A sequencing and story structure lesson featuring Ms. Daniels, an adventurous duck who loves her pond. Includes differentiated reading passages, picture-supported comprehension questions, and a cut-and-paste sequencing activity.
A lesson designed for second graders to distinguish between key details (character, setting, key plot points) and unimportant extra details (fluff) using a fun mystery detective theme.
A foundational phonics lesson focusing on reading words with consonant blends and digraphs. This lesson includes differentiated flashcards designed for emerging readers, ELLs, and fluency practice.
A comprehensive Kindergarten phonics and fine-motor lesson focusing on straight-line letters H, h, and reviewing l, t. Students learn capital vs. lowercase distinctions, engage in tactile letter-building, and explore initial sounds through an interactive Circle Map of 'hat', 'house', and 'lamp'.
A foundational phonics lesson focusing on constructing straight-line letters L, I, and T through multisensory building, sound-sorting, and fine motor handwriting practice.
A first-grade letter recognition and formation lesson focusing on identifying uppercase and lowercase letter pairs, distinguishing visually similar letters (like b, d, p, q), and practicing correct stroke pathways.
A sensory-rich spelling experience targeting the six primary spelling patterns for the long E sound. Students use shaving cream mats to segment and write words, transitioning tactile memory into written form.
A first-grade addition lesson focusing on visual strategies, concrete models, and counting on to solve addition facts up to 10. Includes student worksheets and formative exit tickets.
Students publish and share their completed 'What I Did This Summer' stories with their classmates, celebrating their growth as narrative writers.
Students review their completed narrative drafts with a checklist, checking for actions, thoughts, feelings, transition words, and a strong conclusion, then writing their final polished draft.
Students learn how to write a satisfying concluding sentence that reflects on their summer story and leaves the reader with a final thought, lesson, or feeling.
Students elaborate their narratives by adding internal thoughts and feelings, ensuring their emotional response to the summer event is clear.
Students go back into their narrative draft to add external actions (Show, Don't Tell) that bring their summer moments to life.
Students learn to use a variety of temporal words (First, Later, Suddenly, After that) to build a smooth, chronological flow.
Students sequence their single seed story into a logical 3-part narrative map (beginning, middle, and end) to prepare for drafting.
Students zoom in on their selected seed story, identifying the main moment and sketching it out to freeze the frame of their narrative.
Students learn to distinguish between broad, 'watermelon' topics and focused, 'seed' stories, helping them select a single, specific summer event to write about.
A phonics-based high-frequency word lesson focusing on orthographic mapping and heart-word strategies for 'it', 'is', 'in', and 'to'. Students map phonemes to graphemes and learn to identify regular vs. 'by heart' spelling parts.
An hour-long structured reading lesson focusing on B and W letter-sound association and common sight words. Designed with dyslexia-friendly spacing, color-coded highlights, and picture scaffolding to support struggling oral readers.
An introductory lesson teaching 2nd-grade students how to ask and answer Who, What, Where, When, Why, and How questions using the text 'We Are Super Citizens'. Students learn to find explicit clues in the story using a fun canine detective theme.
Day 12. Students use their published writer's checklist to peer-edit, polish their stories, and share them in the classroom Author's Chair celebration.
Day 11. Students draft their complete narrative booklet, incorporating their exciting hook, transitions, senses, dialogue, and satisfying endings.
Day 10. Students select their absolute favorite seed story, brainstorm details, and design their final cover page.
Day 9. Students learn to show character feelings using action and body clues instead of just telling the reader.
Day 8. Students learn to use quotation marks correctly to add simple spoken dialogue to their stories.
Day 7. Students learn to use touch, smell, and taste details to enrich their personal narratives.
Day 6. Students learn to use sight and sound sensory details to describe elements in their memories.
Day 5. Students learn to write satisfying closings that express real feelings or lessons learned.
Day 4. Students learn transition words and chronological sequencing to outline the middle steps of a story.
Day 3. Students learn to hook their readers with exciting story openings using sound, dialogue, or action.
Day 2. Students learn to zoom in from giant 'watermelon' topics to sweet 'seed' stories (a single focused memory).
Day 1. Students are introduced to personal narratives and learn to identify broad 'watermelon' topics.
A reading comprehension lesson for Grades 2-3 focusing on finding the main idea and supporting details. Students explore the cultural history of lacrosse, known as the 'Creator's Game,' through a structured passage, hands-on slides, and DOK Level 2 analysis.
A foundational literacy lesson designed to introduce uppercase and lowercase letter partners, explicitly correcting the common misconception that the alphabet contains 52 completely independent letters by presenting them as 26 matching pairs.
A foundational reading comprehension lesson for emergent readers to identify and track characters. It includes a teacher guide, two colorful anchor charts, a mini-stories student worksheet, and an answer key.
A targeted Kindergarten literacy center lesson focusing on blending the letter sounds Tt, Pp, Nn, and Aa to read VC and CVC words such as 'an', 'at', 'pan', 'tan', 'pat', 'tap', and 'nap'. Includes direct blending slides, hands-on sorting and matching cards, independent roll-and-read worksheets, and teacher assessment tools.
Day 5 is the final synthesis where students complete their case files, solve the mystery of Clark's transformation, and take their comprehension assessment.
Day 4 focuses on analyzing how Clark solves his problems by creating rhyming rules, and how his character changes.
Day 3 focuses on understanding when rules apply and why they are necessary in Clark's school environment, using direct quotes and book details.