Aligned to Making Meaning Unit 6: How to Build an Airplane Article Comprehension Test Aligned to 3rd grade Reading and Language Arts Common Core Florida State Standards. Multiple choice questions including: multi-select part A and part B excerpts from stories illustrations answer key
ELA Poster Pack of 18 different figurative language words including: Simile, Metaphor, Personification, Metonym, Symbolism, Oxymoron, Paradox, Euphemism, Allusion, Alliteration, Assonance, Onomatopoeia, Analogy, Idiom, Irony Hyperbole, Synechdoche, and Pun
Making Meaning Unit 4 Stories Comprehension Tests The Girl Who Loved Wild Horses and The Emperor and the Kite A Day's Work Mailing May Brave Irene Aligned to 3rd grade Reading and Language Arts Common Core Florida State Standards. Each test has multiple choice questions including: multi-select part A and part B excerpts from stories illustrations answer key
Grades: Pre-K-5 Motivate And Track Classroom Behavior With This Sweet Incentive System With this sweetly simple behavior management system, you just add a magnetic candy to the jar each time your class demonstrates positive behavior. Teachers choose how many candies the class needs to earn and what their reward will be. In addition to individual candies, the set includes clusters of five candies to practice skip counting by fives. An instruction card offers fun suggestions. KEEP STUDENTS ACCOUNTABLE: When behavior is on public display, students are more willing to go the extra mile to be kind and more respectful to both their teachers and their peers. SIMPLE ORGANIZATION: This behavior jar is easy-to-use, colorful and fun. It’s a quick, fun way to bring cheer to your classroom and keep students motivated and engaged. EASY TO USE: When students are doing well, add a magnetic candy into the jar. Once enough candies are earned the class gets a reward! Extra recess time anyone? MULTI PURPOSE: In addition to tracking behavior, the set includes clusters of five candies to practice skip counting by fives. WHAT YOU GET: 43 candy magnets (32 individual candies, 11 clusters of 5 candies) Size: 2"x1" to 3"x3¼". 1 candy jar magnet Size: 11"x19". 1 instruction card Size: 5"x7".
It's important students are learning their multiplication strategies, so why not make it engaging with these activities that you can download for FREE?
For the past two weeks, my class has been learning about figurative language and how to use it to enhance writing. We worked through 6 elements of figurative language: similes, metaphors, hyperboles, idioms, personification, and onomatopoeia. Here is a listing of picture books I used to teach figurative language and the activity we completed for each piece of language: My lovely student teacher started off with a T-Chart on the board with "like/as" in the center. She had a variety of pictures and words on magnets. Students came up and moved the pieces to create similes such as "busy as a bee" or "cool as a cucumber." She then read the class "Crazy like a Fox." Afterward, she brainstormed with the class characters and a plot to create a class simile story. Pairs of students were assigned a page and had to write a few sentences, including one .". They are currently working on finishing off the illustrations. This story is great to read to your class even if you aren't teaching figurative language! It's all about a boy who can't help but shout out and the strategy he learns to stop it from happening. I didn't do much beyond read the story as the students were able to easily understand having done similes first. Again, I LOVE this story! There are two sequels as well: "More Parts" and "Even More Parts." They are quite funny. The entire book is an exaggeration, but there's also some idioms in here as well. I started off this lesson by having students wash their hands. They were so intrigued just from that! When they returned to their desks, there was a bowl of Alpha-bits cereal on each table group. I gave them 5 minutes to make as many words as they could. After, I told them "Eat your words." :) I explained that in this situation, I actually meant "eat your words", but that's not what the saying really meant. Only one student has actually heard the saying before, so they explained it to the class. As I read "Amelia Bedelia's First Field Trip" (you could read any Amelia story, they are all full of idioms) the students munched their snack and were on the lookout for other things that sounded one way, but actually meant something else. They were able to find them all! I didn't use a book for this one. We talked about onomatopoeia earlier in the year when working on "great grabbers" for writing. A student did tell me that Batman comics would be really useful for teaching this though. I heard about this book on my favourite website - Pinterest. I ordered it off Chapters website and am very happy I did. The little red pen has a whole lot of marking to do, and none of the other school supplies want to help her. But, when she falls into the Pit of No Return (the garbage can) the supplies get together to help her out. I started off by making a chart with all the supplies as headings. I also had an actual red pen, stapler, eraser, push pin and green highlighter. I had the students describe the items. After reading the story, we added more to the chart based on how the books are in the story. I called a student up to circle any "alive" words. It was at this point I introduced the term personification. Students made their own chart that had the headings: noun, verb and adjective. The added at least 5 items under each. From there, they could create personification sentences such as "the wind tapped softly on my window" or "the car grunted as it slowly climbed the hill". What books do you use for teaching figurative language? Leave me your suggestions in the comments!
