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Type

  • Classroom Resources
  • Professional Development

Grades

  • 1 (135)
  • 2 (139)
  • 3 (211)
  • 4 (210)
  • 5 (223)
  • 6 (229)
  • 7 (229)
  • 8 (241)
  • 9 (254)
  • 10 (251)
  • 11 (245)
  • 12 (245)
  • K (121)

Learning Objectives

  • (-) reading fluency (67)
  • (-) text structure / story structure (242)
  • (-) writing process (421)
  • collaboration (458)
  • Comprehension (508)
  • critical thinking (649)
  • digital literacy (154)
  • Grammar (57)
  • inquiry / research (350)
  • listening (182)
  • literary analysis (367)
  • Media literacy (205)
  • metacognition (302)
  • multicultural awareness (113)
  • multimodal literacy (260)
  • oral communication (224)
  • phonological awareness (61)
  • print awareness (89)
  • reading genres (290)
  • Spelling (51)
  • Vocabulary (191)
  • writing genres (382)

Topics

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Fantastic Characters: Analyzing and Creating Superheroes and Villains
Grades
6 - 8
|
Lesson Plan
|
Standard Lesson
Fantastic Characters: Analyzing and Creating Superheroes and Villains
Students analyze characterization by creating their own superheroes or super-villains, complete with related gadgets and settings.
Songs of Our Lives: Using Lyrics to Write Stories
Grades
5 - 10
|
Lesson Plan
|
Standard Lesson
Songs of Our Lives: Using Lyrics to Write Stories
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.
Cut up, Cover up, and Come Away with Ideas for Writing!
Grades
6 - 8
|
Lesson Plan
|
Standard Lesson
Cut up, Cover up, and Come Away with Ideas for Writing!
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.
Creative Writing in the Natural World: A Framing
Grades
4 - 8
|
Lesson Plan
|
Minilesson
Creative Writing in the Natural World: A Framing
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.
<em>The Mysteries of Harris Burdick</em>: Using Illustrations to Guide Writing
Grades
5 - 9
|
Lesson Plan
|
Standard Lesson
The Mysteries of Harris Burdick: Using Illustrations to Guide Writing
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.
Investigating Genre: The Case of the Classic Detective Story
Grades
9 - 12
|
Lesson Plan
|
Standard Lesson
Investigating Genre: The Case of the Classic Detective Story
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.
Color My World: Expanding Meaning Potential through Media
Grades
3 - 6
|
Lesson Plan
|
Standard Lesson
Color My World: Expanding Meaning Potential through Media
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.
Analyzing Famous Speeches as Arguments
Grades
9 - 12
|
Lesson Plan
|
Standard Lesson
Analyzing Famous Speeches as Arguments
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.
American Folklore: A Jigsaw Character Study
Grades
3 - 6
|
Lesson Plan
|
Standard Lesson
American Folklore: A Jigsaw Character Study
Groups of students read and discuss American folklore stories, each group reading a different story. Using a jigsaw strategy, the groups compare character traits and main plot points of the stories. A diverse selection of American folk tales is used for this lesson, which is adaptable to any text set.
Guided Reading Strategies with <i>Henry and Mudge</i>
Grades
1 - 3
|
Lesson Plan
|
Standard Lesson
Guided Reading Strategies with Henry and Mudge
In this lesson, students read Henry and Mudge and the Starry Night as a whole group as the teacher models a questioning strategy. In subsequent sessions, students practice the questioning strategy and reread for fluency.
Utilizing Visual Images for Creating and Conveying Setting in Written Text
Grades
3 - 6
|
Lesson Plan
|
Recurring Lesson
Utilizing Visual Images for Creating and Conveying Setting in Written Text
This lesson supports third-through-sixth grade students as they communicate story setting to their readers through the use of visual image prompts. Activities include individual and cooperative learning group work, as well as whole class discussion.
Prompting Revision through Modeling and Written Conversations
Grades
3 - 5
|
Lesson Plan
|
Standard Lesson
Prompting Revision through Modeling and Written Conversations
Students create a checklist outlining what effective writers do, revise his or her own writing, and engage in a written conversation to help peers with the revision process.
Tragic Love: Introducing Shakespeare's <em>Romeo and Juliet</em>
Grades
9 - 12
|
Lesson Plan
|
Standard Lesson
Tragic Love: Introducing Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet

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.

Language  and Power in <em>The Handmaid's Tale</em> and the World
Grades
9 - 12
|
Lesson Plan
|
Standard Lesson
Language and Power in The Handmaid's Tale and the World
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.
Sonic Patterns: Exploring Poetic Techniques Through Close Reading
Grades
9 - 12
|
Lesson Plan
|
Standard Lesson
Sonic Patterns: Exploring Poetic Techniques Through Close Reading

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.

Narrative Structure and Perspectives in Toni Morrison's <em>Beloved</em>
Grades
11 - 12
|
Lesson Plan
|
Standard Lesson
Narrative Structure and Perspectives in Toni Morrison's Beloved
Using Beloved as a model of a work with multiple narrative perspectives, students use a visualizing activity and close reading to consider ways in which subjective values shape contradictory representations.
There Are No Small Parts: Minor Characters in <em>David Copperfield</em>
Grades
9 - 12
|
Lesson Plan
|
Standard Lesson
There Are No Small Parts: Minor Characters in David Copperfield
This lesson capitalizes on students' interest in social networking by asking students to build an online profile for a minor character in Charles Dickens' David Copperfield.
Grades
9 - 12
|
Lesson Plan
|
Standard Lesson
Preparing for the Journey: An Introduction to the Hero Myth
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.
Blurring Genre: Exploring Fiction and Nonfiction with <em>Diary of a Worm</em>
Grades
6 - 8
|
Lesson Plan
|
Standard Lesson
Blurring Genre: Exploring Fiction and Nonfiction with Diary of a Worm
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.
An Exploration of Romanticism Through Art and Poetry
Grades
9 - 12
|
Lesson Plan
|
Unit
An Exploration of Romanticism Through Art and Poetry

Students use art and poetry to explore and understand major characteristics of the Romantic period.

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