A lesson focused on identifying, comparing, and contrasting first- and third-person points of view in literature. Students will analyze how the narrator's perspective influences the reader's experience.
An archaeology-themed vocabulary review focusing on common Greek and Latin roots for 6th-grade students. Students will explore root meanings, decode complex words, and apply their knowledge through interactive slides and a practice worksheet.
This lesson focuses on helping students at a 6th-grade writing level expand their ideas and add specific details to a 5-paragraph essay. It uses visual strategies and structured templates to move beyond basic statements toward rich, descriptive writing.
A focused study on Chapters 9 and 10 of Gary Paulsen's 'Hatchet,' focusing on Brian's discovery of fire and turtle eggs, emphasizing recall, inference, and types of literary conflict.
A creative writing lesson designed to help third graders develop narrative skills by imagining an extraordinary spring break adventure.
A guided poetry workshop where students use grammar concepts and figurative language to celebrate the arrival of spring.
An Orton-Gillingham based introduction to Level 2 vowel teams (EE, EA, AI, AY) using a secret agent theme to engage students in decoding and encoding.
Capstone simulation. Students apply all 11 strategies to solve a complex text-based 'Maze' and earn their Thought Tracker Mastery.
Metacognitive choice. Students practice deciding which 'Mind Tool' (Inference, Visualization, Questioning) is best for specific text challenges.
Masters the 'Click or Clunk' monitoring technique. Students learn to identify when meaning breaks down and which tool to use for a 'fix-up'.
Identifies text structures (Cause/Effect, Sequence) as 'Brain Blueprints' that help organize incoming data.
Uses Arthur Evans' deductive reasoning techniques. Students solve logic puzzles by eliminating impossibilities within a text.
Directly inspired by the Reading Detective series. Students learn to cite page, line, and word clues to prove their reasoning.
Focuses on Synthesis. Students track how their 'Thought Map' changes from the first page to the final sentence.
Introduces the 'Curiosity Compass' to generate Thick and Thin questions, moving from literal facts to deep inquiry.
Teaches visualization as a sensory experience. Students learn to 'film' the story in their heads using five-sense descriptions.