A student worksheet designed as a 'Case File' for practicing identifying ambiguity, asking clarifying questions, and rewriting sentences for clarity.
A teacher-facing guide with learning objectives, scaffolding strategies, success criteria, and model paragraphs for all 5 'Favorite Things' topics. Consistently formatted to fit on two pages.
A 5-page set of graphic organizers for student writing, each covering a different 'favorite' topic with sentence frames, stems, and paragraph space. Includes expanded writing lines (9 per page) and darker detail grids for better usability.
A teacher-facing rubric and instructional guide for the Divine Debate project. It provides specific look-fors for CCSS standards 6.RI.2, 6.RL.1, 6.RL.4, and 6.RL.6, along with scaffolding tips for educators.
A five-slide presentation template for students to use as a model for their 'Hero or Monster' project. Each slide is structured to meet specific CCSS standards including objective summaries, evidence lockers, and perspective analysis.
A structured graphic organizer for students to collect research on their chosen Greek deity. It includes specific workspaces for objective summaries, word connotation analysis, direct evidence, and perspective comparison.
A comprehensive project guide for 6th-grade students outlining the 'Hero or Monster' Greek God presentation. It includes the choice board, slide-by-slide requirements aligned with CCSS standards, and a mastery checklist.
A vocabulary list for the first four chapters of The Boy Who Harnessed the Wind. Key terms include famine, dynamo, and innovation, reflecting the environmental and technical aspects of the memoir.
A vocabulary list for the first four chapters of I Will Always Write Back. Focuses on terms like perspective, privilege, and infrastructure to highlight the contrast between the two main characters' environments.
A vocabulary list for the first four chapters of The Distance Between Us. Includes cultural terms like El Otro Lado and adobe, as well as thematic words like resilience and abandonment.
A vocabulary list for the first four chapters of Born a Crime by Trevor Noah. Key terms include apartheid, paradox, and sovereign, with a focus on South African history and identity.