reading disability.

Students who are labeled as learning disabled in reading must first demonstrate that their skills are “well below the average range of scores in culturally and linguistically appropriate tests of reading.”

Prior to diagnosing any learning disability, students are screened to ensure that health impairments, such as vision and hearing deficiencies, are not the cause of their reading difficulties.

There is no test to measure the quality of the reading instruction that students receive prior to being diagnosed with a reading disability.

What if some of those nearly 2 million students who were diagnosed with a reading disability failed to receive effective reading instruction prior to being evaluated?

Source: https://www.ncld.org/wp-content/uploads/2014/11/2014-State-of-LD.pdf