Carol Jago offers readers a handy guide for bringing this celebrated author's work into the classroom, including biographical information, ideas for literature circles using Walker's short stories, sample writing lessons using Walker's poems, suggestions for teaching The Color Purple, and a wealth of resources for further investigation of Alice Walker and her work.
Alice Walker in the Classroom: "Living by the Word"
Grades
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Developing Evidence-Based Arguments from Texts
Grades
6 - 12
Strategy Guide
This strategy guide clarifies the difference between persuasion and argumentation, stressing the connection between close reading of text to gather evidence and formation of a strong argumentative claim about text.
Grades
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Depend on the Text! How to Create Text-Dependent Questions
Grades
1 - 3
Strategy Guide
Teachers need to create text-dependent questions to elicit close reading. When answering these questions, students learn to reread and think deeply about the text.
Grades
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Promote Deep Thinking! How to Choose a Complex Text
Grades
1 - 3
Strategy Guide
Complex texts promote deep thinking and critical analysis by students. Through close reading of a complex text, students' independent reading abilities also increase.
Grades
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Get Close to Think Deeply: Creating Primary-Level Close Readings
Grades
1 - 3
Strategy Guide
Close readings allow primary students to engage with complex texts. Through repeated reading, students build a deep understanding of the text and critical thinking skills.
Grades
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Tracking the Ways Writers Develop Heroes and Villains
9 - 12
Lesson Plan
| Unit
Everyone knows that Star Wars character Darth Vader is a villain. This lesson asks students to explore how they know such things about heroes and villains they encounter in texts.
Grades
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The Ten-Minute Play: Encouraging Original Response to Challenging Texts
9 - 12
Lesson Plan
| Unit
Students use both analytical and creative skills to adapt passages from a novel with significant internal dialogue and conflict, such as Toni Morrison's Beloved, into a ten-minute play.
Grades
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The Importance of Titles: From Big Blank Space to Small Good Thing
9 - 12
Lesson Plan
| Standard Lesson
After examining two sets of stories that author Raymond Carver renamed in revision, students write a reflective essay in which they defend their choice of a title for one them.
Grades
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Cover to Cover: Comparing Books to Movies
6 - 8
Lesson Plan
| Unit
Students compare and analyze novels and the movies adapted from them. They design new DVD covers and a related insert for the movies, reflecting their response to the movie version.
Grades
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Exploring Setting: Constructing Character, Point of View, Atmosphere, and Theme
9 - 12
Lesson Plan
| Standard Lesson
Students read texts by Dybek, Dickens, Poe, and Morrison to explore how authors use language to create setting and, in turn, how setting constructs other elements in a literary work.
Grades
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Exploring Change through Allegory and Poetry
6 - 8
Lesson Plan
| Standard Lesson
Students read an example of allegory, review literary concepts, complete literary elements maps and plot diagrams, create a pictorial allegory, and write diamante poems related to the theme of change.
Grades
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Creative Outlining-From Freewriting to Formalizing
9 - 12
Lesson Plan
| Standard Lesson
After reading a short story, students use freewriting as a catalyst for a literary analysis essay.
Grades
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Worth Its Weight: Letter Writing with "The Things They Carried"
9 - 12
Lesson Plan
| Standard Lesson
This lesson uses a letter-writing activity based on Tim O'Brien's story "The Things They Carried" to build empathy as students examine the weight they symbolically carry in their own lives.
Grades
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Exchanging Ideas by Sharing Journals: Interactive Response in the Classroom
3 - 5
Lesson Plan
| Standard Lesson
Pairs of students respond to literature alternately in shared journals. Mini-lessons are presented on responding to prompts, creating dialogue, adding drawings, and asking and answering questions.
Grades
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Developing Characterization in Raymond Carver's "A Small, Good Thing"
9 - 12
Lesson Plan
| Standard Lesson
Students read Raymond Carver's story "A Small, Good Thing," focusing on characterization in order to develop one of the static charactersthe hit-and-run driver who causes Scotty's deathmore fully.
Grades
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Many Years Later: Responding to Gwendolyn Brooks' "We Real Cool"
9 - 12
Lesson Plan
| Standard Lesson
Students analyze the Gwendolyn Brooks' poem "We Real Cool" and then write about how the character's pool hall days might influence who the character becomes fifty years in the future.
Grades
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The Day Jimmy's Boa Taught Cause and Effect
K - 2
Lesson Plan
| Standard Lesson
This lesson introduces the concept of cause and effect with Trinka Hakes Noble's books about Jimmy and his boa constrictor.
Grades
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The Children's Picture Book Project
9 - 12
Lesson Plan
| Unit
In this lesson students evaluate published children's picture storybooks. Students then plan, write, illustrate, and publish their own children's picture books.
Grades
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When Less IS MoreUnderstanding Minimalist Fiction
9 - 12
Lesson Plan
| Standard Lesson
This lesson pairs Ernest Hemingway's short story "Cat in the Rain' with Raymond Carver's "Little Things" to guide students to an understanding of the characteristics of minimalist fiction.
Grades
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Assessing Cultural Relevance: Exploring Personal Connections to a Text
9 - 12
Lesson Plan
| Standard Lesson
As a class, students evaluate a nonfiction or realistic fiction text for its cultural relevance to themselves personally and as a group.