Skip to the main content

AP English

Help ALL your students achieve AP success with our coursebooks designed by leading experts.

AP & Honors Science

Guide students through real-world application of science concepts with Wiley’s advanced programs.

AP Social Studies

Discover a variety of accessible yet rigorous programs designed to align with AP social studies courses.

AP Computer Science

Prepare students for success on the AP Computer Science A exam.

AP & Honors Mathematics

Explore Wiley titles to support both AP and Honors mathematics instruction.

Literacy Skills & Intensive Reading

Connections: Reading – Grades 6–12

Empower student success with a proven intensive reading program that develops strong reading skills in striving readers.

Drama, Speech & Debate

Basic Drama Projects 10th Edition

Build students’ confidence and competence with comprehensive, project-based theatre instruction.

Literature

Connections: Literature

Support learners as they study dynamic, relevant texts and bring the richness of diverse voices to students through literature.

Middle School Preview | Shop
High School Preview | Shop
 

Literature & Thought

Develop critical thinking, reading, and writing across literacy themes, genres, historical eras, and current events.

Language Arts

Vocabu-Lit® – Grades 6–12

Help students build word power using high-quality contemporary and classic literature, nonfiction, essays, and more.

 

Connections: Writing & Language

Help students develop grammar, usage, mechanics, vocabulary, spelling, and writing and editing skills.

Reading/English Language Arts

Measuring Up to the English Language Arts Standards

Incorporate standards-driven teaching strategies to complement your ELA curriculum.

English Language Learners

Measuring Up for English Language Learners

Incorporate research-based best practices for ELLs with an approach that includes a focus on language acquisition strategies.

Mathematics

Measuring Up to the Mathematics Standards

Incorporate standards-driven teaching strategies to complement your mathematics curriculum.

Foundations

Measuring Up Foundations

Help students master foundational math skills that are critical for students to find academic success.

Reading Preview | Shop
Mathematics Preview | Shop

Science

Measuring Up to the Next Generation Science Standards

Give students comprehensive NGSS coverage while targeting instruction and providing rigorous standards practice.

Assessment

Measuring Up Live

Deliver innovative assessment and practice technology designed to offer data-driven instructional support.

World Languages

Social Studies

Science

Turtleback

Reinforced bindings of classroom novels and nonfiction for maximum durability with a lifetime guarantee.

SAT Prep

SAT Prep

Financial Literacy

Introduction to Personal Finance

Culinary Arts

Professional Cooking

Professional Baking

Welcome.

For a better website experience, please confirm you are in:

2 min read

Cheers to Stolen Memories

Cheers to Stolen Memories

Way back in the day, we had this thing called Must See TV. And one of the shows you had to “must-see” was Cheers. Set in a bar in Boston, the show operated around the premise that “sometimes you want to go where everyone knows your name.”

 

It’s a universal theme. Whether you’re transferring to a new school, moving to a new neighborhood, or meeting the guy piloting an identical spaceship as yours that you have no idea how you ended up on (you can read more about that here), everyone wants to fit in. But sometimes, “making your way in the world takes everything you’ve got”—especially if you were kidnapped as a child for your magical abilities.

 

In the fantasy novel Incendiary by Zoriada Córdova, Renata Convida is kidnapped by the King’s Justice and brought to the kingdom of Adulacia. She is an only child and a part of the Robari, the rarest and most feared of the magical Moria. Now, as a member and spy of the rebel Whisperers, Renata is having trouble fitting in because of her power:

I’d still be a scavenger if Dez hadn’t petitioned his father and the other elders to train me as a spy. My skill has been useful at saving Moria trapped in the Puerto Leones borders, but no one among our kind wants a memory thief in their midst. Robari are the reason we lost the way, even if our side has been on the losing end for decades. Robari can’t be trusted. I can’t be trusted” (17).

 

Making your way in the world really does take everything you’ve got—especially if, before you were kidnapped, the other side (determined to destroy your people) used you and your power to turn hundreds of the “enemy” into hollows (what they called people who were stripped of their memories until they withered into empty shells).

