Figurative Language Fun Reading and Writing

Figurative Language Fun Reading and Writing

Figurative Language Fun Reading and Writing

Who likes figurative language? Everybody does! (That’s hyperbole.) The great thing about it is you can say something is something it’s not and get away with it (using a metaphor)! When you’re at a loss for words, just use “like” or “as” to try to explain what you mean (with a simile). You can make words out of sounds like a teacher’s favorite “shhhhhh” (that’s onomatopoeia). Plus, listen to just about any song and you’ll hear figurative language because that’s how awesome it is!

blog post featured image figurative language fun

1. Let’s Start By Defining Some Common Figurative Language Terms:

  • personification: attributing human traits and qualities to something not human, such as an animal. I don’t think Disney could exist without this!
  • simile: a comparison that uses “like” or “as” such as “I’m as hangry as a bear.”
  • metaphor:something is said to be something else or do something else in order to suggest a similarity between them. Like, “You are such an angel!”
  • idiom: a commonly used phrase that isn’t meant to be taken literally because then it would make no sense! For example, “He kicked the bucket” has nothing to do with kicking a bucket. These are troublesome when you’re learning a language.
  • hyperbole:The use of exaggeration for emphasis or to create a strong impression
  • onomatopoeia:The formation of a word by imitation of a sound made by an object, person, or animal like “woof, woof.”
  • repetition/parallelism:Quite simply, repetition is the repeating of a word or phrase. It is a common rhetorical device used to add emphasis and stress in writing and speech.
  • alliteration: the occurrence of the same letter or sound at the beginning of adjacent or closely connected words. For example, the ice cream “Cocoa Mocha Macaroni”

2. Play Bingo Using Terms From This Comprehensive List: Holy smokes! This website defines a huge amount of figurative language and literary devices. I was thinking this could really help you if you want to make Literary Terms Bingo. For that you would make the bingo board with terms, and then instead of announcing the terms, you would announce the definitions. Sounds fun, right?

3. You’re a Mean One, Mr. Grinch: Ok, so I watched a LOT of videos online that attempted to teach figurative language, and I gotta say (sorry, but) they weren’t that great. I couldn’t recommend a single one. And then I got the idea to listen to the Christmas song about the Grinch and it’s perfect! You can have students watch the video and ask them to find similes, metaphors, and hyperbole. There are two similes right off the bat, and then metaphor galore, and also hyperbole such as “I wouldn’t touch you with a thirty-nine-and-a-half foot pole!” Here are the rest of the words:

 

You’re a mean one, Mr. Grinch

You really are a heel

You’re as cuddly as a cactus

You’re as charming as an eel

Mr. Grinch

You’re a bad banana

With a greasy black peel

You’re a monster, Mr. Grinch

Your heart’s an empty hole

Your brain is full of spiders

You’ve got garlic in your soul

Mr. Grinch

I wouldn’t touch you

With a thirty-nine-and-a-half foot pole

You’re a vile one, Mr. Grinch

You have termites in your smile

You have all the tender sweetness

Of a seasick crocodile

Mr. Grinch

Given the choice between the two of you

I’d take the seasick crocodile

You’re a foul one, Mr. Grinch

You’re a nasty, wasty skunk

Your heart is full of unwashed socks

Your soul is full of gunk

Mr. Grinch

The three words that best describe you

Are as follows and I quote, “Stink, stank, stunk”

You’re a rotter, Mr. Grinch

You’re the king of sinful sots

Your heart’s a dead tomato splotch

With moldy purple spots

Mr. Grinch

Your soul is an appalling dump heap

Overflowing with the most disgraceful assortment of deplorable

Rubbish imaginable

Mangled up in tangled up knots

You nauseate me, Mr. Grinch

With a nauseous super-naus

You’re a crooked jerky jockey

And you drive a crooked horse

Mr. Grinch

You’re a three-decker sauerkraut and toadstool sandwich

With arsenic sauce

SourceLyricFind/Songwriters: Albert Hague / Theodore S. Geisel/You’re a Mean One, Mr. Grinch lyrics © Sony/ATV Music Publishing
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4. Song Lyrics: Song lyrics are PERFECT for finding figurative language. Ask students to share some examples, and they will be right on it!! Ask them to bring in lyrics and have the figures of speech already labeled and ready to share. And you may want to tell them to only bring in appropriate ones. Here are Kenny Chesney’s lyrics I love that aren’t really appropriate to share with kids (hypocrite?) but I want to share with you: “One bottle of wine, two dixie cups, three a.m. I fell in love, for the first time in my life.” Oh my goodness, I got chills again writing that.

