Essential Questions
- How can you better control your online identity?
- What is cyber-bullying?
Literature Connection
- Novel: #famous by Jilly Gagnon
Standards Correlations
R.1, R.2, R.3, R.4, R.6, R.7, R.9, W.1, SL.1, L.4, L.5, L.6
Learning Objective
Students will synthesize information from two texts about teens who became memes.
Key Skills
synthesizing, text features, vocabulary, text evidence, compare and contrast, figurative language, key details, making connections, argument writing
Complexity Factors
Purpose: The texts explain the concept of online identity and suggest ways to protect that identity.
Structure: The first text contains narrative and informational passages. The second is a Q&A.
Language: The language is conversational.
Knowledge Demands: The texts mention memes, hashtags, and social media.
Levels
Lexile: 600L-700L
Guided Reading Level: T
DRA Level: 50
Lesson Plan: Could Your Face Go Viral?/"My Face Went Viral"
Essential Questions
Literature Connection
1. Preparing to Read
Activate Prior Knowledge (5 minutes)
Ask students if they’ve ever had a situation where a friend posted a photo of them online that they didn’t feel comfortable with. Who is the rightful owner of that photo? Is it the person in the photo or the person who took the photo? Discuss.
Preview Text Features (15 minutes)
Guide students to locate the texts. Then preview the text features by asking the following questions:
Preview Vocabulary (10 minutes)
Make a Plan for Reading
Before students start to read, walk them through a reading plan:
2. Reading and Unpacking the Text
Guide students to read the texts. Once they understand them well, discuss the following close-reading and critical-thinking questions.
Close-Reading Questions (15 minutes)
.Critical-Thinking Questions (10 minutes)
3. Skill Building and Writing
Learn Anywhere Activity
An enrichment activity to extend the learning journey at home or in the classroom
Meme Analysis
The internet is full of memes. All you have to do is open up your favorite social media app and start scrolling. This assignment asks you to do just that! Look at the first three memes you come across and think about them critically. Who is in the image? Do you think they gave permission for the image to be posted online? How do you think they might feel about being in the image?
Choose one of the memes and try to research it online. Where did it come from? What’s the story behind it? Based on what you learn, is the meme harmless or harmful?
Finally, try creating your own meme. (No need to post this online; it’s just an experiment). Find a photo of yourself. What’s happening in the photo? Based on your facial expression, the position of your body, or the background, what else could be happening? Try writing a line or a quote that makes the scene in the photo seem different from what it really is.
ELL Springboard
Play “Look Who’s Talking” to help students understand different types of text.
Before reading the two articles, point out that one of the titles is in quotation marks and one isn’t. Explain that the reason is that the title of the second article is in the voice of the person featured in the article. Many articles are written mainly in the author’s voice, with quotation marks to show when the words are someone else’s.
Ask students how you can tell who’s speaking in other types of texts. In comic books, it’s usually speech bubbles. In interviews, the words often follow the speaker’s name and a colon, or each speaker’s words are in a different font or color.
After reading, play “Look Who’s Talking”: Read these four lines from the texts aloud and have students identify the speaker and explain how they know.
Looking for more ELL support? Download our full lesson plan and scroll to p. 5 to find questions that will help your ELLs respond to the text at the level that’s right for them.
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