A highly visual, Lego-themed grammar lesson where students become 'Brick Architects' to snap color-coded word blocks together, apply end-cap punctuation, and build sentence towers.
A lesson focused on teaching students how to ask and answer who, what, where, when, why, and how questions using a progression of student-friendly learning targets.
Focuses on VC & CVC practice across all learned sounds, featuring the decodable story 'I See'. Students practice reading, tracking with dots, and identifying characters.
Focuses on the short vowel sound /ĕ/ with the decodable story 'Ten on the Bed'. Students practice reading words with short e and tracking with dots.
Focuses on the consonant sound /b/ with the decodable story 'A Bug on the Bus'. Students practice tracking, blending, and CVC reading.
Focuses on the consonant sound /g/ with the decodable story 'Gus the Dog'. Students practice tracking, blending, and CVC reading.
Focuses on the short vowel sound /ŭ/ with the decodable story 'The Pup'. Students practice reading, tracking with dots, and blending.
Focuses on the consonant sound /k/ represented by letter c, with the decodable story 'The Cat Can'. Students practice reading, tracking with dots, and blending.
Focuses on the consonant sound /d/ with the decodable story 'Sid and Dad'. Students practice tracking, blending, and CVC reading.
Focuses on the short vowel sound /ŏ/ with the decodable story 'Tom and the Fan'. Students practice reading words with short o and tracking with dots.
Focuses on the nasalized sound of a (am, an) with the decodable story 'Sam and Pam'. Students practice tracking, blending, and illustrating.
Focuses on CVC practice with vowels a and i, featuring the decodable story 'The Pit'. Students practice reading, tracking with dots, and illustrating scenes.
Focuses on the consonant sound /n/ with the decodable story 'The Pin in the Map'. Students practice reading words with short i, a, and n.
Focuses on the short vowel sound /ĭ/ with the decodable story 'I Sit, I Tap'. Students practice reading words with short i and tracking with dots.
A collection of visual anchor charts and posters for UFLI foundations heart words, designed to support students in orthographic mapping with clear visuals and phonetic cues.
A lesson designed for second graders to distinguish between key details (character, setting, key plot points) and unimportant extra details (fluff) using a fun mystery detective theme.
A foundational phonics lesson focusing on reading words with consonant blends and digraphs. This lesson includes differentiated flashcards designed for emerging readers, ELLs, and fluency practice.
A foundational phonics lesson focusing on constructing straight-line letters L, I, and T through multisensory building, sound-sorting, and fine motor handwriting practice.
An engaging, detective-themed 4th Grade ELA lesson designed to teach students how to make text-based inferences using the story 'Act Your Age'. Follows an interactive 'I Do, We Do, You Do' gradual release model with class-wide discussion and turn-and-talk prompts.
A first-grade letter recognition and formation lesson focusing on identifying uppercase and lowercase letter pairs, distinguishing visually similar letters (like b, d, p, q), and practicing correct stroke pathways.
A first-grade addition lesson focusing on visual strategies, concrete models, and counting on to solve addition facts up to 10. Includes student worksheets and formative exit tickets.
Students publish and share their completed 'What I Did This Summer' stories with their classmates, celebrating their growth as narrative writers.
Students review their completed narrative drafts with a checklist, checking for actions, thoughts, feelings, transition words, and a strong conclusion, then writing their final polished draft.
Students learn how to write a satisfying concluding sentence that reflects on their summer story and leaves the reader with a final thought, lesson, or feeling.
Students elaborate their narratives by adding internal thoughts and feelings, ensuring their emotional response to the summer event is clear.
Students go back into their narrative draft to add external actions (Show, Don't Tell) that bring their summer moments to life.
Students learn to use a variety of temporal words (First, Later, Suddenly, After that) to build a smooth, chronological flow.