English Texts for Beginners

homework for reading

English texts for beginners to practice reading and comprehension online and for free. Practicing your comprehension of written English will both improve your vocabulary and understanding of grammar and word order. The texts below are designed to help you develop while giving you an instant evaluation of your progress.

homework for reading

Prepared by experienced English teachers, the texts, articles and conversations are brief and appropriate to your level of proficiency. Take the multiple-choice quiz following each text, and you'll get the results immediately. You will feel both challenged and accomplished! You can even download (as PDF) and print the texts and exercises. It's enjoyable, fun and free. Good luck!

  • Wedding Wishes PREMIUM ? »
  • Countries and Nationalities PREMIUM My workday starts at seven. ? »

Home

Reading & Math for K-5

Easter Worksheets

Kindergarten

  • Learning numbers
  • Comparing numbers
  • Place Value
  • Roman numerals
  • Subtraction
  • Multiplication
  • Order of operations
  • Drills & practice
  • Measurement
  • Factoring & prime factors
  • Proportions
  • Shape & geometry
  • Data & graphing
  • Word problems
  • Children's stories
  • Leveled Stories

Context clues

Cause & effect

  • Compare & contrast
  • Fact vs. fiction
  • Fact vs. opinion
  • Main idea & details

Story elements

  • Conclusions & inferences
  • Sounds & phonics
  • Words & vocabulary
  • Reading comprehension
  • Early writing
  • Numbers & counting
  • Simple math
  • Social skills
  • Other activities
  • Dolch sight words
  • Fry sight words
  • Multiple meaning words
  • Prefixes & suffixes
  • Vocabulary cards
  • Other parts of speech
  • Punctuation
  • Capitalization
  • Narrative writing
  • Opinion writing
  • Informative writing
  • Cursive alphabet
  • Cursive letters
  • Cursive letter joins
  • Cursive words
  • Cursive sentences
  • Cursive passages
  • Grammar & Writing

Breadcrumbs

Reading Comprehension Workbooks and Leveled Readers

Download & Print Only $3.49

Reading Comprehension

Free reading comprehension worksheets.

Use these printable worksheets to improve reading comprehension. Over 100  free children's stories  followed by comprehension exercises, as well as  worksheets focused on specific comprehension topics  (main idea, sequencing, etc).

homework for reading

Reading worksheets by grade:

Reading worksheets by topic:.

Children's stories

Compare and contrast

Main idea & supporting details

Conclusions and inferences

Fact vs fiction

Fact vs opinion

Figurative language

What is K5?

K5 Learning offers free worksheets , flashcards  and inexpensive  workbooks  for kids in kindergarten to grade 5. Become a member  to access additional content and skip ads.

homework for reading

Our members helped us give away millions of worksheets last year.

We provide free educational materials to parents and teachers in over 100 countries. If you can, please consider purchasing a membership ($24/year) to support our efforts.

Members skip ads and access exclusive features.

Learn about member benefits

This content is available to members only.

Join K5 to save time, skip ads and access more content. Learn More

  • Forgot Password?

Literacy Ideas

13 Fun Reading Activities for Any Book

' data-src=

Whether you walk into a classroom in Asia, North America or Europe, you will almost certainly see teachers and students building their understanding of the world through a dedicated daily reading session full of great reading activities.

Books allow students an opportunity to be informed, entertained or escape as they comprehend fiction and non-fiction texts against their understanding of the world, their personal insights, and opinions and finally compare those texts to others.

Whilst you may have a wealth of books in your school library, developing fresh and engaging ways to study literature can often be challenging.  So today, we will explore 25 proven activities that can be applied to any book and at any age level.

These reading activities to improve reading comprehension are easy to follow and suitable for most age groups within an elementary/junior high school level.

125 Text Response ACTIVITIES, Games, Projects for ANY BOOK

Reading Activities | GUIDED READING ACTIVITIES | 13 Fun Reading Activities for Any Book | literacyideas.com

This massive collection of ☀️ READING ACTIVITIES☀️ covers all essential reading skills for elementary/primary students. NO PREP REQUIRED! Works with all text and media types.

Thousands of teachers have adopted this as a GO-TO RESOURCE for independent and group tasks.

A COLLECTION OF FUN READING ACTIVITIES

A lifetime tale in pictures reading task.

Draw the main character from a book you have recently read.  Show them as a baby, middle-aged and an older person.

Underneath each picture, write what you think they might be doing at that point in their life, and explain why they may be doing so.

For example, if you drew Harry Potter as a baby, he might cast spells on his mum to feed him lots of yummy food.

Post-reading activities like this are accessible for all age groups to adapt their skill level and text style.

If you want to learn more about characters, read our complete guide here.

Reading Activities | Slide58 | 13 Fun Reading Activities for Any Book | literacyideas.com

TEXT TO SELF-READING TASK

Based upon a book you have just read, share a  story about yourself related to an event or character in the book.

It is probably best done in the form of a written recount. Link your experience to no more than four situations that occurred within the text.

Text to self is an excellent opportunity for students to become introspective about the content they read and compare it to their own life experiences. 

This activity is appealing to teenagers more so than juniors .

IT’S IN THE INSTRUCTIONS READING TASK

From a book you have just read, select either a critical object or creature and create a user manual or a guide explaining how to care for it.

Ensure you use any vital information learnt from the book and any other information you consider essential.

