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
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Talking, Writing, and Reasoning: Making Thinking Visible with Math Journals
3 - 5
Lesson Plan
| Standard Lesson
Students explore how their problem-solving strategies work by writing in math journals as they work in small groups to solve a math puzzle with multiple solutions.
Grades
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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
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Name Tag Glyphs
2 - 5
Lesson Plan
| Standard Lesson
In this lesson, students practice a way to communicate without words by using a glyph. They create a name card using information about themselves. Students also interpret glyphs made by others.
Grades
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Authoring an Epilogue That Helps Our Characters Live On
3 - 5
Lesson Plan
| Standard Lesson
This lesson uses One Green Apple by Eve Bunting to teach how characters change across a text. It will also guide students through writing an epilogue to accompany their independent book.
Grades
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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
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Composing Cinquain Poems with Basic Parts of Speech
3 - 5
Lesson Plan
| Standard Lesson
Reinforce student understanding of parts of speech through the analysis of sample cinquain poems followed by the creation of original cinquains.
Grades
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Guided Comprehension: Making Connections Using a Double-Entry Journal
4 - 6
Lesson Plan
| Standard Lesson
Based on the Guided Comprehension Model by Maureen McLaughlin and Mary Beth Allen, this lesson helps students learn three types of connections (text-to-text, text-to-self, and text-to-world) using a double-entry journal.
Grades
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Make a Splash! Using Dramatic Experience to "Explode the Moment"
3 - 5
Lesson Plan
| Standard Lesson
Students will have a blast as they use descriptive language to write about an "explosive" and dramatic moment in their lives.
Grades
|
Using Word Webs to Teach Synonyms for Commonly Used Words
4 - 8
Lesson Plan
| Standard Lesson
Students use word webs to choose synonyms for generic adjectives and to learn to adjust their word usage for different contexts.
Grades
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Spelling Cheerleading: Integrating Movement and Spelling Generalizations
K - 5
Lesson Plan
| Standard Lesson
"2-4-6-8, students will be spelling great" in this lesson that teaches the y rule for adding suffixes through cheering the spelling of words aloud, word sorts, and writing stories.
Grades
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Guided Comprehension: Self-Questioning Using Question-Answer Relationships
3 - 6
Lesson Plan
| Standard Lesson
Guided comprehension moves your students beyond decoding to become independent readers. Generating questions to guide reading helps readers make connections with the text and supports independent comprehension of new texts.
Grades
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Using Writing and Role-Play to Engage the Reluctant Writer
3 - 5
Lesson Plan
| Standard Lesson
What does the world look like through a javelina's eyes? Students become javelinas in this lesson when they analyze a character and write from his or her perspective.
Grades
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Applying Question-Answer Relationships to Pictures
3 - 5
Lesson Plan
| Standard Lesson
A picture is worth a thousand words as students are guided in viewing wordless picture books and responding to four different types of questions about the images they see.
Grades
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Developing Students' Critical Thinking Skills Through Whole-Class Dialogue
3 - 5
Lesson Plan
| Standard Lesson
"That's my position and I'm sticking to it!" After reading about the Korean War, students will take a position in response to an open-ended question, support their position, and evaluate that support.
Grades
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Sequencing: A Strategy to Succeed at Reading Comprehension
3 - 5
Lesson Plan
| Standard Lesson
Did Paul Bunyan gouge out the Grand Canyon before or after he dug the Great Lakes? Students create a life-sized timeline showing the sequence of events in this tall tale.
Grades
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How-To Writing: Motivating Students to Write for a Real Purpose
3 - 5
Lesson Plan
| Standard Lesson
It's not easy surviving fourth grade (or third or fifth)! In this lesson, students brainstorm survival tips for future fourth graders and incorporate those tips into an essay.
Grades
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Buzz! Whiz! Bang! Using Comic Books to Teach Onomatopoeia
3 - 5
Lesson Plan
| Standard Lesson
This lesson is sure to sizzle, not fizzle, as students use comic strips to find onomatopoetic words, develop a vocabulary list from the words, and discuss why writers use onomatopoeia.
Grades
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Skimming and Scanning: Using Riddles to Practice Fact Finding Online
3 - 5
Lesson Plan
| Standard Lesson
Students will learn to skim and scan to make sure they don't flounder when they're surfing the Internet for facts to help them complete riddles about the United States.
Grades
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Story Elements Alive!
3 - 5
Lesson Plan
| Standard Lesson
What's in a narrative? Students find out in this lesson in which they explore four narrative elements—setting, characters, problem/solution, and plot, through purpose-driven read-alouds and independent reading.