 

5. It Came From Planet Simile Drawing Fun: Have students draw this creature, the creature from planet Simile.

 

planet simile drawing activity

 

 

6. Jack London’s stories, novels, and articles: This guy, in the early 1900s really knew his way around figurative language. For example, there’s “The Call of the Wild,” “To Build a Fire,” “Stories of the North,” “The Story of an Eyewitness,” etc. Or how about use this FREE lesson I made and you don’t even need the book for it. I did all the hard work of finding examples of figurative language in “The Call of the Wild” and then made a worksheet for kids to label them.

 

cover call of the wild figurative language lesson

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7. Alliteration Fun: Have you heard of Jack Prelutsky’s poem “Bleezer’s Ice Cream”? I just found it today and it’s not only a funny list of ice cream flavors, but it is also full of alliteration. Check it out:I made these graphic organizers using clip art from Erin Bradley Designs and am including them in my FREE CREATIVE GRAPHIC ORGANIZERS PACK (different colors and cone combinations). I think they would be perfect for listing some alliteration examples.

 

8. FREE Figurative Language Frenzy WebquestI made this with distance learning in mind and some great short reading selections I know of that contain figurative language galore, such as “All Summer in a Day” and “There Will Come Soft Rains” by Ray Bradbury (which has the elusive, hard-to-find dramatic irony), Barack Obama’s 2008 acceptance speech which repeats “Yes we can,” Jack London’s article about the 1908 San Francisco Earthquake/Fire that appeared in Collier’s Magazine, and a modern-day article about the same event. You should get it for your students:

 

9. Which Simile Symbolizes Me?: Here’s ANOTHER FREE lesson I wrote, and this time it has to do with writing. It gets students to write similes about themselves and then do a related mandala art activity. It is available in Google Slides or PDF. You should check it out. You can see more samples done by kids of all ages in my blog post:

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10. Bragging and Boasting Using Similes and Hyperbole Writing ActivityIf you’re still reading, thank you for hanging in there! I give you yet again another FREE writing lesson that has always proven to motivate the most reluctant of writers and bring joy to the classroom (or home with Google Slides). It leads them step-by-step in writing about something they are okay at and making it sound like they are the best ever at it. You can see a sample in my blog post about it.

 

 

11. THREE MORE FREE READING LESSONS: These are for students to read There Will Come Soft Rains and “All Summer in a Day by Ray Bradbury which are both packed with figurative language(and there’s me using Theresa Hernandez’s designs again). AND I made a WebQuest Practice Test “Smart Homes in Utopia and Dystopia” that engages students in reading multiple fiction and nonfiction online authentic sources around an awesome theme:

 

                                   

 

 

WebQuest Practice Test #4 Smart Homes in Utopia and Dystopia GIF

Since teaching ELA for 10 years, I’ve been a contracted learning resource and assessment writer while running my store “Loving Language Arts.” I know how to align to standards like the back of my hand, yet I always aim to make resources high-interest to motivate reluctant readers and writers.

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Click below for FREE ELA PRACTICE TESTS – each targeting specific reading, writing, language, and speaking/listening/viewing standards.

Check out these GRADE-SPECIFIC test prep books with practice tests that target EVERY GRADE-SPECIFIC READING INFORMATIONAL TEXT STANDARD, one by one. An added bonus is that students LOVE the texts! In Easy-Print or Self-Grading Online Versions.
Grade 4 Reading Passages and Practice Tests Workbook - Informational Text Edition
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The 6th Grade Practice Tests Test Prep Workbook “is a high quality, beautifully-aligned resource. It is no-frills, to the point, yet high-interest for students. It is helping us prepare for standardized testing in a hybrid, synchronous, difficult year.”

ReBeckha L.

Sixth Grade Teacher, Teachers Pay Teachers

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10 Graphic Organizers for Reluctant Readers and Writers

10 Graphic Organizers for Reluctant Readers and Writers

10 Graphic Organizers for Reluctant Readers and Writers

Sometimes it just takes one simple thing to get reluctant readers and writers motivated to start their task. That one simple thing could be a fun, creative graphic organizer. So simple, yet so effective at getting them on board. Here are 10 different graphic organizers that do just that. 10, Wow!!! 

