A comprehensive winter-themed review of nouns, verbs, adjectives, and adverbs for 3rd-grade students, featuring a hands-on sorting activity and challenge task cards.
Students practice reading comprehension and narrative sequencing by ordering sentences from Aesop's classic fable of the boy who cried wolf. The lesson includes a visual storytelling presentation, printable sentence strips for tactile learning, and a follow-up writing activity.
A 3rd-grade ELA lesson focused on reading a narrative passage and answering comprehension questions in the style of the NYS ELA exam. Students explore the theme of overcoming a challenge through the story of a girl facing her fear of the high dive.
Summative assessment on RI.3.1 using a comprehensive extreme weather passage.
A collaborative review and guided practice session preparing for the final assessment.
Students learn to generate their own questions and locate answers within a text about hurricanes.
Focused practice on answering explicit questions using a reading passage about tornadoes.
Introduction to RI.3.1 and building foundational skills for finding evidence in weather-related texts.
A week-long series of warm-up activities focusing on historical biographies and RI.3.1 standards to prepare students for end-of-grade testing.
A cumulative review and formal assessment of dictionary navigation and entry analysis skills.
Focuses on the anatomy of a dictionary entry, specifically how to identify and choose between multiple definitions based on sentence context.
Introduction to the physical and digital structure of a dictionary, with a deep dive into using guide words for rapid word location.
A collection of worksheets designed to help students write structured biographical paragraphs about historical figures using mind maps and sentence starters. Each worksheet features a unique theme tailored to the figure's profession.
Students identify antonym clues to understand what a word is NOT, using contrasting pictures to solve the vocabulary puzzle.
Students use synonym clues to find words that mean the same thing as the unknown word, using pictures to match similar concepts.
Students explore example clues, where a sentence provides specific instances of a word to help reveal its meaning, paired with helpful visual supports.
Students learn to identify definition clues in sentences where the meaning of a tricky word is explained directly, using illustrations to confirm their findings.
A lesson focused on narrative sequencing and logical flow through the lens of mystery and suspense stories. Students analyze transition words, cause and effect, and character development to reorder scrambled narratives.
Final assessment of RL.3.3 mastery through an EOG-formatted test and reflection.
Integrated review of traits, motivations, and plot contribution using complex EOG-style passages.
Focus on how character actions directly cause specific events in the story's sequence.
Focus on identifying character motivations and feelings and how they lead to specific actions.
Focus on identifying character traits using text evidence (what characters say, think, and do).
A comprehensive small-group lesson focused on the foundational skills of retelling and paraphrasing using short fiction. Students use blueprint-themed tools to identify story structure and practice restating ideas in their own words.
A foundational lesson on synonyms and antonyms that explicitly addresses thematic confusion (related vs. similar) using visual sorting activities and text-based practice.
A collection of reflective and creative activities for Memorial Day, including a poppy craft writing activity, a gratitude letter template, and acrostic poems to honor fallen heroes.
Students learn to navigate story structure by becoming 'Plot Pilots,' guiding their narratives through takeoff, cruising, and landing. This lesson covers the essential elements of beginning, middle, and end using an engaging aviation metaphor.
Students work in small groups to rehearse and perform mystery plays, analyzing their specific plot structures and reflecting on social-emotional themes.
Students learn the fundamental components of a play script and use a model play to identify setting, characters, and plot structure.
A lesson focused on identifying the central message and supporting it with text evidence from the story 'Seasons of Life'.
A fun, hands-on lesson for 3rd graders to explore morphology by spinning and combining prefixes, bases, and suffixes. Students learn how affixes change the meaning and tense of base words.
A lesson focused on using the present progressive tense to describe actions happening in the moment, themed around capturing live action with a camera.
A lesson designed to help students analyze and sequence fairy tales, focusing on identifying the conflict, resolution, and underlying theme through structured graphic organizers.
A reading comprehension lesson focused on a fictional narrative about a boy helping a turtle. Designed for 3rd-grade EOG preparation with simplified vocabulary and 3-option multiple choice questions.
A hands-on lesson focusing on identifying and categorizing multisyllabic words using Compound and VC/CV (Rabbit) patterns. Students will practice decoding and sorting words to build phonemic awareness.
A collection of versatile graphic organizers designed to help students analyze fiction and nonfiction picture books. Each organizer focuses on a specific reading skill, providing a structured framework for student response.
A toolkit of success criteria and structured practice materials for IMSE Orton-Gillingham dictation routines, focusing on word mapping and sentence conventions.
A set of engaging antonym task cards focusing on adjectives and verbs to help 3rd-grade students master word opposites through a magical mirror theme.
A lesson focused on RI 3.1 (Ask and Answer Questions) using a historical passage about the Wright Brothers' first flight in Kitty Hawk, North Carolina. Students will learn to find and cite explicit text evidence to support their answers in an EOG-style format.
Una lección interactiva diseñada para enseñar a los estudiantes a realizar inferencias, utilizar evidencia textual y determinar el propósito del autor a través de tres géneros literarios distintos: ficción, artículos informativos y poesía narrativa.