Prefixes and suffixes in first grade? Kindergarten ? What?! I'm not sure who decided teaching them so early was the way to go but never fear...
Like most holidays, you're most likely wondering how to add the thanksgiving holiday to your homeschool lesson plan. I've tested and tried many great ideas over the years and have finally learned how to incorporate
Do your students sometimes have trouble following written direction? Then Following Directions • Language Arts • Grades 5–6 is for YOU! Your students will love the whimsical stores and buildings on each of the 28 language-based Task Cards and will get invaluable practice in following multi-step, written directions. Download the Following Directions Task Cards, laminate them for extra durability, and cut them apart. The Task Cards have an added advantage of serving as a great review of the following language arts concepts: • singular and plural nouns • common and proper nouns • verb tenses and abbreviations • adjectives and adverbs • alphabetical order • homophones and pronouns • synonyms and antonyms • contractions • prefixes and suffixes • conjunctions and capitalization • interjections • types of sentences • A Student Record Sheet is provided so students can record their answers. • An Answer Key is included for self-correcting. Examples are listed for many of the open-ended Task Cards. • Illustrated templates are included so you can individualize additional Task Cards. • You’ll also find an Award Certificate to use for completion of the unit. Ways to Use Following Directions • Language Arts • Use the Task Cards for a game of Scoot for a whole class activity. Directions for playing Scoot are included. • The Task Cards are also ideal for use at a learning center for individualized instruction, for partners, or for small groups of students. Keywords: following directions, practice in following written directions, review language arts *************************************************************************** Following Directions: Language Arts • Grades 5–6 by Linda Schwartz ©2016 Pizzazz Learning Background Super Hero Papers © Clipart Queen Clip Art of Stores and Buildings © Apples ‘n’ Acorns Books in the Following Direction Series for Grades 5–6: Following Directions • Math Following Directions • Language Arts Following Directions • Science Be FIRST, to learn about NEW products and SALE notices. Click the GREEN star in my store to become a FOLLOWER. When you purchase Following Directions • Language Arts Task Cards • Grades 5–6, please take a minute to rate it to receive TpT credits. Thanks for visiting Pizzazz Learning! Linda Schwartz
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• THIS 2 PAGE DOCUMENT IS AN OVERVIEW AND DOES NOT CONTAIN ALL THIRD GRADE STANDARDS. YOU CAN FIND THE VERSION WITH ALL STANDARDS HERE: 3rd Grade Common Core Standards Visual Reference- All Common Core Standards •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• This skill goal sheet is a two page resource that is a fun and very visual way for the kids and parents to see 3rd grade skills. There is one sheet for ELA and one sheet for math. It can be placed in data folders or homework folders as communication of the students learning. This can also be provided to parents as simple to understand resource at conferences, parent teacher conferences or open house to inform parents a basic idea what their child is expected to learn. Included in both color and black and white, with the common core standards listed in each box and a second version with only the images and text. Includes basic third grade skills such as: reading multi- syllable words reading with fluency retelling and comprehending stories multiplying telling time to the minute measuring reading and writing sight words adding and subtracting with fluency measuring volume writing personal narratives writing opinion pieces writing expository text Unfortunately, I was not able to fit all third grade standards because I wanted it to be simple and not overwhelming for parents and students but a great variety so students and parents can see what is expected. ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• You may also like: 3rd Grade Common Core Standards Visual Reference- All Common Core Standards- all 3rd grade common core standards I can statements in 6 page kid friendly format 3rd Grade I Can Statements: Each standard is listed on 1 page with an I can statement and a visual representation or an example. Perfect for posting in your classroom while teaching the standards. •3rd Grade Common Core I Can Statements or a bundle of all three of these products together at a discount price 3rd Grade I Can Statements Bundle •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• You may also like the other grade level skill sheets found here: •Pre-Kindergarten Skills •Kindergarten Skills •First Grade Skill Sheet •2nd Grade Goals Sheet •4th Grade Goals Sheet ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
Have you ever heard a teacher say, “Just sound out the word,” to a struggling young speller? Or maybe you’ve said those words to a student yourself? This simple strategy frequentl…
Do you love having quick activities available for when your little ones only have a spare minute or two? That's what these writing sticks are for! Children simply grab a stick, copy the sentence and choose between the given words to fill in the blanks. Great for pairs or individual work. If the sentence is too hard to read they can still write the sentence and then read it together with a more advanced student or adult when they're done. Simply print off the free download (with 28 sentences), cut up the sentence strips, glue them to craft sticks and you're ready to go! I hope you enjoy this activity from Liz's Early Learning Spot and wish you happy teaching and learning.
