We are a group of active educators sharing our everyday experiences in the classroom. We share news, trends, research, ideas, and technologies that shape the future of learning. We support teaching through professional development, thought leadership, and resource curation.
We believe that education should not be a privilege; it is essential to the survival of the human race.
We are a group of active educators sharing our everyday experiences in the classroom. We share news, trends, research, ideas, and technologies that shape the future of learning. We support teaching through professional development, thought leadership, and resource curation.
We believe that education should not be a privilege; it is essential to the survival of the human race.
The Grade 3 Common Core Language Arts curriculum focuses on developing foundational reading, writing, speaking, and listening skills. In Reading, students explore both literature and informational texts, learning to identify main ideas, details, and themes while also recognizing text structures. The Reading Foundations segment emphasizes fluency, helping students read with accuracy and expression.
Writing tasks include narratives, informative texts, and opinions, guiding students through the writing process—planning, drafting, revising, and editing. Language standards focus on grammar, punctuation, and vocabulary, with lessons on using verbs, forming plurals, and understanding word meanings and figurative language.
In Speaking and Listening, students engage in discussions and presentations to strengthen communication and active listening skills. Overall, this curriculum builds independence in reading and writing and equips third graders with essential skills for future academic success. It balances skill-building with opportunities for creative expression, preparing students for more complex learning in later grades.
You will find a wealth of activities in this worksheet for your students.
The Common Core ELA standards aim to help students develop their comprehension and practical use of print concepts, the alphabet principle, and other fundamental rules of the English writing system. These basic skills are not the ultimate goal; they are essential parts of a successful reading program aimed at creating skilled readers who can understand various types of texts in different subjects.
Differentiation in instruction is necessary as proficient readers will require far less practice with these ideas compared to readers who are having difficulty. The goal is to educate students on new information, not repeat what they already understand - to decide when certain children or tasks require additional or reduced focus.
Students are responsible for meeting grade-specific standards each year and improving upon skills and knowledge acquired in previous grades.
This worksheet provides a lot of practice opportunities for your Grade 1 students in order to master Language Arts.
Grade 4 students are required to perform certain tasks.
Use specific information and examples from the text to clarify the text’s direct meaning and to make logical deductions from it.
Identify a central idea in a text and provide a concise summary of the text.
Provide a detailed analysis of a character, setting, or event in a story or drama by referencing specific details from the text, such as the character’s thoughts, words, or actions.
Identify the definition of words and phrases in a text, including references to important mythological characters like Hercules.
Describe key distinctions among poetry, plays, and prose by discussing the specific components of each form, such as verse, rhythm, and meter for poetry, and characters, settings, descriptions, dialogue, and stage directions for drama.
This ebook contains 50 activities designed for your students to practice with the Common Core Language Arts for Grade 4.
The Standards, known as the Common Core State Standards for English Language Arts & Literacy in History/Social Studies, Science, and Technical Subjects, are the result of a comprehensive initiative to meet the states’ directive to develop new K-12 standards that will prepare students for college and careers with literacy skills by the end of high school.
The Common Core Standards establish several criteria for literacy in history and social studies, science, and technical subjects as well as English language arts (ELA). In the same way that students need to master reading, writing, speaking, listening, and using language proficiently across different subjects, the Standards must also outline the literacy skills needed for success in college and careers in various fields.
This worksheet will provide enough pratcice for your students to familiarise themselves with the Language Arts curriculum. The answers to the activities are included as well at the end of the book.
While in Kindergarten, students will acquire these skills along with other subjects:
With guidance and assistance, inquire and respond to queries regarding important details within a text.
With guidance and assistance, recount well-known tales, highlighting important details.
Inquire and respond to queries regarding unfamiliar terms in a passage.
With guidance and assistance, identify the author and illustrator of a tale and explain the function of each in narrating the story.
Identify typical categories of texts (e.g., storybooks, poems).
Participate purposefully in group reading activities with comprehension.
With guidance and assistance, explain the relationship between two people, occurrences, concepts, or pieces of information within a text.
Identify the writer and artist of a piece and explain the function of each in conveying the concepts or details within the text.
Participate purposefully and with comprehension in group reading sessions.
This ebook is filled with numerous activities designed to assist your kindergarten students in honing their Common Core skills.
During the 9th Grade Common Core Language Arts curriculum, students will be taught various subjects including:
Show proficiency in the rules of standard English grammar and usage while writing or speaking.
Utilize parallel structure in rephrasing the given text while maintaining the same language and word count.
Recognize sentences that have parallel structures.
The cat played with the ball, pounced on the mouse, and chased the butterfly.
Employ different kinds of phrases and clauses to express precise meanings and enhance diversity and engagement in writing or presentations.
Find prepositional phrases
Recognize appositives and phrases that rename nouns.
Determine subordinate and main clauses.
What type of sentence is it: simple, compound, complex, or compound-complex?
Combine sentences by using relative clauses.Show mas
tery of correct English capitalization, punctuation, and spelling in writing.