 

 

1. The Hamburger: Do an internet search and you will find a bunch of these. Some are for 1) planning to write a paragraph, 2) planning to write an essay, 3) planning to write a story, 4) identifying parts of a paragraph, 5) identifying parts of an essay, 6) identifying parts of a story. So many uses for a simple hamburger. Here is one I especially like by timvandevall.com:

 

sample graphic organizer for reading or writing grades 3-8

 

2. The Ice Cream Cone: I made these designs using clip art from Erin Bradley Designs. I use them for 1) to organize ideas about ice cream’s scientific properties that are explained in my info text/task lesson “Ice Cream Science,” 2) to write examples of alliteration from Jack Prelutsky’s poem “Bleezer’s Ice Cream,” (such as Cocoa Mocha Macaroni ice cream) or 3) writing ideas for a beginning, middle, and end. Thanks to Erin Bradley, I have ice cream scoops in lots of different colors and 4 types of cones, so the combinations seem endless.

 

In my FREE Graphic Organizers Pack, you can find these and more!

 

 

This is my FREE informational text and tasks lesson “Ice Cream Science” in which students use the organizers:

 

 

3. The Book Butterfly: I believe this is from Scholastic, but it is all over the internet, such as on Pinterest. It could be used with a fiction book, but with some tweaks could be used for informational text.

 

 

And, here’s what it looked like when it was younger lol:

 

 

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4. Dogs: I have done a lot of informational texts/tasks and more on dogs. In fact, just today I added a reading analysis lesson honing in on themes Aesop’s Fables Featuring Dogs and this lesson with 5 stories is FREE FOR THE SUMMER. I just think dogs are awesome and draw students putting them at ease. So I made these two graphic organizers using clip art from Dancing Author, Mary’s Clip Art, and Charlotte’s Clips. Students could read any of my FREE  high-interest informational texts about dogs and use these to write main ideas and key details. I’ll show you some of my products and then two of the organizers from my graphic organizers pack.

 

5 free dogs in society texts bundle

 

 

 

 

aesop's fables featuring dogs literary analysis activity

 

                              In my FREE Graphic Organizers Pack, you can find these and more!

 

 

5. My News Analysis: This looks like a nice, simple organizer for reading news articles.

 

 

6. Octo-Defense:

 

This one works well with finding central ideas in the National Geographic article about the Common Octopus, and more specifically, finding examples of the octopus’s defense mechanisms which the article explains well, making filing out this organizer pretty straightforward! It’s cute too.

 

 

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7. The Sundae: Again, another simple straightforward one which in this case is used for fiction, but could be adapted for nonfiction or writing, etc. It is from thedabblingspeechie.com.

 

 

8. Character Attribute Web: This one is from another blog post I did which shows how to use this to delve into Anne Frank’s character. I like it because it forces you to write evidence instead of general ideas.

 

                In my FREE Graphic Organizers Pack, you can find these and more!

 

 

I think it would work really well to analyze the character in “All Summer in a Day” by Ray Bradbury since the main character is developed quite thoroughly. So, I am including a link to that FREE lesson as well.

 

 

9. Flower Write: This looks like a versatile one that is for writing but could be used for reading or a lesson about flowers. It’s from Super Teacher Worksheets.

 

 

10. Roots: And finally, (are you still there?), I like how Cultivating Critical Readers organized prefixes and suffixes for a lesson about roots. I have seen this same concept using a tree and leaves for root words quite a bit. Usually the root word is at the bottom and then the leaves display words made from those roots.

 

 

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BONUS I almost forgot: This is a great one to organize the thoughts and feelings of a character that you’ve read about or that you are going to write about. The one below is about Anne Frank. Check out the blog post with samples and a template.

 

 

 

Update: Since writing this post, I have created a free related product “Analyzing Characterization 6 Ways With 6 Graphic Organizers” and have written a blog post “Analyzing Characterization 6 Ways With 6 Different Charcters in 6 Stories” so check them out!

blog header analyzing characterization 6 ways in 6 stories with 6 characters

Since teaching ELA for 10 years, I’ve been a contracted learning resource and assessment writer while running my store “Loving Language Arts.” I know how to align to standards like the back of my hand, yet I always aim to make resources high-interest to motivate reluctant readers and writers.

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Grade 4 Reading Passages and Practice Tests Workbook - Informational Text Edition
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Grade 9 Reading Passages and Practice Tests Workbook - Informational Text Edition
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Click below for FREE ELA PRACTICE TESTS – each targeting specific reading, writing, language, and speaking/listening/viewing standards.

