MLK in ELA: Reading & Writing About Martin Luther King, Jr.

MLK in ELA: Reading & Writing About Martin Luther King, Jr.

MLK in ELA: Reading & Writing About Martin Luther King, Jr.

Honoring MLK in ELA really is a no-brainer because there’s a prolific amount of passionate writing you can find that’s been written by, and about, Martin Luther King, Jr.  He was a fantastic speechwriter, a gifted orater, a brave fighter, a true collaborator, a civil rights activist, a tactful communicator — a man passionate and relentless in the ongoing fight for equality. So, here are 10 ideas for reading, writing, and language related to MLK you can incorporate into English language arts any time of year, but especially around MLK Day in January and Black History Month in February. I also give you a free text with ELA task for Letter From Birmingham Jail.

new year in ela blog header

1. Journal Writing on the Topic of MLK: As a bellringer or a 10-minute “quick write” session, have students respond to their choice of journal topic. Here are a BUNCH of ideas: What do you know about MLK? Why do you think some states used to refuse to designate MLK Day a holiday while other states consistently pushed for it to be a holiday? MLK had a dream of equality; what do you sometimes dream about that would make the world a better place? Can you think of any ways to work on making your dream come true someday? Since MLK was assassinated in 1968 , in your opinion, how has the fight for equality continued in America (including ups and downs and signs of progress)? Who has taken the place of, or has continued in the footsteps of, MLK since he was killed? What do MLK and Black Lives Matter have to do with each other (broadly speaking)? What makes Martin Luther King, Jr. so memorable?

2) Looking at the “I Have a Dream” Speech as LiteratureWhen we look at works of nonfiction as literature, we call that Reading Literary Nonfiction. The “I Have a Dream” speech uses literary devices and techniques in such as way so as to move the reader, so that’s literary nonfiction. Not only that, but it’s an amazing speech with such a powerful message. Now I was going to make a whole little lesson right here, but I actually found a GREAT lesson plan for teaching the speech at the PBS Newshour website. So, rather than reinvent the wheel, you should check it out! But then promise to come back, ok?

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3. Explain How You Would Improve the World (Dare to Dream): Most likely your students have spent some time daydreaming how they would make the world a better place. Heck, they might even be daydreaming right now with all this talk of the “I Have a Dream” speech. So, tap into the passion! Have students choose one aspect of the way things are in the world that they want to change.  And, here’s the explanatory writing part — have them explain it in detail, including three specific steps they would take in the process to fulfill the dream. Have them include an introduction and conclusion — and BAM! — another standards-based essay done in no time.

4. Letter From the Birmingham JailMartin Luther King, Jr.’s Letter From The Birmingham Jail is a must-read. But, what I have for your ELA classroom is a must-have. Grab the FREE PRINTABLE IDENTiFYING THEMES IN NOTABLE MLK QUOTES FROM THE LETTER. It provides students with one page of monumental quotes from the letter, guiding students to identify theme in each of them. This is a standards-based activity, specifically aligned to Standard RI.9 in high school, which is to analyze seminal U.S. documents of literary and historical significance.

YOU CAN PIN THE IMAGE BELOW IF YOU LIKE:

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5. Explain the Six Principles of Nonviolence: Have students read King’s Six Principles of Nonviolence and write a short explanatory essay explaining what they are and what they mean. Exploring nonviolence seems like a good use of time in my opinion. Speaking of opinions, have your students write an opinion or persuasive essay about the six principles.

6. Compare and Contrast Influential Speeches: When you read enough of the monumental speeches made during American history, you start to notice similarities and differences in their structure, language/use of rhetoric, and repeated allusions to the ideals of freedom set forth in the Constitution. So, this is good news for ELA! You can have students compare and contrast speeches, honing in on such things as figurative language, rhetoric, structure, allusions, tone and attitude, being direct vs. being metaphorical, being tactful vs. aggressive, etc. Here are some ideas: Lincoln’s Gettysburg Address, JFK’s Inaugural Address, Deval Patrick’s Inaugural Address, Obama’s speeches such as his 2008 acceptance speech (the yes we can/si se puede speech) or the 2009 Inaugural Address (and many more), etc.

NOTE: By the way, my High-Interest Text Passages and Practice Tests Workbooks and my High-Interest Text Passages and ELA Tasks Workbooks contain these speeches and more in easy-print and digital 1-page formats that are MAJOR TIME SAVERS.

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7. Read the Nobel Peace Prize Acceptance Speech: When Martin Luther King, Jr. accepted the Nobel Prize for Peace in 1964, he delivered an amazing acceptance speech. Have students explain what the award is a “profound recognition” of. In the speech, he stated, “Sooner or later all the people of the world will have to discover a way to live together in peace…” In order for that to happen, what method must people learn, according to MLK?

8. Get Artistic About MLK.: How about assign each student a different quote by MLK (here is a list of 25 Quotations by MLK for the Classroom), and then have them do an artistic representation of it on an 8 12″ x 11″ page? Have them make the quotation visible, write 5 adjectives on the page describing it, include 5 images, etc….you decide.

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9. Read Robert F. Kennedy’s Statement on the Assassination of Martin Luther King, Jr.: Sadly, this man who was making so much traction on the platform of nonviolence, was killed in 1968. Senator Robert F. Kennedy made a lovely statement to comfort others and remind them of his cause: “What we need in the United States is not division; what we need in the United States is not hatred; what we need in the United States is not violence or lawlessness; but love and wisdom, and compassion toward one another, and a feeling of justice toward those who still suffer within our country, whether they be white or they be black.” Have students write about their opinion on all of this, including examples.