If you are writing a user manual for an object, remember to focus on using it correctly and taking care of it.

If you are writing a user guide for an animal or creature, focus on keeping it alive and healthy as well as information that explains how to keep it happy and under control if necessary.

reading-activities-for-students

Dear Diary, READING TASK

Place yourself in the shoes of one of the characters you have just read about and write a diary entry of a critical moment from the story.

Try to choose a moment in the story where the character has plenty of interaction and emotion to share in a diary entry.

Your diary entry should be around a page long and contain information you learned from the book when the character was in that specific place and time.

Remember, when writing a diary entry, you are writing it from a first-person perspective. It is usually but not always written in the present tense.

Diary writing has been a very popular activity throughout time, but social media tools such as Facebook and blogging have in some ways changed this.

Mapping it all out, READING TASK

How do you make reading lessons fun? This reading activity answers that question confidently.

Have a go at drawing a map of one of the places from the text you have just read. See how much detail you can include, and be sure to discuss your map with another reader so you can compare and add more if necessary.

Take some time and effort to ensure your map appeals to the same audience the book aims at.

All good maps should contain the following BOLTS elements.

B – Bolts

O – Orientation

L – Legend

S – Scale

reading-activities-for-students

Express Yourself READING TASK

Using an iPad or a digital camera, make faces of the emotions the main characters would have gone through in your book and take photos of them. 

Put them together in a document on your computer or device and explain the emotion below the image and when the character would have felt this way.

This is an excellent opportunity to use some creative direction for this task.

Be sure to play around with the images, filters and graphical styling available.

Travel Agent READING TASK

Think of yourselves as a group of travel assistants whose job is to promote a  city of your choice from the text you have been reading.

As a group, you need to develop a concept map of all the exciting things that happen in your city and then present it to the class.

Don’t forget all of the exciting things such as theatres, restaurants, sports, adventure activities, entertainment and much more…

If you are a little short on details of the location of your story, do some research if it was an actual location or just get creative and make up some locations and tourist attractions based on what you read.

reading-activities-for-students

You’re Hired READING TASK

Select a character from a book and consider what might be an excellent job for them. You can choose something entirely suitable such as a security guard job for Superman or a more oddball approach, such as a pastry chef.

Either way, you will have to write a letter from this character’s perspective and apply for a position.

Be sure to explain why your character would be a great employee and what special skills they would possess to make them ideal for the role. Sell your character by explaining all the great attributes they possess.

What’s the Status? READING TASK

Create a Facebook page for your character with some status updates about what they have been up to.

Include some pictures and ensure your status updates are relevant to the character and the story.

Around 3 – 4 status updates with mages should give an overall picture of the character.

Use your status updates to explore what your character does for a job, leisure time, places they might go on vacation and the like.

Reading Activities | Slide118 1 | 13 Fun Reading Activities for Any Book | literacyideas.com

Bubbles and Clouds READING TASK

Using speech bubbles and pictures of the characters, draw a conversation between two characters from the story you have read.

Remember, thought is drawn as a cloud, and a spoken statement is drawn as a  bubble.

Be sure to look at some comics or graphic novels for inspiration and insights.

This activity is usually best done on pen and paper, but numerous digital apps and tools will allow you to make this a reality through technology.

Amazing Artifacts READING TASK

An artifact is an object that has some significance or meaning behind it. Sometimes, an artefact might even have a very important story behind it.  I am sure you have a favorite toy, or your parents have a particular item in the house that they would consider an important artifact.

For today’s task, you will select five artifacts from the text you have been reading and explain what makes them significant or essential.

They don’t all have to be super important to the story, but I am sure that at least a couple played a significant role.

Be sure to draw a picture of the artifact and if necessary, label it.

Reading Activities | Slide105 1 | 13 Fun Reading Activities for Any Book | literacyideas.com

FREE READING ACTIVITIES RESOURCE TO DOWNLOAD

12 Reading RESPONSE TASK CARDS FOR STUDENTS -  DOWNLOAD NOW

Thinking Differently READING TASK

Choose three important events from the text and explain how you would have handled them differently from the characters in the story.

Explain how it may have changed the story’s outcome in either a minor or significant way.

Be insightful here and think of the cause and effect.  Sometimes your smallest action can have a significant impact on others.

Popplet Mind Mapping Task

Popplet is a mind mapping tool that allows you to connect ideas together using images, text and drawings.

From a text, you have recently read, create a family tree or network diagram that explains the relationship the characters have with each other.

Some may be father and son, husband and wife or even arch enemies.

Try and lay it out so it is easy to follow.

reading-activities-for-students

You Have Three Wishes READING TASK

A genie lands at the midpoint of the story you have just read and grants the two main characters three wishes.

What do they wish for and why?

Finally, would their wishes have changed anything about the story?  How so?

Again think about the cause and effect relationship and how this may have altered the path of the book you have been reading.