Check out these GRADE-SPECIFIC test prep books with practice tests that target EVERY GRADE-SPECIFIC READING INFORMATIONAL TEXT STANDARD, one by one. An added bonus is that students LOVE the texts! In Easy-Print or Self-Grading Online Versions.
Grade 4 Reading Passages and Practice Tests Workbook - Informational Text Edition
Grade 10 Reading Passages and Practice Tests Workbook - Informational Text Edition
Grade 5 Reading Passages and Practice Tests Workbook - Informational Text Edition
Grade 11 Reading Passages and Practice Tests Workbook - Informational Text Edition
Grade 6 Reading Passages and Practice Tests Workbook - Informational Text Edition
Grade 12 Reading Passages and Practice Tests Workbook - Informational Text Edition
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Grade 8 Reading Passages and Practice Tests Workbook - Informational Text Edition
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The 6th Grade Practice Tests Test Prep Workbook “is a high quality, beautifully-aligned resource. It is no-frills, to the point, yet high-interest for students. It is helping us prepare for standardized testing in a hybrid, synchronous, difficult year.”

ReBeckha L.

Sixth Grade Teacher, Teachers Pay Teachers

How about save this pin to your “Reading” or “Graphic Organizers” or “Pre-Writing” Board so that you can come back to this post again?

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Back to School Writing Activities for English Language Arts

Back to School Writing Activities for English Language Arts

Back to School Writing Activities for English Language Arts

As the 2022 school year starts, you have three wishes: 1) You want students to like your class and look forward to the year with you. 2) You want students to get acquainted with each other and with you (while thinking you’re super cool). 3) You want them to be ready to read and write without whining or dreading it! These 10 writing ideas are going to make your three wishes come true! I’m like a magic fairy!

10 back to school writing ideas blog main

1) Two Truths and a Lie (Quick Warm-Up Activity): While not a full-blown writing assignment, it eases them back in. Have students write two truths and one lie about themselves in any order in a numbered list. For example “I can play guitar,” “I have been skydiving,” “I have four dogs and a cat,” “My favorite food is sushi,” etc. In the regular classroom setting, have students take turns reading their three statements, and call on students to guess which one they think is the lie. You can even take a poll. In a distance learning situation, have them post these for their classmates to see. Instruct the class to comment on each other’s 2/3-true biographies and say which # they think is the lie. Also instruct them that, after receiving at least three comments from classmates, the student will make a comment revealing which one is the lie.

2) Compare-and-Contrast This Past Summer to a Prior OneIt occurred to me that summers these days are probably a lot different than they used to be for most students. And who knows how many vacays got messed up again! Anyway, it was a light bulb moment for me thinking how they could write a compare-and-contrast essay comparing and contrasting the summer they just experienced with some prior summer! So, I wrote up a free guided step-by-step printable (& made Google Slides too!) that takes them through the process of coming up with ideas, filling out a choice of graphic organizers that are included, then creating the finished product. Get your WRITING FREEBIE here.

3) Write a Limerick About Yourself: This is a great way to have students introduce themselves in a very lighthearted, silly way while practicing rhyme, meter, and rhythm! Again, I made a guided printable (& Google Slides) that takes them from how to do it, samples, brainstorming, and then writing. It’s FREE so get yours today!

Here’s one I made up:

There was a sweet woman named Katie

Who was a most beautiful lady

But her moods were unreal

We were like, “What is her deal?”

But then she finally chilled out at age eighty. 

4) Write a Five Senses Concrete Imagery Poem: This gets them to write about a summer memory, a topic they enjoy, and gets them to practice using concrete imagery by having them think in sensory terms. In the past, I had them use stationary I provided just to jazz them up and add some flair, so I included some stationary papers, samples of poems done, and step-by-step guidance in ANOTHER FREEBIE LESSON IN PRINTABLE AND DIGITAL FORMATS! WOW! Here’s a sample:

5 senses poem about trip to new york city


5. An Autobiography Block: This is similar to the biography block lesson I recently posted for students to present a biography book report. It occurred to me they could do the same things but about themselves! There are six sides to display information and then a small symbolic item can go inside. I made ANOTHER FREE LESSON for them to create it (template and rubric included) to create six sides of the box. And a small symbolic item goes inside. Get your free lesson with template and rubric.

6) Fingerprint Writing: This one is not my lesson, but I saw it and wanted to share it. It looks really good! Students write about themselves on a large fingerprint with lines on it that looks really cool. Check it out! 

example of fingerprint art by kitchentableclassroom for back to school writing

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7) Writing About Me Symbolically: This is a free, super creative writing and art combo lesson (though you could leave out the art portion of it and call it a day). Below is a sample. Plus CHECK OUT THE BLOG POST SHOWING MORE SAMPLES MADE BY ALL AGES. Basically, you have students write 7 similes about themselves, to explain what they are like (a plant/tree/flower, earth/fire/water/air, color, number, man-made or natural material, shape, and animal). GO GRAB THE FREE LESSON YOUR STUDENTS WILL LOVE (AND YOU WILL TOO).

example writing about me symbolically

8) Writing About Me With Hyperbole and Simile: Students write an explanatory, informative text about themselves, but add hyperbole to it to make it really funny and obviously exaggerated.  It basically becomes a tall tale, or a legend. See below for the sample I wrote, and go grab the FREE lesson that has the step-by-step guided writing printable, which is also available digitally in Google Slides. It is a quick, fun writing activity that gets students acquainted in a silly, non-scary way. And it requires writing skills, so there you go! Go get yours free today.