10. MLK Biography Block: Have students read a biography of MLK and then, instead of those boring book reports that put everyone to sleep, have your students make biography blocks instead. Grab the FREE Biography Block Lesson and Template. And check out the sample Clara Barton biography block below.

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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The New Year in ELA: Ideas for Reading & Writing in January

The New Year in ELA: Ideas for Reading & Writing in January

The New Year in ELA: Ideas for Reading & Writing in January

The New Year in ELA means new opportunities for reading and writing! Get your students pumped by providing activities that get them to embrace a growth mindset, develop a vision for the upcoming year, learn about New Year’s customs in other cultures, read literature and informational text on the topic of New Years, summarize the sequence of events that led to January being the lucky month chosen to start each year, write a poem, and more. Here are 10 ideas for reading and writing in English language arts in January!

new year in ela blog header

1) New Year, New Mindset: As a bellringer or a 10-minute “quick write” session, have students respond with their thoughts on this quote by Neil Gaiman, a well-known and respected author: 

“I hope that in this year to come, you make mistakes.
 
Because if you are making mistakes, then you are making new things, trying new things, learning, living, pushing yourself, changing yourself, changing your world. You’re doing things you’ve never done before, and more importantly, you’re Doing Something.
 
So that’s my wish for you, and all of us, and my wish for myself. Make New Mistakes. Make glorious, amazing mistakes. Make mistakes nobody’s ever made before. Don’t freeze, don’t stop, don’t worry that it isn’t good enough, or it isn’t perfect, whatever it is: art, or love, or work or family or life.
 
Whatever it is you’re scared of doing, Do it.
 
Make your mistakes, next year and forever.”

2) Vision BoardsVision boards are amazing because they get you to envision what your future could look like and then manifest what it will actually take to make your dreams come true. You envision yourself succeeding at something — either very specifically — such as “going to college in the fall with scholarships,” “getting in shape this year” — or perhaps more broadly, such as “the life I want to be living in five years.” Then, you make a visual representation of it, such as a collage of images and phrases or perhaps just a simple web diagram. In the context of the English language arts classroom, perhaps just have student turn in an 8 1/2″ x 11″ vision board that contains at least 5 sentences and 5 images. You decide!

OR HERE’S A TWIST: INSTEAD OF HAVING STUDENTS DO BORING CHARACTER ANALYSIS/BOOK REPORTS, HAVE THEM MAKE VISION BOARDS FOR LITERARY CHARACTERS!

mind map vision board example
sample vision board


3. Write Resolutions Characters Should Make: While I think you should have students write resolutions in ELA to start off the new year, I also think it would be fun to have them come up with resolutions they think some characters in literature should make. You could ask students to choose different characters from literature you’ve read together, or perhaps you want to assign each student a different character. In any case, it would be fun to have each student share one resolution with the class at the end. 


4. Delve Into New Year’s Poetry : I found  a couple of great collections of literary poems related to the New Year: 1) The Poetry Foundation’s collection of New Year’s Poems, and 2) A major book publisher’s selection of Eight Beautiful New Year’s Poems.  Have each student select one poem and do a quick analysis identifying the poet speaker, mood/tone, theme, message, setting, rhyme scheme, etc.

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5. Learn about Winter Sports!

Read, Write, Research All About Sled Dog Racing: Using my FREE ELA/Social Studies printables (also digital), have students read, write, research, all about sled dog racing: a winter sport most popular in the Arctic regions of the United States, Canada, Russia, Greenland, and some European countries. The sport involves the timed competition of teams of  sled dogs that pull a sled with the musher standing on the runners.

A sled dog race was a demonstration sport at the 1932 Winter Olympics in Lake Placid, New York, and again in Oslo, and again in the 1994 Winter Games in Lillehammer. However, it is not currently an official event in the Olympics.

https://www.teacherspayteachers.com/Product/Holiday-Informational-Text-Summary-Song-Lyrics-of-the-Grinch-Christmas-Story-6225468

And Read About the Upcoming Winter Olympic Games: Have students read an interesting FREE 1-page informational text passage (with writing extensions) that explains when the Winter Olympic Games debuted, when they are held and why, how host cities are chosen, which sports compete, and the ideals of the International Olympic Committee.

Just in time for the 2022 Beijing Winter Olympic Games coming in February!

free text and writing about the winter olympic games

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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6. Describe the Highlights of Last Year: Have your students write descriptively about the memory or memories that really stand out from last year. You may also want to ask them to reflect back with a growth mindset and write about what lessons he or she learned from the experience(s).

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7. Learn About Chinese New Year: Chinese New Year starts in February and lasts for fifteen days. Check out my other blog post “5 Interesting Facts About Chinese New Year” to quickly learn what Chinese New Year is about. Then, have your students learn all about it too in this free 1 -page printable (that’s also digital). If you like, you can have students summarize the article, list interesting facts, and/or research to find out more about their zodiac sign and which zodiac sign correlates to the New Year. Oh, and have them write a compare-and-contrast essay comparing Chinese New Year to New Year’s in the USA or elsewhere! Meeting standards left and right!

cover for chinese new year reading passage and writing extensions ela lesson

8. The New Year Around the World: Along the lines of the idea above is to have students research how people in other cultures in other countries around the world celebrate the New Year. To get them excited, you can first have them read this list of ways to say “Happy New Year” in a bunch of different languages. It might be fun to ask students to each memorize one and then say it to people throughout January. Then, have them research how different cultures around the world start the New Year. Perhaps assign each student a different culture to research and have them turn in a short summary. Or, how about have them write a compare-and-contrast essay to compare how two cultures celebrate New Year’s?