A COMPLETE DIGITAL READING UNIT FOR STUDENTS

Reading Activities | Digital Reading activities 1 | 13 Fun Reading Activities for Any Book | literacyideas.com

Over 30 engaging activities for students to complete BEFORE, DURING and AFTER reading ANY BOOK

  • Compatible with all devices and digital platforms, including GOOGLE CLASSROOM.
  • Fun, Engaging, Open-Ended INDEPENDENT tasks.
  • 20+ 5-Star Ratings ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐

MORE GREAT ARTICLES WITH READING ACTIVITIES

Reading Activities | reading comprehension strategies 1 | Top 7 Reading Comprehension Strategies for Students and Teachers | literacyideas.com

Top 7 Reading Comprehension Strategies for Students and Teachers

Reading Activities | 1 Teaching Guided Reading | How to teach Guided Reading: Teaching Strategies and Activities | literacyideas.com

How to teach Guided Reading: Teaching Strategies and Activities

Reading Activities | 1 MAIN2BIDEA | Identifying the main idea of the story: A Guide for Students and Teachers | literacyideas.com

Identifying the main idea of the story: A Guide for Students and Teachers

Reading Activities | teaching cause and effect | Teaching Cause and Effect in Reading and Writing | literacyideas.com

Teaching Cause and Effect in Reading and Writing

Reading Activities | Graphic Organizers | Graphic Organizers for Writing and Reading | literacyideas.com

Graphic Organizers for Writing and Reading

Reading Activities | 2 1 reading comprehension strategies | Top 7 Tips for Teaching Guided Reading in Large Classes | literacyideas.com

Top 7 Tips for Teaching Guided Reading in Large Classes

Reading Activities | img 60ffe64526149 | 5 Reasons You Need a Digital Reading Diary In 2023 | literacyideas.com

5 Reasons You Need a Digital Reading Diary In 2023

If you're seeing this message, it means we're having trouble loading external resources on our website.

If you're behind a web filter, please make sure that the domains *.kastatic.org and *.kasandbox.org are unblocked.

To log in and use all the features of Khan Academy, please enable JavaScript in your browser.

Reading & language arts

2nd grade reading & vocabulary, 3rd grade reading & vocabulary, 4th grade reading & vocabulary, 5th grade reading & vocabulary, 6th grade reading & vocabulary, 7th grade reading & vocabulary, 8th grade reading & vocabulary, 9th grade reading & vocabulary, 6th grade reading and vocabulary (improved and expanded).

Improve your students’ Reading Comprehension It’s free.

Personalized reading comprehension exercises for K-12 and ESL students.

homework for reading

Around the world, millions of students are benefiting from ReadTheory.

  • 18,000,000 Students
  • 700,000 Teachers
  • 40,000 Schools

scroll down to read more

Why use readtheory.

Reach students where they are with adaptive technology that adjusts to each student’s specific reading level.

Improve students’ reading comprehension with proven standards-aligned exercises for grades K-12.

Get up and running in minutes with an easy-to-use interface and human support when you need it.

Build classroom culture with interactive reading exercises and competitions that keep students engaged.

What educators say

ReadTheory motivates the kids to do more. They are hooked.

homework for reading

11-grade teacher

The kids love it. They even ask me to ‘do ReadTheory’ when they wait for others to finish their test.

homework for reading

Middle school English teacher

I recommend this program to all my Special Education teachers as a good way to see exactly where their students are functioning and what they can and cannot do well.

homework for reading

Middle school intervention specialist

Try it right now.

See for yourself how your students will experience ReadTheory!

Personalize learning for every student.

homework for reading

Teach multiple reading levels

Let our A.I driven software take over! We continuously note students’ performance and adapt the level of reading difficulty.

homework for reading

Save time with automatic marking

Put down the red pen, we’ve got you covered! Bonus points – set Recurring Activities once, and you’re good for the year!

homework for reading

Easy-to-use reporting

Track individual student and class progress in real-time. Identify where additional practice is needed.

homework for reading

Access thousands of exercises

With thousands of interactive exercises and worksheets, you can find the perfect activity for your students.

homework for reading

Win prizes and build class culture

Motivate students to read with engaging class competitions, badges, and prizes!

Rooted in research, proven in results

of teachers surveyed reported that ReadTheory contributed to an increase in standardized test scores.

homework for reading

of teachers said students are engaged and interested when using ReadTheory.

ReadTheory is free to use

ReadTheory is free to use.

Register for an account now and be up and running in a couple of minutes.

Are you an admin looking to bring ReadTheory to your school or district?

Bring readtheory to your school or district.

kindergarten reading homework

All Formats

Resource types, all resource types.

  • Rating Count
  • Price (Ascending)
  • Price (Descending)
  • Most Recent

Kindergarten reading homework

Preview of Kindergarten Weekly Homework Bundle, Math, Reading, Writing, Grammar Bundle

Kindergarten Weekly Homework Bundle, Math, Reading , Writing, Grammar Bundle

homework for reading

Reading Fluency Practice BUNDLE for Kindergarten Reading Intervention & Homework

homework for reading

December Morning Work for Kindergarten Christmas Math and Reading - Homework

homework for reading

  • Google Apps™

Preview of Kindergarten Reading Homework Calendars | Monthly Reading Logs for the Year

Kindergarten Reading Homework Calendars | Monthly Reading Logs for the Year

homework for reading

Monthly Coloring Homework Reading Logs Kindergarten 1st Grade Pre-K Preschool

homework for reading

Kindergarten - 2nd Grade Reading Homework Bundle | Passages and Comprehension

homework for reading

Kindergarten Differentiated Weekly Homework with Reading , Comprehension, Math

homework for reading

Kindergarten -3rd Grade Reading Homework Bundle | Passages and Comprehension

Preview of Kindergarten Reading Homework | I Read, You Read Passages and Comprehension