Katie the Incredible Rollerblader

I am so good at rollerblading. When I rollerblade, crowds of people gather around just to see my impressive skills. You can hear people getting on their cell phones to say, “Dude, you gotta get over here and see the most amazing rollerblader I have ever seen!” People beg me for my autograph like I am a movie star or something. I am so fastit is as if there are engines in each one of my rollerbladesI am like a jet. I even had a race with a sports car one time and I won – easily. Not only am I fast, but I can do awesome tricks. I can jump over just about any obstacle: cars, mailboxes, people, you name it. I once jumped over a tree! And flips are no problem. I make flips look so easy, it is like I am coin being tossed in the air during a coin toss. I jump up so high and do about 15 flips on the way down. And don’t even get me started on how many laps I can do at the roller rink. I can do about 1,000 laps around the roller rink in one minute. I truly am the best rollerblader on the entire planet!

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9) Create-a-Critter Explanatory Writing Activity: In a nutshell, students think of an animal that doesn’t exist such as a hybrid like the “jaccoon” (jaguar and raccoon) “durtle” (dog and turtle), or “mooda” (moose and panda). Then they describe what it looks like using their best descriptive writing skills . Then a partner takes the description and tries to draw it based on that. Then, they do a comparison. Laughter ensues! You can facilitate this too with this free lesson in PDF or Google Slides that does most of the work for you. See the samples: a jaccoon, a mooda, and a durtle.  

jaccoon for create a critter lesson
mooda from create a critter lesson
durtle create a critter example
create a dog expository writing activity

10) What’s In My Head: I’ve used this head template for so many lessons such as having students examine a character’s thoughts and feelings, or saying what they learned at the end of the school year, and now they can use it for back to school writing to examine their thoughts and feelings, and let others see them to get to know each other. Here is a sample of one Anne Frank and a teen, but you would have them fill it in based on their own heads! Here is a template and samples that show Anne Frank’s thoughts plus a girl in high school (both actually based on book characters, but you get the idea).

This template is available free in both easy-print and online distance learning versions as part of my “Analyzing Characterization 6 Ways With 6 Graphic Organizers FREEBIE” product. And, check out the related Analyzing Characters From 6 Stories 6 Ways Blog Post that shows how they’re used.

example what's in my head character lesson
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what's in Anne Frank's head sample

Since teaching ELA for 10 years, I’ve been a contracted learning resource and assessment writer while running my store “Loving Language Arts.” I know how to align to standards like the back of my hand, yet I always aim to make resources high-interest to motivate reluctant readers and writers.

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Grade 4 Reading Passages and Practice Tests Workbook - Informational Text Edition
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You Know What Else Kids Love?

These workbooks! I made the articles super interesting to kids by writing about things that interest them! AND IT WORKED! I keep hearing from teachers how kids get so into these texts that they actually WANT to answer the questions!

Click below for FREE ELA PRACTICE TESTS – each targeting specific reading, writing, language, and speaking/listening/viewing standards.

Check out these GRADE-SPECIFIC test prep books with practice tests that target EVERY GRADE-SPECIFIC READING INFORMATIONAL TEXT STANDARD, one by one. An added bonus is that students LOVE the texts! In Easy-Print or Self-Grading Online Versions.
Grade 4 Reading Passages and Practice Tests Workbook - Informational Text Edition
Grade 10 Reading Passages and Practice Tests Workbook - Informational Text Edition
Grade 5 Reading Passages and Practice Tests Workbook - Informational Text Edition
Grade 11 Reading Passages and Practice Tests Workbook - Informational Text Edition
Grade 6 Reading Passages and Practice Tests Workbook - Informational Text Edition
Grade 12 Reading Passages and Practice Tests Workbook - Informational Text Edition
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Grade 8 Reading Passages and Practice Tests Workbook - Informational Text Edition
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Grade 9 Reading Passages and Practice Tests Workbook - Informational Text Edition
why onions make you cry passage and practice test

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The 6th Grade Practice Tests Test Prep Workbook “is a high quality, beautifully-aligned resource. It is no-frills, to the point, yet high-interest for students. It is helping us prepare for standardized testing in a hybrid, synchronous, difficult year.”

