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Type

  • Classroom Resources
  • Professional Development

Grades

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  • 12 (43)
  • K (4)

Learning Objectives

  • (-) literary analysis (67)
  • collaboration (54)
  • Comprehension (66)
  • critical thinking (70)
  • digital literacy (17)
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  • listening (32)
  • Media literacy (14)
  • metacognition (40)
  • multicultural awareness (19)
  • multimodal literacy (28)
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  • phonological awareness (11)
  • print awareness (12)
  • reading fluency (11)
  • reading genres (37)
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  • writing genres (84)
  • writing process (71)

Topics

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Get Close to Think Deeply: Creating Primary-Level Close Readings
Grades
Grades
1 - 3
|
Strategy Guide
Get Close to Think Deeply: Creating Primary-Level Close Readings
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.
Swish! Pow! Whack! Teaching Onomatopoeia Through Sports Poetry
Grades
6 - 8
|
Lesson Plan
|
Standard Lesson
Swish! Pow! Whack! Teaching Onomatopoeia Through Sports Poetry
Students explore poetry about sports, looking closely at the use of onomatopoeia. After viewing a segment of a sporting event, students create their own onomatopoeic sports poems.
Color of Silence: Sensory Imagery in Pat Mora's Poem "Echoes"
Grades
6 - 8
|
Lesson Plan
|
Standard Lesson
Color of Silence: Sensory Imagery in Pat Mora's Poem "Echoes"

Pat Mora's poem "Echoes" demonstrates that our senses are powerful tools for literary analysis and comprehension as students use their senses to discover new ways to read and write.

Analyzing and Comparing Medieval and Modern Ballads
Grades
9 - 12
|
Lesson Plan
|
Standard Lesson
Analyzing and Comparing Medieval and Modern Ballads
Students explore the ballads genre by reading medieval ballads to deduce their characteristics, acting out the ballads, comparing medieval and modern ballads using Venn diagrams, and composing their own ballads.
Ekphrasis: Using Art to Inspire Poetry
Grades
9 - 12
|
Lesson Plan
|
Unit
Ekphrasis: Using Art to Inspire Poetry

In this lesson, students explore ekphrasis—writing inspired by art. Students find pieces of art that inspire them and compose a booklet of poems about the pieces they have chosen.

Exploring Change through Allegory and Poetry
Grades
6 - 8
|
Lesson Plan
|
Standard Lesson
Exploring Change through Allegory and Poetry

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.

Weaving the Old into the New: Pairing <em>The Odyssey</em> with Contemporary Works
Grades
9 - 12
|
Lesson Plan
|
Standard Lesson
Weaving the Old into the New: Pairing The Odyssey with Contemporary Works

After exploring The Odyssey and a contemporary epic, students choose paired characters from the texts, complete a graphic organizer, and place their characters in hypothetical contemporary situations.

Grades
9 - 12
|
Lesson Plan
|
Standard Lesson
Many Years Later: Responding to Gwendolyn Brooks' "We Real Cool"
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.
Thinking Inductively: A Close Reading of Seamus Heaney's "Blackberry Picking"
Grades
9 - 12
|
Lesson Plan
|
Standard Lesson
Thinking Inductively: A Close Reading of Seamus Heaney's "Blackberry Picking"
This lesson eases students' fear of interpreting complex poetry by teaching them a strategy with which they determine patterns of imagery, diction, and figurative language in order to unlock meaning.
Latino Poetry Blog: Blogging as a Forum for Open Discussion
Grades
8 - 12
|
Lesson Plan
|
Standard Lesson
Latino Poetry Blog: Blogging as a Forum for Open Discussion
In this lesson, students use blogs to hold discussions about the effect of the factors of culture, history, and environment on Latino poetry.
Grades
9 - 12
|
Lesson Plan
|
Unit
I've Got the Literacy Blues
Students will be singing the blues in this lesson in which they identify themes from "The Gift of the Magi" and write and present blues poetry based on those themes.
Grades
6 - 8
|
Lesson Plan
|
Standard Lesson
Using the Four-Square Strategy to Define and Identify Poetic Terms
How do poets play with language? Students will explore some answers to this question as they search through poems for examples of alliteration, assonance, simile, and rhyme.
Grades
9 - 12
|
Lesson Plan
|
Standard Lesson
Discovering a Passion for Poetry With Langston Hughes
Through a study of Langston Hughes' poetry, students connect his writing to his place in history.
What is Poetry? Contrasting Poetry and Prose
Grades
6 - 8
|
Lesson Plan
|
Standard Lesson
What is Poetry? Contrasting Poetry and Prose

Students often find poetry frustrating and meaningless. By helping students think critically about the differences between poetry and prose, this introduction sets the stage for different strategies for comprehending poetic texts.

Lonely as a Cloud: Using Poetry to Understand Similes
Grades
4 - 8
|
Lesson Plan
|
Standard Lesson
Lonely as a Cloud: Using Poetry to Understand Similes
Students identify similes in poetry and gain experience in using similes as a poetic device in their own work.
Dancing Minds and Shouting Smiles: Teaching Personification Through Poetry
Grades
3 - 5
|
Lesson Plan
|
Standard Lesson
Dancing Minds and Shouting Smiles: Teaching Personification Through Poetry
Students learn about personification by reading and discussing poems and then brainstorm nouns and verbs to create personification in their own poems.
Poetry: Sound and Sense
Grades
9 - 12
|
Lesson Plan
|
Standard Lesson
Poetry: Sound and Sense
Students' groans about studying poetry may disappear with this lesson in which students read poetry from various writers and use these poems to examine the sounds and sense of language.
Poetry: A Feast to Form Fluent Readers
Grades
3 - 5
|
Lesson Plan
|
Standard Lesson
Poetry: A Feast to Form Fluent Readers
Students improve their reading fluency by selecting a poem online to perform in class.
WorldReadAloudDay
Grades
4 - 12
|
Calendar Activity
|
Literacy-Related Event
Today is World Read Aloud Day.

Students celebrate the power of words by reading aloud to their classmates and spreading the word of global literacy to their friends and family.

Seamus Heaney was born on this day in 1939.
Grades
7 - 12
|
Calendar Activity
|
Author & Text
Seamus Heaney was born on this day in 1939.

Students focus on the figurative language in Heaney's poem, "Digging," and discuss the speaker's attitude, and how metaphor, simile, and image contribute to the poem.

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