Kindergarten Reading Homework | I Read, You Read Passages and Comprehension

Preview of HMH Into Reading Kindergarten Daily Homework Packet

HMH Into Reading Kindergarten Daily Homework Packet

homework for reading

McGraw-Hill Reading Wonders Weekly Homework Kindergarten Bundle (Full Year)

homework for reading

Reading Wonders Kindergarten Homework Pack

homework for reading

Kindergarten Reading Homework | Phonics First | Science of Reading Aligned

homework for reading

Kindergarten Reading Street Homework Pack Units 1-6

homework for reading

Home Reading Program BUNDLE // Simple Kindergarten Homework

homework for reading

Kindergarten and First Grade Reading Homework

homework for reading

Reading Logs & Homework Sheets for Kindergarten - Full Year's Worth

homework for reading

UFLI Kindergarten Fluency Books: Homework {Science of Reading }

homework for reading

Editable Weekly Kindergarten Homework {72 pages of Reading and Math activities}

homework for reading

Kindergarten Help Pages for Reading and Math Folders, Homework Folder

homework for reading

Kindergarten Magnetic reading and math aligned Homework for the year! Units 1-6

homework for reading

Prompt Based Kindergarten Home Reading Program // Simple homework SET ONE

Preview of Kindergarten Magnetic reading and math aligned Homework Unit 3 weeks 11-15

Kindergarten Magnetic reading and math aligned Homework Unit 3 weeks 11-15

Preview of Reading Street Unit 3 Kindergarten Homework Pack

Reading Street Unit 3 Kindergarten Homework Pack

  • We're hiring
  • Help & FAQ
  • Privacy policy
  • Student privacy
  • Terms of service
  • Tell us what you think

You are using an outdated browser. Please upgrade your browser or activate Google Chrome Frame to improve your experience.

FluentU Logo

13 Entertaining ESL Homework Ideas to Keep Your Students Engaged

Homework may not be many students’ favorite thing, but research says it’s truly an effective learning tool that teachers should use .

The trick is assigning great homework.

To help you do this with ease, we’ve compiled an awesome list of 13 homework assignments that will have your ESL students begging for more.

1. Read a Short Story

2. share a passion, 3. start a chat group, 4. listen to a podcast, 5. write a letter, 6. write an amazon review, 7. do a wikipedia edit, 8. write a short story or poem, 9. share their culture, 10. catch a movie, 11. meet new people, 12. analyze a song, 13. go on a photo scavenger hunt, what makes homework effective.

Download: This blog post is available as a convenient and portable PDF that you can take anywhere. Click here to get a copy. (Download)

Have students read a short story for homework and then ask them to tell the class about the story in the next session.

I would recommend giving students some suggestions on what short stories to read, depending on the level of your students.

Here are some suggestions of short story collections for each level of ESL learner:

  • “The Very First Americans” by Cara Ashrose: This collection of short stories features Native American culture and history, written in simple language.
  • “Oxford Bookworms Library: Starter Level” This series offers simplified versions of classic stories, such as fairy tales, adventure stories and more.
  • “Classic Tales for ESL Students” by L.A. Hill: This collection of classic stories from literature is retold with easier vocabulary and sentence structure.

Intermediate

  • “The Best American Short Stories” This series features contemporary short stories from a wide range of American writers, so there’s something for everyone here.
  • “Short Stories in English for Intermediate Learners” by Olly Richards: This collection of engaging stories is designed specifically for intermediate ESL students.
  • “Roald Dahl: The Collected Short Stories” This delightful collection of quirky and imaginative tales has become a favorite of many of my students.
  • “Interpreter of Maladies” by Jhumpa Lahiri: This Pulitzer Prize-winning collection of short stories explores the immigrant experience, something which many ESL students can relate to.
  • “Dubliners” by James Joyce: This classic collection of interconnected stories captures the essence of Dublin in 1914. But it still feels modern to many students.
  • “Nine Stories” by J.D. Salinger: This classic collection of short stories is a class favorite when I’ve used it.

What do your students really care about? Give them a chance to talk about it in front of the class. 

Have each person choose something they’re passionate about, something they might consider themselves an expert on.

Challenge students to think of a creative way to present five must-know facts about that subject. They might make a movie, create a poster or brochure, write a song or even put on a skit.

Have each person present their creative project to the class, and then give the class five minutes to ask questions of the presenter.

Set certain parameters like students must speak in complete sentences or require that every student ask at least two questions at some point during the presentations.

Students will love sharing about their passions, and they’ll get some great speaking, listening and discourse information in the process, as well as teach the rest of the class some interesting vocabulary.

Ask for class for a volunteer to start a class WhatsApp chat group. They can also decide to use another messaging app like Telegram, Viber, Voxer or any other app that has a group chat function. 

Encourage them to send at least one message and to respond to a couple others for their homework. 

This text group has the added advantage of students being able to make friends with one another, and a place to ask about missed homework assignments on days when they can’t make it to class.

Note that if a student doesn’t want to be included in the chat group, you should have a back up assignment prepared for them.

Listening is one of the ESL student’s most difficult skills to acquire, so listening to a short podcast episode is ideal homework.

You can ask students to write a little about the podcast to turn in to you, or you can ask them to briefly summarize what they heard for the class in the next session.

Here are some suggestions for well done podcasts:

The English We Speak : Produced by the BBC, this podcast focuses on teaching commonly used phrases and idioms in conversational English.

