5 Cool Facts About Ice Cream

5 Cool Facts About Ice Cream

5 Cool Facts About Ice Cream

Here are 5 Cool Facts About Ice Cream:
1. Long before modern refrigeration and freezers, around 200 BC, the Chinese enjoyed a frozen mixture of milk and rice sweetened with syrup. It was made frozen by pouring snow mixed with an ancient salt over the ingredients. Roman Emperors have been known to have snow retrieved from mountaintops in order to create the finest chilled delicacies. The Ancient Greeks, around the year 400 AD, ate snow mixed with honey and fruit in Athens.
2. Air is a key ingredient in ice cream (and is what makes it a foam). Although it is not listed in the ingredients, air makes up approximately a third to one half of the total volume of ice cream. When the ingredients in ice cream are whipped together, air bubbles get beaten into the mixture. Often in an ice cream maker, a blade will continuously move throughout the mixture to aerate it, or move air through it. You must whip together and freeze the ingredients all at the same time in order to create and suspend the most important ingredient  – air bubbles! Air is what gives ice cream its light. smooth texture. It’s also what escapes as ice cream melts, which is why ice cream shrinks down and is never quite the same after you refreeze it. Ice cream is a foam — a light mass of fine bubbles formed in liquid.
3. Ice cream is an emulsion.  Under normal circumstances, if you simply mixed the ingredients in ice cream together, they would quickly separate apart. The fat globules from the milk would rather stick together than be spread out among ice crystals, air bubbles, sweeteners, and flavorings. To truly make it an emulsion, which is a mixture of liquids in which one liquid is scattered throughout the other but is not dissolved, you can whip up the ingredients to really spread them out and then trap them timelessly by freezing them so they won’t “escape.”
blog picture ice cream cone graphic organizer
4. One key to creating this foamy emulsion – whether in an ice cream maker or in a plastic baggie – is to freeze it quickly. While the ingredients are being whipped together, the liquids will only turn into ice crystals if they are cooled with something that is even colder than ice. That is why rock salt is added to the ice that surrounds the barrel in ice cream machines or in the baggie of ice you can use to make ice cream yourself at home. The ice cream must be frozen quickly so that the liquid ingredients will turn into ice crystals that will “trap” all the other ingredients, including all those air bubbles, in place.
5. The discovery of the freezing-point depression was a real game-changer in the history of ice cream making. Adding salt to ice artificially lowers the freezing point of water. This is called freezing-point depression. The discovery of this principle was a real game-changer in the history of ice cream making. Before this, people had to make do with mixing ingredients with snow and ice to make a chilled delicacy. But once people discovered how to lower the freezing point of liquids (by adding rock salt to ice), they could not only chill their mixture – they could freeze it. And that is how we got ice cream!

But wait, there’s more!

In my FUN-YET-EDUCATIONAL (AND CURRENTLY FREE) reading informational text and tasks lesson gets students to meet several standards for Literacy in Science & Technical Subjects and Writing, plus they have fun learning all about the science behind ice cream and the procedure for making their own ice cream.

In addition to summarizing central ideas, writing to explain the scientific procedure of how ice cream is made, writing a narrative about an ice cream incident, learning scientific vocabulary, citing evidence, getting the recipe for homemade ice cream in a baggie, and even doing a fun Mad Lib activity about ice cream, students fill out a graphic organizer like this in the free lesson:

You might also like these FREE items in the series. They all align to CCRA.R.7 and RST.6-8.7, which requires students to integrate quantitative or technical information presented in diverse media and formats, including visually (such as simulations, diagrams, videos, infographics) and quantitatively (such as tables, graphs, models, diagrams).

And, check out this COOL and FREE logic puzzle! It takes about 15 minutes of critical thinking, so it would be a good bellringer or free-time activity in any subject. For grades 4-9 more or less.

