Reading Orally
$0.00In our Reading Orally lesson plan, students learn strategies for reading out loud in front of other people. Students learn the importance of tone, pacing, and accuracy, and practice reading orally.
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In our Reading Orally lesson plan, students learn strategies for reading out loud in front of other people. Students learn the importance of tone, pacing, and accuracy, and practice reading orally.
With our Reading Orally lesson plan, students learn how to be more expressive while reading poetry and how to better interpret the literal and figurative language in poetry.
In our Reading Orally lesson plan for grades 1-2, students learn strategies for reading out loud in front of other people. Students learn the importance of tone, pacing, and accuracy, and practice reading orally.
With our Reading Poetry and Prose lesson plan, students learn about poetry and prose, including their differences and how to identify each type of writing.
Our Reading with Purpose and Understanding lesson plan teaches students about the purpose of reading and understanding what they read. Students practice reading excerpts and identifying the purpose for reading and understanding it.
With our Reading/Comprehending Informational Texts lesson plan, students learn strategies for more effectively reading and understanding texts.
With our Real World Problems – Coordinate Planes lesson plan, students learn how to use coordinate planes to help solve real-world problems.
Our Real-Life Word Connections lesson plan teaches students about how the words they use connect to real people, places, and things. Students learn about shades of meaning, homophones, multiple-meaning words, actions and dialogue, and emotions and traits and why word choice is so important.
Our free downloadable PDF Reasoning to Compare Fractions lesson plan presents various strategies students may use to compare fractions. The lesson begins with a brief introduction reviewing greater than (<), less than (>), and equal to (=) signs. The lesson provides examples in which students look at fractions with either the same num
With our Reasons and Evidence Explanations lesson plan, students learn strategies for effective research and how to differentiate credible and non-credible sources.
With our Reasons and Evidence of an Author lesson plan, students learn how to identify an author’s reason and evidence. Students practice reading articles and identifying the different parts (reason and evidence) of the article in order to demonstrate their understanding of the lesson material.
With our Reasons and Evidence of an Author lesson plan, students learn strategies for describing the ways in which authors use reasons and evidence in their writing, particularly in nonfiction writing.
With our Recall Information from Experiences lesson plan, students learn how to effectively retain and recall information. Students learn how to take notes and how to organize their recollections in a useful way.
With our Recalling and Gathering Information lesson plan, students learn about different types of information and how each can be used, including information gained from personal experience and information gained from outside sources.
With our Recognizing Angles lesson plan, students learn how to recognize and identify right, obtuse, and acute angles. Students practice identifying each type by sight and answer questions about them.
Our Reconstruction lesson plan teaches students about Reconstruction, the time period following the Civil War. Students learn about significant events and people in the Reconstruction Era, along with related vocabulary.
With our Recounting-Describing Details lesson plan, students learn strategies for recounting the details of a passage after hearing the passage read aloud.
With our Rectangle Partition lesson plan, students learn how rectangles can be partitioned into rows and columns and how to count them. Students practice using lesson vocabulary and partitioning rectangles into rows and columns on their own.