The Moth : A storytelling podcast where real people share their personal experiences and anecdotes in English.

Stuff You Should Know : Though not specifically designed for ESL students, this podcast covers a vast array of interesting topics, providing exposure to diverse vocabulary and subject matters.

Ask your students to write a letter . The letter can be written to a friend or family member (which they could then actually mail or email), or it could be a fan letter to a favorite musician or actor. They could even write a letter to Santa Claus or a historical figure. 

For example, a student might choose to write a letter to Marie Antoinette, asking her what it was like to be the queen of France at such a young age. 

You can also choose to have students write letters to one another. Then the next homework can be writing that letter writer back.

Ask you students to review a product on Amazon (or any other shopping website that has reviews). Ask them to select a product they have really used, so they have a genuine opinion on the quality of the product and whether it lived up to their expectations.

Then, in the next session, show the reviews on the overhead projector to the class and ask a student to read the review.

You can then go over any errors in vocabulary, grammar or sentence structure and revise the review together as a class.

Since anyone can edit a Wikipedia article, it’s a great place for ESL students to hone their writing and editing skills, and they’ll have a built-in readership, too!

Ask students to select a person that they know a lot about—a well-known figure from history, pop culture, music or film would all work. Then ask them to read the Wikipedia entry to see if they can add anything else to the article.

Perhaps the article on Ryan Gosling is missing a key detail about his recent Ken performance. If so, the student will revise and edit the article. They should take notes on what they changed, so they can explain it to you or the class the next day.

Ask your students to get creative. Have them write a short story or a poem . This can get them to use descriptive language that they don’t always have a chance to use.

One good activity to do before you assign this homework is an adjective bubble chart. For this, you start with one adjective. For example, write “moist” on the board, circle it and then draw 4-5 lines coming off of the”moist” bubble.

Ask your students to come up with other adjectives that are related to “moist” and so on. They may come up with “wet,” “watery,” “soaked” or “damp.” Then draw lines from each of those. This can lead to words that you never expected to come up.

Have your students select 3-4 adjectives from this introduction activity that they’ll use in their story or poem.

Ask your students to prepare a short presentation on an aspect of their home culture to tell the class about in the next session. 

For example, a student from China may explain the Lunar New Year, a student from Vietnam may explain Tet or a student from El Salvador may tell the class about their quinceañera .

They can use photos, art, a PowerPoint presentation or they can just explain in their own words.

Then open the class up for questions.

Can you legitimately send students to the movies for homework? You can when you’re teaching ESL.

Your students don’t have to commit to a full-length movie. Instead, you can use the videos on FluentU to screen mini-lessons using clips from TV shows and movies, movie trailers, news segments, vlogs or music videos.

homework for reading

Use these videos in the classroom or assign homework to watch a few and complete the subsequent quizzes. You can also ask students to complete flashcard quizzes based on vocabulary words you want them to pay special attention to. These quizzes are adaptable so every student will have a unique experience catered to his learning level.

There are plenty of ways to use a movie for language development. And whether students watch a new release or catch an old Elvis flick on TV, they can do any of the following activities as homework:

  • Summarize the plot.
  • Describe a main character.
  • Note new or interesting vocabulary (particularly slang) they hear while watching.
  • Write an interview with one of the characters in the movie.

I’m sure you also have your favorite movie-related language activities and many work as homework assignments. So get creative with how you have students share about what they watched.

For the most part, people are willing to help someone in need, and that is doubly true for someone who needs to complete an assignment for school.

That’s why sending students out to interview native speakers on campus is such a fun homework assignment.

Start by helping your students write a list of questions they’ll use for their interviews. Students can choose a topic or you can assign one, like leisure activities or celebrity news.

Tell students to list five to ten questions they might ask on that topic that will elicit specific answers. 

As a class, discuss how students might introduce themselves to a potential interviewee. 

Then send students out to their interviews after class. They can share the answers they got in the next session.

Music is great for English learners since it stresses many aspects of language that can otherwise be hard to isolate, like the emotion of language, intonation and stress.

Have students choose their favorite English language song to listen to for homework and then ask them to do the following:

  • Practice the lyrics to learn intonation and rhythm.
  • Note slang and cultural references in the songs.
  • Summarize the theme of the song, or just what it’s about.
  • Have students share their favorite lyrics and what a particular song means to them.

Give individual students or groups of up to three students a list of items to find on their homework scavenger hunt. But instead of being specific in your list (for example, including items such as cat), be descriptive in your list.

You might include items such as something frightening, something beautiful, something quiet, something cool.

Students find items they think fit the description. For example, someone who is claustrophobic might choose an elevator for something frightening. They then take a picture of it.

The next day, have each person get with a partner and show them the pictures they took for each item on the list.

If the connection is not obvious, students should ask their partner to explain why they chose a particular item, such as the elevator.

Assigning homework that works isn’t as hard as you might think, especially if you focus on the following points.