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9. Growth Mindset Journal Writing for One Week: As a bellringer or during some other short writing time that repeats daily for about a week, have students write in 10-15 minute increments about what they want to accomplish in the New Year. They are to just write freely and non-stop during the alotted writing period, focusing solely on what they want to accomplish for themselves in the current new year. The writing doesn’t have to be organized or published. It is just an alotted time to focus in one’s journal, manifesting one’s dreams so as to bring them to fruition by the end of the year.

10. Write an Essay About the Sequence of Events That Led to January 1 Being the Big Day: Have students quickly read this sequence of events that led to January 1 being the first day of the New Year. Then, have students write a short essay that explains the sequence of events in chronological order, using plenty of transition words, and tying together events by focusing on cause and effect.

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Do you or someone you know teach math? Are you looking for math that’s relevant to real life? If so, check these out:

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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.
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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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Winter Fun in ELA

Winter Fun in ELA

Winter Fun in ELA

It’s that time of year when there’s a nip in the air and a palpable sense of anticipation for all that winter brings. Not only are your students getting antsy, but so are you. Y’all just can’t wait for all those winter holidays and events. In the meantime (and after you return from celebrating them), here are 10 fabulous ideas for reading and writing during this chilly yet wonderful season in English language arts.

winter in ela blog header

1) Winter Haiku: According to poets.org, “A traditional Japanese haiku is a three-line poem with seventeen syllables, written in a 5/7/5 syllable count. Often focusing on images from nature, haiku emphasizes simplicity, intensity, and directness of expression.” Haiku poetry is PERFECT for the winter season. First, have a brainstorming session with your students, making a list of possible topics together, to get them thinking what they’ll focus on (the haiku should focus intensely on one thing, usually having to do with nature). Then, give them some quick instructions (and perhaps samples) of how to write them: they consist of 3 lines with 5 syllables in the first line, 7 syllables in the second line, and 5 syllables in the third line, using concrete imagery (vivid sensory descriptions that make readers get clear images in their heads).  You may even want to have students make artistic posters out of their poems to display, like the one shown here:

high school student holding winter haiku poem


2. Winter Similes and/or Metaphors: Have students write symbolically about the winter. Similes use “like or as.” Metaphors simply say that something is something else that it is not. In upper elementary, it’s easier for kids to write similes. In high school, students should be challenged to write metaphors. First, brainstorm with students everything they can think of that has to do with the winter season. Then, have them write 5 similes and/or metaphors. For example, “The snow glistened pure white on the branches of the pine trees like the powdered sugar we sprinkle on our green Christmas tree cookies.”

snowmen in winter wonderland

3. Read, Write, Research All About Sled Dog Racing: Using my FREE ELA/Social Studies printables (also digital), have students read, write, research, all about sled dog racing: a winter sport most popular in the Arctic regions of the United States, Canada, Russia, Greenland, and some European countries. The sport involves the timed competition of teams of  sled dogs that pull a sled with the musher standing on the runners.

A sled dog race was a demonstration sport at the 1932 Winter Olympics in Lake Placid, New York, and again in Oslo, and again in the 1994 Winter Games in Lillehammer. However, it is not currently an official event in the Olympics.

https://www.teacherspayteachers.com/Product/Holiday-Informational-Text-Summary-Song-Lyrics-of-the-Grinch-Christmas-Story-6225468


4. Delve Into Winter Poetry & Literature: Winter poetry and storytelling can be just as cozy, warm, and soothing as snuggling up indoors by the fireplace. Of course, it can convey much more. Have students each find a winter poem (or excerpt from literature) to analyze, and perhaps share with the class. Analysis can be as simple as identifying 1) the poet speaker 2) the setting 3) the feeling tone 4) figurative language. Here are some ideas:

  • “…It snowed and snowed, the whole world over,
    Snow swept the world from end to end.
    A candle burned on the table;
    A candle burned…” – from Doctor Zhivago by Boris Pasternak

  • “When all aloud the wind doth blow,
    And coughing drowns the parson’s saw,
    And birds sit brooding in the snow,
    And Marian’s nose looks red and raw,
    When roasted crabs hiss in the bowl.” – from Love’s Labour Lost by William Shakespeare

  • “Winter lies too long in country towns; hangs on until it is stale and shabby, old and sullen.” – from My Antonia by Willa Cather

  • “Whose woods these are I think I know.
    His house is in the village though;
    He will not see me stopping here
    To watch his woods fill up with snow.” – from “Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening” by Robert Frost

  • “In the bleak midwinter
    Frosty wind made moan,
    Earth stood hard as iron,
    Water like a stone;
    Snow had fallen, snow on snow,
    Snow on snow,
    In the bleak midwinter,
    Long ago.” – from “A Christmas Carol” by Christina Rosetti

  • “In winter I get up at night
    And dress by yellow candlelight.” – from “Bed in Summer” by Robert Louis Stevenson

  • “There’s a certain Slant of light,
    Winter Afternoons,
    That oppresses, like the Heft
    Of Cathedral Tunes.” – from “No. 258” by Emily Dickinson

  • “Announced by all the trumpets of the sky,
    Arrives the snow.” – from “The Snowstorm” by Ralph Waldo Emerson
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5. Read About the Winter Games: Have students read an interesting FREE 1-page informational text passage (with writing extensions) that explains when the Winter Games debuted, when they are held and why, how host cities are chosen, which sports compete, and the ideals of this international sporting event.

