
English (ELA) • Year 5 • 30 • 25 students • Created with AI following Aligned with Common Core State Standards
This is lesson 1 of 5 in the unit "Exploring Informational Texts". Lesson Title: Introduction to Informational Texts Lesson Description: Students will explore the characteristics of informational texts, including their purpose and structure. They will identify different types of informational texts and discuss their features.
Subject: English Language Arts (ELA)
Grade Level: Year 5 (based on U.S. equivalent — typically ages 10–11)
Standards Addressed:
By the end of this 30-minute lesson, students will be able to:
| Time | Activity | Description |
|---|---|---|
| 0–5 min | Attention Grabber ("Real vs. Not Real") | Quick whole-group game comparing narrative and informational titles/images. |
| 5–10 min | Mini-Lesson & Guided Modeling | Interactive teacher-led slide with examples of features. |
| 10–20 min | “Text Detectives” Small Group Exploration | Students examine real samples in groups to find informational features. |
| 20–28 min | Class Discussion & Anchor Chart Creation | Collaborate to make an informational texts anchor chart. |
| 28–30 min | Exit Ticket | Individual task: "What makes a text informational?" |
Objective: Tap into curiosity and activate prior knowledge.
Instructions:
Objective: Introduce key features and the purpose of informational texts.
Steps:
Teacher Prompt:
“Informational texts teach us about the real world. They give facts, explanations, and ideas about topics like science, history, and how things work.”
Introduce the metaphor:
“We’ll be informational text DETECTIVES this week — collecting clues to understand how these texts work!”
Objective: Identify features of an informational text in authentic samples.
Instructions:
Scaffolds: Use a simple detective checklist (“Can you find...?”) and assign roles: reader, feature finder, recorder, reporter, manager.
Teacher circulates: Prompt students, praise curiosity, and model "thinking like a reader."
Objective: Consolidate learning and co-construct understanding.
Instructions:
Add sticky notes: Students write “One amazing thing I learned during Text Detectives” on sticky notes and add them around the chart.
Prompt:
💭 “Write one sentence explaining what makes a text informational. Add one feature you can look for.”
Examples for Modeling:
Collect to assess understanding & inform Lesson 2.
| Method | Purpose |
|---|---|
| Exit Ticket | Gauges individual comprehension of main concept |
| Group Activity | Assesses ability to apply feature-identification collaboratively |
| Discussion | Evidence of verbal reasoning and feature recognition |
Title: “Main Ideas and Key Details”
Students will dive deeper into understanding how to determine the main idea of an informational text and identify supporting details.
Use a clipboard “detective badge” for each student — it makes them feel like investigators and builds engagement with academic vocabulary. With each new lesson in the unit, they earn new “clues” they add to their badge!
Empower your learners this week with the lens of inquiry. They're not just reading texts — they're exploring the world, one fact at a time. 🕵️♂️📖
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