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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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
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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 “Literacy in Science” or “Creative ELA” Board so that you can come back to this post again?

blog header 5 cool facts about ice cream

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
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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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10 Great Ways for Students to Research and Present Information

10 Great Ways for Students to Research and Present Information

10 Great Ways for Students to Research and Present Information

This year, when you are looking for ideas that go beyond the boring book report or essay, but you still want students to read informational text and present what they learned, try one of these ten ideas. Trust me, they will be happy with the creative approaches and you’ll be happy when it’s time for them to present them to you and the class, and when it comes time for you to grade them all.

1. A Biography Block (or Block for Any Info)

When I had 90 students research and present biographies, the last thing my students and I wanted to do was listen to lengthy presentations or read lengthy reports. But, by having them make these biography blocks, it resulted in shorter, to-the-point presentations as well as awesome visual displays that could be left all around the room for students to look at. In my free lesson, you will get the template and directions for an easy no-prep lesson. Now, you can also use the block to have students present any other kind of information. When placed around the classroom, students pick them up to admire them and they end up learning something at the same time! Win-win. (& making it = storing memories). Get my FREE lesson that comes with directions and a block template. 

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2. Brochures for book reports, biographies, destinations, and lots of other things. 

There are a lot of people offering free as well as paid brochure templates with great ideas for how to use them. A couple that I liked were a free book report brochure by TPT seller Student Savvy , and a free travel brochure by Literacy in Focus below. They show you how to turn book reports or other English assignments into brochure form instead, which is so much more fun & readable!

editable novel brochure template
travel brochure template for book report or presentation of information

3. Pyramids 

Similar to the blocks in #1, the pyramid is a visual display that other students can pick up, admire, and learn something quickly  in the process. (Plus, the act of making it gets the info in the student’s brain.) These are a couple examples that go with free WebQuests I made. The WebQuest is the research part and the pyramid is one part of the presenting part. The pyramid template comes FREE with the lesson.

1) Researching a Dog Breed’s Character Traits and History FREE WebQuest: In this free lesson, students are guided step-by-step (so no prep) tor research dog breeds and input information into a premade Google sheet. Then, they can choose one breed of their choice to present.

2) Researching “Why Do We Need Vitamins and Minerals Anyway?” FREE WebQuest: Students are always hearing about getting proper nutrition but most have no clue even what vitamins and minerals do. This helps them find out. Then, they can each select a different nutrient and present it on a pyramid. That way there are a variety of pyramids around the room teaching everyone about different nutrients.

4. Wax Museum: They do this at my kids’ school every year and it is a huge hit that draws crowds. Students do a biography report with a visual display, then on presentation day, they stand there as if they are wax figures. One option is for people to pay a penny, or quarter, or any amount (as a fundraiser) to get them to talk. They are dressed up like the people, talk like the people, talk about themselves. What a great idea. There is even an option to have it run through an entire school day and have the younger grade students rotate through. All the kids love it! Here is my daughter dressed as John McCain and her friend was Wayne Gretzky (in this modern age of defying gender stereotypes):

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5. PowerPoint Presentation or Google Slides: Am I right that we need to train our youth to give good presentations so they don’t bore the heck out of their colleagues in future jobs?! It occurred to me that a presentation would be a good way to present the information about the dog breed from example 3 above. I would have students do these slides: 1) introduce the breed with a picture and give some numbers about its height, weight, lifespan, and point out some physical characteristics, 2) Along with another picture, summarize the dog’s temperament and give around 5 character trait words that describe it, 3) Give 5 interesting facts about its history, 4) Other interesting facts. This would go quite well with my FREE Dog Traits and History WebQuest. By the way, I found over 300 character trait words on one website in the WebQuest. Wow! I think this activity would also work well to explain how something works.
 