Just in time for the February 2022 games.

All About the Winter Games Reading and Writing Freebie

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

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6. Describe Your Favorite Winter Memory of All Time: Have your students think back to a special wintertime memory that will probably stay in their heart forever. You can have students write a simple description full of concrete details, or if you really want to force the concrete imagery out of them, have them write a 5-senses poem:  “I saw…I heard…I smelled…I tasted…I touched…I felt…”

winter landscape scene

7. Funny Holiday Rhymes (In Poetry and Song): Check out my other blog post “3 Funny Christmas Holiday Rhymes in ELA” to have students read, listen to, and/or watch three humorous rhymes and do associated ELA tasks. One of those FREE tasks is my FREE 1-page printable “Summary & Song Lyrics of the Grinch Christmas Story.” 

blog post 3 funny holiday rhymes, songs, and poem lyrics to use in ELA winter
free text about how the grinch stole christmas story and lyrics

8. Consonance and Assonance Fun: One way to spice up a creative story, dialogue, humor, or a speech is to add consonance (the repetition of a consonant sound in successive words) and/or assonance (the repetition of a vowel sound in successive words.) For example:

  • Sassy snowmen scared Santa on his sleigh.
  • Rudolph the Red Nosed Reindeer really reads a lot.
  • Snow scatters scantly over the fields.
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9. Write Your Version of ‘Twas the Night Before Christmas: Have students read the classic story ‘Twas the Night Before Christmas and then have them write their own shorter version, borrowing from some of the lines in the story. Students can change “Christmas” to something else if desired.

10. Why There are Seasons (FREE DOWNLOAD): Usually when people notice the days are getting so short, they start thinking about why there are seasons anyway. That’s why I made this literacy in science informational text and ELA activities so that students can read and write all about it. Check it out! It’s free!

why there are seasons literacy in science ela activities

Do you or someone you know teach math? Are you looking for math that’s relevant to real life? If so, check these out:

cover winter holidays math word problems
winter sports math word problems

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
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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 “Seasonal Resources” Board so that you can come back to this post again?

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Fall in ELA: 20 Ideas for Reading & Writing in Autumn

Fall in ELA: 20 Ideas for Reading & Writing in Autumn

Fall in ELA: 20 Ideas for Reading & Writing in Autumn

Once your students return to school in the fall, it’s time to grab their attention and get them excited about reading and writing again! Fall in ELA is perfect for reading and writing because there is just so much to read and write about – the changing weather, fall colors, pumpkins & other harvest, treats, scary stories, spooky creatures, cautionary tales, corn mazes, Halloween, Thanksgiving, and more! I came up with 20 great ideas for you which can be used in grades 4-12. I have noted which ones are geared more toward younger or older students, when applicable.

10 back to school writing ideas blog main

1) Fall Haiku: According to poets.org, “A traditional Japanese haiku is a three-line poem with seventeen syllables, written in a 5/7/5 syllable count. Often focusing on images from nature, haiku emphasizes simplicity, intensity, and directness of expression.” Haiku poetry is PERFECT for the fall. First, have a brainstorming session with your students, making a list of possible topics together, to get them thinking what they’ll focus on (the haiku should focus intensely on one thing, usually having to do with nature). Then, give them some quick instructions (and perhaps samples) of how to write them: they consist of 3 lines with 5 syllables in the first line, 7 syllables in the second line, and 5 syllables in the third line, using concrete imagery (vivid sensory descriptions that make readers get clear images in their heads).  You may even want to have students make artistic posters out of their poems to display, like the ones shown here:

Nova fall haiku poem #1
Nova high school student fall haiku #2
molly high school student fall haiku #1
molly high school student fall haiku #2
autumn 9th grader fall haiku #1
autumn 9th grader fall haiku #2

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
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2. Fall Similes and/or Metaphors: Have students write symbolically about the fall. Similes use “like or as.” Metaphors simply say that something is something else that it is not. In upper elementary, it’s easier for kids to write similes. In high school, students should be challenged to write metaphors. First, brainstorm with students everything they can think of that has to do with the fall season. Then, have them write 5 similes and/or metaphors. For example, “The air changed as if someone turned on the air conditioning,” “The pumpkin is like an orange balloon,” “The candy is as sour as 100 lemons,” “The haunted house is my nightmare,” etc.

pumpkin jack o'lantern gif for blog post

3. For Grades 4-6: It Came From Planet Simile: 

Have students draw this creature, the creature from planet Simile.

planet simile drawing activity

4. For Grades 7-12: Frightening Flash Fiction: One of the most famous flash fiction stories is by Ernest Hemingway.

For sale: baby shoes, never worn.