Employ a semicolon (and possibly a conjunctive adverb) for connecting two or more closely related independent clauses.Using conjunctive adverbs for transitions
Utilize semicolons to connect independent clauses, and commas to separate items in a list.
This digital book will assist them in practicing everything mentioned.
By the time they reach fifth grade, students following the Common Core Language Arts curriculum will be introduced to a variety of new concepts and skills:
Make sure to correctly cite a passage from a text both when summarizing its explicit content and when making conclusions based on the text.
Identify the main idea of a narrative, play, or poem based on specific information provided in the text, such as the reactions of characters to obstacles or the reflections of the speaker on a subject; give a brief overview of the text.
Analyze and differentiate between two or more characters, settings, or events in a story or drama, utilizing specific details from the text (e.g., examining how characters engage with one another).
Decide the significance of words and phrases in a text, taking into account figurative language like metaphors and similes.
Describe how a succession of chapters, scenes, or stanzas connect to form the overarching framework of a specific narrative, play, or poem.
This eBook provides numerous chances for Grade 5 students to practice various aspects of Language Arts.
In their final year of High School, students should be aware of, among other aspects:
· Utilize language understanding to grasp how it operates in various contexts, enabling effective decisions regarding meaning or style and achieving deeper comprehension during reading or listening.
· Change sentence structure for impact, referring to sources (like Tufte’s Artful Sentences) for support as necessary; utilize knowledge of syntax when analyzing intricate texts during reading.
· Merge sentences by incorporating relative clauses.
· What is implied by the punctuation?
· Vocabulary Learning and Application
· Identify or explain the significance of unfamiliar and ambiguous words and expressions relevant to grades 11–12 reading and subject matter, selecting adaptively from various techniques.
· Rely on context (for instance, the general idea of a sentence, paragraph, or text; a word’s role or placement in a sentence) as a hint to understand a word or phrase’s meaning.
This ebook will assist your students in practicing everything mentioned above and beyond.
In Common Core Language Arts, 6th grade students are instructed in a range of skills such as those listed below:
Explain how a narrative in a story or play develops through a sequence of occurrences, emphasizing how the characters react or evolve as the narrative advances towards a conclusion.
Identify the main concept conveyed in a passage and how it is illustrated through specific details; summarize the text without adding personal opinions or evaluations.
Examine how a particular sentence, chapter, scene, or stanza impacts the overall organization of a text and enriches the progression of the theme, setting, or plot.
Analyze the distinctions between reading a story, play, or poem and listening to or watching an audio, video, or live interpretation of the text, while also exploring the varied visual and auditory elements encountered in each.
This digital book includes many activities for Common Core Language Arts students to improve their abilities.
Common Core State Standards for English Language Arts in the eighth grade:
Provide quotes from the text that best support an analysis of both explicit statements and conclusions drawn from the text.
Identify a main message or key idea of a text and examine how it progresses throughout the text, considering its connection to the characters, setting, and plot; give an unbiased overview of the text.
Examine how specific dialogues or events in a narrative or play advance the plot, unveil character traits, or influence a character’s choice.
Analyze the use of words and phrases in a text to understand their meanings, including figurative and connotative meanings; evaluate how specific word choices affect meaning and tone, such as using analogies or allusions to other texts.
Examine the organization of multiple texts and assess how the distinct structure of each impacts their overall meaning and style.
The ebook contains 50 exercises to assist your students in practicing.
Seventh grade students following the Common Core Language Arts program will be taught:
Provide multiple examples of text to back up analysis of both explicit statements and conclusions drawn from the text.
Identify a main theme of a text and examine how it progresses throughout the text; present an unbiased summary of the text.
Examine the way specific elements of a narrative or play are connected (e.g., how the setting influences the characters or storyline).
Analyzing the meaning of words and phrases in a text, including their figurative and connotative meanings, as well as examining the effects of rhymes and other sound repetitions like alliteration on a particular verse or stanza of a poem or section of a story or drama.
Examine the impact of a play or poem’s format or arrangement (e.g., monologue, sonnet) on its significance.
This digital book will assist them in practicing the curriculum tasks.
Common Core Grade 11 students will be taught to:
Show mastery of the rules of standard English grammar and usage in writing or speaking.
Utilize the knowledge that usage is based on convention, may evolve, and can be challenged.
Addressing complicated or disputed language usage problems by referring to resources like Merriam-Webster’s Dictionary of English Usage and Garner’s Modern American Usage for guidance.
Show mastery of standard English capitalization, punctuation, and spelling in writing.
Follow rules for using hyphens.
Make sure to spell accurately.
Utilize language expertise to grasp how language operates in varying situations, to make appropriate decisions regarding meaning or style, and to enhance understanding while reading or listening.
Identify or define the definitions of unfamiliar and ambiguous terms and expressions from 11th to 12th grade literature and material, utilizing various methods as needed.
This ebook will assist students in practicing these skills.
Students in the tenth grade of the Common Core Language Arts program will be required to acquire the skills to:
Decide or explain the definition of unfamiliar and various-meaning words and phrases from grades 9–10 reading and content, utilizing a variety of strategies.
