This guide explores quantitative civic reasoning in English and math classrooms.
This tool provides a fun and useful way to explore a variety of topics such as a character in a book, a person or place from history, or even a physical object. An excellent tool to for summarizing or as a prewriting exercise for original stories.
The current edition of The Students' Right to Read is an adaptation and updating of the original Council statement, including "Citizen's Request for Reconsideration of a Work."
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.
Students read and discuss an award-winning book before writing their own story that demonstrates compassion.
Students reflect on recent learning and the role digital tools and media have played in supporting or enhancing it.
Students celebrate the power of words by reading aloud to their classmates and spreading the word of global literacy to their friends and family.