Only six words, it still manages to tell a scary story. If one line isn’t enough, you can double or triple it, though. These are so short that you can have students read them aloud!

turkey clip art by myscrapnook
Image by myscrapnook.com

5. Pumpkins Literacy Activities (FREE DOWNLOAD): Grab their attention with INTERESTING & FREE informational texts about pumpkins, historical literacy passages, vocabulary connections, a poem, fascinating facts incorporated into critical thinking activities, writing explanatory text about how to make a jack-o-lantern, writing a short persuasive text about why and how people can eat more pumpkin in their diets, and more challenging yet fun ELA activities. Perfect for the fall season in ELA, including Halloween and Thanksgiving.

pumpkins literacy reading and writing activities for ela

6. Write a How-to Explanatory/Informative Text: Have your students write a short “how-to” informative, explanatory essay to relate an organized sequence of events, beginning with a short introduction, then the steps (using transition words in between), and a short conclusion. Here are some ideas: make a specific costume, carve a pumpkin, host a Thanksgiving, cook a turkey, make candy apples, bob for apples, decorate for Halloween, make a treat, trick-or-treat, etc.

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7. Extreme Candy Summaries: Have your students read about how scientists make three types of “extreme candy” in this article. Have your students choose one process to summarize (or two, or three). Have them write one paragraph in their own words, explaining how scientists make that extreme candy.

Halloween candy
Image by Fun Classroom Creations

8. Character Eulogy: Tell students to write a eulogy for a fictional character. A eulogy is a speech praising someone who recently passed away. This activity is strange, but it is character analysis, so why not? Have students follow these steps: 1) Choose a character (protagonist or antagonist) 2) Write opening remarks such as “I am the character’s brother…or I was his sworn enemy” 3) Spotlight character traits…”He was brave and daring,” “She was timid yet kind…” Here is a humongous list of character traits to peruse. 4) Give words of comfort and a final farewell.

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9. Thanksgiving Gratitude Theme Reading & Writing Activities (FREE DOWNLOAD): Grab their attention and get them feeling grateful with this Free Thanksgiving Gratitude Theme Reading, Writing, and Language! A great selection of Aesop’s Fables with themes (morals) related to being grateful and giving thanks. Students explore character, motivation, theme, and new vocabulary. A writing warm-up is included with a selection of writing topics in which students must self-reflect on gratefulness. A language portion requires students to make corrections to sentences. Plus analogies to practice new vocabulary! It’s Thanksgiving in ELA! Comes with the fables and an answer key.

thanksgiving gratitude ela activities

10. Analyze Fall Poetry: Have students select a Fall Poem to analyze. Analysis can be as simple as identifying 1) the mood or feeling tone 2) the poet speaker (whether that’s a pumpkin, a mysterious “I” narrator, the author, etc.) 3) theme 4) setting, etc. For upper elementary students, I recommend having them select one of these Harvest/Pumpkins Poems & Songs. For older students/high schoolers, I recommend having them select from one of these Fall poems (such as “Fall, leaves, Fall” by Emily Bronte).

fall leaves horizontal branch 1
Image by digiwebstudio.com

11. Add a Scary Stanza to a Classic Poem: Have students select a scary classic Halloween poem, such as:

Then, have them add an additional stanza that would fit into the poem using the same voice, rhyme scheme, meter, language, imagery, etc. as if it were part of the poem. “The Raven” is an especially good choice.

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12. Explain How to Make a Corn Maze: Have students write an explanatory, informative text that explains how the Treinan family makes their corn mazes. Have students read all about how the Treinan Farm family makes their corn mazes in three phases. Have them also watch this great short video that explains it. Then, have students write three paragraphs to explain each phase of the corn maze-making process in their own words.

corn fields maze fall blog post image

13. Research & Present Why/How Leaves Change Color in the Fall: Have students research about how and why leaves change colors in the fall, such as at this website using an article from weather.com. Then, have them make a graphic organizer listing causes and effects. Here are three causes they can use: 1) temperature changes and the amount of daylight changes 2) chemical changes occur 3) the mixing of varying amounts of the chlorophyll residue and other pigments. Using the article, students can list causes and effects.

14. Make a Potion Recipe: For upper elementary students, you can have them write a recipe card with fake ingredients such as “1/4 cup kindness” or “1 cup dog fur”…and choose what the potion is meant for, such as “Kindness Potion” to make people nicer. For older kids, perhaps have them write a paragraph about an imaginary potion, what it would be used for, and how it would be made, plus any cautions, etc.

Reading Informational Text Passages Workbooks Promotional Page

15. Write a Halloween Story: For upper elementary students, I recommend having them select one of these story prompts from “13 Halloween Writing Ideas.” For older students such as high schoolers, you can have them write a “Gorey Story.” Edward Gorey is a writer/illustrator known for his strange, gloomy art. Have students select an image and then write a story based on it. Here is an example of Gorey image “The Gashlycrumb Tinies” :

Edward Gorey Image "The Gashlycrumb Tinies"

© The Edward Gorey Charitable Trust

16. Story Weaving: This is all about spooky campfire-story-style group story telling. It can be done orally by having each student add one line to the story aloud. Or, it can be done in a written format called “story pass writing” in which you have groups of students (5 or 6, such as a row of students) create stories. Tell everyone to write a beginning (such as “Once upon a time on Halloween night…), give them 2-3 minutes, then tell them to pass it to the next person. The next person writes the next part of the story. And, so on. You use a timer to give them about 2 minutes per round. Just before the final round, remind students to write an ending that wraps everything up. Students can read the stories aloud for fun.