Making inferences is an important skill that learners need to have as they comprehend text. Making inferences takes comprehension to a deeper level than just the surface. Find more comprehension strategies paired with picture books in our Comprehension Reading Strategies series. *This post contains affiliate links. Why Making Inferences Can be Tricky Now, making ... Read More about Making Inferences using “My Lucky Day”
Hook your students and keep them engaged by injecting the theme of horror into your lesson resources. With these scary stories and lessons, you'll have them in the palm of your hand and give them plenty of reasons to want to be in your class doing their work - all year long! With these highly engaging lessons, they will practice their reading analysis and narrative writing skills - and ask for more! Great for secondary and middle school writing and close reading practice. Bundle Includes: 1) Classic Short Horror Stories Bundle. Contents include: "The Tale of the Monkey's Paw" This classic tale of horror is especially enjoyable for teens. Thorough analysis of "The Tale of the Monkey's Paw" in this fifteen-page lesson packet for middle and high. Pre-reading activity sheet. Visual dictionary. Sequence organizer. Analysis worksheet - 20+ questions focused on the elements of fiction. Multi-learning styles. Before, during, and after reading reflections can be used for individual assessment or in a small group. Probing questions assessing students' mastery of literary devices, inference, and providing textual evidence - all of which promote deep-level thinking. "From Beyond" by H.P. Lovecraft Known as "the man who can scare Stephen King," H.P. Lovecraft is a master of horror. This lesson introduces students to his style of writing with the short story "From Beyond." Contents Include: Illustrated Text of "From Beyond" Standards for ELA Tips for Teachers (throughout) Anticipatory Brainstorm: 3 Activities H.P. Lovecraft Biographical & Literary Information Vocabulary for Short Story Short Story Analysis Forms Fan Fiction Writing Prompt Lovecraft used the power of the unknown to inspire and horrify his readers. A lot of our contemporary cultural understanding of what goes into the horror genre comes from his stories. He had a profound influence on subsequent horror and science fiction writers. In his essay, "Supernatural Horror in Literature," Lovecraft writes: “The oldest and strongest emotion of mankind is fear, and the oldest and strongest kind of fear is fear of the unknown.” "The Cask of Amontillado" This classic tale of horror from Edgar Allan Poe is Common Core State Standards ELA and Quality Core Aligned. Post-reading activity. Students must analyze characterization, symbolism, mood, irony, point of view, and more - plus they must support their interpretations with textual evidence. Also a fan-fiction creative writing prompt is included. Lastly, students create a graffiti wall of symbolism for your classroom. Fun and engaging! Original art by Mira-Francine. For commercial use, please provide credit and a link back to my store. 2) Edgar Allan Poe Graveyard Breakout Escape Room. Editable Contents include: Overview of Escape Room Tasks Step-by-Step Instructions Answer Keys for Task Cards and Keys Contents of Team Packets (to help you compile) Signs and Keys with Teacher’s Guide Team Clues Talley Cards Cipher Decoding Maze Expectations and Procedures Final Checklist and Scoring Guide Six Keys – One for Each Mission Mission One: Capture the Key from the Raven Mission Two: Break into the Poe Family Mausoleum Mission Three: Grab Poe, Write Message on Tee, Run Mission Four: Awaken Poe from his Dream Mission Five: Lure Away the Ghost Mission Six: Escape through the Tunnel and Back Gate 3) Horror Mini-Lessons. Currently 46 pages of creative and engaging lessons ... and growing! These lessons aren't really just about teaching the genre of horror, they're about using the genre to teach other concepts and to keep students interested in what you have to teach. It's also a great discipline management strategy because they'll do what it takes to be rewarded with lessons such as these. Providing this level of engagement is one of my secrets to great classroom management. **************************************************************** Currently 200+ beautiful pages of creative and enjoyable lessons ... and growing! List of Products for You and Your Students to Love: Lessons with Song Lyrics 1. My Life Symbolized by Song Titles 2. Coldplay's "Violet Hill" Song Lyric Analysis Lesson ELA Games 1. Literary/Poetic Devices "Tab-shoo" 2. Literary Elements "Tab-shoo" 3. Characterization: Character Portrayal Game 4. "Name That Tone" - Author's Tone Game
