Lesson: Reading Roles Mentor Text

$18.75

Reading Roles Mentor Text is a 100-minute secondary ELA lesson that investigates the ethics and legality of protest. By analyzing a high-profile Supreme Court case involving student speech and Snapchat, students use Reading Roles to deconstruct complex informational texts, identify central ideas, and debate the boundaries of direct action.

Description

Reading Roles Mentor Text pushes students to evaluate the systems that govern their own voices. As a core component of the Informational Reading & Writing Unit, this lesson moves beyond basic comprehension to critical analysis of how the law interacts with youth activism and free expression.

Designed for a 100-minute block, the lesson begins with a provocative media inquiry: “Is there a right way to protest?” Students explore various forms of direct action before diving into a Mentor Text regarding a Supreme Court case over student speech. The lesson utilizes a highly structured Reading Roles protocol—assigning students specific tasks like Vocabulary Victor or Central Idea Captain—to ensure that small-group analysis is equitable, focused, and deep.

The session wraps up with a gamified review and a formative writing task where students synthesize their findings on subtopics and central ideas.

What’s Included

  • Detailed 100-minute lesson plan with step-by-step instructional slides and timing.

  • L3. Student’s Snapchat Profanity Leads to High Court Speech Case article for close reading.

  • L3. Reading Roles Guide to facilitate collaborative, student-led text deconstruction.

  • L3. Source Note-Taking Sheet to organize evidence, vocabulary, and subtopics.

  • Central Idea Strategy Guide featuring new protocols for identifying the “heart” of an article.

  • Interactive Review Game Link (Kahoot) to reinforce key concepts and vocabulary.

  • Alignment with WAESN Elements of Liberation and CCSS ELA standards for informational text.

Why Educators Use This Lesson

  • High-Interest Content: Uses a legal case involving social media and student rights that is immediately relatable to middle and high schoolers.

  • Scaffolded Collaboration: The Reading Roles protocol provides a clear script for group work, preventing one student from dominating the conversation.

  • Critical Literacy Skills: Teaches a new central idea strategy that helps students move past superficial summaries.

  • Interactive Formative Assessment: The integrated Kahoot game provides instant data on student understanding of key terms like “direct action” and “systemic oppression.”

  • Ethical Inquiry: Encourages students to think critically about the respectability of protest and who gets to decide what is a “right” way to speak up.

This lesson turns your ELA block into a high-stakes legal and ethical forum.

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