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Writing Resources | Essay Prompts | Grammar & Vocabulary Build Your Own Bundle
By Write On with Jamie
Would you like to create a custom bundle of my writing products AND save money at the same time?
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Create your own custom writing bundle and save money. The more you bundle the more you save!
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Download the free PDF for full instructions!
Directions:
1. Choose the resources* from Write On with Jamie that you would like in your bundle.
2. Copy the link for each resource you have chosen.
3. Email me at jamie@writeonwithjamie.com and include:
4. Within 24 hours, I will create a link on TeachShare to your custom bundle and email the link and directions to you.
5. Purchase your custom bundle as you would any resource on TeachShare. You will receive all updates and additions to your resources just like you would any resource on TpT.
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* Bundles are excluded from this offer because they are already discounted.
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Terms of Use
Copyright © Write On! with Jamie. All rights reserved by author. All components of this product are to be used by the original downloader only. Copying for more than one teacher, classroom, department, school, or school system is prohibited unless additional licenses are purchased. This product may not be distributed or displayed digitally for public view. Failure to comply is a copyright infringement and a violation of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA). Clipart and elements found in this product are copyrighted and cannot be extracted and used outside of this file without permission or license. Intended for classroom and personal use ONLY.
College Application Essay Writing: How to Write a Common App Personal Statement
By Rigorous Resources for High School English
This 30-page EDITABLE curriculum has everything you'll need to help students write write phenomenal college application essays! This is the PREMIERE bundle for any English teacher, college counselor, or tutor working to help students master the Common App essay!
The materials in this bundle were designed by a Ph.D. who has taught English at top-ranked high schools and colleges for over 20 years. He has worked closely with former college admissions officers from Harvard, Brown, and NYU. This 30-page unit features all the wisdom he's gathered over a decades-long career in secondary and higher education. The unit is packed to the brim with writing tips and formatting advice that will help your students craft truly remarkable college essays!
Here are some highlights from the 30-page curriculum:
• How to Get Started (Handout #1): Tips for how to get started on one's college essay and overcome writer's block. (1 page)
• Strategies for Crafting Vivid & Lively Prose (Handout #2): While the question of what students choose to write about will be important, the question of how they write will be equally important since a writer's style can reveal a lot about their personality. This handout features advice on how students can write essays using vibrant and virtuosic prose that will enamor any admissions officer. (2 pages)
• The Opening Line: Attention-Grabbing Hooks (Handout #3): The opening paragraph is the single most important part of a college essay. How will your students capture the interest of admissions officers? How will they make a memorable first impression? This handout offers several suggestions for how to focus an opening paragraph, followed by concrete examples of opening paragraphs by top essayists like Annie Dillard, Frank McCourt, Louise Erdrich, Naomi Shihab Nye, and others. (4 pages)
• How to Format a College Essay (Handout #4): This handout offers advice for the structural organization of college essay, with tips on what should be included in each paragraph. The strategy offered here will enable students to showcase their skills at descriptive writing, narrative writing, informational writing, and reflective writing — all in less than 650 words! (1 page)
• Sample Essays: Show your students eight successful college essays written by students who were recently admitted to top-ranked colleges and universities. These were the favorite essays that wowed admissions committees at Harvard University, Johns Hopkins University, Cornell University, Hamilton College, New York University, and Tufts University. (18 pages)
• Writing Assignment: This carefully scaffolded writing assignment will help students to get practice at writing narrative essays in response to actual prompts on the Common App from 2023-2024. (1 page)
• Writing Rubric: Use this rubric to evaluate the narrative essays that your students write in response to to the prompts from the Common App of 2023-2024. (1 page)
This resource packet will come to you in two separate formats: Word doc and PDF. Because the Word doc is editable, you'll be able to customize the materials to suit your teaching style and/or the skill levels of your students — year after year! If you don't have Microsoft Word, you'll still be able to access the materials in PDF format, which is easy to navigate and quick to print!
Because I believe that teachers should be able to see what they're getting before they make a purchase, the preview for this resource provides access more than a dozen actual pages from the resource. Click on the green preview button to see exactly what you’ll get....
Thank you for choosing “Rigorous Resources”!!
Happy teaching!
Adam Jernigan, Ph.D.
