Using different writing/drawing materials (e.g., markers, color pencils, pastels, etc.), students learn how to communicate different moods and/or feelings to support their written ideas and how authors do the same through their work.
Color My World: Expanding Meaning Potential through Media
Grades
|
American Folklore: A Jigsaw Character Study
3 - 6
Lesson Plan
| Standard Lesson
Groups of students read and discuss American folklore stories, each group reading a different story. Using a jigsaw strategy, the groups compare character traits and main plot points of the stories. A diverse selection of American folk tales is used for this lesson, which is adaptable to any text set.
Grades
|
Moving Toward Acceptance Through Picture Books and Two-Voice Texts
3 - 5
Lesson Plan
| Unit
Students read and discuss literature about intolerance and diversity. They work with a partner to write two-voice poems that illustrate situations of intolerance at their school and suggest a step toward acceptance.
Grades
|
Engaging Students in a Collaborative Exploration of the Gettysburg Address
3 - 5
Lesson Plan
| Standard Lesson
In small groups, students closely examine one sentence from the Gettysburg Address and create a multigenre project communicating what they have discovered about the meaning and significance of the text.
Grades
|
Creating Family Timelines: Graphing Family Memories and Significant Events
3 - 5
Lesson Plan
| Standard Lesson
Students interview family members, and then create graphic family timelines based on important and memorable family events.
Grades
|
What If We Changed the Book? Problem-Posing with Sixteen Cows
3 - 5
Lesson Plan
| Standard Lesson
After reading a piece of math-related children's literature aloud, students pose and solve new problems by asking what-if questions about the events in the story.
Grades
|
Genre Study: A Collaborative Approach
3 - 5
Lesson Plan
| Recurring Lesson
Students explore multiple genres through genre studies. They record evidence of genre characteristics on bookmarks as they read, and finish by giving a book review for their classmates.
Grades
|
Book Report Alternative: Examining Story Elements Using Story Map Comic Strips
3 - 5
Lesson Plan
| Standard Lesson
Comic frames are traditionally used to illustrate a story in a short, concise format. In this lesson, students use a six-paneled comic strip frame to create a story map, summarizing a book or story that they've read. Each panel retells a particular detail or explains a literary element (such as setting or character) from the story.
Grades
|
Comics in the Classroom as an Introduction to Genre Study
3 - 5
Lesson Plan
| Standard Lesson
Multidimensional, challenging, and popular with students, comics provide an excellent way to introduce the concept of genres.
Grades
|
Talking Poetry with Blabberize
4 - 8
Lesson Plan
| Standard Lesson
Students will be motivated to share their poetry through an online tool the features recording and animation.
Grades
|
Designing Elements of Story in Little Blue and Little Yellow
K - 5
Lesson Plan
| Standard Lesson
In this series of four lessons, students will explore key elements of design in Little Blue and
Little Yellow to learn about setting, character relationships, and plot.
Grades
|
Boars and Baseball: Making Connections
4 - 7
Lesson Plan
| Standard Lesson
In this lesson, students will make text-to-self, text-to-text, and text-to-world connections after reading In the Year of the Boar and Jackie Robinson. After sharing and discussing connections, students choose and plan a project that makes a personal connection to the text.
Grades
|
Captioning the Civil Rights Movement: Reading the Images, Writing the Words
2 - 8
Lesson Plan
| Standard Lesson
Teachers guide students to carefully view images from the Civil Rights Movement and write captions that accurately describe the images and/or their probable purposes.
Grades
|
Picture This: Using Instagram to Report
4 - 8
Lesson Plan
| Standard Lesson
After taking a field trip that students document using mobile app Instagram, students become new reporters as they use the interactive Printing Press to tell about their experiences.
Grades
|
Powerful Writing: Description in Creating Monster Trading Cards
3 - 5
Lesson Plan
| Standard Lesson
Students create their own monster trading cards using "powerful," vivid language to describe their creatures.
Grades
|
How Big Are Martin's Big Words? Thinking Big about the Future
3 - 5
Lesson Plan
| Minilesson
Inspired by the book Martin's Big Words, students explore information on Dr. King to think about his "big" words, then they write about their own "big" words and dreams.
Grades
|
Native Americans Today
3 - 5
Lesson Plan
| Standard Lesson
This lesson challenges students' views of Native Americans as a vanished people by asking them to compare their prior knowledge with information they gather while reading about contemporary Native Americans.
Grades
|
Get the Reel Scoop: Comparing Books to Movies
3 - 5
Lesson Plan
Students compare a book to its film adaptation, and then perform readers theater of a scene from the book that they feel was not well represented in the movie version.
Grades
|
Fairy Tales from Life
3 - 5
Lesson Plan
| Unit
Picture books provide the basis for an analysis of fairy tale elements before students write their own original tales.
Grades
|
Playing with Prepositions through Poetry
3 - 5
Lesson Plan
| Standard Lesson
Students play with and explore prepositions during a whole group reading of Ruth Heller's Behind the Mask, and then by composing and publishing prepositional poems based on the book's style.