File for the Post: Multi Step Equations INB While looking for a document, I found that I have created MULTIPLE foldables over the same concept. My first foldable that I created over solving equations is pictured below... You can find the original post here: Solving Equations Flip-Book I decided to create the following foldable last spring to use this school year. However, I did not use these foldables this year. The resource Algebra 1 teacher did use them this school year though! So, at least it was used somewhere. :) Sooooo.... below are the pages that were actually used this school year. The only downfall was how long it took students to cut the pages out. Next year, I will trim the paper down with a paper-cutter to save time. I really liked how fast the foldable was since it was a review topic from middle school. After the foldable, we completed my Solving Equations Stations Maze. It was a success! I have realized that I will never be satisfied with using the same foldable from the year before. I always try to improve each school year and build upon students strengths and weaknesses. Yes, it's a lot of work.... but, it's totally worth it! I am also wearing this shirt any time we review solving equations... From my experience, students are visual learners and they remember any of my shirts! lol Click here if you want one too!
When I look back to my first experience teaching five paragraph essays to fifth graders, I can remember how terribly unprepared I felt. I knew that the five paragraph essay format was what my students needed
There are so many benefits to teaching your kids story writing. Storytelling has been used in every culture to teach valuable life lessons and good storytellers were always respected. Written communication is still a huge part of today’s society – almost every occupation uses written communication. Writing stories will help your children think more clearly, …
I can't believe it's only Tuesday...Seriously? I already feel like I need the weekend for a break. Part of the problem is that it was my ...
Grab your trusty flashlight and get ready for a scientific treasure hunt!
These fun, engaging, NO PREP word work activities help students practice their words effectively and are the perfect option for your 1st or 2nd grade class!
Voici quelques affiches didactiques utiles pour vos classes d’arts plastiques.
Aligned to Making Meaning Unit 4: A Day's Work Comprehension Test Aligned to 3rd grade Reading and Language Arts Common Core Florida State Standards. Multiple choice questions including: multi-select part A and part B excerpts from stories illustrations answer key
Figurative Language using hit music! Top Hits Sampler uses today’s popular music to explore figurative language. Find similes, metaphors, idioms, and more in this fun multi-model learning product! Bring life to your room and have your students tapping their feet and singing aloud to their favorite songs while learning. Get the FULL VERSION by clicking the link below. ***************************************************************************** If you like this freebie, you'll love these upper grade figurative language products! Top Pop Figurative Language ~ Top Hits Figurative Language Full Product with FREE UPDATES! Tie Die Language ***************************************************************************** Customer Tips:How to get TPT credit to use on future purchases: • Please go to your My Purchases page (you may need to login). Beside each purchase you'll see a Provide Feedback button. Simply click it and you will be taken to a page where you can give a quick rating and leave a short comment for the product. Each time you give feedback, TPT gives you feedback credits that you use to lower the cost of your future purchases. I value your feedback greatly as it helps me determine which products are most valuable for your classroom so I can create more for you. ☺ Be the first to know about my new discounts, freebies and product launches: • Look for the green star next to my store logo and click it to become a follower. Voila! You will now receive email updates about this store. ☺ *****************************************************************************
Grade 6 English Language Arts Georgia Standards of Excellence with blue chevron background paper. With less background paper showing, you save money on printing in color. *I have corrected and added the LANGUAGE standards! Sorry for the inconvenience to those who have previously purchased!
Author's Purpose Students will remember Author's Purpose after making this cute pie shaped flap book. The booklet uses the mnemonic PIE for persuade, inform and entertain. Students can add definitions, drawings, or examples to cement learning. A few lesson ideas/prompts are included. I have used t...