P.S. Don't forget to click “follow” for email updates on new products by Rigorous Resources. New products will be 50% OFF for the first 24 hours!
Feel free to check out these other resources on writing:
How to Write an Analytical Essay
How to Write an Poem Analysis Essay (AP Lit FRQ 1)
How to Frame Quotations or Embed Evidence
Figurative Language Stations
ECR & SCR Bundle: Constructed Response Group Practice for STAAR Testing
By Blooming Through High School
Elevate your students' short response writing skills and prepare them for success on the STAAR test with these comprehensive Extended Constructed Response (ECR) and Short Constructed Response (SCR) lessons designed for middle and high school classrooms. The engaging PowerPoint lessons offer educators a valuable tool to assess and guide student learning effectively.
Key Features:
Why Choose This Lesson:
Rigorous and standards-aligned content designed to meet the needs of middle and high school students.
Engaging and interactive activities that promote student engagement and academic growth.
Easy-to-use resources and materials for seamless lesson implementation and classroom management.
Comprehensive preparation for the STAAR test, ensuring that students feel confident and capable on exam day.
Empower your students to excel in short response writing and conquer the challenges of the STAAR test with this dynamic and comprehensive lesson. Elevate your teaching and ignite a passion for learning with these innovative instructional materials. Download this lesson today and watch your students thrive!
What's Included:
Authors' Styles and Types of Sentences Writing Activities (Upper Levels)
By Beth Hammett
2 PowerPoints in one: Author's Style and Types of Sentences
Upper level, 31 page lesson on Authors' Style and Types of Sentences that focuses on how and why writers' styles changed over the years, introduces the use of author's style in students' essays, and reviews the four kinds of sentences: Basic, Compound, Complex, Compound-Complex.
It includes:
Simple explanations for author's style & types of sentences
Color coded examples
Peer workshopping activities
Extra individual/group/class activities
Tips for helping writers identify author's style & types of sentences
Why author's style & sentence variety is important in writing
Activities for understanding and practicing author's style and types of sentences
Real life connections
Excellent for homeschool, Gifted & Talented, AP/Pre-AP, flipped classes, literacy centers, and test prep. Helps student writers understand and master author's style and sentencing skills through collaborative, colorcoded, peer workshopping techniques.
AVID Peer Feedback and Essay Revision - Writing Practice in Small Groups
By KJ Inspired Resources
These 8 protocol/guideline slides are perfect for any essay in any subject! Students will follow the guidelines in order to present their essays to their peers and recieve direct and specific feedback through 3 column note taking.
Before the Lesson:
Directions:
Click HERE to see our other AVID resources. We also have several great AVID bundle options available down below!
AVID Mega Growing Bundle
AVID Teambuilding Bundle
AVID Writing Bundle
*Note this product may be used in brick an mortar classes as well as virtual systems like Outschool.
By Sign with me TOD
Writing a book report based on a book that students enjoyed reading is a fun and interesting project for your students. Students can take this time to go back and review their favorite parts of the book, favorite characters, the setting, and the plot of the story. This packet includes a brainstorming template and rough draft template for students to write a book report based on a book that they read. Students can also use the rough draft template for a final written draft or can type their final draft.
