Emojis Close Reading Comprehension Passages Differentiated Reading Passages
Students love this lesson! Relate to your students with something they are familiar with - emojis and emoticons! With these fun and engaging close reading passages and activities, students will learn about where emojis and emoticons came from and why we use them today. The reading passages and activities help students understand how we communicate our feelings in today’s modern world of texting, chat, or emails. This week-long lesson on Emojis and Emoticons: Where Did They Come From? follows a close reading model and includes a teacher guide and notes to make teaching the lesson easy!
Students will be required to use close reading skills to practice making logical inferences, citing textual evidence, and drawing conclusions from the text.
These differentiated informational text passages about emojis and emoticons will engage students and spark interest! Through reading comprehension and close reading skills, students will learn about:
- how communication has changed over time from letters and phone calls to texting and emails
- where emoticons came from and how simple keyboard characters can help convey feelings
- who invented emojis and how they've changed the world of communication forever
- how emojis and emoticons can be used to convey happiness, silliness, sadness, and more!
PRINT & GO! Easily differentiate instruction with the leveled reading passages for grades 3-5. Includes everything you need to teach a week-long close reading lesson.
⭐ A digital Google Classroom option is included! (Google Slides™)
⭐⭐ Bundle and Save! This resource is also included in the following bundle.
Close Reading Comprehension Passages & Questions | September Bundle
Close Reading Lesson:
Emojis and Emoticons: Where Did They Come From?
This high-interest and engaging topic will captivate the interest of students!
Step-by-Step instructions (for teacher and students) are included that follow a close reading model.
Step 1: First Reading: Determine what the text says.
Step 2: Second Reading: Determine how the text says it.
Step 3: Third Reading: Determine what the text means.
Step 4: Written Comprehension: Write and Respond
Includes:
- Implementation Guide (Steps to Close Reading)
- Teacher Guide and Notes
- Classroom Posters
- Mark It Up! Annotation Cards
- 2 Differentiated Reading Passages
- Text-Dependent Questions
- Vocabulary Practice
- Written Response
- Close Reading Graphic Organizers
Easily Differentiate Instruction!
These close reading comprehension passages are written at 2 different levels to allow for differentiation during instruction. The content of the 2 passages is the same, but the reading levels are different. Questions about the content are the same. This makes it easy for you to provide students with the same questions and activity sheets while also allowing students to practice close reading skills on their reading level.
All answer keys are included!
⭐ Note: Each reading passage is leveled with special symbols at the bottom left corner to denote difficulty levels.
This resource is aligned to the anchor standard that refers to reading text closely:
ELA Reading Standard 1: “Read closely to determine what the text says explicitly and to make logical inferences from it, cite specific textual evidence when writing or speaking to support conclusions drawn from the text.”