Students explore collective nouns by visualizing them as single 'containers' holding multiple items, learning to match them with singular verbs.
Students will learn to use simple present tense verbs correctly, focusing on subject-verb agreement for singular and plural nouns.
This lesson explores the myth of Pandora through a comparative lens, analyzing how different media (video vs. text) portray her character and the themes of curiosity and hope. Students will develop critical analysis skills by identifying key differences in narrative elements and artistic choices.
Applying common suffixes (-s, -es, -ed, -ing) and mastering spelling rules like doubling consonants and dropping the silent e.
Exploring common vowel teams like ai, ay, ee, and ea, and understanding how vowel combinations create long vowel sounds.
Learning the role of silent e in changing vowel sounds from short to long, focusing on common CVCE patterns.
Developing proficiency with consonant blends (bl, st, fr) and digraphs (ch, sh, th, wh) to decode and spell more complex single-syllable words.
Mastering short vowel sounds (a, e, i, o, u) through CVC word construction, reading fluency with simple decodable text, and basic spelling patterns.
A comprehensive lesson on using context clues (Inference, Definition, Example, Antonym, Synonym) to decode unfamiliar vocabulary, featuring a detective-themed anchor chart, guided notes, and a story-based assessment.
An exploration of Chapters 13-15 of Zora Neale Hurston's 'Their Eyes Were Watching God,' focusing on Janie's transition to the Everglades and her deepening relationship with Tea Cake.
A hands-on lesson for first graders to identify and divide multisyllabic words with two closed syllables using the VC/CV pattern. Students will learn to spot the "vowel-consonant-consonant-vowel" pattern to decode longer words.
A comprehension lesson focused on Chapter 13 of 'The Last Kids on Earth and the Nightmare King', where students analyze setting, character teamwork, and a major plot turning point involving a radio signal.
A high-stakes grammar escape room where students act as secret agents to solve mysteries using their knowledge of parts of speech and subject-verb agreement.
A 3-day intensive study of an original folktale, 'The Weaver of Whispers.' Students analyze character motivations, setting influences, and figurative language before creating their own original myth.
A lesson focusing on the transition of the Watson family from Flint to Birmingham, analyzing setting development and character shifts in chapters 12 and 13.
A deep dive into Chapter 10 of 'The Watsons Go to Birmingham – 1963', focusing on how the Appalachian setting and the shroud of night symbolize the growing racial tensions as the family heads South.
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.
A mini-lesson for a 6th-grade resource room ELA class focusing on Auggie's character traits and his development throughout the first month of school in the novel 'Wonder'. This lesson uses a space-exploration theme and provides high levels of scaffolding.
Students synthesize the entire novel's events, including the final chapter and afterword, to identify themes and analyze the resolution of the plot.