Students analyze characterization by creating their own superheroes or super-villains,
complete with related gadgets and settings.
Fantastic Characters: Analyzing and Creating Superheroes and Villains
Grades
|
Songs of Our Lives: Using Lyrics to Write Stories
5 - 10
Lesson Plan
| Standard Lesson
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.
Grades
|
Cut up, Cover up, and Come Away with Ideas for Writing!
6 - 8
Lesson Plan
| Standard Lesson
Students rework their forgotten/abandoned drafts by cutting and covering up selected words. By creatively manipulating text, they explore portal writing, a strategy for envisioning a new story or story direction.
Grades
|
Creative Writing in the Natural World: A Framing
4 - 8
Lesson Plan
| Minilesson
Students practice writing detailed, sensory-rich descriptions by framing a small piece of nature and freewriting about it. From this minilesson, students can develop a variety of types of writing.
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
|
Color My World: Expanding Meaning Potential through Media
3 - 6
Lesson Plan
| Standard Lesson
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.
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
|
An Exploration of The Crucible through Seventeenth-Century Portraits
9 - 12
Lesson Plan
| Standard Lesson
In this lesson, students incorporate analyses of characters from The Crucible with examinations of original seventeenth-century portraits of Puritans to create a visual portrait of the character. The project culminates in a "Portrait Gallery Walk" where students present and defend their artwork.
Grades
|
Exploring The Prologue to The Canterbury Tales using Wikis
9 - 12
Lesson Plan
| Standard Lesson
Students study Chaucer's Canterbury Tales not just for its rich language, but also for the insights it provides into the Middle Ages. Using wikis, students collaborate to study both literature and history on their own terms. They create meaning and build information networks using tools Chaucer himself would have loved.
Grades
|
Using Microblogging and Social Networking to Explore Characterization and Style
9 - 12
Lesson Plan
| Standard Lesson
Students use social networking sites to trace the development of characters by assuming the persona of a character on the class Ning and sending a set number of tweets, or status updates.
Grades
|
If a Body Texts a Body: Texting in The Catcher in the Rye
9 - 12
Lesson Plan
| Standard Lesson
Students imagine the possibilities afforded by text messaging technology in The Catcher in the Rye; They compare and contrast major forms of communication, select points in the novel to represent with text messages, and share and discuss their creative work.
Grades
|
"America the Beautiful": Using Music and Art to Develop Vocabulary
K - 2
Lesson Plan
| Unit
Students engage in a rich study of vocabulary words from the song "America the Beautiful," using music and art.
Grades
|
Blurring Genre: Exploring Fiction and Nonfiction with Diary of a Worm
6 - 8
Lesson Plan
| Standard Lesson
After reading several examples of how a published author incorporates facts in fiction writing, students research a topic of their choice and write fictional diary entries that incorporate factual information.
Grades
|
Building Vocabulary: Making Multigenre Glossaries Based on Student Inquiry
6 - 8
Lesson Plan
| Standard Lesson
Students choose unfamiliar words from their reading and create a multigenre, multimodal glossary of terms.
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
|
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
|
Family Memoir: Getting Acquainted With Generations Before Us
9 - 12
Lesson Plan
| Unit
Creating a memoir of an older family member allows students both to learn more about their own backgrounds and to learn the power of storytellers.
Grades
|
Enchanting Readers with Revisionist Fairy Tales
6 - 8
Lesson Plan
| Standard Lesson
Students examine three examples of revisionist fairy tales in which female characters act in empowered roles rather than behaving helpless and submissive.
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.