ReBeckha L.

Sixth Grade Teacher, Teachers Pay Teachers

How about save this pin to your “Back-to-School Resources” Board so that you can come back to this post again?

back to school writing ideas blog post

Writing a Concrete Imagery Poem About a Summer Memory

Writing a Concrete Imagery Poem About a Summer Memory

Writing a Concrete Imagery Poem About a Summer Memory

workbook cover informational texts and tasks volume 1

In your experience, do students just starting the school year want to get to know each other a little, but don’t usually want to have to talk too much? 

This fun writing activity helps students share a summer memory in a relaxed way and it is FREE! It is perfect for grades 4-8 during back-to-school time. Comes with samples and templates.

What makes it “fun” (fun as far as ELA goes) is that students get to share something about their summer, and thus about themselves, in a way that feels safe.

 writing a concrete imagery poem about a summer memory free writing lesson and blog post

 

An excellent way to get students to relate a memorable summer memory to the class is to have them write a “Five Senses Poem” about anything memorable that happened over the summer. Once students turn in their final drafts, you can display them, have them do a gallery walk, or have them read them aloud. Click on the product cover above to take you to my store where you can download the lesson for FREE – which includes templates. Here are a couple sample final drafts plus a couple templates:

You can get a FREE TEMPLATE of the New York City Skyline scene above in the FREE LESSON!

Reading Informational Text Passages Workbooks Promotional Page

You know what else students LOVE? These high-interest informational texts and tasks. I went out of my way to make the articles super interesting to upper elementary and middle schoolers by writing about things that interest them. And, guess what? It worked. I keep hearing from teachers how kids get so into these passages. They actually want to answer the questions. They even want to discuss the articles as a group. 

middle school informational text passages and ela tasks volume 1

Volume I was so popular with students in grades 6-8 that I just HAD to create Volume II. Kids love them both!

6th-8th grade language arts workbook volume 2 - High-interest passages and tasks.

Since teaching ELA for 10 years, I’ve been a contracted learning resource and assessment writer while running my store “Loving Language Arts.” I know how to align to standards like the back of my hand, yet I always aim to make resources high-interest to motivate reluctant readers and writers.

Subscribe

Grade 4 Reading Passages and Practice Tests Workbook - Informational Text Edition
Grade 5 Reading Passages and Practice Tests Workbook - Informational Text Edition
Grade 6 Reading Passages and Practice Tests Workbook - Informational Text Edition
Grade 7 Reading Passages and Practice Tests Workbook - Informational Text Edition
Grade 8 Reading Passages and Practice Tests Workbook - Informational Text Edition
Grade 9 Reading Passages and Practice Tests Workbook - Informational Text Edition
Grade 10 Reading Passages and Practice Tests Workbook - Informational Text Edition
Grade 11 Reading Passages and Practice Tests Workbook - Informational Text Edition
Grade 12 Reading Passages and Practice Tests Workbook - Informational Text Edition
High School Bundle Reading Passages and Practice Tests Workbook - Informational Text Edition
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Check out these GRADE-SPECIFIC test prep books with practice tests that target EVERY GRADE-SPECIFIC READING INFORMATIONAL TEXT STANDARD, one by one. An added bonus is that students LOVE the texts! In Easy-Print or Self-Grading Online Versions.
Grade 4 Reading Passages and Practice Tests Workbook - Informational Text Edition
Grade 10 Reading Passages and Practice Tests Workbook - Informational Text Edition
Grade 5 Reading Passages and Practice Tests Workbook - Informational Text Edition
Grade 11 Reading Passages and Practice Tests Workbook - Informational Text Edition
Grade 6 Reading Passages and Practice Tests Workbook - Informational Text Edition
Grade 12 Reading Passages and Practice Tests Workbook - Informational Text Edition
Grade 7 Reading Passages and Practice Tests Workbook - Informational Text Edition
we sail for america by samuel mcclure ela practice test

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Grade 8 Reading Passages and Practice Tests Workbook - Informational Text Edition
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The 6th Grade Practice Tests Test Prep Workbook “is a high quality, beautifully-aligned resource. It is no-frills, to the point, yet high-interest for students. It is helping us prepare for standardized testing in a hybrid, synchronous, difficult year.”

ReBeckha L.

Sixth Grade Teacher, Teachers Pay Teachers

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Writing About Me Using Hyperbole and Simile

Writing About Me Using Hyperbole and Simile

Writing About Me Using Hyperbole and Simile

This is a fun lesson in which you give students permission to write some fake news (based on truth) about themselves using similes and hyperbole. They are going to write about something they are good at and make it sound as if they are great at it — like the world’s best at it.