You may also be interested in the following:
Writing a Mystery Fiction Story:
https://www.TeachShare.com/Product/Mystery-Fiction-Story-Template-and-Review-11275866
Writing a Magazine Article Template:
https://www.TeachShare.com/Product/Magazine-Article-Template-9212729
Writing a Pirate Adventure Story:
Writing a Story:
https://www.TeachShare.com/Product/Writing-a-Story-Graphic-Organizer-Example-and-Template-8197750
Writing Instructions:
https://www.TeachShare.com/Product/Writing-Instructions-Example-and-Template-8362531
Writing an Opinion Paragraph:
https://www.TeachShare.com/Product/Writing-an-Opinion-Paragraph-Example-Template-8315312
Writing to Solve a Problem
https://www.TeachShare.com/Product/Writing-to-Solve-a-Problem-Example-Template-8319585
Learning and Writing my Address – Examples and Template:
https://www.TeachShare.com/Product/Learning-and-Writing-My-Address-Example-Template-8218625
Writing a Narrative Story – Example, Graphic Organizer, and Template:
Writing a Summary Template
https://www.TeachShare.com/Product/Writing-a-Summary-Template-8197872
Writing a Play – Example, Graphic Organizer, and Template:
https://www.TeachShare.com/Product/Writing-a-Play-Graphic-Organizer-Example-and-Template-8205396
Peer Edit Forms and Lesson Plan
By Language Arts Excellence
If you are looking to save time editing and grading student essays, this resource will literally be a life-changer! Over my years of teaching, I believe that I have perfected the peer editing system so as to produce the best student essays possible with minimal errors while cutting down significantly on the time the teacher must spend editing and grading them. This product includes three meticulously-designed peer editing forms with directed questions and editing prompts. Forms are fully editable so that you may change wording to remain consistent with your instruction, grade level, and adapt to any essay. The questions cover everything from basic essay components and quote integration to technical details, grammar, and formatting. Most importantly, this resource also includes a step-by-step guide on how to conduct a 45-50 minute class on peer editing day. I promise that these peer editing forms and accompanying lesson plan will become some of the most valuable resources in your teacher's tool box and that your students' writing will improve without you pulling your hair out reading rough drafts. ___________________________________________________________________________ Check out these related resources for your ELA classroom by Language Arts Excellence: ⭐ Introduction to Dystopia Powerpoint
⭐ Socratic Seminar Lesson Plan and Materials
⭐ Literary Devices Crossword Puzzle
⭐ Literature Circle Task Cards
⭐ Literature Activities {{BUNDLE!}}
⭐ Novel Playlist Assignment
⭐ Guess Your Grade - Effective Effort Form
⭐ Figurative Language in 2017 Hit Music PowerPoint & Task Card BUNDLE
⭐ Figurative Language Challenge Game
⭐ Characters in the Hot Seat! ___________________________________________________________________________ ⭐Click to Follow Language Arts Excellence⭐
Introducing Quotations: How to PROPERLY EMBED Evidence (i.e. Set Up Quotes)
By Rigorous Resources for High School English
This handout provides a thorough and clear explanation of how to properly embed quotations within a paper. The handout will introduce students to the three methods they should be using to introduce textual evidence. It offers a lucid account of how to properly punctuate quotations, how to properly alter quotations, and how to properly cite evidence from different literary genres (novel, plays, poems, etc).
Tired of reading papers in which students repeat the exact same phrases to introduce a series of quotations? Tired of reading papers in which students contextualize evidence by writing, On page 34, it says, "blah blah" ?? Look no further! I developed this resource after listening to my talented English colleagues chat about their shared frustrations over how students frame quotations in their papers. If the teachers at your school are facing similar frustrations, then you might find this handout to be helpful.
As it turns out, there are only three strategies that writers employ when embedding quotations in a paper. This handout explains when and how students should use each of the three strategies:
1. Block Quotations: The best technique for framing a long quotation is to use a block quotation. The examples in this handout will model not only how to punctuate a block quotation but also how to follow up with analysis by picking out key words from the quotation and unpacking their significance.
2. Clause-and-Colon Method: The best technique for framing a mid-sized quotation is to introduce the quotation with an independent clause followed by a colon (:). The examples in this handout will model the grammatically correct way to use a colon to set up a quotation.
3. Integration-of-Keywords Method: The best technique for framing shorter quotations is to integrate the quotations into the writer's own sentences. The examples in this handout demonstrate how to integrate quotations seamlessly into the flow of one's sentences.
Here's my suggestion for how to use this handout. What I'd recommend is that you distribute this handout to your students before you distribute your next writing assignment. After reading and discussing each of the three methods, you might announce that all students will be required to utilize both the "clause-and-colon method" and the "integration-of-keywords method" at least once in their next papers. Should you do that, I promise their papers will improve!
My store is called “Rigorous Resources” because all of the materials prioritize rigorous content over decorative graphics. While there are plenty of sellers whose lessons feature beautiful design elements, my resources promise to improve students' writing by equipping them with practical skills used by published academic writers.
The previews for my resources provide direct access to several pages of exemplary materials. Hit the green “Preview” button to see exactly what you’ll get. . . .