  • Put your homework in writing. It can be tempting to just announce homework assignments to students at the end of class, but language learners benefit when you reinforce what you say with what they can see. So take a minute to write any homework assignment on the board so students can read it as well as listen to it.
  • Let students know what goals you have for a particular assignment. Is it practicing a certain grammar point ? Improving their listening skills ? Pronunciation practice ? When students know why they’re doing something, they’ll be able to tell on their own when they’ve successfully completed their homework assignment.
  • Keep your homework practical . Your students may not find themselves planning out a menu for Thanksgiving when they leave your ESL classroom, but odds are they’ll have to order food at a restaurant at some point. Think about realistic ways students will have to use English in the real world and try to make your homework practical.
  • Let your students be creative . Give your students choices on how they express themselves or present information. It’s okay for students to make a home movie, put on a one-man play or paint a picture to present to the class. Just because you prefer a particular type of creative expression doesn’t mean your students do, so give them choices and let them express themselves.
  • Make homework fun! Every class has its own personality, so what’s fun for one might not be fun for another. Tailor your assignments to the personality of your class. Think about what they would think is fun, and go with that.

No matter what you believed in your student days, homework doesn’t have to be boring. With a little creativity when assigning homework, you might find that the activities you assign for outside of class become the highlights of your students’ days.

Enter your e-mail address to get your free PDF!

We hate SPAM and promise to keep your email address safe

homework for reading

homework for reading

Since when did reading books become a game? Well, millions are playing

R ead your height . Read the  world . Read the alphabet. Read anything, but read a lot of it. Read less, but read more critically. Read only library books. Listen to only audio books. Read only books with cats as the main characters (no, really, that's a real  challenge that exists ).

As another new year begins, the options for joining challenges that promote reading seem endless, and they have become a popular way to encourage people to consume more books. Nearly eight million people around the world participated in the 2023 Goodreads challenge , for instance, and they had an average pledge of 43 books per person.

So far, just a week into January, over 4.4 million have signed up for the 2024 challenge . Suzanne Skyvara, vice-president of marketing and editorial at Amazon-owned Goodreads, a website and app for readers and book recommendations, says that's the most they've ever had sign up in the first week of the year. 

"Our members tell us that they find it motivating to mark a book as 'read' on Goodreads and see how they are progressing toward their goal," Skyvara told CBC News.

Reading challenges are widely supported by the book industry (bookseller Indigo does one , as does U.S. retailer Barnes & Noble ), along with  libraries and authors  eager to connect with new audiences. But as many readers flock to these challenges, sharing their stats on social media, others find them off-putting and anxiety-inducing.

"I love to read, but multiple disabilities make reading challenges pretty inaccessible due to the expectation of reading a plethora of books in a set amount of time," said Caley Krantz.

Krantz, 38, who lives in Vernon, B.C., struggles with skipping over words and processing text and audio. 

"It's frustrating watching everyone posting and engaging in these challenges when it's not an option to participate," they told CBC News.

On TikTok, where #BookTok has a whopping 214.2 billion global views, some popular videos  illustrate the feelings of inadequacy and overwhelm that some readers feel when they see others bragging about their hundreds of reads per year.

Others online are turned off by what they see as the gamification of reading. As a writer noted on Shondaland last year, "influencers recommend listening to audiobooks at 1.5 times the speed, and multiple Goodreads users told me they deliberately pick up shorter books to achieve certain goals."

'Sport or homework'

And that's not always very fun.

"It's either sport, or it's homework," Jael Richardson, the executive director of The FOLD Canada, a foundation that celebrates diverse authors and storytellers at literary festivals and events based in Brampton, Ont., told CBC News.

"I try to make it neither."

Each year, the FOLD (the Festival of Literary Diversity) releases its own 12-book challenge, encouraging readers to diversify their selections rather than trying to meet a specific number of titles.

January's challenge, for instance, is to read a book by a Palestinian author ; February's is to read a book that's been challenged in Canadian schools.

Many other challenges focus on the act of reading in and of itself. The FOLD challenge, on the other hand, aims to create more conscious readers while also amplifying voices that don't get as much publicity, according to Richardson.

"Reading is a really, really important act that's unique from all other kinds of media in that you consume it on your own," she said.

"As a result, when it comes to difficult topics and difficult subject matter, it's a really powerful place to create change in your own heart, in your own mind, and to cultivate empathy."

Flavia Camargo, who lives in Ottawa, takes a similar approach to her own reading challenges. The 40-year-old ESL education counsellor is in three book clubs, two of which she runs. While she also sets a numeric goal — this year is 40 books — her aim is to read with more diversity. 

This year she created her own challenge, which includes reading a banned or censored book, one by a neurodiverse writer and another by an Indigenous author .

"Because of my book club, I realized it's also important to challenge myself to read books out of my comfort zone," Camargo said.

Many love the challenge

But plenty of people love the challenge of reading as much as they possibly can.

Since 2021, Brooke Nicholls has set herself a goal to consume 100 books a year. That works out to about two books per week. If that seems challenging, she says that's the point.

"In 2021, it felt like a big stretch goal and I wanted to challenge myself," she said. She was so enthusiastic she actually read 120.

"I love having the goal, and I really feel like the education I'm giving myself is paying off exponentially. Every year I'm smarter, more articulate, and have better critical thinking skills."

Nicholls, 32, a realtor in Brockville, Ont., loves to relax with print books, but says the key to meeting her goal is audiobooks, through which she mostly consumes business-related and self-improvement titles.

"I feel like I 'hacked' my brain by listening to audiobooks on 1.8 speed, so I can consume books while I drive or hike with my dog," she said.

Robyn Kurtz, who lives in New Westminster, B.C., says they're using reading challenges for motivation to get back into it "after virtually stopping since having kids." This year they've joined two — their firsts.

