Whether your city is hosting a March Madness game, you have a college with a participating team nearby, or your students just really love basketball, mid-March to early April is an exciting time for college basketball fans. We’ve curated a collection of articles, interactive activities, and lessons to make it easier for you to bring March Madness classroom activities to your students throughout the tournament:
Hit a three-pointer with your students by adding March Madness ELA activities to your lesson plans this month:
Create your own March Madness-style literary bracket with your students. When you use Newsela ELA content for your challenge, you can pick the correct grade band and start assigning articles that meet your students’ interests and reading levels. Over a few class periods, students can read engaging fiction and poetry texts and vote on their favorites. For even more participation, have students create their own personalized brackets and use a classwide bracket to track the majority picks. Some selections from each grade band’s collections include:
ELA classrooms don’t get to have all the fun! Have students create a March Madness bracket with science content or add nonfiction resources to your ELA bracket to make the voting even more interesting. Some of the Newsela Science articles you can choose for your competition include:
Do more than just create a reading bracket with your students during this year’s March Madness tournament. Explore other ways to create themed lessons through reading, writing, and debates to keep them engaged:
Have students practice their opinion analysis and writing skills on topics that relate to March Madness, like:
Then, have students write their own opinion essay using our student writing assistant, Newsela Writing. Add the program to Google Docs and use it to create a short- or long-form assignment, with an AI-generated prompt or one you’ve created.
You can also align your assignment to the rubric of your choice for better, more accurate grading and student tips. Encourage students to use Newsela articles and videos to research the topic and find evidence to support their claims.
Take students’ opinions off the page and encourage healthy debate and discussion in the classroom:
Add novel studies that include articles and activities about basketball to your lesson plans to build background knowledge and explore themes that tie March Madness to literature:
Basketball and March Madness have benefits beyond entertainment. Show your students what other life skills they can learn from the sport and the tournament with Newsela SEL activities to add to lessons you assign with your other Newsela products:
Teach students about the value of transferable skills in sports and life:
Help students discover the mental side of individual and team sports:
Athletes, even professional ones, aren’t immune from mental health struggles. Explore one basketball player’s fight for mental health awareness with your students:
There are plenty of reasons to attend a specific college or university. Athletic scholarships and a chance to play in the March Madness tournament are just a few! Use an SEL lesson to get students thinking about their futures and how to pick the college that’s right for them:
Competitive reading fun doesn’t have to stop when March Madness is over. Use the Newsela Independent Reading Challenge each month in your classroom! This gamified event encourages students to practice literacy skills and read about topics that spark their interests. They can earn tokens and badges for completing quizzes and Power Words activities on articles included in the challenge.
Ready to see how the challenge works in your classroom? Log in to your Newsela account to get started. Or sign up for Newsela Lite and request your free trial to explore the Independent Reading Challenge and other premium features!
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