“All The Way To The Top” book lesson plan

“All The Way To The Top” book lesson plan

In this lesson students will learn new vocabulary words and explore important civil rights themes by reading the book “All the Way to the Top” by Annette Bay Pimentel. “All the Way to the Top” tells the childhood story of Jennifer Keelan-Chaffins, who climbed all the way to the top of the stairs of the US capitol in 1990 to encourage congress to pass the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA). Jennifer has cerebral palsy and became famous for the photos taken of her while climbing the stairs without a wheelchair at just 8 years old. The book tells the story from her perspective and covers how she felt she was not treated equally in her community and how she and other activist worked to get the ADA passed.

Image description: Cover artwork for “All the Way to the Top”

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Analyze a Poem for Theme - DEE the Chickadee
3rd grade, 4th grade Sharon Pennock 3rd grade, 4th grade Sharon Pennock

Analyze a Poem for Theme - DEE the Chickadee

This lesson will help students to analyze the theme of a poem. Students will compare their understanding of how they view disability before and after reading the poem. Students will compare the message and theme of the poem and contrast the bird in the poem to the life of a person with a disability.

Image Description: Chickadee sitting in a baseball hat

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Book Read A Loud Video List

Book Read A Loud Video List

On the YouTube page linked you will find a playlist with dozens of read a loud videos of books that we believe will add opportunities to incorporate disability representation in natural, positive ways to your class.

Image description: colorful books on a dark bookcase

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Calendar of Events

Calendar of Events

A calendar of events that recognizes various days (and months) is an easy way to bring the conversation about disability into your classrooms and schools. Including discussion of disabled people throughout the year sends a message to all that disabled students are recognized and valued as a part of the education community.

Image description: calendar page tilted at an angle, reading glasses rest on the bottom corner of the calendar

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Coloring Books, Pages and Clip Art with Disability Representation

Coloring Books, Pages and Clip Art with Disability Representation

Including coloring pages and artwork in lessons (some of these allow you to use as clip art) that includes disability representation furthers the goal of regularizing disability by seeing it and offering opportunities to learn and ask questions.

Image Description: small images of the coloring books on a yellow background

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Dad and Me in the Morning Guided Reading Lesson
4th grade, 5th grade Sharon Pennock 4th grade, 5th grade Sharon Pennock

Dad and Me in the Morning Guided Reading Lesson

This lesson revolves around the book Dad and Me in the Morning by Patricia Lakin. The book tells the short story of a boy and his dad getting up early to see the sunrise. The book is unique because the boy in the story is deaf and the book shows the different ways he and his dad communicate. It is a great example of how the disabled perspective can be brought to a story that most children can relate with. In this lesson the teacher will read the book page by page and stop on each page to have students figure out all the different ways the boy and his Dad are communicating. The students will compete to see who can find the most ways. 

Image description: Cover art from “Dad and Me in the Morning” book

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Disability History through Primary Sources

Disability History through Primary Sources

As our friends from Engaging America state, “Primary sources … can provide entry points and deepen exploration into historical events. Primary sources add immediacy, such as the faces in a photograph, the emotional tone of a drawing or song, or the complex look of a handwritten document. Documents from multiple points of view can illuminate conflicting ideas and events. Varied media, including maps, oral histories, published reports, and graphs offer many options for connection and investigation”.

We share these collections or primary sources as tools to continue introducing disability into the conversation from natural perspectives, using disabled people to tell their own stories whenever possible.

Image Description: Article from Dallas Times Herald, Wednesday, January 14, 1986 in section “Community Close-Up” titled “Police on sidewalk wheelchair ramps changed”
Full image description can be found at: https://adaptmuseum.net/gallery/picture.php?/451/category/16

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Equity is Essential: Working to Achieve Access for All Lesson
3rd grade, 4th grade, 5th grade Sharon Pennock 3rd grade, 4th grade, 5th grade Sharon Pennock

Equity is Essential: Working to Achieve Access for All Lesson

Students will read Not So Different: What You Really Want to Ask About Having a Disability by Shane Burcaw and consider what it means to have a disability, what inclusion means and how to create a more accessible world.