"I'm pretty competitive, especially with myself, so that will help, but I am most excited about the potential ease of finding diverse books to read," Kurtz said, noting that one of their two challenges provides recommendations.

"I want to stay motivated to continue to read rather than doomscroll, and I want to read more from historically underrepresented authors and topics that I may not have thought much about."

Challenges are good for the industry

Social media reading challenges encourage people to share what they're reading, which helps authors with brand awareness, book sales, discoverability, library holds, audiobook sales and increased demand across the board, said Carly Watters, a senior literary agent with P.S. Literary Agency and co-host of the podcast  The Sh-t No One Tells You About Writing.

"This helps create habits in readers which will help keep them life-long readers which also means life-long book consumers, which keeps our business and industry healthy," Watters told CBC News.

Some libraries have jumped on the reading challenge bandwagon, too, where they can create prompts to promote their diverse collection.

Since 2019, Toronto Public Library has hosted its own book-a-month reading challenge, focused on trying out new books, genres and authors. Some of the monthly prompts include: a memoir by a Canadian author, a book by an author with a chronic illness and, of course, a book set in a library or bookstore.

Sarah Bradley, an area manager with Toronto Public Library (TPL), notes that there are 3,000 people in the challenge's Facebook group, where they eagerly recommend titles, chat about how they plan to interpret the categories, and discuss what they've read. And people have fun with it, she added, noting that some people might choose to do the entire challenge using only books of poetry, or only books written by women, or children's books.

"It shouldn't feel like work," Bradley said.

"It's not about a numbers game," said Michael Warner, TPL's digital content lead. "We're in this to help people discover books."

And a love of books is why Krantz in Vernon keeps reading.

They've been reading the same book for two years: Braiding Sweetgrass  by Robin Wall Kimmerer. And they love it. Plus, it uses paragraph breaks, which Krantz says makes it the most accessible book she's read.

"It breaks up the wall of text into manageable sections that my brain can process."

A composite of six books recommended by Toronto Public Library as part of its 2024 reading challenge: There is No Blue by Martha Baillie (memoir by a Canadian author), Escapes by Daniel Tunnard (book about playing games), The Librarianist by Patrick deWitt (book set in a library), Braiding Sweetgrass by Robin Wall Kimmerer (a nonfiction book by an Indigenous author), The Pit by Tara Borin (book set in the Canadian territories), and The Eyes and the Impossible by Dave Eggers (book from an animal's perspective).

IMAGES

  1. Homework Worksheets to Print

    homework for reading

  2. a printable worksheet for reading the sight word homework with an image

    homework for reading

  3. Reading Response Homework Sheet

    homework for reading

  4. Weekly Reading Homework {Freebie} by Create Teach Share

    homework for reading

  5. Homework Sheets to Print

    homework for reading

  6. Asian young Student in casual suit reading and doing homework in

    homework for reading

VIDEO

  1. K1 reading homework 3

  2. Grade 1 Reading Homework (The Fan Is In The Box)

  3. homework for Reading #viral#short

  4. the vowel family (homework reading) Benjamin Almendariz

  5. K1 reading homework 1

  6. Homework reading

COMMENTS

  1. Reading Worksheets & Printables

    Our printable reading worksheets cover a variety of reading topics including early letter recognition, sight words, fluency, and comprehension. As children progress through the elementary grades, they will go from learning to read to reading to learn. That switch is a crucial component to your child's academic success, which is why educators ...

  2. English Reading: English Texts for Beginners

    English texts for beginners to practice reading and comprehension online and for free. Practicing your comprehension of written English will both improve your vocabulary and understanding of grammar and word order. The texts below are designed to help you develop while giving you an instant evaluation of your progress. Prepared by experienced ...

  3. Free Reading Comprehension Worksheets

    K5 Learning offers free worksheets, flashcards and inexpensive workbooks for kids in kindergarten to grade 5. Become a member to access additional content and skip ads. Free printable Reading Comprehension worksheets for grade 1 to grade 5. These reading worksheets will help kids practice their comprehension skills. Compliments of K5 Learning.

  4. Reading Worksheets

    Many students have difficulty answering inferential questions. This worksheet has ten more practice problems to help students develop this critical reading skill. Read the passages, answer the inference questions, and support answers with text. The Suggested reading level for this text: Grade 3-7.

  5. The 5 Best Homework Help Websites (Free and Paid!)

    Best Paid Homework Help Site: Chegg. Price: $14.95 to $19.95 per month. Best for: 24/7 homework assistance. This service has three main parts. The first is Chegg Study, which includes textbook solutions, Q&A with subject experts, flashcards, video explanations, a math solver, and writing help.

  6. Free Online Reading Passages and Literacy Resources

    CommonLit is a comprehensive literacy program with thousands of reading lessons, full-year ELA curriculum, benchmark assessments, and standards-based data for teachers. Researchers found a direct correlation between increased CommonLit 360 usage and higher scores on end-of-year state tests. Roll out 360 with wraparound supports for just $6,500 ...

  7. 13 Fun Reading Activities for Any Book

    Compatible with all devices and digital platforms, including GOOGLE CLASSROOM. Fun, Engaging, Open-Ended INDEPENDENT tasks. 20+ 5-Star Ratings ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐. $3.00 Download on TpT. Open ended Reading activities: Awesome reading tasks and reading hands on activities for any book or age group. Fiction and Non-Fiction.

