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Type

  • Classroom Resources
  • Professional Development

Grades

  • 1 (16)
  • 2 (19)
  • 3 (38)
  • 4 (42)
  • 5 (51)
  • 6 (57)
  • 7 (67)
  • 8 (66)
  • 9 (62)
  • 10 (60)
  • 11 (56)
  • 12 (56)
  • K (13)

Learning Objectives

  • (-) writing genres (114)
  • collaboration (88)
  • Comprehension (104)
  • critical thinking (148)
  • digital literacy (25)
  • Grammar (17)
  • inquiry / research (67)
  • listening (46)
  • literary analysis (83)
  • Media literacy (29)
  • metacognition (80)
  • multicultural awareness (44)
  • multimodal literacy (51)
  • oral communication (56)
  • phonological awareness (11)
  • print awareness (15)
  • reading fluency (12)
  • reading genres (55)
  • Spelling (13)
  • text structure / story structure (40)
  • Vocabulary (45)
  • writing process (90)

Topics

  • (-) poetry
  • (-) social action
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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.
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.
Moving Toward Acceptance Through Picture Books and Two-Voice Texts
Grades
3 - 5
|
Lesson Plan
|
Unit
Moving Toward Acceptance Through Picture Books and Two-Voice Texts
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.
Walt Whitman as a Model Poet: "I Hear My School Singing"
Grades
9 - 12
|
Lesson Plan
|
Standard Lesson
Walt Whitman as a Model Poet: "I Hear My School Singing"
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.
The ABCs of Poetry
Grades
9 - 12
|
Lesson Plan
|
Minilesson
The ABCs of Poetry
Students examine a letter of the alphabet from all angles, creating image pools of original metaphors that they then turn into poems.
From Friedan Forward—Considering a Feminist Perspective
Grades
9 - 12
|
Lesson Plan
|
Standard Lesson
From Friedan Forward—Considering a Feminist Perspective
Students write letters expressing personal views on issues like equal pay, equal education/employment opportunity, and gender roles—and receive these letters six years later.
Communicating on Local Issues: Exploring Audience in Persuasive Letter Writing
Grades
9 - 12
|
Lesson Plan
|
Standard Lesson
Communicating on Local Issues: Exploring Audience in Persuasive Letter Writing

Students will research a local issue, and then write letters to two different audiences, asking readers to take a related action or adopt a specific position on the issue.

Put That on the List: Independently Writing a Catalog Poem
Grades
9 - 12
|
Lesson Plan
|
Standard Lesson
Put That on the List: Independently Writing a Catalog Poem
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."
Put That on the List: Collaboratively Writing a Catalog Poem
Grades
9 - 12
|
Lesson Plan
|
Standard Lesson
Put That on the List: Collaboratively Writing a Catalog Poem
Using the structure of a list poem, students combine creative expression with poetic techniques and language exploration in order to write group poems about what really matters in their lives.
Grades
K - 2
|
Lesson Plan
|
Standard Lesson
A Bear of a Poem: Composing and Performing Found Poetry
Children find favorite words, phrases, and sentences from familiar stories. Working together, they combine their words and phrases to create a poem. The poem is then shared as performance poetry.
Grades
9 - 12
|
Lesson Plan
|
Standard Lesson
Discovering Traditional Sonnet Forms

Students read sonnets, charting the poems' characteristics and using their observations to deduce traditional sonnet forms. They then write original sonnets, using a poem they have analyzed as a model.

Grades
6 - 8
|
Lesson Plan
|
Standard Lesson
Exploring Free Speech and Persuasion with Nothing But the Truth
Students read Avi's Nothing But the Truth and examine the First Amendment and student rights, and then decide whether the rights of the novel's protagonist, Philip, are violated.
Grades
K - 2
|
Lesson Plan
|
Standard Lesson
Writing Poetry with Rebus and Rhyme
This lesson encourages students to use rhyming words to write rebus poetry modeled on rebus books, which substitute pictures for the words that young students cannot yet identify or decode.
Grades
9 - 12
|
Lesson Plan
|
Standard Lesson
Unlocking the Underlying Symbolism and Themes of a Dramatic Work
This lesson plan invites students to consider characters from Lorraine Hansberry's A Raisin in the Sun. Students explore a selected character and write poems about objects associated with that character.
Grades
6 - 8
|
Lesson Plan
|
Standard Lesson
Childhood Remembrances: Life and Art Intersect in Nikki Giovanni's "Nikki-Rosa"
Students explore what Carol Jago calls the place "where life and art intersect" by reading Nikki Giovanni's poem, "Nikki-Rosa," and then writing about childhood memories of their own.
Grades
9 - 12
|
Lesson Plan
|
Minilesson
Is a Sentence a Poem?
Students use their own poetry to analyze syntax, imagery, and meaning in a one-sentence poem by a canonical author to decide what makes it a poem.
Making History Come Alive Through Poetry and Song
Grades
6 - 12
|
Lesson Plan
|
Standard Lesson
Making History Come Alive Through Poetry and Song

Students compare the sinking of the Edmund Fitzgerald with the song, "The Wreck of the Edmund Fitzgerald," then create their own poetry about a historical event.

Talking Poetry with Blabberize
Grades
4 - 8
|
Lesson Plan
|
Standard Lesson
Talking Poetry with Blabberize

Students will be motivated to share their poetry through an online tool the features recording and animation.

Grades
6 - 10
|
Lesson Plan
|
Standard Lesson
Blending the Past with Today's Technology: Using Prezi to Prepare for Historical Fiction
To prepare for literature circles featuring historical novels, students research the decades of the 1930s to the 1990s and share their information using Prezi, a web application for creating multimedia presentations.

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