Bring the celebration of reading and literacy into your classroom, library, school, and home all year long.
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.
Observed on the last Monday of May, Memorial Day honors the men and women who died while serving in the United States military. In addition to having celebrations with family and friends, many people visit cemeteries and memorials and place flags on the grave sites of fallen servicemen and women.
After students have read and discussed several poems from Brooks' collection, they create a poetry anthology for their own family, neighborhood, or classroom.
Students imagine they have been asked to participate in a museum exhibit, take photos/videos of a significant location, and write or record reflections. Students can also create an exhibit from something they have read.
Using the Book Cover Creator, students write and share their own multilingual stories.
Students focus on the figurative language in Heaney's poem, "Digging," and discuss the speaker's attitude, and how metaphor, simile, and image contribute to the poem.
After dividing students into small groups, students play a variation of the game Balderdash to celebrate the publication of Webster's dictionary.