This 3-page document will come to you in two separate formats: a Word doc *and* a PDF. Because the Word doc is editable, you'll be able to costumize the resource to suit the skill levels of your students — year after year! If you don't have Microsoft Word, you'll still be able to access the resource as a PDF — which is easy to navigate and quick to print.
If there's anything I can do to support your amazing work in the classroom, please don't hesitate to get in touch. Thank you for choosing “Rigorous Resources”!!
Happy teaching!
Adam Jernigan, Ph.D.
P.S. Don't forget to click “follow” for email updates on new products by Rigorous Resources. New products will be 50% OFF for the first 24 hours!
Feel free to check out these other resources on writing:
How to Write a College Application Essay
How to Write an Analytical Essay
How to Write an Poem Analysis Essay (AP Lit FRQ 1)
Figurative Language Stations
Extended Constructed Response Writing for STAAR - Test Prep for ELAR ECR
By Blooming Through High School
Elevate your students' short response writing skills and prepare them for success on the STAAR test with this comprehensive Extended Constructed Response (ECR) lesson designed for middle and high school classrooms. This engaging PowerPoint lesson offers educators a valuable tool to assess and guide student learning effectively.
Key Features:
Why Choose This Lesson:
Rigorous and standards-aligned content designed to meet the needs of middle and high school students.
Engaging and interactive activities that promote student engagement and academic growth.
Easy-to-use resources and materials for seamless lesson implementation and classroom management.
Comprehensive preparation for the STAAR test, ensuring that students feel confident and capable on exam day.
Empower your students to excel in short response writing and conquer the challenges of the STAAR test with this dynamic and comprehensive lesson. Elevate your teaching and ignite a passion for learning with these innovative instructional materials. Download this lesson today and watch your students thrive!
What's Included:
Symbolism Writing and History Activity
By Beth Hammett
Make using and working with symbolism collaborative, fun and educational (Meets CCSS) with this interactive writing project that focuses on 850 B.C. and the discovery of the Snake Circle: Includes: 1. KWL Chart 2. Extra Resources: Take a tour of Ancient Greece, learn about the lives of adults and children, and watch videos to understand the time period of 850 B.C. 3. Uncover its origin: The Snake Circle object came from the days of Homer, so explore its meaning with the use of two symbolism sheets. 4. Discuss and interpret the Snake Circle shield handout. 5. Write stories: choose a genre; then Peer Workshop essays 6. Color the shields--review students' colorful examples 7. Display for all to enjoy! Comes with: handouts to complete writings, students' samples, and class project photos. Everything needed for writing fun! Excellent for teaching how to interpret and use symbolism, reinforce concepts and skills, and working with multigenres. Combination of historical technology resources with writing and using literal concepts.
AVID Focused Notes Digital Lesson - Writing Primary Versus Secondary Sources
By KJ Inspired Resources
Are you an AVID teacher looking for an easy way for students to learn and practice the focus note taking process while learning about primary versus secondary sources? Are your students about to begin an essay and need an explanation on using sources in writing? You came to the right place! This AVID Focused Note Taking Lesson Plan with Google Slides and Applying Learning opportunities has everything you need to have your students practice the very important skill of note taking while learning the importantce and benefits of using primary or secondary sources in their writing. This lesson is ready to go! Teach whole group OR have students follow along by sharing the google slides link with them. This way they have access to all the links provided!
What's Included:
Note Taking Process and Lesson:
Click HERE to see our other AVID resources. We also have several great AVID bundle options available down below!
AVID Mega Growing Bundle
AVID Teambuilding Bundle
AVID Writing Bundle
Follow KJ Inspired Resources:
TeachShare Store
Tik Tok
Writing a Story - Example, Graphic Organizer, and Template
By Sign with me TOD
Writing a story is a perfect project that gives students time to use their imagination and share it with others. This packet includes information to share with your students about what a story is, why we write a story, and who we write a story for. This packet also includes an example showing the process that is used to write a story and the steps that are taken to add onto a story to be sure it includes a beginning, middle and end. On the last few pages, it includes a template to help students come up with possible story ideas, write about the characters, setting, and plot of a story, and space to write a rough draft as well as a final draft.