  8. Key Lessons: What Research Says About the Value of Homework

    Too much homework may diminish its effectiveness. While research on the optimum amount of time students should spend on homework is limited, there are indications that for high school students, 1½ to 2½ hours per night is optimum. Middle school students appear to benefit from smaller amounts (less than 1 hour per night).

  9. Free reading homework

    Browse free reading homework on Teachers Pay Teachers, a marketplace trusted by millions of teachers for original educational resources.

  10. 2nd Grade Reading Worksheets & Free Printables

    What is Cause and Effect? Our printable second grade reading worksheets help seven- and eight-year-olds practice compound word recognition, pluralization, reading comprehension, and more. Children will enjoy the imaginative stories and fascinating non-fiction texts, as well as the word games and coloring worksheets in our collection.

  11. Free 4th and 5th Grade Reading Activities

    4th and 5th Grade Reading Skills Bundle. This huge resource includes the reading activities and resources that I use to teach my major reading skills and standards. The reading activities included in the resource include: Reading Charts/Posters. Graphic Organizers. Reading Passages. Small Group Reading Activities.

  12. ELA practice (beta)

    Syntax: sentences and clauses. Syntax: conventions of standard English. Usage and style. ELA practice exercises (beta) for 2nd to 9th grade, covering reading comprehension and vocabulary. Aligned to Common Core State Standards for Reading: Literature; Reading: Informational Text, and Vocabulary Acquisition and Use.

  13. ReadTheory

    Improve students' reading comprehension with proven standards-aligned exercises for grades K-12. Easy. Get up and running in minutes with an easy-to-use interface and human support when you need it. Fun. Build classroom culture with interactive reading exercises and competitions that keep students engaged.

  14. How to Do Homework: 15 Expert Tips and Tricks

    You finish one episode, then decide to watch another even though you've got SAT studying to do. It's just more fun to watch people make scones. D. Start the episode, but only catch bits and pieces of it because you're reading Twitter, cleaning out your backpack, and eating a snack at the same time. 5.

  15. Effective Practices for Homework

    Homework has four basic purposes: Practice (e.g., after the teacher has directly taught a math algorithm in class, the homework is to complete several problems requiring use of that algorithm).; Preparation (e.g., pre-reading or looking over a new unit of study in a text for the next class meeting).; Study (e.g., reviewing content to prepare for a test). ...

  16. First Grade Reading Homework Teaching Resources

    This homework is based off the Wonders Reading Series for First Grade Unit 1 in the Anthology reader. Included each week is 3 days of homework with a Reading homework page that includes story activities, fluency, and the spelling skill for the week. A fluency page with words and phrases is included, as well as a Math skills page.

  17. Homework Tips for Parents

    Homework is important, but helping your child with homework isn't always easy. Here are some ways you can make homework easier for everyone! ... If your child prefers to do a little math, a little reading, a little word study and then back to math, that's okay! Mixing up the practice time may leave a greater impression on your learner.

  18. Kindergarten Reading Homework Teaching Resources

    5.0. (29) $5.00. PDF. This kindergarten phonics and reading homework is aligned with the Phonics First Curriculum and follows the progression that correlates with this program. This is not an editable resource, so if you use a different phonics progression it might not align with the order you teach letters.

  19. Reading Homework: Making it Meaningful

    For reading homework, I always assigned my students nightly reading and gave them a reading log to complete. Although I never wanted to admit it, I knew that a completed reading log at the end of each week didn't mean any REAL reading actually took place. It was a problem I was aware of but was too exhausted to find a solution for.

  20. Reading Response Homework That's Fun!

    In this notebook students work with one passage all week (3-4 nights). Passages will vary, depending on skills and strategies we are working on in class. Genres will also vary. We will assign literature, informational text, poetry, or excerpts from longer pieces of text. Later in the year, we will assign two passages on the same topic or by the ...

  21. 10 Helpful Homework Ideas and Tips for Primary School Teachers

    Reading is Essential. Reading for homework each night is a no-brainer! All children should be given the opportunity to take home something to read. This means weekly readers for lower years students to read with their parents and a library book or another appropriate book from home for middle and upper years students.

  22. 13 Entertaining ESL Homework Ideas to Keep Your Students Engaged

    Homework may not be many students' favorite thing, but research says it's truly an effective learning tool that teachers should use. The trick is assigning great homework. To help you do this with ease, we've compiled an awesome list of 13 homework assignments that will have your ESL students begging for more. Contents. 1. Read a Short ...

  23. How Children Learn to Read

    How Children Learn to Read. Teacher and literacy coach Margaret Goldberg gives a concise and clear explanation of the science of reading and how it makes sense in her teaching practice. Using animations, graphics and student video examples, Margaret connects the dots from research to instruction, covering how the brain reads, how we use letters and sounds for reading, and how we use meaning ...

  24. 740 Top "Reading Homework" Teaching Resources curated for you

    UKS2 The London Marathon Differentiated Fact File. Explore more than 740 "Reading Homework" resources for teachers, parents and pupils as well as related resources on "Maths Homework ". Check out our interactive series of lesson plans, worksheets, PowerPoints and assessment tools today! All teacher-made, aligned with the Australian Curriculum.

  25. Since when did reading books become a game? Well, millions are ...

    Read your height. Read the world. Read the alphabet. Read anything, but read a lot of it. Read less, but read more critically. Read only library books. Listen to only audio books. Read only books ...