This type of writing is the explanatory, expository, and informative writing called for in the Common Core State Standards and is just about everywhere actually. So, it’s silly, but silly writing is the basis for all those TV shows we love, right?

So, if you want the free printable or Google Slides distance learning version that guides them through this lesson and helps them get their writing down on paper, you can get it here.

Here is an example of what a final product looks like (with similes underlined):

          I am so good at rollerblading. When I rollerblade, crowds of people gather around just to see my impressive skills. You can hear people getting on their cell phones to say, “Dude, you gotta get over here and see the most amazing rollerblader I have ever seen!” People beg me for my autograph like I am a movie star or something. I am so fast, it is as if there are engines in each one of my rollerbladesI am like a jet. I even had a race with a sports car one time and I won – easily. Not only am I fast, but I can do awesome tricks. I can jump over just about any obstacle: cars, mailboxes, people, you name it. I once jumped over a tree! And flips are no problem. I make flips look so easy, it is like I am coin being tossed in the air during a coin toss. I jump up so high and do about 15 flips on the way down. And don’t even get me started on how many laps I can do at the roller rink. I can do about 1,000 laps around the roller rink in one minute. I truly am the best rollerblader on the entire planet!d

One thing I did that was fun was I held a “bragging and boasting contest.” I asked who wanted to be in the contest and did not force anyone. I read each entry out loud and kept a list going of which ones I had read. I kept their names private and didn’t say who wrote them. Then, I had students do a blind vote to decide which one was the best. Since this is silly, comedy-level writing (even though it’s Common Core), this kind of voting thing is a fun addition. But I would not suggest it for regular writing or as a regular occurrence.

 

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Since teaching ELA for 10 years, I’ve been a contracted learning resource and assessment writer while running my store “Loving Language Arts.” I know how to align to standards like the back of my hand, yet I always aim to make resources high-interest to motivate reluctant readers and writers.

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Grade 4 Reading Passages and Practice Tests Workbook - Informational Text Edition
Grade 5 Reading Passages and Practice Tests Workbook - Informational Text Edition
Grade 6 Reading Passages and Practice Tests Workbook - Informational Text Edition
Grade 7 Reading Passages and Practice Tests Workbook - Informational Text Edition
Grade 8 Reading Passages and Practice Tests Workbook - Informational Text Edition
Grade 9 Reading Passages and Practice Tests Workbook - Informational Text Edition
Grade 10 Reading Passages and Practice Tests Workbook - Informational Text Edition
Grade 11 Reading Passages and Practice Tests Workbook - Informational Text Edition
Grade 12 Reading Passages and Practice Tests Workbook - Informational Text Edition
High School Bundle Reading Passages and Practice Tests Workbook - Informational Text Edition
Writing Modules General Promotion Pin

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Click below for FREE ELA PRACTICE TESTS – each targeting specific reading, writing, language, and speaking/listening/viewing standards.

Check out these GRADE-SPECIFIC test prep books with practice tests that target EVERY GRADE-SPECIFIC READING INFORMATIONAL TEXT STANDARD, one by one. An added bonus is that students LOVE the texts! In Easy-Print or Self-Grading Online Versions.

The 6th Grade Practice Tests Test Prep Workbook “is a high quality, beautifully-aligned resource. It is no-frills, to the point, yet high-interest for students. It is helping us prepare for standardized testing in a hybrid, synchronous, difficult year.”

ReBeckha L.

Sixth Grade Teacher, Teachers Pay Teachers

Grade 4 Reading Passages and Practice Tests Workbook - Informational Text Edition
Grade 10 Reading Passages and Practice Tests Workbook - Informational Text Edition
Grade 5 Reading Passages and Practice Tests Workbook - Informational Text Edition
Grade 11 Reading Passages and Practice Tests Workbook - Informational Text Edition
Grade 6 Reading Passages and Practice Tests Workbook - Informational Text Edition
Grade 12 Reading Passages and Practice Tests Workbook - Informational Text Edition
Grade 7 Reading Passages and Practice Tests Workbook - Informational Text Edition
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Grade 8 Reading Passages and Practice Tests Workbook - Informational Text Edition
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Grade 9 Reading Passages and Practice Tests Workbook - Informational Text Edition
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Writing about me using hyperbole and simile free lesson

