How long until lunch?
How many times have you gotten questions like these from your students? Don't you wish your students would come to you already knowing how to read an analog clock and answer these questions for themselves?
Use numbers like these around your classroom clock. |
This will allow students to see the relationships between the numbers and the words used in every day situations {quarter after 11, half past 3, etc.}. Once these word cards go up and students begin using them accurately, the other numbers {05, 10, 20, 25, 35, 40, 50, and 55} will come down. By the end of the school year, my goal is that students will have had practice telling time without any labels on the clock.
By using this knowledge in real-world situations throughout the year, our telling time lessons in math class can be mostly review, and we can focus on the dreaded elapsed time.
Find this pack in my TpT and TN stores! |
I'm offering 20% off all my products, and TpT is adding another 10% off, for a total of a 28% savings! {When you take 20% off my products, then 10% off the remaining cost, the total savings is 28%--I know, crazy math!} All you have to do is put in the promo code (BTS12) when you check out for the extra 10% savings. I will also be running a sale in my Teachers Notebook store those same days!
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