August, 2025

Here is a look at what you can find on Teach Grow Sow in August. Remember you can also stay up to date by signing up for notifications on:

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Scroll down to Find what you’re looking for under Grow & Sow.

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August Morning Work

August Reading Logs

2025-2026 Journals

Back to School

All the Questions for Teachers to Ask at a New School

Are you teaching at a new school this year? Whether this is your first year teaching, or your thirtieth, being a new teacher in a new school has lots of challenges. Here is a list of All the Questions for Teachers to Ask at a New School, since you often don’t know what it is you don’t know until it comes up at your busiest moment.

Help students to feel welcome on their first day with these banners.

Print these on cardstock (and laminate to keep using year after year) and attach to craft sticks for a first day photo booth.

Use this fun activity to help children remember that everyone has a different strongest suit…and a different weakest suit. For older students, use this activity to help them develop self-awareness and utilize the diagrams to strengthen study skills.

This is a great activity for the first week of school. Children can keep these books in their binders (behind the same tab as their class schedule and class rules), on their shelves or in their desks, and can refer to them throughout the year to review what they learned about their teacher and classmates at the beginning of the year.

For younger children, use this form to learn about students from their parents.

This is a fun activity page for children to create at the beginning of the year. Save in students’ files to add to their memory books at the end of the school year.

Losing homework can be very stressful for young children. To help put them at ease, let each child fill out one excused homework pass at the beginning of the year, to keep in their file for when they want to redeem it. If you want to get a bit silly, read students a book such as Alexander and the Terrible, Horrible, No Good, Very Bad Day, by Judith Viorst, or Arnold in a Pickle, by Marc Brown. Encourage them to make up the wildest, most extravagant excuse for their lost homework (making it clear that this is intentional fiction, not lying, since you are in on the joke). The creative writing will well make up for one day’s lost homework.

At the beginning of the year many parents will make vague offers to help “with anything you need.” The problem is, parents don’t always know what is actually needed, and teachers don’t always know in what ways parents are actually willing and able to help. Parents are often happiest to help when it is something they are passionate about and/or have the ability to do well.

Cut out these angel cards and hang them on a class plant, from a string with clothespins, or on the door, for parents to select at back-to-school night.

Print these frames onto cardstock for children to color. They can either draw a picture of themselves inside or cut out the inside and take a photo with it framing their faces.

Print these hats for younger children to color and wear on their first day of school.

Print these signs in color onto cardstock to use in first day of school photos.

Print the page of your choice to give students for a first day photo. And don’t forget to use the teacher version for yourself!

Sends these cards home the first day to let parents know their child started the year strong.

The beginning of the year is the perfect time to start planning for the end of the year. Use these pages to brainstorm what you would like to save throughout the year to create a cumulative end-of-year book to give to your students as a parting gift.

Here are some tips and tricks for managing classroom behavior so that you and students can get the most out of your time together. 

Check out these fun Games & Object Lessons for teaching behavior expectations.

Classroom Organization

Keeping a classroom organized can be a daunting task. Read up on some tips and tricks to help you keep your sanity.

Print these onto full- or quarter-page labels and place in folders to help children remember which papers go where (and practice learning right from left).

Free, printable schedule cards.

Free, printable class jobs.

Free, printable name tags.

Prepare ahead for having a substitute with these fun cards.

Home Communication

Send these behavior charts home in students’ binders each day to give parents a quick snapshot of their child’s day. Have them stay at home on Friday and start with a new sheet each Monday.

Attach these slips to unfinished work when sending home, so that parents will know why it is in their child’s folder.

Print these templates onto cardstock and keep in your desk to grab quickly whenever you need to send a short note.

Print these templates onto cardstock and keep in your desk to write a quick thank-you for a gift received.

Help parents (and yourself) keep track of missed work from sick days and vacations with these pages.

Highlight students’ good behavior with these cards that are quick to fill out and slip into take-home folders.

Classroom Community

Building a sense of classroom community can do wonders for student learning and behavior. Check out these fun ideas of things to do throughout the year to help this grow.

Start each day on a funny note with this list of printable jokes.

Keep track of lost teeth with these fun envelope labels and tally chart.

A great activity for students to do is creating acrostic poems. These can be used on a card for a birthday, Mothers/Fathers Day, or any special activity. Use this list of positive adjectives to help guide students to write their own acrostic poems.

Labor Day

Use these worksheets to help children learn about the history of Labor Day.

Use these templates to help children create thank-you cards for workers in their community.

Grow

You can now get organization and holiday materials separately by following on Facebook and Pinterest.

Looking for a printable calendar for August? You can print this free one.

And don’t forget to keep a reading log for yourself.

Back to School for Parents

First Day of School Signs

Questions to Ask Instead of “How Was Your Day?”

My Favorites

All About My Child

Labor Day

Use these worksheets to help children learn about the history of Labor Day.

Use these templates to help children create thank-you cards for workers in their community.

Fall is right around the corner, even if you don’t want to admit it. Check out these tips for preparing for Fall:

Falling Into Fall

Food Hacks You’ll Wish You’d Always Known

Sow

You can now get children’s ministry materials separately by following on Facebook and Pinterest.

Joseph Reunited

Baby Moses

The Burning Bush

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