Students learn about the life and music of John Lennon, write a short story from their lives integrating lyrics from some of their favorite songs, and create a class book of stories.
Songs of Our Lives: Using Lyrics to Write Stories
Grades
|
The Mysteries of Harris Burdick: Using Illustrations to Guide Writing
5 - 9
Lesson Plan
| Standard Lesson
Students use illustrations from The Mysteries of Harris Burdick as a guide to write mysteries
and then present their stories to the class for students to discuss to which illustration each
story corresponds.
Grades
|
Investigating Genre: The Case of the Classic Detective Story
9 - 12
Lesson Plan
| Standard Lesson
After critiquing a list of conventions for the genre, students read, view, or listen to a classic
mystery, and then produce a mystery of their own, reflecting on the purposeful ways in which
they adhered to or altered the genre conventions.
Grades
|
Analyzing Famous Speeches as Arguments
9 - 12
Lesson Plan
| Standard Lesson
Students are often asked to perform speeches, but rarely do we require students to analyze speeches as carefully as we study works of literature. In this unit, students are required to identify the rhetorical strategies in a famous speech and the specific purpose for each chosen device. They will write an essay about its effectiveness and why it is still famous after all these years.
Grades
|
Tragic Love: Introducing Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet
9 - 12
Lesson Plan
| Standard Lesson
This lesson introduces students to William Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet by having them examine the ideas of tragedy and tragic love by connecting the story to their own lives.
Grades
|
Language and Power in The Handmaid's Tale and the World
9 - 12
Lesson Plan
| Standard Lesson
Students work in small groups to examine Margaret Atwood's use of and observations about language in The Handmaid's Tale. Through this activity, students discover and articulate overarching thematic trends in the book and then can extend their observations about official or political language to examples from their own world.
Grades
|
Sonic Patterns: Exploring Poetic Techniques Through Close Reading
9 - 12
Lesson Plan
| Standard Lesson
Students develop close reading skills connecting sound with sense in the poem "Those Winter Sundays," and write an original text that reflects their new learning.
Grades
|
Preparing for the Journey: An Introduction to the Hero Myth
9 - 12
Lesson Plan
| Standard Lesson
Students read a variety of picture books that contain elements of the hero's journey and use an online interactive tool to analyze the stories.
Grades
|
Brochures: Writing for Audience and Purpose
9 - 12
Lesson Plan
| Unit
Students create brochures on the same topic as another piece of writing they have done, highlighting how shifting purposes and audiences creates changes in their strategies as writers.
Grades
|
Walt Whitman as a Model Poet: "I Hear My School Singing"
9 - 12
Lesson Plan
| Standard Lesson
Students first analyze Walt Whitman's "I Hear America Singing," then use Whitman's poem as a model as they create their own list poems.
Grades
|
Put That on the List: Independently Writing a Catalog Poem
9 - 12
Lesson Plan
| Standard Lesson
In this follow-up to writing collaborative catalog poems, students write individual catalog poems about what really matters in their lives, based on Carver's poem "The Car."
Grades
|
Exploring Satire with Shrek
9 - 12
Lesson Plan
The movie Shrek introduces the satirical techniques of exaggeration, incongruity, reversal, and parody. Students brainstorm fairy tale characteristics, identify satirical techniques, then create their own satirical versions of fairy tales.
Grades
|
Id, Ego, and Superego in Dr. Seuss's The Cat in the Hat
9 - 12
Lesson Plan
| Unit
Dr. Seuss's The Cat in the Hat is used as a primer to teach students how to analyze a literary work using plot, theme, characterization, and psychoanalytical criticism.
Grades
|
Short Story Fair: Responding to Short Stories in Multiple Media and Genres
9 - 12
Lesson Plan
| Unit
In this activity, students read short stories and create presentations in multiple media to share in a Short Story Fair. At the fair, students explore and respond to the displays.
Grades
|
Teaching Plot Structure through Short Stories
9 - 10
Lesson Plan
| Standard Lesson
Students use an online graphic organizer to analyze the plot structure of "Jack and the Beanstalk" and three short stories.
Grades
|
Happily Ever After? Exploring Character, Conflict, and Plot in Dramatic Tragedy
9 - 12
Lesson Plan
| Standard Lesson
By exploring the decisions points in a tragedy, students consider how the plot of the story can change if the key characters make a different choice at the turning point.
Grades
|
Making Connections to Myth and Folktale: The Many Ways to Rainy Mountain
9 - 12
Lesson Plan
| Standard Lesson
Following the model of N. Scott Momaday's The Way To Rainy Mountain, students write three-voice narratives based on Kiowa folktales, an interview with an Elder, and personal connections to theme.
Grades
|
Choosing the Best Verb: An Active and Passive Voice Minilesson
9 - 12
Lesson Plan
| Minilesson
Students explore how active and passive voices are appropriate to different audiences. They examine online resources, and then draw conclusions about verb use, which they apply to their own writing.
Grades
|
Avoiding Sexist Language by Using Gender-Fair Pronouns
9 - 12
Lesson Plan
| Standard Lesson
Students engage in a brief writing assignment that concretely illustrates how language and gender stereotyping interact causally.
Grades
|
Locating Purpose in Allusion through Art and Poetry
9 - 12
Lesson Plan
| Standard Lesson
Through this lesson, students will learn how to use the literary term "allusion" in discussing how and why authors and artists draw on and transform subject material.