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Bell Ringers Bundle, One Semester of Vocabulary, Grammar & Literary Terms

Rated 4.84 out of 5, based on 309 reviews
4.8 (309 ratings)
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Laura Randazzo
67.1k Followers
Grade Levels
9th - 12th, Homeschool
Standards
Formats Included
  • Zip
  • Google Apps™
Pages
183 slides (uneditable) in PDF, PowerPoint, and Google Slides
$18.99
$18.99
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Laura Randazzo
67.1k Followers
Includes Google Apps™
The Teacher-Author indicated this resource includes assets from Google Workspace (e.g. docs, slides, etc.).

What educators are saying

This was excellent with various things to do as a bell ringer. You can customize it to suit your students or keep as is and have most of the year bell ringers finished for you. I did want my students to practice these throughout the semester. This is great!
This is a great resource to use at the beginning of the class to provide structure and grammar review.

Description

Smoothly launch your high school English class each day with this bundle of my popular bell-ringers/warm-ups/mini-lessons to teach the Common Core-aligned skills your students need. (NOTE: This product is the first semester's worth of material included in my FULL YEAR VOL. 1 BELL RINGERS. If you've already purchased that massive budget-priced bundle, do NOT purchase this item – you already own all of the same content.)

With M.U.G. Shot Mondays, students master Mechanics, Usage, and Grammar by working together to proofread real-world writing examples. These 19 weekly grammar editing sessions address the most common errors made in middle-school and high-school writing. Students write down the flawed sentence and then work together to edit/make corrections. After the class agrees on all of the edits made by the student writing at the board, go over the marks, explaining the rules that apply. After three sessions, collect the students’ papers and give points for accuracy.

On Lit. Term Tuesdays, class begins with a high-interest short lecture featuring classic literary devices paired with modern examples with which your students are certain to identify. Sure, everyone knows protagonist and antagonist, but have your students learned about anti-heroes (think: Walter White from Breaking Bad, and Dexter) or foils (Jude Law's Watson to Robert Downey Jr.'s Sherlock Holmes)? Freshen up their literary term knowledge with these once-a-week-lectures, ranging from five-to-15 minutes each. From Will Ferrell to Ferris Bueller, there are plenty of examples included in these lectures to help your students relate to the literary techniques used in our greatest classic tales. UPDATE: I've also included links to 19 video presentations (one per weekly lesson) to serve as lecturer notes/prep materials or flipped lesson materials. Feel free to use the videos to prep yourself for the bell-ringer lectures or share them directly with your students and I'll be your weekly virtual guest lecturer.

Then comes Words on Wednesday, a weekly lesson to build higher-level vocabulary in your college-bound students. These lessons feature words commonly used on the SAT that educated adults also use in their everyday lives. Even if your students aren’t bound for a university, they’ll still benefit from knowing these words as they enter the work force. Each lesson, which takes about 15 minutes, goes deep into understanding denotation and connotation of five words and includes definition, part of speech, synonym, antonym, and a sentence relevant to a teen audience. Instead of using a list of 10 words each week that students memorize and then promptly forget, I’ve found more success with going deep on five words. We discuss the words and use them in regular conversation. I’ve been delighted to see many of these words show up in our in-class writings, and students also excitedly point them out to me in passages that we read in class. This method helps words “stick” better than any other method I’ve tried in my 20+ years as a high school teacher.

On Thursdays, my classes take a break from the routine procedures and focus solely on our current unit of study.

Fridays? Why, S.S.R., of course; it’s the best way to end the week. Click here for my FREE materials on how to manage your students' quiet reading time with easy grading for you!

These weekly procedures will take you through an entire semester. My students enjoy the predictability of the procedures and even have their notebooks out and are busy jotting down the slide notes before the tardy bell even rings. It helps me effectively use every minute of my instructional time.

Even though most semesters run for just 18 weeks, I’ve included 19 weeks’ worth of materials for each activity in case your calendar has an extra week or if you just want to swap out one of the lessons.

This product includes;

M.U.G. Vol. #1

Literary Terms/Devices

Vocabulary Builder/Words on Wednesday Vol. #1

All three of these bell-ringer packages are sold separately at my store for $7.99 each. In this bundle, $18.99 (a 20 percent savings!) gets you everything you’ll need for a semester’s worth of learning.

Want more? Check out my full catalog of bell-ringer options here:
https://www.teacherspayteachers.com/Store/Laura-Randazzo/Category/Class-Starters-Procedures-40255

Thanks for stopping by!

Total Pages
183 slides (uneditable) in PDF, PowerPoint, and Google Slides
Answer Key
Included
Teaching Duration
1 Semester
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Standards

to see state-specific standards (only available in the US).
Use precise language and domain-specific vocabulary to manage the complexity of the topic.
Use precise language, domain-specific vocabulary, and techniques such as metaphor, simile, and analogy to manage the complexity of the topic.
Demonstrate command of the conventions of standard English grammar and usage when writing or speaking.
Recognize and correct inappropriate shifts in verb voice and mood.
Demonstrate command of the conventions of standard English capitalization, punctuation, and spelling when writing.

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