turkey clip art #2 by myscrapnook
Image by myscrapnook.com

17. Why There are Seasons (FREE DOWNLOAD): Usually when people are getting sick of the summer heat and longing for the air to cool off, they start thinking about why there are seasons anyway. That’s why I made this literacy in science informational text and ELA activities so that students can read and write all about it. Check it out! It’s free!

why there are seasons literacy in science ela activities

18. Meet My Creepy Friend: Students can create and introduce a “creepy friend” or a “creepy monster” or a “creepy pet critter,” etc. To describe the creepy friend, monster, pet, etc., students find creepy character traits to incorporate into their descriptions. They can find some on my humongous list of character trait words, and/or find creepier ones elsewhere. They can also read this article that explains “How to Write About a Creepy Character Realistically.” Have students describe their creepy friends, perhaps add an illustration, and then “introduce” them to the class.

witch clip art
Image by myscrapnook.com

19. Research and Read Cautionary Tales From the Days of Yore: In just about every culture throughout history, there are cautionary tales that have been passed down from one generation to the next. They are terrifying! A cautionary tale is folklore that warns of danger. There are three essential parts: 1) A taboo or prohibition is stated: some act, location, or thing. 2) A tale is told in which someone disregarded the warning and performed the forbidden act, went to the forbidden place, used the forbidden thing, etc. 3) Finally, the violator experiences an unpleasant fate, frequently related in expansive, grisly detail. You could have students, depending on their age of course, research these. A good place to start is at this website. You could also have students write cautionary tales, again depending on their age and sensitivity levels.

Image by digiwebstudio.com

20. Logic Puzzles: So far, I have made a FREE Halloween logic puzzle asking “Which costume did each friend wear to the Halloween party? Students must use critical thinking deductions to discover the one and only solution. It actually turned out to be more challenging than I thought it would be, so that being said, I am thinking it’s best for middle schoolers, and certainly high schoolers (who need brain breaks too!). Sometime soon, I plan on making a Thanksgiving logic puzzle too, so pin this page and check back soon.

Halloween Logic Puzzle

Do you or someone you know teach math? Are you looking for math that’s relevant to real life? If so, check these out:

Halloween math word problems
cover thanksgiving word problems1
cover Thanksgivimng word problems 2

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
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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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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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15 End-of-the-School-Year ELA Activities

15 End-of-the-School-Year ELA Activities

15 End-of-the-School-Year ELA Activities

With summer approaching, this can be a challenging time to keep students engaged, or merely paying attention at all! What with tests behind them, feeling worn out by another crazy year, and counting down the days until summer, students tend to pay a little less attention, while teachers tend to scramble to keep students engaged. So, here are some fun, terrific ideas for the final countdown to ease the struggle. 

Please let me know in the comments or link up if you have some great ideas too. (I FINALLY got Instagram @lovingela — I’d love to connect there too.)

blog post 15 end of school year in english language arts

 

 

Here are some ideas for the end of the school year in ELA:

1) Story Pass Writing: This is a fun way to have students collaboratively create a story that will surely have plot twists. For in-person learning, you can do this in groups or rows of about 5 students or so. (See below for distance learning.)

When you say “start,” every student starts writing a story. This is a good time to introduce the setting and main character. If they’re stuck, tell them to write “Once upon a time…” and quickly fill in the rest. The teacher keeps track of time. Decide how long the intervals are going to be — 3 minutes or so.

When time’s up, you say “Pass” and they pass the story on to the next person. This means they also receive one! They quickly read what the last person wrote, and then continue writing the story in any way that makes sense.

Repeat the process 5-10 times. As it gets closer to the end, about two passes before the end, tell them to start wrapping up the story, bringing it to a conclusion. When it gets to the last person, tell them to write the ending. Then, have them read them over, and decide on a few funny ones to read aloud.

In a distance learning setting, you could organize this by having three students send story pieces to each other. During the first round, students write the beginning. During the second round students write the middle. During the third round, students write the ending. Students can enlist family and friends to help if necessary!

2) Read Ray Bradbury’s Short Story “All Summer in a Day”: It’s not really about summer so much as how students treat each other, and what it feels like to be bullied…but ON ANOTHER PLANET. The story is well written (and nice & short) with beautifully executed figurative language and  character development. Plus, an added bonus is that the bullies in the story end up feeling bad in the end. 

Additionally, there is a 30-minute video available free on YouTube. If you have them compare the two versions, that aligns to the RI.7 Reading Standard which requires students to integrate and evaluate content produced in multiple media formats. Check out my FREE lesson (in PDF & Digital) which has students examine figurative language and theme.

all summer in a day ela literature lesson

 

3) Year-in-Review Skits: As a class, brainstorm “the school year in review,” as in: memorable lessons, books, scenes from a popular story, funny moments, etc. Then, have students pair up or get in small groups. Each pair or group will write a skit to reenact one of these moments with their unique creative twist. You should quickly review the content of the skits before allowing them to perform. You may have some tips, or may need to edit them a bit.

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4) Evaluate the school year: I used to make a survey for students at the end of every year, asking them about their favorite and least favorite lessons, books, units, etc. I would also throw in some other questions, depending on what type of feedback I was looking for. This can be a valuable tool to find out what students really think. The only caveat is that kids can be brutally honest, so do yourself a favor and throw in something like this at the end, “Write something that will make your teacher smile” or “What do you appreciate most about your teacher?” It sounds like obvious fishing for compliments, which it is, but I’m telling you, you get the most wonderful comments, kind notes, and funny jokes during this, and you may not want to ever throw these papers away (I still have a lot of these from a LONG time ago!).

