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  • WI.ELA-Literacy.W.11-12.6 - Use technology, including the Internet, to produce, publish, and updat...
  • WI.ELA-Literacy.W.11-12.6 - Use technology, including the Internet, to produce, publish, and updat...
Digitally Annotating "Stopping By Woods on a Snowy Evening" by Robert Frost
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Genius.com is a crowd-sourced, living-document website in which users annotate all types of texts, including poems, novels, song lyrics, and plays. In this resource, users see annotations of "Stopping By Woods On a Snowy Evening." This resource could be used in a variety of ways: as a model for annotation, as a tool for deep analysis of Frost's poem, or as a spring board into collaborative annotation (either on this website under an educator log-in or on a collaborative Google Document).

Subject:
English Language Arts
Material Type:
Formative Assessment
Interactive
Learning Task
Provider:
genius.com
Date Added:
11/12/2015
Grade 11 ELA Module 4
Conditional Remix & Share Permitted
CC BY-NC-SA
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In this module, students read, discuss, and analyze literary texts, focusing on the authors’ choices in developing and relating textual elements such as character development, point of view, and central ideas while also considering how a text’s structure conveys meaning and creates aesthetic impact. Additionally, students learn and practice narrative writing techniques as they examine the techniques of the authors whose stories students analyze in the module.|

Find the rest of the EngageNY ELA resources at https://archive.org/details/engageny-ela-archive .

Subject:
English Language Arts
Material Type:
Module
Provider:
New York State Education Department
Provider Set:
EngageNY
Date Added:
11/13/2014
Grade 12 ELA Module 1
Conditional Remix & Share Permitted
CC BY-NC-SA
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Module 12.1 includes a shared focus on text analysis and narrative writing. Students read, discuss, and analyze two nonfiction personal narratives, focusing on how the authors use structure, style, and content to craft narratives that develop complex experiences, ideas, and descriptions of individuals. Throughout the module, students learn, practice, and apply narrative writing skills to produce a complete personal essay suitable for use in the college application process.

Find the rest of the EngageNY ELA resources at https://archive.org/details/engageny-ela-archive .

Subject:
English Language Arts
Material Type:
Module
Provider:
New York State Education Department
Provider Set:
EngageNY
Date Added:
10/22/2014
Marketing Presentation
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CC BY-NC-SA
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This lesson is based on observations of the marketing department at Reinhart Food Service. As a unit for Sports Literature class, students will complete a simulation to market and present a product using advertising techniques, digital media, writing and speaking skills. In groups of three to four students, each team with choose a product or aspect of a sport to market. Some examples include a new sporting goods store, online vendor, food product like a protein powder, drink or granola bar, themed restaurant, sports equipment. (Or use your imagination!) The product may be a one-of-a-kind-invention or an improvement on or variation of a current product. Students will learn advertising techniques, discuss morals in advertising, and practice their desktop publishing skills.

Marketing teams will consider their target audience and how they want to reach that audience. They will create an advertising plan and present their products, print, radio and television advertisements to the class.

Subject:
Career and Technical Education
English Language Arts
Marketing, Management and Entrepreneurship
Material Type:
Lesson Plan
Author:
Marcy Siolka
Date Added:
12/24/2018
Native American Cultural Children's Stories
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CC BY-NC
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The cultural children's story project allows students to explore Native American culture through a new lens by authoring and illustrating children's stories that teach children between the ages of four and six a lesson or tale unique to Native cultural traditions. The exemplar stories are laminated, bound, and given as gifts to an area elementary school with a primarily Native student body. Student authors read the stories to the children, and the books become part of the children's classroom library. The children learn cultural traditions from a young age and see their mentors (often Native students as well) as role models and writers. The authors learn the skills to develop their stories from conception to publication to presentation.Cultural Children's Story Video Lesson

Subject:
Character Education
Early Learning
English Language Arts
Literature
Reading Literature
Speaking and Listening
World Languages
Material Type:
Lesson Plan
Author:
Martha Handrick
Date Added:
05/07/2018
Native American Veterans Tribute
Conditional Remix & Share Permitted
CC BY-NC
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The Native American Veterans Tribute is a slideshow project in Native American Literature class that corresponds with the Veterans Day Assembly at our high school. Veterans who are invited to the assembly are served breakfast and watch the slideshow in the Commons. Our class slideshow is incorporated into the presentation that day. It allows students to recognize relatives or or other Native military veterans and pay tribute to them.

Subject:
English Language Arts
Material Type:
Lesson Plan
Date Added:
05/25/2018
Running a Business Social Media Account
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CC BY-NC
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This activity guides students through analyzing the social media postings of five businesses based on a theme of the student's choice. After making their observations of good and bad business practices, students will create their own posts with pictures. 

Subject:
English Language Arts
Material Type:
Activity/Lab
Author:
Sara Stieve
Date Added:
07/07/2023
Slavery's Opponents and Defenders
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This lesson allows students to explore the different sides associated with the issue of slavery. It can be used for either cross-content lessons between English and Social Studies, as part of an argument unit in English, or as part of a larger unit in Social Studies. The learning objectives for the lesson are that students are able to identify those who are for and against slavery, understand how people used the U.S. Constitution to support their reasons for/against slavery, and the economic argument for or against slavery.

Subject:
English Language Arts
Social Studies
Material Type:
Lesson Plan
Reading
Reference Material
Provider:
National Endowment for the Humanities
Date Added:
12/28/2015
What's New in Indian Country?
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CC BY-NC
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This is a Monday assignment in my Native American Lit. Class. Students read articles on current topics in Indian Country and write about or present their findings to the class on Tuesdays to spark discussion. At the beginning of the year, I usually show a video or clip about a current hot topic to gain their interest. This year I showed the documentary AWAKE about the Dakota Access Pipeline and the protests there, which prompted debate and discussion, and ignited their interest in topics related to Native Americans.

Subject:
English Language Arts
Material Type:
Formative Assessment
Lesson
Reading
Date Added:
05/24/2018