This resource includes everything you need to teach six of the most common prefixes (re-, pre-, de-, dis-, un-, mis-). These materials will allow you to explicitly teach, reinforce, and assess prefixes in just a few minutes a day. Now Included: Google Forms for the Practice Printable, Task Cards, and Assessment! What’s Included: •PowerPoint Lesson (Monday) •Practice Printable - Digital Version Included (Tuesday) •30 Task Cards - Digital Version Included (Wednesday) •Sketch Notes (Thursday) •Assessment - Digital Version Included (Friday) •BONUS: Interactive Notebook Activity Download the preview for a detailed overview of the resource. NOTE: This resource was written based on third-grade content standards. However, none of the student materials are labeled with a grade level. This will allow teachers to use this resource across grade levels. Get the entire Third-Grade Grammar Bundle HERE! Other Third-Grade Grammar Units: •Nouns •Common and Proper Nouns •Pronouns •Verbs •Adjectives •Adverbs •Regular Plural Nouns •Irregular Plural Nouns •Concrete and Abstract Nouns •Regular Verbs •Irregular Verbs •Form and Use Simple Verb Tenses •Subject-Verb Agreement •Pronoun-Antecedent Agreement Agreement •Comparative and Superlative Adjectives •Comparative and Superlative Adverbs •Coordinating Conjunctions •Subordinating Conjunctions •Simple Sentences •Compound Sentences •Complex Sentences •Capitalize Titles •Commas in Addresses •Commas and Quotation Marks in Dialogue •Form and Use Possessives •Prefixes •Suffixes •Use Reference Materials (Dictionary Skills) •Multiple Meaning Words •Shades of Meaning Get all the latest Teacher Thrive news! ➜SIGN UP for my newsletter! ➜FOLLOW me on Teachers Pay Teachers! ➜FOLLOW me on TeacherThrive.com! ➜FOLLOW me on Facebook! ➜FOLLOW me on Pinterest! ➜FOLLOW me on Instagram! Please read: This is a nonrefundable digital download. Please read the description carefully and examine the preview file before purchasing. © Copyright 2018 M. Tallman. All rights reserved. Permission is granted to copy pages specifically designed for student or teacher use by the original purchaser or licensee. This is intended to be used by one teacher unless additional licenses have been purchased. The reproduction of any other part of this product is strictly prohibited. Copying any part of this product and placing it on the Internet in any form (even a personal/classroom website) is strictly forbidden. Doing so makes it possible for an Internet search to make the document available on the Internet, free of charge, and is a violation of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA).
Choose two of the sentences listed below to expand by adding logical additional parts of speech (nouns, pronouns, verbs, adjectives, adverbs, prepositional phrases). Your sentence should be at leas…
If you haven't had the chance to read about how I am using small groups in writing this year, be sure to read the overview HERE. I wanted to talk about each of the individual sections to help give you a better idea of how to start implementing these in your classroom. The first two groups I introduced to my class were Independent Writing and Partner Writing. Independent Writing I started with this first because it's the most familiar. I consists of students writing on their own for the entire time. We talk about keeping their pencils moving, not their mouths ;) The activities that students complete in Independent Writing consist of: finishing work started in Teacher Time~ Independent Writing always follows Teacher Time, so it's an easy way for kids to pick up where we left off together and keep writing writing about anything that interests them~ some students just love writing, so they are welcome to free-write once their Teacher Time work is done looking at their Writer's Notebook cover and/or the List of Things I Love~ read more about that HERE getting ideas from our Writing Ideas Bin Our Writing Ideas Bin is full of great resources to help kids generate ideas! Inside you will find: Seasonal Writing Prompts (I change these out when we switch our other seasonal items in Word Work and Math Centers). Find more information on how I incorporate these HERE. Full-page printouts of some of the most creative writing ideas e-v-e-r! Have you heard of Luke Neff's Tumblr site completely dedicated to prompts? It's called http://writingprompts.tumblr.com/ and, while several are way too hard for my kids, there are some that blow.their.minds! I was excited to read he has a TpT Store now, and has also aligned many of his prompts to CCSS. Check him out HERE. I just print out his prompts and put them in a document sleeve, then attach them all with binder rings. That way, I can add to them as he comes out with more :) We discussed as a class a nice amount of time to spend either choosing or planning their piece (using planners, graphic organizers, webs, etc.). They came up with two minutes, which is obviously relative, since there's no way I can time them, nor would I want to. It does give me some leeway, though, if I see a student at the Writing Ideas Bin forever. I can simply hold