 

Of course there is more to Renata and her past than just extracting memories, but when Dez (her commander and the one whose love is the only thing keeping her going) is captured, Renata must return to her former home to convince those who once held her captive that she has remained loyal to them. So while everyone knows her name, no one trusts her.

 

As a memory thief, Renata will wish she could forget the truths that come back to her when she returns as a spy to her former captives. Incendiary may rely on standard tropes—highly sought child with powers seeking redemption after using that power for ill—but it reminds us that as much as we may want to have our painful memories taken away, life is a series of joys and tragedies that may just inspire and empower us to save the world.

 

And that’s a definite must-see. 

 

Have students write about their most vivid memories and download a free graphic organizer below!

DOWNLOAD LESSON

 

Michael Méndez Guevara is a former high school journalism and English teacher who spent his time in the classroom helping students see themselves as writers and fall in love with reading through the world of young adult literature. As an educational sales consultant with Perfection Learning®, Michael works with teachers and schools on improving their literacy instruction and providing resources to help students achieve academic success. He has taught elementary school, middle school, and high school and has worked as a district level leader and served on the Texas state standards revision committee that developed the state’s current literacy standards. He is the father of three adult sons, the youngest a student at the University of Kansas—Rock Chalk! Michael is working on a professional development book for literacy educators and currently has agents reading the manuscript of his young adult novel, The Closest Thing to a Normal Life. When he's not reading, writing, or running, Michael is fully committed to watching as much Law & Order as possible.

That's the Tweet

That's the Tweet

There’s a trend on Twitter where users make a simple statement followed by the catch phrase “That’s it. That’s the tweet.”

Read More
Catfish in Space?

Catfish in Space?

For some bizarre reason, I’ve recently gotten into the MTV show Catfish. Basically, it’s a documentary show where the hosts help people track down...

Read More
Keurig Confessions—Love the Machine, or Else…

Keurig Confessions—Love the Machine, or Else…

About three weeks ago, my Keurig died halfway through brewing my morning cup of This Is My Only Reason For Living. Weeping, lamenting, and the...

Read More
Science Fiction for Dummies (or Dilettantes)

Science Fiction for Dummies (or Dilettantes)

For me, science fiction boils down to whether you’re a galaxy far, far away person or a space, the final frontier person.

Read More
Does Gatsby Really Matter? Combating Apathy in the ELA Classroom

Does Gatsby Really Matter? Combating Apathy in the ELA Classroom

Given that lately I am as burnt out as they come, I found myself wanting to do something unusual.

Read More
What if we taught composition like Bob Ross teaches painting?

What if we taught composition like Bob Ross teaches painting?

Back in my hometown, it was a rite of passage at the age of twelve to get a paper route. There was no status associated with it, nor did it come with...

Read More
New Beginnings: Let's Get Lost

New Beginnings: Let's Get Lost

Adi Alsaid has released many young adult books since his first title, Let’s Get Lost, but I can promise you, this one blazes through as just as good,...

Read More
Practical Tips and Strategies for Welcoming English Language Learners into Your Middle School Classroom

Practical Tips and Strategies for Welcoming English Language Learners into Your Middle School Classroom

It’s that time! The school year is beginning and you’re ready to welcome up to 180 new learners into your classroom. Whether you’re in your first...

Read More
Black History Month: The Friend You Need

Black History Month: The Friend You Need

In just the past few weeks, I’ve seen two friends post on social media about their spirit animals. Neither of them is Native American. Recently,...

Read More
Secondary ELA Grading Hacks

Secondary ELA Grading Hacks

As secondary English teachers, we know how important it is for our students to learn to write well. We also know that oftentimes means we have over a...

Read More
Mental Health Awareness: All the Bright Places

Mental Health Awareness: All the Bright Places

You know those books that you hug at the end? This is one of those books. All The Bright Places by Jennifer Niven is just plain good—heartbreaking,...

Read More
ELA Activity: Character Analysis Diagram

ELA Activity: Character Analysis Diagram

Analyzing complex characters in a novel or a short story requires students to look at many things such as how they’re described physically, but also...

Read More