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7 Minute Whiteboard Videos - Dinosaur Kindergarten Review

Rated 4.97 out of 5, based on 35 reviews
5.0 (35 ratings)
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The Primary Techie
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Grade Levels
K
Standards
Formats Included
  • PDF
  • Google Apps™
  • Internet Activities
Pages
16 Videos
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$6.00
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The Primary Techie
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The Teacher-Author indicated this resource includes assets from Google Workspace (e.g. docs, slides, etc.).

What educators are saying

I love these whiteboard videos. They are great for filling small time slots or when you have a substitute. My kids are familiar with the routine of them and can do the activities all on their own now.
So fun! The kids love all of the 7 minute videos. I like that they are short and don't take up too much time. Perfect!

Description

Have you ever felt overwhelmed and just needed a minute to catch your breath? Have you ever wondered how you could keep your class busy while you worked one-on-one with a student or small group? I know I have and that's why I created 7 Minute Whiteboard Videos. They are ZERO prep! No copies! No early finishers! No grading! The best part is, kids LOVE them!

These videos offer a quick, no-prep review that your students are going to love! Each student needs a whiteboard, marker, and eraser. They are a wonderful resource for in-person AND distant learning.

This set includes a variety of skills and is a great review for your kindergartners. Videos included are-

Addition to 10 - We see cute dinosaurs holding up fingers on both hands. Your students will write the addition sentence that matches the number of fingers shown. Click here to see a preview of this video!

Hatching Letter Sounds - Help the Dinosaurs find their babies! Dinosaur babies are in the eggs making the sound of their letter. Your kids decide if the Dinosaur letter shown matches the sound of the egg. They draw a happy face or sad face on their boards making this a great activity for even the youngest writers. The egg cracks open to reveal the letter inside. This is also great for reinforcing capital/lowercase letters. (Mom and Dad dinos are capital letters; babies are lowercases.) There are 7 videos like this. Click here to see a quick preview of it!

Color Words Meteor Shower - Watch quickly and write the colors that are seen through the telescope! I love how this video spells color words aloud when kids check their answers. Click here to see an example!

Digging Up CvC words (Missing Beginning Sound) - A tablet with a picture is placed and the name is said aloud. We see bone letters sticking out of the dirt for the middle and ending of the word, but the beginning sound is covered in soil. Your students write the missing sound before an archaeologist helps us out by brushing the dirt away to reveal the answer. My favorite part of these videos is a little roly-poly at the end that says each letter sound then blends them to say the word before rolling away. Click here to see it!

Digging Up CvC words (Missing Middle Sound) - A tablet with a picture is placed and the name is said aloud. We see bone letters sticking out of the dirt for the beginning and ending of the word, but the middle sound is covered in soil. Your students write the missing sound before an archaeologist helps us out by brushing the dirt away to reveal the answer. My favorite part of these videos is a little roly-poly at the end that says each letter sound then blends them to say the word before rolling away. Click here to see an example of this video!

Subitizing Volcano - This volcano erupts dots in a variety of configurations. Can your students quickly identify the number of dots? This set reviews numbers 5 to 10. Click to see it!

Dino 2D Shapes - Your students will write the shape of the dinosaur bodies using the word bank before the shape is said aloud and revealed. Click here to see a preview of this video!

Solid Figure Dino Disguises - 3D shapes are disguised as dinosaurs. Can your students tell which shape they are? They have a word bank and time to write their guess before the dinosaur parts fade away revealing the solid figure and the name of the figure is said and shown for students to check their answers. I love the way this gets them to use their imaginations to find the shape, but then when it's time to check it, the visual shows them exactly where the shape is. It makes this video different, a bit more challenging, and a bit more fun than typical "what's that figure?" videos. Click here to see a preview!

Dinosaur Museum Fact or Opinion - We're going on a tour through the dinosaur museum. We'll hear and read lots of things about dinosaurs. Are they facts or opinions? Students decide and write "fact" or "opinion" on their whiteboards. Click here to see this video!

Spelunking for Bones - We're diving into caves to find skeletons. A flashlight shines on some bones and then we look in a "Guide to Dinosaurs" book to see which dinosaur matches the skeleton we saw. Click here to see this video!

If you like this set, you might also like these other Kindergarten Review sets:

Kindergarten 7 Minute Whiteboard Videos - Back-to-School

Kindergarten 7 Minute Whiteboard Videos - Fall

Kindergarten 7 Minute Whiteboard Videos - Halloween

Kindergarten 7 Minute Whiteboard Videos - Thanksgiving

Kindergarten 7 Minute Whiteboard Videos - Christmas

Kindergarten 7 Minute Whiteboard Videos - Summer

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Due to the large file size of videos, this download is a pdf file with a link the the videos on Google Drive.

Total Pages
16 Videos
Answer Key
N/A
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Standards

to see state-specific standards (only available in the US).
Understand the relationship between numbers and quantities; connect counting to cardinality.
Represent addition and subtraction with objects, fingers, mental images, drawings, sounds (e.g., claps), acting out situations, verbal explanations, expressions, or equations.
Correctly name shapes regardless of their orientations or overall size.
Isolate and pronounce the initial, medial vowel, and final sounds (phonemes) in three-phoneme (consonant-vowel-consonant, or CVC) words. (This does not include CVCs ending with /l/, /r/, or /x/.)
Demonstrate basic knowledge of one-to-one letter-sound correspondences by producing the primary sound or many of the most frequent sounds for each consonant.

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