Sadako and the Thousand Paper Cranes Reading Literature Lesson

Sadako and the Thousand Paper Cranes Reading Literature Lesson

Sadako and the Thousand Paper Cranes Reading Literature Lesson

I like to get students excited about reading literature by having them do a fun activity to go with the story. This is especially true when the book has sad or “heavy” subject matter related to war. So, to get them excited about reading the short novella Sadako and the Thousand Paper Cranes, I let them make origami paper cranes of their own. First, I have them read background information about World War II events that relate to the story and an interview of a survivor. That’s the “heavy” part. Then, I have them read the story, which is sad but also enjoyable and inspiring. After all that is when I have them make the paper cranes, which they really enjoy.

blog header Sadako and the Thousand Paper Cranes free literature activity

Good news! I found a free copy online. It is still under copyright, though, so I am not going to print it or post it. You, as teachers, however are entitled to fair use to use it for education purposes (but not post or sell). Access it here: PDF of Sadako and the Thousand Paper Cranes

Scholastic Book cover Sadako and the Thousand Paper Cranes

Here is how I would teach the book (but there are many options found on the web):

 

1) Learn about and then give students some basic background information on the bombing of Hiroshima by the United States that was an attempt to end World War II. Here are a couple good places for you as the teacher to read about it so you can summarize it for your students:

2) Read the book to students or have the students read the book. Have them answer questions about each chapter. You can find reading comprehension questions free online on several websites, such as this one: https://www.pghschools.org/cms/lib07/PA01000449/Centricity/domain/262/2014%20ela%20curriculum/6th%20ELA/Grade%206%20Sadako%20Teachers%20Guide.pdf

 

3) Have them make paper cranes. The instructions are in the back of the book usually, or you can find some good ones online for free, such as: https://monkey.org/~aidan/origami/crane/index.html

 

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Since teaching ELA for 10 years, I’ve been a contracted learning resource and assessment writer while running my store “Loving Language Arts.” I know how to align to standards like the back of my hand, yet I always aim to make resources high-interest to motivate reluctant readers and writers.

Subscribe

Grade 4 Reading Passages and Practice Tests Workbook - Informational Text Edition
Grade 5 Reading Passages and Practice Tests Workbook - Informational Text Edition
Grade 6 Reading Passages and Practice Tests Workbook - Informational Text Edition
Grade 7 Reading Passages and Practice Tests Workbook - Informational Text Edition
Grade 8 Reading Passages and Practice Tests Workbook - Informational Text Edition
Grade 9 Reading Passages and Practice Tests Workbook - Informational Text Edition
Grade 10 Reading Passages and Practice Tests Workbook - Informational Text Edition
Grade 11 Reading Passages and Practice Tests Workbook - Informational Text Edition
Grade 12 Reading Passages and Practice Tests Workbook - Informational Text Edition
High School Bundle Reading Passages and Practice Tests Workbook - Informational Text Edition
Writing Modules General Promotion Pin

Subscribe

Click below for FREE ELA PRACTICE TESTS – each targeting specific reading, writing, language, and speaking/listening/viewing standards.

Check out these GRADE-SPECIFIC test prep books with practice tests that target EVERY GRADE-SPECIFIC READING INFORMATIONAL TEXT STANDARD, one by one. An added bonus is that students LOVE the texts! In Easy-Print or Self-Grading Online Versions.
Grade 4 Reading Passages and Practice Tests Workbook - Informational Text Edition
Grade 10 Reading Passages and Practice Tests Workbook - Informational Text Edition
Grade 5 Reading Passages and Practice Tests Workbook - Informational Text Edition
Grade 11 Reading Passages and Practice Tests Workbook - Informational Text Edition
Grade 6 Reading Passages and Practice Tests Workbook - Informational Text Edition
Grade 12 Reading Passages and Practice Tests Workbook - Informational Text Edition
Grade 7 Reading Passages and Practice Tests Workbook - Informational Text Edition
we sail for america by samuel mcclure ela practice test

Try a Freebie!

Grade 8 Reading Passages and Practice Tests Workbook - Informational Text Edition
be ready to help passage and ela practice test free

Try a Freebie!

Grade 9 Reading Passages and Practice Tests Workbook - Informational Text Edition
why onions make you cry passage and practice test

Try a Freebie!

The 6th Grade Practice Tests Test Prep Workbook “is a high quality, beautifully-aligned resource. It is no-frills, to the point, yet high-interest for students. It is helping us prepare for standardized testing in a hybrid, synchronous, difficult year.”

ReBeckha L.

Sixth Grade Teacher, Teachers Pay Teachers

How about save this pin to your “Reading Literature” or “Activities for Literature” or “Novellas” Board so that you can come back to this post again?

sadako and the thousand paper cranes free reading lesson activity pin