Here are five approaches for teaching Shakespearean sonnets in secondary ELA! I will use Shakespeare’s “Sonnet 18,” one of his most famous sonnets, to illustrate the five approaches.
Engaging Secondary Students with Crime Stories
There is a reason why crime stories dominate tv and film. People love them! They are equal parts mysterious, suspenseful, horrifying, gruesome, and terrifying. These are the exact traits that draw us in as viewers, and these are the exact same reasons why crime stories are an excellent way to engage secondary students.
TEN Children's Books for Secondary ELA
FOUR Ways to Get Your Students Hooked on Reading
5 Innovative Activities & Projects for Any Novel Unit
Five ESSENTIAL Questions to Guide Textual Analysis
How to get Started with Mentor Sentences
Mentor sentences are an excellent tool to use in the secondary ELA classroom to model essential skills from grammar to literary devices. They reinforce quality writing skills from published in authors in a positive way rather than the traditional sentence correction method that modeled negative traits.
8 Ways to Help Students Break Through Writer’s Block
Tone Tunes: Using Music to Teach Tone in Poetry
The Art of the One-Pager
Satire Through Subtlety-- Using the Comics of Savage Chickens to Teach Satire in High School English
Jack the Ripper + "Mack the Knife": A Nonfiction Lesson on Deciphering Tone and Bias Through Diction
Murder stories are highly engaging topics for secondary students… and for all students alike. But bringing the crime story of Jack the Ripper into secondary ELA is a sure-fire way to keep students engaged and motivated. Crime stories even motivate at-risk students through engaging content. Jack the Ripper is one of those iconic mystery stories that captures the imagination. Crime stories provide an excellent means to engage the writing process.
Famous Love Letters: A Unique Approach to Rhetorical Analysis and Creative Writing for Valentine's Day in Secondary ELA
The Five Most Important Argumentative Essay Topics of 2018
6 Christmas Commercials to Analyze for Literary Elements and Techniques this Holiday Season
Three Famous Christmas Speeches to Inspire Writing
Thanksgiving & Abraham Lincoln: A Rhetorical Analysis Activity
The Logline: A Screenwriting Tool that Helps Students with Textual Analysis in both Fiction and Nonfiction
In screenwriting (writing for movies and TV), the logline is key to brainstorming story ideas and also selling them or "pitching" them to buyers. Crafting loglines can help the writer to flesh out new plot ideas before writing the entire script. It's much easier to revise the logline rather than an entire hundred page script!