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Lexiphile

Rated 4.81 out of 5, based on 98 reviews
24 Followers
Englewood, Colorado, United States
About the store
This is my 15th year teaching middle school, and I have also taught high school for several years. 6th grade is my sweet spot, though, and I love to create innovative, funny, challenging and active ways for my students to engage with literacy and especially writing. I have been writing all of my own curriculum and materials for more than a decade, each year tweaking and adjusting based on what worked for my students this year and what didn't. I've worked with students from many different cultural backgrounds in Florida and in Colorado, as well as students with special learning needs.
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Preview of Message in a Bottle Active Review Game for ANY SUBJECT! Super Adaptable!

Message in a Bottle Active Review Game for ANY SUBJECT! Super Adaptable!

Created by
Lexiphile
Want to get your kids out of their seats while giving them the practice they need to master a concept? Want to motivate your most apathetic student and get them leaping up to answer a question? **WARNING** This game involves tossing a small object back and forth across your classroom, and it will probably get pretty loud. You can easily adapt this game to almost ANY topic you are teaching in any subject area. You can even make multiple versions to cover different content, and your students wil
Preview of ApostroToss Game for Apostrophe Practice (with notes and other materials)

ApostroToss Game for Apostrophe Practice (with notes and other materials)

Created by
Lexiphile
This is a fun game that gets students out of their seats and collaborating with their group to earn points by answering apostrophe questions and tossing an item between them without dropping it or getting an answer wrong. My students LOVE this game, which is part of my annual ApostrOlympic Games, a week of active games and competitions in which students practice applying the rules of apostrophe usage. It's a great way to give them the repetitive drill practice they need without burying them in
Preview of Non-verbal Redirect for Disruptive Student (Trauma-Informed Discipline Strategy)

Non-verbal Redirect for Disruptive Student (Trauma-Informed Discipline Strategy)

Created by
Lexiphile
This is a great way to give a warning to a disruptive student without calling attention to them out loud. I just place this note on their desk without saying anything, and the note tells them that they can choose to either change their behavior or continue what they are doing and get an email sent home. The language is neutral and emphasizes the student's power to choose, rather than just threatening a consequence, and it gives them a clear path to avoiding any further disciplinary steps. I find
Preview of Articles (a/an/the) Grammar Game, Notes with examples, and Song

Articles (a/an/the) Grammar Game, Notes with examples, and Song

Created by
Lexiphile
This mini-lesson is great for elementary students or ELD/ESL/MLE students who need to practice choosing the right article for a given noun. This package also contains lyrics to a song (a parody of "Lollipop, Lollipop" by the Chordettes) that helps students recall these rules. This is one of my students' all-time favorite grammar songs! It's also fun because you can show them how to make a POP! sound with your thumb and mouth.
Preview of English Class Carols 2023: Complete Updated Songs Package

English Class Carols 2023: Complete Updated Songs Package

Created by
Lexiphile
Help your students recall information and grammar rules with these fun songs set to recognizable tunes. My classes sing together a couple times a week while we're studying a particular topic, and I know it works because I hear them humming during tests! But these are not just fun, silly songs about how cool grammar is; they contain concrete information, rules, and useful processes that you want your students to learn. See the thumbnail image for an example about Double Negatives!There are als
Preview of High-Quality Student Feedback Survey

High-Quality Student Feedback Survey

Created by
Lexiphile
~~This is only for the TRULY BRAVE teacher who genuinely wants to know how their students feel about their class.~~ This survey asks your students deep questions about their experience in your classroom. Contains multiple-choice and open-ended questions. The questions pertain to an English class but can easily be adapted to any subject or class. Students will reflect on: The clarity and effectiveness of your teaching, Which activities/supports helped them understand and which did not Teacher-
Preview of How to "Zoom In" on a Moment in a Story- Creative Writing Lesson with Prompts

How to "Zoom In" on a Moment in a Story- Creative Writing Lesson with Prompts

Created by
Lexiphile
Show your students 3 techniques they can use when writing a creative story that will bring their writing to life. This lesson focuses on adding dialogue, adding emotional details, and adding sensory details. The presentation illustrates how each technique brings the reader into the scene, with an example story. (I like using my students' names in the story!) It also includes 3 creative story-writing prompts that you can use to get your students' imagination going. When I did this mini-unit wit
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About the store

Experience

This is my 15th year teaching middle school, and I have also taught high school for several years. 6th grade is my sweet spot, though, and I love to create innovative, funny, challenging and active ways for my students to engage with literacy and especially writing. I have been writing all of my own curriculum and materials for more than a decade, each year tweaking and adjusting based on what worked for my students this year and what didn't. I've worked with students from many different cultural backgrounds in Florida and in Colorado, as well as students with special learning needs.

Teaching style

If you are looking for something unusual, lessons that look, sound, and feel different from what you would find in a textbook or a standard curriculum, then you are in the right place. This is not your mama's English class. We don't do 'boring' here. Grammar workbooks and textbooks are often where creativity and engagement go to die, leading to generations of adults who recall their grammar classes with a shudder. But grammar is fascinating! It's the logic of language, and there are so many ways to have fun with it while challenging students to be critical thinkers and puzzle-solvers, as well as better writers! I kick off my Apostrophes Unit by dressing up as the Apostrofairy, and we spend a week playing active games in the ApostrOlympics to get students out of their seats as they practice sorting types of words that do or don't get apostrophes. My students get to use their creativity, their energy, their critical thinking, and their voices to build their skills in my class, and they get to laugh a lot and play learning games that give them the repetitive drill practice that they need in order to internalize important grammar rules without wanting to beat their brains out with a semicolon. (I SWEAR I have kids every year who ask for more of my sentence structure worksheets, and usually it's the kids who are hardest to engage in general!) My lessons appeal most to students who don't learn as well from the traditional lecture/drill/test model of teaching, especially those who need to get out of their seats sometimes and really engage with the content. I use games, competitions, songs, worksheets with funny sentences, art projects and active games to give kids the practice they need while inflicting minimal trauma and boredom. My lessons center Student Talk and give students opportunities to collaborate and build mastery through a gradual release of responsibility. So if you want to shake things up in your classroom and get your least motivated student all hot and bothered about homophones, try out some of my products with your students.

Awards & shining teacher moments

Winner of The Rae Harris Curiosity Award- 2022 Was once described in a holiday card from a student as "The bast teechr in the word," (and consequently a big believer in spelling tests.)

My own education history

Bachelor's Degree in English Master's Degree in Teaching

Additional biographical information

I spent a few months in 2012 teaching English to Tibetan monks and political refugees at the temple of the Dalai Lama in Dharamsala, India, where I once had a class disrupted by monkey theft!