Explores the use of possessive pronouns before gerunds and how case shifts meaning in formal writing.
A highly scaffolded grammar and sentence-combining lesson designed for 9th-grade special education. Students learn to use coordinating and subordinating conjunctions to combine and generate compound and complex sentences.
A high school creative writing workshop focusing on personal narrative, journaling, and reflective essays. Students are challenged with complex personal themes, stylistic constraints, and literary devices.
A grammar lesson for 9th-grade students focusing on subject-verb agreement, verb tenses, and complete sentence structures using highly engaging, real-world narrative contexts. Includes a targeted practice worksheet, a 20-question paragraph-based fill-in-the-blank assessment, and a comprehensive teacher guide with answer keys.
An end-of-year reflection lesson designed specifically for English Language Learners, featuring tiered worksheets for Beginning/Entering and Developing/Expanding levels, supported by a detailed facilitator guide.
A comprehensive lesson focused on understanding and applying transition words to build logical, smooth connections between ideas in writing.
A cohesive lesson and drill series designed to help students master the connection between explicit literary devices and the central themes of literary texts.
A foundational set of four reading comprehension sheets, split between Grade 9-10 (focusing on core inference and vocabulary) and Grade 11-12 (emphasizing rhetorical analysis and synthesis).
An English 1 lesson focused on comparing and analyzing paired persuasive texts about the use of AI writing assistants. Students learn to evaluate contrasting arguments, identify rhetorical devices, and synthesize opposing viewpoints using text-based evidence.
A preparatory summer reading curriculum designed to bridge historical literary movements, analytical vocabulary, and journey-themed texts for incoming 11th graders.
Students compile their four-sentence creative stories into a comic strip layout, add simple illustrations, and celebrate their storytelling accomplishments.
Students resolve their story's problem, writing their fourth sentence using "Then, ..." and selecting a happy resolution symbol.
Students introduce a simple conflict or surprise for their character, writing a sentence with "Suddenly..." and problem-based action icons.
Students choose a creative setting (such as outer space or a magic forest) and write a sentence using "They are in..." with visual setting prompt cards.
Students invent a fictional character (such as a superhero or friendly animal) and write a sentence describing them using "This is..." and physical descriptors with visual symbols.
Students present their informational posters to peers using verbal or non-verbal communication supports, celebrating their factual discoveries.
Students assemble their key fact, evidence sentence, and concluding statement into a coherent, illustrated informational poster.
Students conclude their informational piece by writing a third sentence that summarizes their topic using a "Now you know about..." sentence starter and visual symbols.
Students locate visual evidence or supporting clues (such as food or habitat icons) to back up their first key fact, writing a second sentence using "It has..." or "It lives..." frames.
Students choose an informational topic (such as an animal or a local community job) and identify their first key fact using a visual matching organizer and "This is a..." sentence frame.
Students practice reading their three-sentence narratives to a peer or teacher, using visual communication boards as support, and celebrate their completed stories.
Students compile their first, middle, and ending sentences into a complete, logically sequenced three-sentence personal narrative, adding simple decorative illustrations.
Students conclude their personal narrative by writing about the final event using a "Last, I..." sentence starter, focusing on chronological closure and a simple emotion word.
Students continue their personal narrative by writing about the middle event using a "Next, I..." sentence starter and corresponding visual icons to show chronological order.
Students choose a personal topic (such as a favorite memory or weekend activity) and write their first complete sentence describing the first event using a "First, I..." sentence starter and visual picture cards.
A comprehensive lesson that breaks down the structural, rhythmic, and poetic elements of hip-hop and rap lyrics. Students learn complex rhyming, flow cadence, figurative imagery, and wordplay, then plan and write a complete 16-bar verse using highly visual scaffolding.
An immersive, medical-themed lesson where students act as 'Draft Doctors' to diagnose, triage, and perform surgery on a poorly organized, weak persuasive essay. Students learn paragraph structure, logical flow, and transition-building through a structured, clinical approach.
A lesson dedicated to the assessment and grading of literary essays, featuring a structured grading rubric and feedback checklist.
A creative narrative writing lesson that guides students through structural comic book creation, character design, and panel-by-panel storytelling using visual templates.
A complete lesson bundle focusing on the mechanics and analysis of direct quotations. Students learn to seamlessly blend quotes, apply correct MLA citations, and write sophisticated analysis using a structured rubric.
A comprehensive 10th-grade ELA lesson analyzing Macbeth's famous 'Tomorrow, and tomorrow, and tomorrow' speech from Act 5, Scene 5. Students explore Macbeth's psychological state—whether he is depressed, defeated, or finally realizing the truth of his ambitions—using textual annotation, group evidence organizers with scaffolded sentence stems, a Philosophical Four Corners debate, and a reflective exit ticket.
A multi-sensory, highly structured 45-minute cooperative lesson on Macbeth Act 5 Scene 5, specifically designed for 10th-grade students with SLD and ADHD. Features chunked text, side-by-side translations, visual graphic organizers, and tactile roles.
An immersive introductory lesson on active text annotation, focusing on identifying literary devices, analyzing author's craft, and tracking characterization. Students learn to use a unified code of symbols to turn reading from a passive activity into an active dialogue with the text.
A comprehensive instructional bundle for Elie Wiesel's *Night*, exploring the systematic loss of humanity under Nazi persecution, tracking complex figurative language and motifs, and researching historical Jewish resistance. Includes an instructional slide deck, station task cards, a research project guide, and a student literary tracker.
Trace the protagonist's development from a compliant citizen to an awakened rebel. Students map the critical turning points, alliances, and sacrifices that drive resistance against the regime, applying these insights to their book club novels.
Analyze how dystopian regimes maintain authority through propaganda, censorship, and manufactured fear. Students contrast real propaganda techniques with fictional manifestations in their novels to decode the author's underlying real-world critiques.
Explore how dystopian authors build oppressive societies using key tropes such as environmental collapse, intense surveillance, and the systematic erasure of history. Students analyze their book club novels to map these elements.
An immersive, high-energy introductory hook lesson for Charming as a Verb that engages rising 10th-grade summer school students through NYC hustle culture, the social psychology of 'charm', and an author interview on performance anxiety and self-belief.
A lesson targeting STAAR-aligned word-meaning strategies, including dictionary skills, context clues types (contrast, definition, cause/effect), and analyzing foreign words in English. Includes cloze-style guided notes, a practice worksheet bundle, and a teacher answer key.
A scaffolded proofreading and editing lesson designed for high school special education students to master sentence-level punctuation, capitalization, subject-verb agreement, homophones, and mixed grammatical errors. Includes a structured student workbook and a comprehensive teacher guide with a progress tracker.
A rigorous high school grammar workshop focusing on debugging subject-verb agreement, mixed mechanical errors, and commonly confused words. Students take on the role of copyeditors to locate and correct 20 syntax errors with precision.
A complete 9th-grade English Language Arts STAAR prep lesson focused on analyzing the characteristics and structural elements of argumentative texts. It includes high-impact graphic organizers for concept mapping and target-text analysis alongside a high-interest practice passage with margin-notated questions.
An introductory hook lesson for Charming as a Verb that leverages the author's background, Haiti-to-NYC immigrant perspective, and satirical writing style to engage rising 10th graders in low-stakes, active learning stations and discussion.
An ELA and Special Education lesson plan that guides students in brainstorming, planning, and drafting a meaningful time capsule letter to their future selves, designed with vintage postal aesthetics, strong accommodations, and scaffolded structures.