Students categorize evidence into types (anecdotal, statistical, expert testimony, analogical) and discuss their relative strengths.
A focus on advanced grammar concepts for 8th-grade students, specifically mastering parallel structure in complex sentences to improve writing flow and clarity.
A high-impact, 10-minute lesson designed to help 8th graders master participial phrases through structural analysis and creative writing.
A collection of five reading passages and comprehension questions designed for beginning 4th-grade students to practice literal and inferential reading skills.
A lesson focused on summarizing the key events of Books 1-10 of Homer's Odyssey for English Language Learners, using visual supports and simplified language.
A culminating week where students compile their work into a portfolio and perform a 'Final Verse' for their peers.
Teaching students that poems can tell stories. Students will read and write short narrative verses about everyday events.
Exploring the emotional side of poetry. Students will identify how a poem makes them feel and what 'vibes' the author is sending.
Helping students find the 'big idea' or lesson in a poem. Students will identify simple themes like bravery, friendship, and change.
Exploring how poems can make objects act like people (personification) and how words can sound like their meanings (onomatopoeia).
Introducing similes and metaphors as "secret comparisons." Students will use simple 'like' and 'as' structures to describe themselves and their world.
Focuses on building mental pictures using the five senses. Students will explore how simple words can describe smells, sights, and sounds in an urban or relatable environment.
An introduction to the rhythm and 'beat' of poetry. Students will learn to identify the steady pulse in verse and practice simple rhyme schemes using accessible vocabulary.
Combining prefixes, roots, and suffixes to decode complex multi-syllabic academic words.
Mastering Latin roots commonly found in academic literature and formal writing.
Identifying and defining core Greek roots that form the foundation of scientific and technical vocabulary.
Exploring high-frequency academic suffixes and their role in determining a word's part of speech.
Introduction to common academic prefixes and how they modify the meaning of base words.
Focus on the root 'TRACT' (to pull) and a final review of the Word Alchemist principles.
Focus on the root 'AUD' (to hear) and words related to sound and listening.
Focus on the roots 'VIS' and 'VID' (to see) and their distinction from 'SPECT'.
Focus on the roots 'SCRIBE' and 'SCRIPT' (to write) and their presence in modern documentation.
Focus on the root 'PORT' (to carry) and its role in movement and trade vocabulary.
Focus on the root 'JECT' (to throw) and how it creates dynamic action words.