Utilize the surrounding information to infer the meaning of a word or phrase.
Find the definition of words by examining their opposites in the given context.
Utilize the surrounding information to determine the definition of a term
Recognize and accurately apply variations in word forms that signal various meanings or grammatical functions (e.g., criticize, criticism, critical; explore, exploration).
Look up general and specific resources such as dictionaries, glossaries, and thesauruses in both physical and digital formats to discover how to say a word or figure out its exact definition, type of word, or origins.
Use the exercises provided in this ebook to help your students improve these skills.
What are Irregular Verbs?
Irregular verbs are verbs that do not follow the standard rules of conjugation in English. Unlike regular verbs, which form the past simple and past participle by adding “-ed” (e.g., walk -> walked), irregular verbs change in unique ways.
Why Do We Use Irregular Verbs?
Irregular verbs are deeply rooted in the English language, often because of their origins in Old English or other Germanic languages. They are commonly used, and knowing them helps speakers sound more fluent and natural.
Irregular Verb Forms
In English, verbs can have three main forms:
Base Form: The root form of the verb (e.g., go, see, buy)
Past Simple: The form used for past events (e.g., went, saw, bought)
Past Participle: The form used in perfect tenses and the passive voice (e.g., gone, seen, bought)
Understanding these forms is essential for forming correct sentences in past and perfect tenses. This ebook will help you and your students with that.
The Future Perfect is a verb tense used for actions that will be completed before some other point in the future. For example: “The parade will have ended by the time Chester gets out of bed. At eight o’ clock I will have left.”
The Future Perfect tense is used for talking about an action that will be completed between now and some point in the future. On the other hand, the Future Perfect tense is only for actions that will be complete before a specified point in the future. In other words, the action you’re talking about must have a deadline. If you don’t mention a deadline, use the Simple Future tense instead of the Future Perfect tense.
In this ebook, you will find detailed explanations on how to form the Future Perfect tense, when it should be used, and many exercises for your students to practice. There is also the relevant answer key at the end.
When we refer to things that will happen in the future, we often use something known as the Simple Future tense. When we talk or write about plans, expectations, schedules, and predictions, we often use the Simple Future tense. The Simple Future tense helps convey an action or state that will begin and end in the future. We use the Simple Future tense in declarative sentences to state that something is scheduled or planned. It communicates willingness and expresses an expectation, a prediction, or a guess.
This highly practical ebook contains detailed explanations on how the Simple Future is formed, when to use it, and there are plenty of activities in the end for your students to practice and master it. Anwer key is also included.
When we describe an action in the Future Perfect Continuous tense, we are projecting ourselves forward in time and looking back at the duration of that activity. The activity will have begun sometime in the past, present, or in the future, and is expected to continue in the future. For example: “In November, I will have been working at my company for three years.”
There are similarities and differences between the Future Continuous and the Future Perfect Continuous tense, which might cause confusion. The main difference is that we use the Future Continuous to predict the future, while we use the Future Perfect Continuous to talk about an ongoing action that will finish before another.
This practical ebook will explain how the Future Perfect Continuous is formed, when it is used, and it will also provide plenty of examples and exercises. The relevant answer key is provided at the end as well.
The Future Continuous tense is a verb tense that shows an action happening over a period of time in the future. “I will be driving all night” is an example of the Future Continuous tense, as it indicates an action continuing over a specific future period of time. Compare it to this sentence, written in the Simple Future tense: “I will drive.” Although this example indicates an intention to drive in the future, it does not refer to a continuous action over a specific period of time in the future.
The Future Continuous tense can be confusing because it sometimes seems interchangeable with other future tenses.
This ebook sheds light to all the uses of the Future Continuous tense. It describes how it is formed, when it is used, and has ample practice for students, with plenty of exercises and examples. The relevant answer key to the activities is also included.
This is the first book of the Practical English Grammar series, on the Simple Present Tense.
Understanding and using the Simple Present correctly is essential for clear and effective communication in English. The Simple Present tense is one of the most fundamental tenses in English grammar. It is primarily used to describe habitual actions, general truths, and fixed arrangements.
This book contains all the uses of the Simple Present tense, along with examples. They are followed by formation rules, and also some activities. You can use these activities in your class to teach or reinforce the use of the Simple Present Tense.
It is one of the most widely used tenses of the English language, and it is very easy to use and to teach. Even younger students can easily master it and use it in no time. We hope you enjoy teaching the Simple Present Tense to your students.
This is the second ebook from the highly successful Practical English Grammar series.
The Present Continuous Tense is probably the most commonly used tense in English. It is used to describe an action that is happening now, at the moment of speaking, and it is therefore one of the first tenses that young students learn, as it is very easy to understand. It is also called Present Progressive.
The first part of the ebook focuses on theory: the correct formation and usage of the Present Continuous tense, followed by examples.
The second part of the ebook contains exercises that will help your students practise and consolidate their knowledge of the tense.
Finally, there is the key to the activities, which makes the book ideal for both classroom use and self study as well.
We hope that both you and your students will enjoy teaching and learning about the Present Continuous tense.