Real to Reel: Dystopian Societies
Netflix, Hulu, and Disney+ have taken over much of the television industry by taking popular and enticing books or comics and creating a TV series...
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.
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.
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.
For a better website experience, please confirm you are in:
Code-switching is changing something about yourself to fit a certain situation or audience. The way you might talk to your friends versus talking to your parents by using two different tones of voice is an example of code-switching. People code-switch to make tone, wording, and appearance fit the situation. In the book and movie, The Hate U Give by Angie Thomas, the main character Starr Carter (played by Amandla Stenberg) learns that code-switching is essential to her various friend groups, and to her safety when interacting with people of authority as a person of color.
Code-switching is a tug of war that Starr plays between her two worlds—gangs and poverty in her neighborhood in Garden Heights, and suburbia and money at Williamson High School. Through the tragedy of losing her best friend Khalil to police brutality, Starr tries to navigate her Garden Heights self while also maintaining her Williamson self.
Download the below for a lesson on code-switching using textual evidence.
Jennifer Epping is a high school English and journalism teacher in Des Moines, Iowa. She has a passion for reading, writing, and making lame jokes to her students just to see them laugh or roll their eyes. She just concluded her ninth year teaching. Epping graduated from Iowa State University with a BS in journalism and mass communication (2010) and BA in English Education (2013). She attended New York University’s Summer Publishing Institute (2010), and spent some time in children’s book publishing in New York.
Netflix, Hulu, and Disney+ have taken over much of the television industry by taking popular and enticing books or comics and creating a TV series...
In the majority of books, the narrator is human and alive, but in The Book Thief by Markus Zusak, the narrator is Death. Yes, Death with a capital D....
From San Antonio, you take I-35 S until you hit Hwy. 90W just outside of the city limits. You’ll then hit Castroville, which everyone pronounces...
The way authors structure their books is sometimes jaw-dropping. So impressive that by the end you hug it tight, knowing it taught you something, or...
Students' favorite streaming services, movies, and video games are all packed with compelling storytelling. To get them more excited about reading, I...
Every time I open up Instagram, Facebook, or Twitter, I’m given the option to post to stories or urged to open the stories of others. Pictures that...
In Kimberly Brubaker Bradley’s Fighting Words, 10-year-old protagonist Della gives readers a front row seat to her daily life in foster care with her...
In recent months, the Taliban in the Middle East has taken over once again after American troops removed themselves. The first person I thought of...
Whether teaching literature or rhetoric, close reading is an essential and often difficult skill to teach. This note-taking system, which is a...
It’s not very often that TV shows or movies come before the book version, but it does happen sometimes! The art of writing is alive in visual media...
For the past two weeks on my morning runs, I’ve been listening to the podcast Christmas Wars: A Very Merry Rivalry on the battle for Christmas movie...
On the day after state testing, one of my sophomores burst into the room and announced: “Mr. G, I used rule of three on my essay.” It was a proud...