5) Reflect on “What I Learned” in Art & Writing an Essay: I had an a-ha moment when I thought of this lesson. There is a blank head that I normally have students use to portray what is going on in the mind of a character, as you can see in a related blog post. But, then I thought students’ heads by this time of year should be FULL of all the things they learned. And this year, I know they learned a lot both at school AND at home. So, have them think about what they learned, and fill in the head with images and words to symbolize them. AND OMG, YOU CAN QUICKLY GET THEM TO WRITE A 2-4 PARAGRAPH INFORMATIVE ESSAY THEY WILL ACTUALLY WANT TO WRITE – USING THIS FREEBIE! Get your printable freebie that comes with an interactive Google Slides version for easy in-person and digital, remote learning.

 

What I Learned This School Year Writing an Informative Essay and Doing Symbolic Art Activity ELA FREEBIE
Here is a sample:

6) Music is literature too!: If you teach ELA, then you can’t help but hear all those literary devices embedded in the music you listen to. Your students hear it too! Of course, we’ve heard rhyme schemes, like poems have, a million times. This is the perfect time of year to relax a little and let kids find (appropriate) song lyrics and then analyze them for: rhyme scheme, metaphors, hyperbole, parallelism, similes, syllabication, onomatopoeia, alliteration, foreshadowing, and more literary elements.

Ok, I have an example, but like a hypocrite, it is not appropriate to share in class. But, I want to share with you how poetic it is. It’s by Kenny Chesney called “Don’t Happen Twice.” Here’s a lyric: “One bottle of wine, two Dixie cups, 3 a.m. I fell in love, for the first time in my life. Things like that just don’t happen twice.” I just got the chills writing that! (Did you see how he used the homophone for so cleverly? Now that’s attractive…ha ha)

You can have students print out song lyrics, highlight or notate literary devices or poetic elements, and then bring them to you to approve before you allow them to be shared aloud.

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7) Thank You Notes: Students have a lot of people to thank for helping them get through the school year, and life. Therefore, devote time to expressing gratitude in writing. They say that being grateful makes you feel happier. So true! There’s plenty of people to thank: parent, friend, …….YOU.

8) Read a 1-page Informational Text All About Summer: This is a highly interesting, one page FREE READING & WRITING PRINTABLE (& DIGITAL) that gives all sorts of information about summer such as school calendars around the world, why summer days are longer, weather, etc. Plus writing prompts and ideas!

Summer on the Brain Reading Passage and Writing Connections Task free

9) Shower With Compliments: I got this idea from “The Cult of Pedagogy” (TPT Star). She says students take turns of about 10 minutes each being in the “hot seat” while their classmates write compliments on the board behind them. She says you have to see it to appreciate its full impact. What a great idea. I’m thinking the teacher needs a turn too. 

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10) Host a Poetry Slam: Have them read their own poems or recite poems of their choice. See #11 for a simple idea, plus there is haiku, acrostic, etc.

11) Write a 5-Senses Poem: The topic can be a favorite summer memory, a trip they went on, a place they want to go, anything related to summer really. The idea is to use concrete language. It has five lines. See my example below. Grab the  FREEBIE PRINTABLE (& DIGITAL)!

5 senses poem about trip to new york city

12) Have students explain why summer days are so much longer: As temperatures rise, everyone starts wondering why there are seasons anyway. They may be wondering what the summer solstice (longest day of the year in June) is all about too. Grab this fun literacy in science READING, WRITING, AND ELA TASKS SCIENCE FUSION FREEBIE that gets students to discover for themselves what causes seasons! Aligns to many standards AND kids love this one so much!

why there are seasons free informational text and ela science tasks

13) Write a Letter to Your Future Self: I have only done this with them writing actual letters by hand and bringing in self-addressed stamped envelopes, but I’m pretty sure email would work, as long as you stayed organized by keeping a separate folder of the emails and labeling with the year to send them the emails they wrote. You have them write a letter to their future selves three years from now. It can be about current events, describing self, goals, predictions, positive affirmations, etc. You collect the letters, keep them for three years, and then send them. They forget they wrote them and it is fun to receive them, albeit a little odd. 

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14) Read and Write About Something Cool – Ice Cream: Check out my FREE high-interest informational text passage with ELA-Science fusion tasks about how ice cream is made. As part of the reading, it even comes with instructions for how to make ice cream. It is really interesting, about a topic they love, and aligns to standards RST.6-8.6 and 7, and more. Plus, have them do the free, fun ice cream logic puzzle that gives their brain a little break while still doing some critical thinking!

cover ice cream science free lesson
ice cream logic puzzle ela bellringer activity grades 4-9

15) Read some or all of Summer of the Monkeys: Summer of the Monkeys is a novel for adolescents by Wilson Rawls, a book I really like and kids like too. It is still under copyright unfortunately. But maybe you can find some copies. OR CHECK OUT THE FREE EXCERPT OF CHAPTER ONE HERE! Have students analyze characterization of the main character, a 14-year-old boy, using this FREE GRAPHIC ORGANIZER FOR ANALYZING CHARACTER SHOWN FILLED OUT IN THIS BLOG POST, a great ELA activity.

