The Best Anchor Charts for your ELA classroom all together in one place! You will find outlines to utilize in Reading Literature, Reading Informational, Writing and Language. Explained in this blog post is about the purpose of utilizing anchor charts in your daily instruction. Along with tips to organize your charts. Below is a collection […]
20 Authors of Japanese Literature *Note: The following list follows the traditional Japanese order of writing full names with surname first followed by given name without comma. 1.Murasaki Shikibu (c. 978 – c. 1014) Murasaki Shikibu is a representative author … Continue reading →
Sometimes shit just hits the fan.
Discover the 8 periods in english literature and download and print the FREE literary timeline to use in the classroom or at home.
Art and history Pandas, you’re in for a treat today! Comedy lovers, get in here, too. We’re featuring some of the best new classical art and art history memes from the wildly popular r/trippinthroughtime subreddit.
I read old books because I would rather learn from those who built civilization than those who tore it down.
Reading a piece of fiction is like an invitation to escape the immediate world and immerse yourself in fantasy. You’re expected to put your disbeliefs aside and blot out any distractions to fully experience the story. But some passages in those same books are so blatantly disrespectful and hilariously inaccurate that they can leave half of the population straight-up rolling their eyes. You guessed it, we’re talking about male authors portraying female characters and missing the mark by a long, long shot.
From Aldous Huxley to Steven Pinker, read a list of Israeli intellectual and bestselling author Yuval Noah Harari's favorite book recommmendations.
“Not even Snape could Severus apart.”
The world is a difficult place, and we're all in need of some healing. From memoirs to self-help to fiction, here are the best healing books.
Plenty of us loves to read. Or say that we do. But finding the time to do so is, more often than not, much more difficult than we’d like. After a hard day at work or school, instead of snuggling up with a doggo, a steaming mug of hot cocoa, and a good novel, we usually end up being couch potatoes in front of the TV or computer screen.