Original Title :How the Monuments Came Down Author:Created by on October 8,2021 …
Original Title :How the Monuments Came Down Author:Created by on October 8,2021 by #GoOpenVA.Administrator.License: Common AttributiveIt is a great tool for teaching both writing and cultural diversity. It has a refreshing theme. It guides students to a 21st century relavant approach to Black History. Most students are repetitiously taught lessons about what happened back then. The lessons include current events which presents a connection between the present the past and the future generations.
Using the C3 Inquiry Design Model format, high school social studies and English students …
Using the C3 Inquiry Design Model format, high school social studies and English students learn to understand lynching in Virginia in the Jim Crow South and discuss ways of taking informed action to move towards racial healing. Each inquiry is supported by the Virginia Standards of Learning and the Common Core Standards and is expected to take three-four 50-minute class periods. The inquiry time frame can expand if teachers think their students need additional instructional experiences (e.g., historical context, formative performance tasks, featured sources, writing, etc.). Teachers are encouraged to adjust the inquiry to meet the needs and interests of their students and school/community contexts. The inquiries lend themselves to differentiation and modeling of historical thinking skills while assisting students in reading a wide variety of sources and writing in a wide variety of genres.Use the next button or the drop down menu to navigate between pages. Please note, Social studies lessons are found at the bottom of page 2 and English lesson are found at the bottom of page 3. For more information and/or access to the primary sources used in the lesson plans, please visit the Racial Terror: Lynching in Virginia website.
This is a teacher and students' resource pack for Shakespeare's The Tempest. …
This is a teacher and students' resource pack for Shakespeare's The Tempest. The resource is for the F.E.T phase, grade 10-12. It contains summary notes and resources for constructive engagement by both students and teachers.
In this video segment from Between the Lions, a large dinosaur puppet …
In this video segment from Between the Lions, a large dinosaur puppet teaches a class of monkeys about ten little words through a song. These words promote reading fluency and include: I, he, they, with, was, his, are, on, as, and for. This video segment provides a resource for Fluency and Phonological Awareness. ***Access to Teacher's Domain content now requires free login to PBS Learning Media.
This unit is focused on the examination of a single topic, in …
This unit is focused on the examination of a single topic, in this case, the Native Americans of the inland Northwest and conflict that arose when other non-native people started to settle in the northwest, and to specifically address the native populations that lived in the inland northwest. The materials were created to be one coherent arc of instruction focused on one topic. The module was designed to include teaching notes that signal the kind of planning and thinking such instruction requires: close reading with complex text, and specific instructional strategies or protocols are described that support students’ reading and writing with evidence are described in enough detail to make it very clear what is required of students and how to support students in doing this rigorous work. Materials include summative assessment of content and process, central texts, key resources, and protocols that support and facilitate student learning.
This collection uses primary sources to explore the Texas Revolution. Digital Public …
This collection uses primary sources to explore the Texas Revolution. Digital Public Library of America Primary Source Sets are designed to help students develop their critical thinking skills and draw diverse material from libraries, archives, and museums across the United States. Each set includes an overview, ten to fifteen primary sources, links to related resources, and a teaching guide. These sets were created and reviewed by the teachers on the DPLA's Education Advisory Committee.
Included are two lessons to help sixth grade students gain a beginning …
Included are two lessons to help sixth grade students gain a beginning understanding of how to cite evidence and make inferences. This is one lesson I will use prior to beginning expository writing. Students should already have knowledge of context clues.
Whether freshmen or AP seniors, students often forget to back up their …
Whether freshmen or AP seniors, students often forget to back up their statements about texts with evidence for support or to begin with the text when considering answers to literary questions. The more we ask them to provide textual evidence in discussion, analysis activities, essays, and on tests, the more ingrained this important skill will become. This lesson was designed for freshmen at the beginning of the year as they begin analyzing literature. The handout and question refer specifically to the story "Poison" by Roald Dahl, but feel free to remix the lesson to work with another text, older students or nonfiction.
This lesson can be used to provide an example of the compare …
This lesson can be used to provide an example of the compare and contrast text structure. It also give students the chance to compare and contrast using a venn diagram after reading an expository text.
This 18 day unit explicitly teaches text structures, summary, text features, reading …
This 18 day unit explicitly teaches text structures, summary, text features, reading informational text about Mesopotamia, and writing a book about Mesopotamia. Instruction moves from high scaffolding to moderate scaffolding to independent practice as students become familiar with the various text structures, how to identify them, what graphic organizer will work with each text structure, how to use notes recorded in graphic organizers to write summaries, and how to compile an informational book. Mesopotamia is the content used as an anchor.
The importance of reading aloud to children is an established tenet of …
The importance of reading aloud to children is an established tenet of reading instruction. This lesson supports the language development and reading comprehension of kindergarten through second graders. Through the use of the text talk strategy, students explain, develop, and expand story ideas. This lesson is designed to help students learn how to gain meaning from words that are taken out of their original context.
This lesson can work with any content standards. It is a lesson …
This lesson can work with any content standards. It is a lesson for students to learn a text marking procedure. Teachers and students can apply it to any non-fiction text on any non-fiction topic. Extensions include academic speaking and writing prompts.
Through close readings of Zora Neale Hurston'sTheir Eyes Were Watching God, students …
Through close readings of Zora Neale Hurston'sTheir Eyes Were Watching God, students will analyzehow Hurston creates a unique literary voice by combining folklore, folk language, and traditional literary techniques. Students will examine the role that folk groups play in both their own lives and in the novel.
This collection uses primary sources to explore Zora Neale Hurston's Their Eyes …
This collection uses primary sources to explore Zora Neale Hurston's Their Eyes Were Watching God. Digital Public Library of America Primary Source Sets are designed to help students develop their critical thinking skills and draw diverse material from libraries, archives, and museums across the United States. Each set includes an overview, ten to fifteen primary sources, links to related resources, and a teaching guide. These sets were created and reviewed by the teachers on the DPLA's Education Advisory Committee.
In this lesson students will learn about Louise Erdrich and then read …
In this lesson students will learn about Louise Erdrich and then read her poem “Advice to Myself #2: Resistance.” As students read they will analyze how the writer uses words, phrases, and details to communicate a theme. Students will discuss the message of the poem in both small and large groups and discuss how the author’s literary choices help communicate this message. Students will then write about a message in the poem and explain what lines most strongly communicate that message as evidence to support their thinking.
"The Interlopers" by Saki (H.H. Munroe) is a story that portrays the …
"The Interlopers" by Saki (H.H. Munroe) is a story that portrays the theme of hatred resulting in tragedy. This story also has several examples of situational irony which is the contrast between what is said or expected and what actually happens. Three examples of irony will be discussed and how they are significant to the theme. The examples are:1. The men die over something unimportant.2. The struggle for land ownership ends in a tragedy when nature takes their lives.3. The long running feud ended, but no one in the village/town could learn of that as both men died.
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