A technical workshop applying Gérard Genette's taxonomy of transtextuality (paratexts, metatexts, architexts, and hypertextuality) to various literary excerpts.
A collection of beautifully designed, compact data folder inserts featuring proficiency scale charts and progress tracking logs for Grade 3 standards.
A comprehensive 15-day word study unit for Grade 4 focused on prefixes, suffixes, Latin roots, compound words, homophones, synonyms/antonyms, and context clues. Includes a master slide deck and a complete student workbook.
A professional data analysis lesson framework and diagnostic guide to help K-3 educators dissect Acadience Reading benchmarks, identify systemic teaching gaps, and design proactive prevention plans for the upcoming school year.
A foundational Kindergarten writing lesson where students discover that writers tell about things they know, starting with their school. Students practice oral sentence stems and create drawings representing their school environment, which teachers support by labeling using dictation.
A rigorous STAAR-aligned high school English I lesson analyzing how authors employ literary devices, diction, syntax, and imagery to craft mood, voice, and tone. Students engage in interactive note-taking followed by guided close reading of Edgar Allan Poe and Delia Owens, culminating in independent passage analysis.
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.
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.
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.
Day 2 focuses on identifying the main problem (What) that Clark causes with his loud, wild behavior, and tracking the direct text reactions from others.
Day 1 focuses on identifying characters (Who) and setting (Where) in Clark the Shark, finding direct evidence of Clark's classroom and his classmates.
A spelling lesson focusing on long e spelling patterns (ey, ee, ea) designed for third-grade special education students with multisensory, hands-on activities, color-coded word cards for cutting, and structured pasting boards.
A first-grade lesson that introduces story elements (character, setting, problem, and solution) through a fun detective agency theme. Students use original 3-sentence mini-stories to identify each element and solve literary cases.
A second-grade phonics lesson focusing on consonant digraphs (th, wh, sh, ch) and double consonants (ff, zz, ll, ss) using dictation sentences that reinforce sight and high-frequency words: best, does, end, job, left, men, more, see, than, and wash.
An independent reading unit focusing on perspective and point of view during two contrasting historical eras: World War I and the Great Depression. Students analyze character emotions and historical contexts using a 'four corners' layout.
A targeted preparation module designed to scaffold student success on Part 3 of the NYS Regents ELA exam. Students dissect a mentor text, use a structured graphic organizer to identify central ideas and literary techniques, and practice writing high-scoring responses using guided templates.