TPT
Total:
$0.00

Percent Increase and Decrease Quiz

9+ results
Filters
Standard
Audience
Supports
Preview of Analytical Paragraph Practice Formative Assessment | Scaffolded & Differentiated

Analytical Paragraph Practice Formative Assessment | Scaffolded & Differentiated

Looking for a quick, structured way to check students’ analytical writing skills — without building a full lesson? This analytical paragraph practice + formative assessment uses B.J. Novak’s short story “I Never Want to Walk on the Moon” to help students practice writing a focused literary analysis paragraph with clear expectations and scaffolding. This resource is designed for in-class writing, checkpoints, or review, and works especially well when you want students to actually write. Wha
Preview of Golden Line Analysis Guide (Works with Any Text!)

Golden Line Analysis Guide (Works with Any Text!)

Help students move beyond summary and into meaningful, text-driven analysis with this Golden Line Analysis Guide—a structured, discussion-ready tool that teaches students how to closely analyze one powerful line of text and extract theme, tone, author’s craft, and deeper insight. This resource guides students step-by-step through identifying a “Golden Line”—a sentence or passage that resonates due to its language, meaning, or impact—and analyzing it using AP-aligned literary skills that transfe
Preview of Commonly Misused Words with Sentence Examples

Commonly Misused Words with Sentence Examples

Here is a list of essential MIS-USED vocabulary for students to include in their binders, notebooks, and study guides for vocabulary quizzes. Mastering the correct usage of words will enhance students' comprehension and improve their writing skills in sentences and essays! Teachers will be pleased! Misused Vocabulary Words (listed A-W) A LOT (NEVER ALOT) “ Alot" is not a word. Avoid "a lot" in formal writing. ASSURE VS. ENSURE VS. INSURE "Assure" is to promise or say with confidence. It is
Preview of AP Lang Commentary Practice: 20 Exercises to Establish a Line of Reasoning

AP Lang Commentary Practice: 20 Exercises to Establish a Line of Reasoning

Students struggle with commentary because they don’t know how to connect evidence to a larger argument. They summarize, restate, or stop short of explaining why the evidence matters. This resource gives them structured practice with that exact skill. Each exercise provides a thesis, a supporting claim, and concrete evidence. Students are asked to write 2–4 sentences of commentary that clearly connect the evidence to the claim and the claim to the thesis. The goal is simple: move from evidence to
Preview of Figurative Language Presentation & Guided Notes

Figurative Language Presentation & Guided Notes

Make figurative language engaging, memorable, and accessible with this comprehensive figurative language unit that combines guided notes, direct instruction, and humor-filled meme examples. Designed for middle and high school ELA classrooms, this resource helps students move beyond simple literary devices and develop a deeper understanding of how authors use language to create meaning, emphasize ideas, and engage readers.Students explore over 25 literary devices organized into easy-to-understand
Preview of Hero’s Journey Activities + Evidence-Based Questions, Graphic Organizer, Test

Hero’s Journey Activities + Evidence-Based Questions, Graphic Organizer, Test

Make teaching the Hero’s Journey simple with this no prep ELA activity that includes worksheets, a graphic organizer, text-dependent questions, citing textual evidence practice, and literary analysis for middle and high school students. This versatile resource is designed to work with any text and includes a clear breakdown of the Hero’s Journey, a student-friendly graphic organizer, and multiple ways for students to engage with the content. With both general comprehension questions and ev
Preview of Cornell Notes Template Note Taking Graphic Organizer Avid Study Skill Curriculum

Cornell Notes Template Note Taking Graphic Organizer Avid Study Skill Curriculum

Created by
Peas in a Pod
College and career readiness - Cornell Notes are a systematic, structured way for students to take organized notes as part of an avid study skills curriculum. Perfect for college prep classes. (Step 1) On the right-hand side, students should paraphrase important ideas. These notes can be taken from any source of information, such as fiction and nonfiction books, DVDs, lectures, text books, etc. Symbols or abbreviations should be used instead of long sentences. (Step 2) After reviewing the not
Preview of Coraline Pre-Viewing Lesson

Coraline Pre-Viewing Lesson

Hook your students before the movie even begins.This pre-viewing lesson uses Coraline’s opening sequence to introduce students to basic film form vocabulary while activating thematic questions that spark curiosity and prior knowledge. Students ease into film analysis with guided notes, essential questions, and scaffolded or non-scaffolded options for support. What’s Included:Pre-Viewing/Thematic Activation Questions (printable PDF & Editable Google Docs)Guided Viewing Lesson for Coraline’s open
Preview of Amelia Earhart WebQuest or Podcast Listening Comprehension Fast Finisher

Amelia Earhart WebQuest or Podcast Listening Comprehension Fast Finisher

Created by
cozyrainbow
What really happened to Amelia Earhart? Amelia Earhart was a brave pilot who lived a very interesting life. Students will be fascinated to hear fun facts about Amelia Earhart. The content for this lesson can be delivered as a video, podcast or internet webquest.A creative challenge is given at the end of the episode to draw a comic of Amelia Earhart the first time she learned to fly.
Showing 1-9 of 9+ results