Students explore how introductory words, phrases, and clauses set the stage for the main sentence, practicing where to insert commas to create necessary pauses.
Consolidating skills into a final performance about students’ actions around the world.
Comparing cultures, traditions, and navigation (directions) using role-play.
Synthesizing information into 'Summary Sculptures' focused on food items and healthy lifestyles.
Writing from the perspective of characters visiting cultural and educational places in Kuwait.
Practicing fluency through weather forecast 'Radio Dramas' and climate reports.
Using reenactment to boost recall of the history of technology and modern hobbies.
Exploring multiple viewpoints within global celebrations and cultural events.
Diving deep into traveler perspectives through the 'Hot Seat' technique while discovering countries.
Using physical poses to represent informational text structures like cause/effect focused on environmental danger.
Creating frozen tableaus to represent narrative story arcs centered on the joy of hobbies.
Using 'Talking Statues' to make inferences about healthy habits and scientific facts about health.
Introduction to enactment as a tool for prediction, focused on Kuwaiti heritage and life in the past.
A quick bell-ringer activity focused on identifying central ideas and summarizing key concepts about Ancient Mesopotamia.
A comprehensive Grade 8 ELA lesson focused on mastering logical inferences across mixed genres, utilizing a 'detective' theme to engage students in close reading and evidence-based reasoning.
A comprehensive review of NC Standard RI 8.4, focusing on context clues, connotation, tone, and vocabulary types to prepare students for the 8th grade EOG.
A lesson focused on integrating information from text and illustrations (maps and photographs) to understand where, when, why, and how key events occur in the history of Yellowstone National Park.
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 review lesson for ELL students focused on recalling key characters and events from Books 1-5 of The Odyssey after a school break.
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.
An immersive 45-minute grammar escape room where 6th-grade students solve puzzles involving parts of speech, punctuation, and sentence structure to unlock 'The Grammarian's Vault'.
A collection of five informational passages and assessments focused on RI.7.3, featuring modern icons like Simone Biles and Taylor Swift. Students will analyze how individuals and events are introduced and elaborated upon through anecdotes and examples.
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 middle school lesson on visual rhetoric, teaching students how to analyze and use color, layout, and typography to influence audience perception in media and advertising.
A lesson focusing on the cultural shift of the 1920s through the lens of flapper culture, designed with highly accessible text for middle school students reading at a 1st-grade level. Students will analyze diction to identify positive and negative connotations.
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.
Students examine the setting's impact on the plot and synthesize details from Annemarie's encounter with the soldiers in the woods.
Students analyze character growth and the impact of point of view as Annemarie takes on a dangerous mission in chapters 13 and 14.