

It also asks students to use the Curved Line tool to connect the pictures. This Butterfly Life Cycle Diagram from Eric Curts asks students to arrange four pictures into a circle to match a butterfy's life cycle. Eric tells more about his template in this post. This is helpful when a word needs to be changed from singular to plural or a verb tense needs to be matched. Eric’s template allows students to edit the words so that they can be modified.

Like Kasey’s templates, he provides dozens of words that students can move onto a background. Students make their own copies and combine words together to form poems on top of the refrigerator.Įric Curts shares a template for Valentines Magnetic Poetry Template. She provides a refrigerator image and dozens of words in her template Shake Up Learning with Collaborative Magnetic Poetry by Kasey Bell. Kasey Bell has shared a few magnetic poetry templates. Students drag and drop objects on the canvas to sort, order, match, or categorize. John Sowash shares six graphic organizers, including documents for main events, main idea, predictions, and story elements. In Diane Main's Somebody Wanted But So Then Template template, students are prompted to write a story following a story arc. This Life Timeline Template asks students to add facts about Harriet Tubman to a timeline. The boxes for text form a question mark.Įric Curts’ Sandwich Chart - color is a graphic organizer to help students write a paragraph with a topic sentence, details, and a concluding sentence. Matt Miller shares 15 graphic organizers that he has created in Google Drawings.Įric Curts’ Question Chart asks students to fill in Who, What, When, Where, Why, and How. You can make your own graphic organizer or use one that’s shared online. Students fill in the blanks on their own copies of a document.

If you’re not using Google Classroom to share, you can prepare a Make a Copy link. If you’re posting your template as an assignment in Google Classroom, you have the option to make a copy for each student. This is a handy way to share your own templates with students. Many of the templates are shared so that you are forced to make a copy before proceeding. You can make changes and personalize the document before sharing with students. A new window will open that contains your very own version of the template. Here’s how to make your own copy of a Google Drawings document: When viewing a Google Drawings document, click the File menu and choose Make a copy.
