Adam Silvera was born and raised in the Bronx. He has worked in the publishing industry as a children’s bookseller, community manager at a literary development company, and book reviewer of…
Just like books, these clever cartoons will help you reduce stress – and provide refreshing, and uncommon reasons to read even more books.
Just like books, these clever cartoons will help you reduce stress – and provide refreshing, and uncommon reasons to read even more books.
Just like books, these clever cartoons will help you reduce stress – and provide refreshing, and uncommon reasons to read even more books.
Just like books, these clever cartoons will help you reduce stress – and provide refreshing, and uncommon reasons to read even more books.
Just like books, these clever cartoons will help you reduce stress – and provide refreshing, and uncommon reasons to read even more books.
Just like books, these clever cartoons will help you reduce stress – and provide refreshing, and uncommon reasons to read even more books.
Just like books, these clever cartoons will help you reduce stress – and provide refreshing, and uncommon reasons to read even more books.
Michiko Kakutani has earned her reputation as one of the most fearless and important literary critics in recent history. Kakutani is the former chief book critic for The New York Times and is the…
Just like books, these clever cartoons will help you reduce stress – and provide refreshing, and uncommon reasons to read even more books.
Instead of VERY and using Another Word 98 Words Instead Of Very very lazy indolent very fat obese very afraid terrified very accurate exact very often frequently very smelly pungent very smooth sleek very willing eager very long-term enduring very nervous apprehensive very strong unyielding very tasty delicious very tired exhausted very valuable precious very neat immaculate very risky perilous very afraid fearful very creative innovative very evil wicked very good excellent very light luminous very nice kind very rich wealthy very roomy spacious very smart intelligent very weak frail very eager keen very detailed meticulous very confused perplexed very crowded
Read books about reading, libraries , and books and promote reading while doing it. Great books about books for kids.
Just like books, these clever cartoons will help you reduce stress – and provide refreshing, and uncommon reasons to read even more books.
Just like books, these clever cartoons will help you reduce stress – and provide refreshing, and uncommon reasons to read even more books.
Just like books, these clever cartoons will help you reduce stress – and provide refreshing, and uncommon reasons to read even more books.
Perhaps the greatest obstacle between Shakespeare’s plays and student audiences is the language barrier. Now you can minimize the challenge by introducing your students to the language of Shakespeare in a way that is fun, meaningful and memorable. This Introduction to Shakespeare's Language bundle—including a 28-slide editable PowerPoint and packet of truly engaging language activities and handouts—will empower your students to better understand and even appreciate Shakespeare’s work, AND actually enjoy each step along the way! It includes two products, each now provided in both print and digital formats: Introduction to Shakespeare’s Language: Fun Activities & Printables Packet • Glossary of Elizabethan Terms—a listing of frequently found terms in Shakespeare’s works that students can use to decipher meaning as they read as well as for class activities • Shakespeare Translation Practice Worksheet—includes a variety of lines from Shakespeare’s plays that students must translate into modern-day English • Completed Answer Key—to generally make your life easier • Shakespeare Song Tweets—a creative, fun activity in which students take lines from popular songs and rewrite them as Tweets using Elizabethan terms, with examples provided. You can also ask students to guess each others’ songs. Great as bell work or summary activity! • Sonnet Extension Activity—in which students visit a web site that takes popular songs and cleverly rewrites them as Shakespearean sonnets. They then try their hand at writing their own. • Shakespeare Language Skits—a fun, memorable activity in which students choose from a list of scenarios, then work in groups to write and present a skit using Shakespearean language. Students won’t forget these skits—or the Shakespearean language they use! • Skit Plot Planner—a graphic organizer students can use to develop their skits • Shakespearean Skit Rubric—to set clear expectations and make grading a breeze Introduction to the Language of Shakespeare PowerPoint • Background on Shakespeare’s language style • Key differences between modern and Elizabethan English • Frequently encountered words, their definitions, and translation practice examples • Glossary of Elizabethan Terms (can be used with handout above and/or enlarged to be used as a poster) • Shakespeare language practice examples for students to build comprehension and confidence while you to assess progress • Shakespeare Language Skit Activity—can be used with handouts from activity packet (above) • Rubric—to walk the entire class through the skit activity and your expectations This introductory presentation is included both as a fully editable PowerPoint as well as a PDF file to prevent any font or compatibility issues. Now you can buy both these products together and save a bundle! I’ve done these activities with my own students who tell me they are among the most entertaining and memorable they’ve ever done in English class! More importantly, the PowerPoint and activities will help them to conquer their fear of Shakespeare and understand and actually appreciate his work. I hope you and your students enjoy them as much as we have! WHAT TEACHERS ARE SAYING: ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ “Absolutely love this resource! It has been a great tool to help my students better understand the Shakespearean language in preparation for reading Romeo and Juliet.” —Rebecca T. ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ “Thorough, informative, and well-designed. This one is well worth your money.” —Jennifer M. ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ “FANTASTIC. Hearing the name "Shakespeare" can make people groan or feel intimidated, but it's activities like these that get students excited about learning.” –Arts Smarts ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ “This resource is AMAZING! It does a great job of outlining things for the students and I love the activities that go along with it! Worth every penny!”—Samantha D. ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ “I have NEVER had more fun teaching Shakespeare than with this activity! My students were engaged with every activity in the bundle! The song title/lyrics tweets was my favorite! Thank you so much!” —Amy P. You may also like: Macbeth Unit Bundle: Introductory PPT, Study Guide Questions, Analysis Activities Shakespeare’s Julius Caesar Fun Pre-reading Activity (Common Core Aligned) Shakespeare’s Julius Caesar Close Reading & Characterization Activity (Common Core Aligned) Literary Analysis Bundle - Fun Lessons & Activities for ANY Text
Just like books, these clever cartoons will help you reduce stress – and provide refreshing, and uncommon reasons to read even more books.
To Italian writer Umberto Eco, “the list is the origin of culture”, making “infinity comprehensible”. Lists, like Michelangelo’s 16th-Century grocery list, Mark E. Smith’s list of his most-loved books, Carl Sagan’s Baloney Detection Kit and Eco’s own 14 common features of the eternal fascist, lists are our “attempt to grasp the incomprehensible”. In the book … Continue reading "Illustrated Lists of Great Writers and Artists"
The Snow Queen.,She has read all the newspapers in the world, and forgotten them again, so clever is she., Digital ID 1701881, New York Public LibraryFictional works are usually cataloged by author and title, not by subject or plot line, which makes identifying books by their plot or story line difficult. Before you start your search it would help if you can identify
I just wrote this up for a new friend of mine who is considering homeschooling her daughter in the fall. There’s so much info here, I thought it might work well as a post! I adore Sonlight. …
Happy holidays, and Happy Overlooked Novels By Women, 2016 Edition! I wish this list weren’t necessary. But here are a few reasons it is: – The New York Times Book Review Best Books of 2016 i…
Reader, we read them. Go back to Thornfield Hall with these Jane Eyre retellings and books inspired by the Charlotte Brontë classic.
Online business degree students should check out these favorite books of some of the most powerful CEOs. Their choices may surprise you!
Just like books, these clever cartoons will help you reduce stress – and provide refreshing, and uncommon reasons to read even more books.
Just like books, these clever cartoons will help you reduce stress – and provide refreshing, and uncommon reasons to read even more books.
Just like books, these clever cartoons will help you reduce stress – and provide refreshing, and uncommon reasons to read even more books.
*Sits in silence and thinks about what I just watched*