Here is an example of page 1 of a presentation on Pitbulls that would work with the free lesson:

6. Poster (a.k.a. Infographic): Again, keep in mind that just the act of making something with your hands and writing stores the information in your mind long-term and attaches good feelings to it. So, although it might seem like a waste of time and you might wonder what the point is if it is something you are going to throw away, just remember this, as research has proven. Think back to the memories you have of school assignments. The ones you still remember (including the basic information) are the ones you made by hand! Here’s a couple that students can create after learning “The Science Behind Ice Cream” in my FREE ELA or Literacy in Science informational text and tasks:

And this one goes well with my FREE “Why There Are Seasons” informational text & tasks for ELA or Literacy in Science:

7. Interview: This could literally be done or figuratively be done…what I mean is that students could conduct a real interview with someone (in person, by email, by video, by voice recording, so many options) or they could do a fake interview with an actor (brother, mother, friend, so many options). The point is that the questions should be thoughtful and the answers should yield good information. In any case, it should be scripted beforehand (you know, like on “reality” TV lol).
8. Digital Poster (a.k.a. Infographic): In a distance learning situation or when you want students to have the digital option, a digital poster can do the trick. This allows for easy usage of photographs and diagrams that don’t have to be printed, something that is key if there are a lot of graphics. For example, this one is about a popular research topic, the Titanic (man I loved that movie lol). My daughter made it in Google Slides on an 18×12 slide. I remember having students doing this at school by hand, making black and white copies with the copy machine, but this was much more efficient.

9. Collage: Who doesn’t like collages? Nobody. Which kids don’t know how to make a collage? Hardly any. These can be done physically or digitally and are a great way to show a lot of visuals at once. For example, these look intriguing (the one about Lincoln is an Etsy item, but could be done by a student):

10. Video: If this sounds scary, have no fear. Kids are making quick videos about everything these days, so just ask them for ideas. Again, a good option for distance learning.

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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
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Grade 8 Reading Passages and Practice Tests Workbook - Informational Text Edition
Grade 9 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
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
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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 “Researching and Presenting” or “Presentations in ELA” Board so that you can come back to this post again?

blog post 10 ways to research and present information in ela

How Chameleons Change Colors: An ELA Literacy in Science Lesson

How Chameleons Change Colors: An ELA Literacy in Science Lesson

How Chameleons Change Colors: An ELA Literacy in Science Lesson

This fun lesson combines science and ELA (a.k.a. literacy in science). Students read about why and how chameleons change color. They explain why chameleons change color in their own words. They make their own paper chameleons change colors in a mini science experiment. They read more informational text about acids, bases, and chemical reactions. Finally, they explain what caused their chameleons to change color (has to do with acids, bases, & chemical reactions).

 

Follow These Easy Steps:

(optional) Read a short story to students about chameleons. I happened to have one on hand called The Chameleon Who Couldn’t Make Up His Mind. Or I found this short read aloud of a similar story The Chameleon Who Couldn’t Change Colour.

Give students an overview of the lesson (you can read the first paragraph at the top). Get them excited about the hands-on mini science experiment and then they will be more motivated to do the reading and writing that comes first.

Real quick, either you show them or have them look themselves at a cool animation of a color-changing chameleon at nationalgeographic.com. (This part only needs to last 10 seconds.)

Next, students read the article Why Do Chameleons Change Their Colors? Tell them ahead of time to keep their eyes peeled specifically for the section on WHY (not how) they change colors. (Btw that section starts with “So why would they want to change colors?”)

Either give students the paragraph writing sheet that is provided at the end of this post or have them write on their own piece of paper. They will write a paragraph to explain why chameleons change colors. This essentially involves writing a summary of the two paragraphs that start with “So why would they want to change colors?”

Next is the science experiment. Students will be dipping q-tips into three liquids and “painting” them on to a chameleon outline.