Image description: Cover for the book “Not So Different: What You Really Want to Ask About Having a Disability”

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Portrait of the Whole Person - Disability Rights Washington

Portrait of the Whole Person - Disability Rights Washington

Portrait of the Whole Person is a curriculum for elementary school students designed to teach students how disability rights fit into the broader civil rights movement, to perceive disability as a reflection of societal views of differences, and to treat people with disabilities with respect and dignity. It contains four distinct lesson plans comprised of three in-class instruction lesson plans and one lesson plan governing the research and writing of a biographical sketch and creation of a portrait of a notable person with a disability. It is also complete with a graphic organizer, rubrics, a power point, and a list of references students can use for research.

Image Description: Disability Rights Washington logo with “Portrait of a Whole Person Curriculum Overview” written below and drawings of 3 different people in colored pencil.

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Posters with Disability Inclusive Content

Posters with Disability Inclusive Content

Posters with disability representation. Most are free to download, though some can be purchased as well.

Image description: Corkboard wall with many signs of assorted size and colors.

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Recognizing Literal and Figurative Language, Idoms & Metaphors
3rd grade, 4th grade, 5th grade Sharon Pennock 3rd grade, 4th grade, 5th grade Sharon Pennock

Recognizing Literal and Figurative Language, Idoms & Metaphors

In this 3 part lesson, students will learn how to recognize idioms and explain the difference between literal and figurative language

Students will determine what assumptions are made in certain situations and text using literal and figurative language.

Image description: Graphic showing a cat pulling on a child’s tongue with the text “Cat got your tongue? English Idioms”

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Rhyming Lesson based on “Different - A Great Thing to Be”
1st grade, 2nd grade, 3rd grade, 4th grade Sharon Pennock 1st grade, 2nd grade, 3rd grade, 4th grade Sharon Pennock

Rhyming Lesson based on “Different - A Great Thing to Be”

Students will identify personal similarities and differences between peers.  Students will listen to read/listen to “Different… A Great Thing to Be” and identify rhyming words.  After the lesson, students will write a poem about being different. 

Image Description: cover of the book "Different: A Great Thing to Be!" includes an illustration of a girl with long brown hair holding flowers. Her eyes are closed and she's wearing glasses.

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The Sneetches Lesson

The Sneetches Lesson

Students will read/watch the story of The Sneetches by Dr. Seuss. Students will think about prejudice and bullying. Students will learn that differences are not a bad thing and that no one should have to change to please others.

Image description: Cover art from the book “The Sneetches”

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The Social Model of Disability

The Social Model of Disability

This links to our Social Model of Disability resources page which contains videos and examples of how to introduce and teach the Social Model of Disability.

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Winnie the Witch - Reading Guide and Lesson Plan that Addresses the Social Model of Disability

Winnie the Witch - Reading Guide and Lesson Plan that Addresses the Social Model of Disability

Students or teachers read or watch “Winnie the Witch” by Valerie Thomas and Korky Paul and consider how the story relates to the social model of disability.  Students can apply what they learned about the social model, make connections, and identify events in the story where it was used. 

Image Description: cover of the book "Winnie the Witch" which showed Winnie the Witch tripping over a black cat on the stairs.

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We are all Superheroes: A Theatrical Unit on “El Deafo”
4th grade, 5th grade Sharon Pennock 4th grade, 5th grade Sharon Pennock

We are all Superheroes: A Theatrical Unit on “El Deafo”

This lesson is a unit of 9 classes. “El Deafo” is a graphic novel about a young girl, Cece, who becomes deaf in elementary school. The book highlights how she adjusts to her new life as she navigates her new hearing aids, communication, teachers and friendships. In each class students will read the parts of each character like they are reading for a play rehearsal. Encourage students to really embody their characters, gesturing, facial expressions and standing up (if possible). This lesson encourages students to feel empathy because each discussion highlights the feelings of characters. Each class is split up into a discussion and a reading.

Image description: Cover art for the book “El Deafo”

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