Description
These editable middle school 6th-8th grade ELA bell ringers are perfect of a quick ELA warm-up every day. This resource includes two year-long (36 weeks each) sets of ELA Bell Ringers for Middle School ELA Classrooms. Each week has a grammar bell ringer, a vocabulary word bell ringer, a root word or affix bell ringer, a foreign phrase bell ringer, and a quote bell ringer. Better yet, no copies and no prep are required.
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TEACH TWO DIFFERENT GRADES?
I teach 7th and 8th grade English Language arts, and I didn’t want students having the same bell ringers both years. Because of this, the bell ringers have the same format, but have completely different content.
INCLUDED IN THIS RESOURCE
ALSO AVAILABLE:
Download the file for two-three free weeks of this product.
WHAT’S INCLUDED?
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This resource would work great in grades 6th-9th.
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These bell ringers are quick, simple, but most importantly, meaningful and engaging at the same time.
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The focus is getting your middle school students to work right away, but still introducing them to quality ELA concepts and content.
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Both resources have all 36 weeks of bell ringers for your middle school and high school students.
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All work is based on the 6th-9th grade ELA Common Core standards and the 7th and 8th grade Core Knowledge Topics.
Monday: Vocabulary Word of the Week {Commonly misspelled/confused}
Students write, define, break-up, use the word in a sentence, and illustrate an 7th grade vocabulary word or CCSS vocabulary word. Based on the commonly misspelled word list for 7th and 8th graders and high school students.
Tuesday: Grammar Skill of the Week
Students correct a grammatically incorrect sentence based on the CCSS middle school language standards.
Wednesday: Root Word of the Week
Students write the root word, its meaning, two examples, and draw pictures for each example. Selected from grades 7th-10th most used Greek and Latin roots.
Thursday: Foreign Phrase of the Week
Student write a commonly used foreign phrase, its country of origin, time-frame origin, use the phrase in a sentence, and then illustrate the foreign phrase
Friday: Quote of the Week
Students read a quote and write what the quote means to them or makes them think of. Many quotes chosen from popular/award-winning novels.
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Middle School/Upper Elementary Bell Ringers
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Quote Bell Ringers
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