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
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Detailed 100-minute lesson plan with step-by-step instructional slides and timing.
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L3. Student’s Snapchat Profanity Leads to High Court Speech Case article for close reading.
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L3. Reading Roles Guide to facilitate collaborative, student-led text deconstruction.
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L3. Source Note-Taking Sheet to organize evidence, vocabulary, and subtopics.
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Central Idea Strategy Guide featuring new protocols for identifying the “heart” of an article.
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Interactive Review Game Link (Kahoot) to reinforce key concepts and vocabulary.
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Alignment with WAESN Elements of Liberation and CCSS ELA standards for informational text.
Why Educators Use This Lesson
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High-Interest Content: Uses a legal case involving social media and student rights that is immediately relatable to middle and high schoolers.
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Scaffolded Collaboration: The Reading Roles protocol provides a clear script for group work, preventing one student from dominating the conversation.
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Critical Literacy Skills: Teaches a new central idea strategy that helps students move past superficial summaries.
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Interactive Formative Assessment: The integrated Kahoot game provides instant data on student understanding of key terms like “direct action” and “systemic oppression.”
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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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