In honor of NCTE's National Day on Writing, tune in to hear about the growing number of books featuring teens who write.
Students research different awards given by the ALA and do an activity based on one of the awards.
Let children explore an interesting subject—themselves. An online tool will teach them to summarize and organize information as they write.
Use shape and theme poems, or poems that look like the things they describe, as a fun way to introduce children to poetry.
Use recipes to help children practice reading and writing step-by-step instructions. Have them sample the results to see how they did.
Use the online Trading Card Creator tool to have children make cards describing their favorite characters from the books on their reading list.
Share a fun book about staying safe and then talk about real-life safety issues before writing a letter to someone in your community who can help.
Boost vocabulary by taking an imaginary trip into space. After a lunar "landing," children return to Earth with a galaxy of new words.
Choose favorite rhyming songs or nursery rhymes then replace the rhyming words with seasonal themes.
Engage teens in this activity in which they use photographs to examine and write about courage on a blog.
Invite teens to explore issues that are important to them, and then write a script and film a video public service announcement.
Explore how music can have an emotional impact on a scene in a movie, then help teens write and film a scene of their own.
This activity invites children and teens to explore various careers and then write about what they might want to be when they grow up in a blog.
Explore fairy tales told in both old and new ways and use an online tool to help children create their own "fractured" version of a fairy tale.
Have children explore the different parts of mystery writing by making a puzzle about a favorite book. They can then invent and write their own mysteries using the online Mystery Cube tool.