up two fingers and they will oh-so-gently be reminded to choose and get to work ;) Partner Writing This was a big risk for me this year, because I have never instituted regular partner writing ever in my teaching. I was deeply impressed with the community-building that was coming out of Read With Someone, so I took a chance and *wow* I am glad I did! I had to structure it so it wouldn't be a free-for-all, or a partnership where one student wrote and the other just sat there for 20 minutes. I came up with three options: Sharing any piece in their Writer's Notebook and getting feedback Shared Writing Partner Writing Shared Writing is when both students are working on the same story. They both need to be writing it in their own Writer's Notebooks, so at the end of the writing time, there is an identical story in both. This has been a wonderful lesson in collaboration and also teamwork, as they ask each other how to spell a word, come up with characters' names, and work to create something new from each others' ideas. Partner Writing is similar, but different. In this activity, kids are both writing and are working together, but their pieces are different. How different is completely up to them. I have had students work on the same story idea, but write it from differing perspectives. I have also had kids write about two different ideas but check in with each other when they need help spelling something or want input on how a part of their story should go. Although I was most nervous about this one, the kids didn't fail to impress and came up with some very unique ideas! Plus, it was a wonderful experience to truly collaborate in writing, which is something that was new to all of us :) Kids go to Partner Writing in the same groups as the rest of their Writing Groups, so they can continue to build on their partner pieces week after week, or choose to meet with new partners every time. I hope this introduction to Independent and Partner Writing helped give you some ideas for your own classroom writing program. We started with building stamina in these two groups before I introduced the Spelling Practice and Teacher Time, but it didn't take long for students to get the hang of it-- not just because the layout was similar to how we ran other subjects, but because the choices were fun and the time was shorter than in years past. Let me know if you have any questions and I will be going more in-depth with Teacher Time, Spelling Practice, and Handwriting next! If you're interested in picking up my Chevron Writing Groups Signs, they are available in my TpT Store HERE. Have a wonderful afternoon!
We are headed quickly for Back to School! Summer seems to go by faster every year, don't you think? This year for one of my goals in reading as we start back to school, I
Making Meaning Grade 2 Unit 6 Wondering Fiction and Narrative Nonfiction: The Tale of Peter Rabbit/Beatrix Potter and The Art Lesson/Draw, Draw,Draw Aligned to 2nd grade Reading and Language Arts Common Core Florida State Standards. Each test has multiple choice questions including: multi-select excerpts from articles, text, and stories pictures and photographs part A/part B answer key
Printable Copies AND Self-Grading Google Forms - Grade 4 LEAP 2025 - Improve LEAP 2025 Grade 4 ELA scores with this practice set for ELA Reading designed to help students excel. All answer keys are included. Use as printables OR Self-Grading Google Forms. Includes: Printable Copies Links for Self-Grading Google Forms and Directions The Roll of a Dice - Narrative poem with 10 LEAP style questions The Case of the Missing Mystery - Narrative with 11 LEAP style questions Writing Prompt - from passages 1 and 2 The History of the Empire State Building - Informational with 10 LEAP style questions Poster Set for Bulletin Boards - We are Ready! Question types: multiple choice, multi select, A/B questions, hot text, order of events, and table match Use as a mock LEAP test, or break up the bundle as separate test prep materials. These are NOT released tests. They are original passages and questions written in LEAP style and addressing LEAP standards. These ELA practice tests can be taken on paper, or on Google Drive/Google Classroom through Google Docs. It’s your choice! Are you interested in our 3rd grade bundle? Click here: 3rd Grade LEAP Bundle Buyer's note - the passages in this set are similar to other reading bundles, so buy one, not all. Why am I qualified to write these passages, writing prompts, and Common-Core aligned questions? Not only have I worked as a Language Arts Teacher for 30 years with a Highly Qualified Status, but I also have spent the last 15 years writing state and national assessments, such as the SATs, ACTs, and individual state assessments that align with the Common-Core standards. This includes grading, item writing, and passage writing for these assessments. 4th Grade LEAP 2025 Test Prep Informational Text and Non-Fiction Review Game 4th Grade LEAP 2025 Test Prep Reading Literature and Narrative Review Game 4th Grade LEAP 2025 Test Prep Practice Tests 3rd Grade LEAP 2025 Test Prep Practice Tests