 

I HOPE YOU AND YOUR STUDENTS ENJOY THE REST OF THE SCHOOL YEAR IN ELA!

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.
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
be ready to help passage and ela practice test free

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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

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St. Patrick’s Day in ELA – Ideas for Reading & Writing in March

St. Patrick’s Day in ELA – Ideas for Reading & Writing in March

St. Patrick’s Day in ELA – Ideas for Reading & Writing in March

It’s your lucky day in ELA! That’s because St. Patrick’s Day is one more opportunity to incorporate an engaging, fun, multicultural topic into English language arts. It’s another chance to set a good feeling tone while engaging students’ emotions — whether by writing silly limericks, by empathizing with Irish struggles in serious verse, or by philosophically pondering the concept of luck. So, here are some ideas for you, which you can use all March long. Please let me know in the comments or link up if you have some great ideas too. (I FINALLY got Instagram @lovingela — I’d love to connect there too.)

blog post st. patrick's day in english language arts

Here are some ideas for St. Patrick’s Day (and all of March) in ELA:

1) Quick-Write About Luck: According to the Roman philosopher Seneca, “Luck is what happens when preparation meets opportunity.” In other words, he postulates, we aren’t born “lucky” or “unlucky”; rather, we make our own luck. I’m pretty sure Jack on Titanic said something along those lines too (lol).

Ask students to write about this topic that has been debated for eons. Is “luck” more about accidentally being in the right place at the right time, or is it more about intentionally getting yourself to the “right place”? This could be a quick-write topic. Ask students to give at least one example to support a point they make about luck. If they have trouble thinking of one, have them consider a musician or recording artist’s career path and how either luck, or preparation, or both, may have led to their success.

I like this quick lifehacker article on how to prepare yourself for opportunities (get lucky). Students might like it too.

2) Write a Limerick: There once was a lady named Katie, She was an amazing lady, But her moods were unreal, We were like What is her deal?, Then she finally chilled out at age eighty….Anyway, limericks are so fun. They were quite likely invented in Limerick, Ireland. (Read this article to find out.) And even esteemed writers such as Rudyard Kipling have written them. They’re great for getting reluctant writers to not only get words down on paper, but to probably laugh in the process! When you have students share them, students get to know each other in a fun way. Check out my free one-page printable or Google Slides version that guides students step-by-step in writing a limerick.

free write a limerick activity

3) Delve Into Irish Literature: For young kids, I would check out this list of best Irish children’s books, or I would see what fun stories about Irish culture or St. Patrick’s Day they have in the library. For older students, I would check out some of these authors, but beware that the subject matter is often intense when it’s about struggling (a common theme): Frank McCourt (Angela’s Ashes is an amazing memoir but very sad!), Samuel Beckett (Waiting for Godot), James Joyce (Ulysses), Jonathan Swift (Gulliver’s Travels), Oscar Wilde (The Picture of Dorian Gray), or a newer verse novel called Nóinín.

NEW complete writing modules that prepare students for writing assessment tests in which they must cite from sources  that are provided – GRAB YOURS TODAY!

Writing Module #1 The Recycling Problem

4) Speaking of Irish Literature – A Poem for St. Patrick’s Day: I found this great literary, historical poem that was delivered to an audience in San Francisco on March 17, 1870, by an Irish immigrant passionate about Ireland’s history, struggles, and changes. Here is the poem FREE with 10 literary analysis questions in easy-print or digital interactive Google Slides version for easy distance learning. Great for grades 5 all the way through high school.

free lesson Irish literary poem for St. Patrick's Day

5) Learn All About U2 (The best Irish band ever in my biased opinion): Okay, so you’re probably already getting the feeling this activity has a lot to do with ME and MY desires, but I personally think it’s a great idea for ELA. I have loved U2 my whole life, including their no-apologies songs about human rights struggles (which were more serious than most of the quirky 80s stuff which I also loved), and they are very passionate about their homeland of Ireland. So, I was thinking, have students read about the band, their biographies, their story, their verses, the literary devices they use in their poetic songs, etc…they are humanitarians and have been on the world stage for decades, so why not? (OMG they’re so awesome.)

U2 2015
Image Credit: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:U2_2015.jpg (R. L. 68, CC BY-SA 4.0 via Wikimedia Commons)

I HOPE YOU AND YOUR STUDENTS HAVE A GREAT ST. PATRICK’S DAY – ALL MARCH LONG – IN ELA!

 

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!

middle school informational text passages and ela tasks volume 2

And now, workbooks for UPPER ELEMENTARY are here!

cover workbook 4th grade informational texts and tasks
5th grade informational texts and ELA practice tests workbook

And now ones for HIGH SCHOOL TOO! YAY!

9th grade informational text passages and ELA tasks workbook
10th grade informational text passages and tasks
11th grade english language arts informational texts and ela tasks workbook
12th grade high interest informational text passages and ela tasks workbook cover

Would you like to try a FREE one first?

free reading passage and task "yay or nay on daylight saving time?"
free reading passage and task "10 reasons to live off the grid"
MLK Letter From Birmingham Jail text and task product cover

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.
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
be ready to help passage and ela practice test free

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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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How about save this pin to your “current seasonal resources” or “diversity in ELA” or “Irish Literature” Pinterest boards so you can read it again later?

st patricks day in ELA blog post