You may also be interested in the following:
Writing an Acrostic Poem Example and Templates:
https://www.TeachShare.com/Product/Acrostic-Poem-Example-and-Templates-11537945
Graphic Novel Writing Project Example, Graphic Organizer, and Template
Graphic Novel Rubric:
https://www.TeachShare.com/Product/Graphic-Novel-Rubric-9863836
Summer Bucket List Essay Example, Graphic Organizer, and Template
Writing an Informational Essay Graphic Organizers, Example, and Template
Writing an Informational Paragraph Graphic Organizers, Example, and Template
Writing an Informational Essay Graphic Organizers, Example, and Template
Writing an Informational Paragraph Graphic Organizers, Example, and Template
Writing an Animal Research Report Graphic Organizer, Example, and Template
Spring Writing Graphic Organizer, Example, and Template
https://www.TeachShare.com/Product/Spring-Writing-Example-and-Template-11381047
Writing a Realistic Fiction Story Graphic Organizer, Example, and Template
Writing a Mystery Fiction Story Template and Example:
https://www.TeachShare.com/Product/Mystery-Fiction-Story-Template-and-Review-11275866
Writing a Graphic Novel Example, Graphic Organizer, and Template:
https://www.TeachShare.com/Product/Graphic-Novel-Example-Graphic-Organizer-and-Template-11022175
Writing a Fable Example, Graphic Organizer, and Template:
https://www.TeachShare.com/Product/Writing-a-Fable-Example-Graphic-Organizer-and-Template-9925372
Writing a Book Report:
https://www.TeachShare.com/Product/Writing-a-Book-Report-Template-9161788
Writing a Pirate Adventure Story: https://www.TeachShare.com/Product/Writing-a-Pirate-Adventure-Story-Graphic-Organizer-Example-Template-8196649
Writing a Story:
https://www.TeachShare.com/Product/Writing-a-Story-Graphic-Organizer-Example-and-Template-819775
Writing Instructions:
https://www.TeachShare.com/Product/Writing-Instructions-Example-and-Template-8362531
Writing an Opinion Paragraph: https://www.TeachShare.com/Product/Writing-an-Opinion-Paragraph-Example-Template-8315312
Writing to Solve a Problem:
https://www.TeachShare.com/Product/Writing-to-Solve-a-Problem-Example-Template-8319585
Learning and Writing my Address – Examples and Template: https://www.TeachShare.com/Product/Learning-and-Writing-My-Address-Example-Template-8218625
Writing a Narrative Story – Example, Graphic Organizer, and Template: https://www.TeachShare.com/Product/Writing-a-Narrative-Story-Graphic-Organizer-Example-and-Template-8197782
Writing a Summary Template:
https://www.TeachShare.com/Product/Writing-a-Summary-Template-8197872
Writing a Play – Example, Graphic Organizer, and Template: https://www.TeachShare.com/Product/Writing-a-Play-Graphic-Organizer-Example-and-Template-8205396
Writing a Biography – Example, Graphic Organizer, and Template: https://www.TeachShare.com/Product/Writing-a-Biography-Example-Graphic-Organizer-Template-8754406
By Rigorous Resources for High School English
This 25-page EDITABLE writing curriculum has everything you'll need to help your students write high-quality analytical papers on any literary text. This unit was originally designed for high school English teachers who want to help students improve their analytical writing. But teachers across other disciplines report that it has helped them to deliver clear and informative lessons on how to write high-quality expository essays.
