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How to make a voting booth for your classroom.
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For pre-readers, the (a) glyphs feature larger pictures and a smaller font, for teachers to read directions aloud.
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Color a blackline drawing by following the directions in the legend.
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Instructions for a project to make a poster about a current event.
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Use this form to organize Know, Want to know, and Learned material about a candidate.
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[member-created with abctools] Unscramble the words from "candidate" to "speech".
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"In your opinion, what are the most important qualities that a person running for President of the United States should have?"
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Use this chart to list the similarities and differences between any two candidates.
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Lots of election-themed ideas for the classroom.
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"Do you think it is important for Americans to vote in national, state and local elections?" Essay writing prompt.
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Writing activities and comprehension and vocabulary exercises enhance Laura Driscoll's story about a mouse's campaign for class officer.
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Pgina para colorear: "Voto" para estudiantes de primaria y elementaria. Glyph: "Vote" for primary and elementary students.
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Voting Ballot for mock elections. Fill in your own candidates.
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A picture to color and space to write a very short story with theme words from a word bank.
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A picture to color and space to write a very short story with election-themed words from a word bank.
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Easy-to-print poster version.
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Learn vocabulary with this fun set: a
word search, dictionary skills, working with words, and more. From "ballot" to "voting".
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Add the check marks in this picture graph to determine who won the class election.
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Enhances comprehension and vocabulary skills for the book by Kirsten Hall.
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Easy-to-print poster version.
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Poster defines the fallacy and gives examples. "People under the age of 18 should not have the right to vote because only adults should have the right to vote."
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A four page realistic fiction reading comprehension about a (class) presidential election. Questions are formatted for short essay or discussion questions, rather than multiple choice.