Publisher's Synopsis
This is a turn-key, differentiated novel unit for Harper Lee's "To Kill a Mockingbird" with over 250 pages of resources including Google Slide presentations, Easel self correcting quizzes and more.
This massive unit includes ready to use activities.
- Mock Trial
- Lesson plan
- 59 Interactive Notebook Pages
- Nonfiction: About the Author
- 14 Fluency Practice Passages
- 14 Differentiated Fluency Practice Passages
- 14 Vocabulary Lists w/Interactive Notebook Pockets and Flash Cards
- 16 Journal Prompts - 31 Modified Journal Prompts w/ answers
- Multiple Essay Prompts
- Multiple Projects
- 6 Non-Fiction Reading Passages
- Comparative Texts
- 14 Comprehension Quizzes
- Higher Order Thinking Assessments
- Reflective Essay
- Inference
- Literary Devices
- Analysis Box - Three D Project
- Jim Crow and TKAM Comparative Text Assignment
- Race Relations in Monroe, Alabama in the 1930s Non-Fiction
- AP Question Practice
- Character Analysis
- Nonfiction: Amasa Coleman Lee: Harper Lee's Father and a Profound Legal Case
- Summative Essay
- Plot Development and Plot Diagram
- Socratic Seminar Discussions
- AP Practice
- AP Study Questions
- End of Novel Multiple Choice Exam
- Constructed Response Final Exam
- 4 Culminating Project Ideas
- Group Projects
- Speaking Assignments
- Google Slide Links to Teaching Presentations
- Themes, Motifs, Symbols
Non-fiction projects include Harper Lee's early life and father as the inspiration for the novel, Jim Crow Laws and the culture and environment of Monroe County in the 1930s.
Fluency passages summarize the chapters and are written at two levels for maximum differentiation.
Five weeks worth of engaging teaching resources from set-by-step lesson plans, chapter questions and answer keys, interactive workbook pages, projects worksheets, graphic organizers and more. This unit will guide you through the process of teaching the novel from start from finish.
Historical Content: The unit contains historical background to fully understand the context of the plot, themes, symbolism, motifs and other literary devices.