Here are some highlights from this 25-page unit on analytical/expository writing:
• The Writing Process (Handout #1): This handout offers several tips about how to choose a topic for an analytical paper on literature. Encourage your students to use the writing process as an opportunity to deepen their knowledge about the text. (4 pages)
• The Intro Paragraph: Hook & Thesis (Handout #2): In the first page of this handout, students learn to identify and formulate the interpretive questions which they will hope to answer or solve while writing their papers. The challenge of "problem construction" will present most high school students with the opportunity to develop a new and exciting skill — one that will serve them well in college and beyond. In the second and third pages of this handout, students learn to write thesis statements that balance complexity with clarity. They learn to use grammatical subordination in order to generate a main claim that is sufficiently complex to anchor an entire paper. (4 pages)
• Body Paragraphs: Evidence & Analysis (Handout #3): In this handout, students learn about how "evidence" in the humanities differs from evidence in the sciences. Because evidence in the humanities is rarely factual or indisputable, student writers will always need to frame, unpack, and analyze their evidence. This handout offers several suggestions about how, as it were, to "make the evidence speak." It also offers strategies for how to organize evidence into a series of body paragraphs that build upon one another in a logical and compelling manner. (2 pages)
• Topic Sentences / Transitional Sentences (Handout #4): This handout offers advice about how students can use transitional expressions to clarify the logical connections between the claims in each of their topic sentences. It includes a list of different types of transitional expressions along with several examples. (2 pages)
• Precepts for Effective Prose (Handout #5): This handout features about a dozen precepts or "rules of thumb" that students should follow when writing academic papers. The handout contains brief paragraphs on each of the following topics: Avoid plot summary; Always use the present tense; Minimize intensifiers; Alternatives to writing "It says"!! (2 pages)
• Sample Introductory Paragraphs: Look at six introductory paragraphs from articles published by literary scholars in academic journals over the last decade. Invite students to reflect on what they find to be particularly effective — or ineffective —about each introductory paragraph. How does each writer hook the reader's interest? How do they construct an interpretive problem? How do they generate a complex thesis statement? (6 pages)
• Paper Outline Template: Invite students to use this template when generating the outlines for their analytical papers. (3 pages)
• Rubric: Use this rubric to evaluate the analytical papers that your students write in response to any literary text. (1 page)
The entire writing unit will come to you in two different formats: Word doc *and* PDF. Because the Word doc is editable, you'll be able to customize the materials to suit your teaching style and/or your students' skill levels — year after year! If you don't have Microsoft Word, you'll still be able to access the entire unit as a PDF file, which is easy to navigate and quick to print!
Because I believe that teachers on TeachShare should be able to see what they're getting before they make a purchase, the preview for this resource provides access more than a dozen actual pages from the resource. Click on the green “preview” button to see exactly what you’ll get....
Thank you for choosing “Rigorous Resources”!!
Happy teaching!
Adam Jernigan, Ph.D.
P.S. Don't forget to click “follow” for email updates on new products by Rigorous Resources. New products will be 50% OFF for the first 24 hours!
Feel free to check out these other resources on writing:
How to Write a College Application Essay
How to Write an Poem Analysis Essay (AP Lit FRQ 1)
How to Frame Quotations or Embed Evidence
Figurative Language Stations
Logical Fallacies & Rhetorical Devices - Lesson & Activities - HS - ELA
By Blooming Through High School
Get ready for argumentative units with this engaging activity centered around persuasive techniques in rhetorical devices, and logical fallacies.
Teacher students what makes a good and bad argument with a short lesson and 5 practice paragraphs to evaluate for effectiveness. Afterwards, students can practice rhetorical devices in advertisements and analyze why the device was chosen (author's purpose).
ALSO INCLUDED IS AN EXTENSION ACTIVITY where students can get creative and make their own ads.
- Teacher directions
- Grading Rubric
- Student instructions
- Research and Brainstorm document
(no templates for creation are included)
PROVIDED IN WORD/POWERPOINT & PDF
By Beth Hammett
Basic, simple, easy-to-follow rules with examples that cover writing concepts of: Numbers Dates Money Time Includes: Tips for using and writing numbers, dates, money, time Peer Workshopping Activity for student/peer essays Activities/comprehension checks for numbers, dates, money, time in sentences Answers to sentences Great for centers, flipped classes, homeschool, small/whole group, ELL/ESL, adult learners, beginning writers, test prep, assessment, and quick brush up on skills. Easy to use and follow!
By Sign with me TOD
Writing a summary can be challenging for students when they first start learning how to complete this writing task. This template breaks down the beginning, middle and ending paragraph in a summary into three sections. Tips are also provided along the way to help support students when writing a summary.
