In this lesson, students write an informatory/explanatory text and accurately use third-grade academic vocabulary.
- Subject:
- English Language Arts
- Material Type:
- Lesson Plan
- Provider:
- EngageNY
- Date Added:
- 04/13/2017
In this lesson, students write an informatory/explanatory text and accurately use third-grade academic vocabulary.
In this lesson, students will use thematically related texts, organized from least to most complex, to gather a word bank of supporting details and content vocabulary about a concept. Then they use these words as a basis for writing acrostic poems, which support organization of information around a central idea, as the lines of an acrostic poem are held together by the topic or main idea spelled vertically.
In this lesson, students get to flex their writing muscles as they use a variety of writing genres to create a zine of their own: letter writing, persuasive writing, narrative, acrostic poetry, comic writing, and biography/autobiography. Students choose a prominent figure from popular culture as the focus for a multigenre zine and then plan the project using the Facts–Questions–Interpretations method. Students then write in each of the listed genres about their chosen subjects, using a variety of ReadWriteThink.org tools. Finally, students design covers for their projects, and the teacher binds all the printed documents into individual zines.