  • Decide if you want to have students share supplies at tables or if you will rotate them through a station, etc.
  • Each student needs access to a small cup of grape juice, a small cup of vinegar, and a small cup of water that has been mixed with 2 tablespoons of baking soda. Each student needs 3 cotton swabs.
  • Hand out chameleon pattern sheets (provided below) to each student. They need to set these sheets on top of a paper towel because the liquids will bleed through the paper. Also, grape juice can stain, and though it is unlikely it will get on students, you may want them to wear smocks.
  • Here is the procedure: dip the cotton swab in the grape juice (which is slightly acidic) and “paint” the chameleon. Allow the chameleon to dry for about 5 minutes. Student may need to gently wave it in the air or put it outside to ensure it dries enough.
  • Now, students can view a chemical reaction by dipping another q-tip into the baking soda mixture and then dabbing it onto the chameleon. They can make spots or stripes. These areas will turn a bluish-green. A color change indicates a chemical reaction has taken place between an acid and a base.
  • To see what happens when they add a chemical that is highly acidic, students use a different cotton swab to dip into the vinegar and then dab that on to see that it turns pink.

Finally, students will read the paragraph about chemical reactions that is below the chameleon pattern. This explains why their chameleons changed color if they read it analytically. Have students write the paragraph about what caused their chameleons to change color.

 

 

8th Grade Student Example

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7th Grade Student Example

 

 

4th Grade Student Example

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Template: Paragraph Response Sheet

 

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chameleons and chemical reactions template for experiment and reading

Template: Chameleon Outline & Informational Text

chameleons and chemical reactions template for experiment and reading

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

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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
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

How about save this pin to your “Literacy in Science” or “Science in ELA” Pinterest Board so that you can come back to this post again?

color changing chameleons science activity for ELA reading and writing pin

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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Labor Day in ELA

Labor Day in ELA

Labor Day in ELA

You're curious about Labor Day and, deep down inside, students are too. Here are a few interesting facts about Labor Day to satisfy your curiosity, and, if you are a teacher, to share with students so they can reflect on it through writing, discussion, or further reading. Plus a free lesson that includes a passage, poem, and writing!

Labor Day in ELA blog header

1) The second half of the 1800s was a dismal time for American workers. Workdays were often 12 hours a day, 7 days a week. Wages were generally low, working conditions were often unsafe, and child labor was common. This led to the labor movement in the late 19th century/early 20th century, during which time Labor Day came about.

2) The labor movement began in the late 1800s when labor unions were growing more prominent and vocal. There were many unions such as those for jewelers, carpenters, cabinet makers, printers, bricklayers, etc. Large organizations such as the American Federation of Labor joined many of the smaller unions into one large powerful group. Labor Day came about during the labor movement.

symbol for laborer

3) Ten years prior to Labor Day becoming a national holiday, the first Labor Day parade took place in New York City on September 5, 1882. Approximately 10,000 workers took it upon themselves to take the day off without pay and join in a parade that showcased all of the different unions and then ended with a massive picnic, fireworks, and dancing. Annual celebrations in September have taken place ever since. Around this same time in the late 1800s, many cities and some states recognized Labor Day as a holiday. It usually took the form of a parade and festivities. It was a day when workers could take the day off to relax with their families. But the federal government needed some convincing.

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4) President Grover Cleveland made Labor Day a federal holiday in 1894, a couple of weeks after a major strike and boycott had crippled railroad travel nationwide. Some say it was an apparent bid to appease American workers.

5) Presently, according to the United States Department of Labor, "Labor Day, the first Monday in September, is a creation of the labor movement and is dedicated to the social and economic achievements of American workers. It constitutes a yearly national tribute to the contributions workers have made to the strength, prosperity, and well-being of our country."

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But wait, there's more! Have your students read this highly informative, highly interesting 2-page informational text passage all about Labor Day with a classic literary poem celebrating American workers AND writing extensions - ALL FOR FREE! NOW IN DISTANCE LEARNING FORMAT ALSO! 

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Grab the free lesson which includes a two-page informational text passage, a classic literary poem by Walt Whitman, AND writing extensions - ALL FOR FREE!

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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.

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