A 6th Grade ELA lesson focused on differentiating between weak, relevant, and strong evidence. Students explore the concept through a classic food debate, a Supreme Court case analysis via video, and a collaborative evidence-ranking activity.
A spooky, high-interest ELA comprehension lesson for grades 5-8, perfect for sub days. Students read a terrifying tale about a haunted school locker, use margin annotations, complete visual organizers, and crack a secret clue-based meta-puzzle.
A fun, active public speaking lesson for 13-year-olds (low proficiency) where students complete 'ninja missions' to practice eye contact, posture, and vocal volume in a safe, gamified classroom environment.
An architectural blueprint-themed lesson introducing relative adverbs (where, when, why) as 'bridge builders' that connect clauses and sentences. Includes interactive instruction slides, hands-on task cards for stations, and a blueprint-style recording sheet.
A structured writing lesson focused on drafting cohesive introductory paragraphs using the RACE strategy. Features a clear gradual release model (I Do, We Do, You Do) to guide students through introducing the question, linking context, and drafting a solid Restate & Answer claim.
A high-interest persuasive writing lesson where students analyze the impact of technology on society, select a stance on topics like social media limits or video game benefits, and construct a structured persuasive argument.
An ELA and self-reflection project where 3rd-6th grade students curate their year-long academic growth, select their best writing, and design an interactive art-gallery-style showcase of their progress.
An immersive, multi-sensory ELA lesson designed for grades 3-6 to unlock descriptive writing. Students explore mystery tactile objects, build sensory vocabulary, and compose descriptive paragraphs.
A vocabulary review lesson utilizing a thematic Choice Board Matrix, focusing on critical thinking, collaborative partner speaking, reading comprehension, visual sketching, and creative writing.
A journey into transforming real-life memories into vivid prose. Students practice zooming in on 'snapshot moments', writing realistic dialogue, and developing authentic reflective themes.
An immersive exploration of sensory imagery, metaphor, rhythm, and structure. Students examine classic and modern mentor poems and draft original pieces using figurative language.
An immersive, hands-on lesson exploring six major types of figurative language through structured station activities, a collaborative workshop, mentor poetry analysis, and an interactive slideshow. Students learn to identify, analyze, and craft similes, metaphors, personification, hyperboles, alliteration, and onomatopoeia.
A middle school reading intervention lesson focusing on language and inference. Through metacognitive anchor charts, a guided presentation, and a structured case file worksheet, students learn to combine text clues with personal schema to decode figurative language and draw deep inferences.
An exploration of Andrea Davis Pinkney's 'The Red Pencil'. Amira navigates the trauma of Kalma refugee camp, finding her voice and healing through her red pencil, secret nighttime reading lessons, and a powerful shared release of grief with her mother.
A foundational lesson containing frameworks and evaluative tools to support rigorous, evidence-based collaborative debate. It focuses on elevating academic argument quality, critical thinking, and respectful civil dialogue across different subjects and grade levels.
A differentiated lesson focused on character analysis. Students learn to hunt for textual clues and combine them with personal schema to uncover character traits and deep-seated motivations, structured across three escalating levels of task complexity (Fact Finding, Trait Tracking, and Motive Mapping).
An exploration of Chapters 31-36 of 'Knead'. Alba works desperately to save Toni's traditional Barcelona bakery, confronting painful family history and social class barriers, before pitching a revolutionary, pun-filled new business plan to her grandmother.
A comprehensive school-wide literacy program and implementation toolkit. Includes a 40-week master quest index, printable student submission slips, and a high-impact library bulletin board poster.
An exploration of Part III of Marjorie Agosín's 'The Road to Butterfly Hill'. Celeste returns to Chile after the fall of the dictatorship, reconnects with her family and friends on Butterfly Hill, and embarks on a courageous journey south with Cristóbal to find her parents.
A comprehensive middle school ELA reading unit focused on internet safety and digital citizenship. Includes a two-page paired reading passage (informational and narrative), a four-page standard-aligned comprehension assessment covering 12 standards (RI.1-4, RI.8, RL.1-4, RL.8, L.4-5) plus context-clues, and a complete teacher's answer key with standard alignments and detailed rationales.
A study of Chapters 31-36 of Elsie Chapman's 'All The Ways Home'. Students explore Kaede's search for identity, his complex relationship with his brother Shoma, his father's painful abandonment, and his desperate choice to steal Shoma's bass to find his father in Sapporo.