You may also be interested in the following:
Writing an Acrostic Poem Example and Templates:
https://www.TeachShare.com/Product/Acrostic-Poem-Example-and-Templates-11537945
Graphic Novel Writing Project Example, Graphic Organizer, and Template
Summer Bucket List Essay Example, Graphic Organizer, and Template
Writing an Informational Essay Graphic Organizers, Example, and Template
Writing an Informational Paragraph Graphic Organizers, Example, and Template
Writing an Animal Research Report Graphic Organizer, Example, and Template
Spring Writing Graphic Organizer, Example, and Template
https://www.TeachShare.com/Product/Spring-Writing-Example-and-Template-11381047
Writing a Realistic Fiction Story Graphic Organizer, Example, and Template
Writing a Mystery Fiction Story Template and Example:
https://www.TeachShare.com/Product/Mystery-Fiction-Story-Template-and-Review-11275866
Writing a Graphic Novel Example, Graphic Organizer, and Template:
https://www.TeachShare.com/Product/Graphic-Novel-Example-Graphic-Organizer-and-Template-11022175
Writing a Biography Rubric:
https://www.TeachShare.com/Product/Writing-a-Biography-Rubric-9709166
Writing a Friendly Letter Example and Template:
https://www.TeachShare.com/Product/Writing-a-Friendly-Letter-Example-and-Template-9453760
Writing a Magazine Article Template:
https://www.TeachShare.com/Product/Magazine-Article-Template-9212729
Writing a Book Report:
https://www.TeachShare.com/Product/Writing-a-Book-Report-Template-9161788
Writing a Pirate Adventure Story:
Writing a Story:
https://www.TeachShare.com/Product/Writing-a-Story-Graphic-Organizer-Example-and-Template-8197750
Writing Instructions:
https://www.TeachShare.com/Product/Writing-Instructions-Example-and-Template-8362531
Writing an Opinion Paragraph:
https://www.TeachShare.com/Product/Writing-an-Opinion-Paragraph-Example-Template-8315312
Writing to Solve a Problem
https://www.TeachShare.com/Product/Writing-to-Solve-a-Problem-Example-Template-8319585
Learning and Writing my Address – Examples and Template:
https://www.TeachShare.com/Product/Learning-and-Writing-My-Address-Example-Template-8218625
Writing a Narrative Story – Example, Graphic Organizer, and Template:
Writing a Summary Template
https://www.TeachShare.com/Product/Writing-a-Summary-Template-8197872
Writing a Play – Example, Graphic Organizer, and Template:
https://www.TeachShare.com/Product/Writing-a-Play-Graphic-Organizer-Example-and-Template-8205396
Short Constructed Response Writing for STAAR - Test Prep for ELAR High SCR
By Blooming Through High School
Elevate your students' short response writing skills and prepare them for success on the STAAR test with this comprehensive Short Constructed Response (SCR) lesson designed for middle and high school classrooms. This engaging PowerPoint lesson offers educators a valuable tool to assess and guide student learning effectively.
Key Features:
Why Choose This Lesson:
Rigorous and standards-aligned content designed to meet the needs of middle and high school students.
Engaging and interactive activities that promote student engagement and academic growth.
Easy-to-use resources and materials for seamless lesson implementation and classroom management.
Comprehensive preparation for the STAAR test, ensuring that students feel confident and capable on exam day.
Empower your students to excel in short response writing and conquer the challenges of the STAAR test with this dynamic and comprehensive lesson. Elevate your teaching and ignite a passion for learning with these innovative instructional materials. Download this lesson today and watch your students thrive!
By Beth Hammett
A quick, two page review of Grammar Tips (sentence variety with examples and reader as writer instructions) along with a five-step format for structuring standardized essays. Easy to follow with color-coded examples.
Writing a Mystery Fiction Story Example, Template, and Graphic Organizer
By Sign with me TOD
Students will complete the Mystery Fiction Writing project by following the tips provided in this product. Students will learn what a mystery fiction story is, what is included in a mystery fiction story, why someone may write a mystery fiction story, what is shared in a mystery fiction story, who a mystery fiction story is written for, how the mystery fiction story is published, rules to follow when writing a mystery fiction story, what makes a great mystery fiction story - comparing weak and strong openings to start a mystery fiction story, vocabulary words that may appear in a mystery fiction story such as - crime, motive, sleuth, fugitive, and lead. An example that shows mystery fiction story ideas, a mystery fiction story idea that includes a title, characters, setting, and plot, and rough draft are included in the product to show the students a strong beginning, middle, and end. An idea template, a story outline for the title, characters, setting, and plot, and a rough draft template are included in this product.
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