Commas in the Chaos

20. Teaching Parts of Speech in Upper Elementary: Why It Has to Come First

8 min · Ayer
Portada del episodio 20. Teaching Parts of Speech in Upper Elementary: Why It Has to Come First

Descripción

EPISODE SUMMARY Most teachers start the year with subjects and predicates. It feels logical. But year after year, students struggle, and the reason almost always traces back to the same missing piece: parts of speech. In this episode, I share the light bulb moment that changed how I start every school year and walk through exactly why parts of speech have to come before everything else in your grammar sequence. I also break it down by grade level so you know what to prioritize, whether you teach third, fourth, or fifth grade. If you are heading into a new school year and wondering where to start, this one is for you. Want to see what the first 18 weeks of grammar instruction look like, built out for your grade level? Check out the BUILD Framework at https://www.thegrammarcollective.com/build-framework [https://uniquelyupper.com/cups-strategy-for-student-editing/] CONNECT WITH RACHEL * Instagram: @uniquelyupper [https://www.instagram.com/uniquelyupper] * Show Notes: www.uniquelyupper.com [https://www.uniquelyupper.com/] * TpT Store: Uniquely Upper on TpT [https://my.captivate.fm/dashboard/podcast/aa597c77-29ee-41ad-8b8d-26be98930faf/episode?reloaded=1#] * Email: uniquelyupper@gmail.com * The Grammar Collective 👉 Don’t forget to subscribe to Commas in the Chaos wherever you listen to podcasts so you never miss an episode!

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21 episodios

Portada del episodio 20. Teaching Parts of Speech in Upper Elementary: Why It Has to Come First

20. Teaching Parts of Speech in Upper Elementary: Why It Has to Come First

EPISODE SUMMARY Most teachers start the year with subjects and predicates. It feels logical. But year after year, students struggle, and the reason almost always traces back to the same missing piece: parts of speech. In this episode, I share the light bulb moment that changed how I start every school year and walk through exactly why parts of speech have to come before everything else in your grammar sequence. I also break it down by grade level so you know what to prioritize, whether you teach third, fourth, or fifth grade. If you are heading into a new school year and wondering where to start, this one is for you. Want to see what the first 18 weeks of grammar instruction look like, built out for your grade level? Check out the BUILD Framework at https://www.thegrammarcollective.com/build-framework [https://uniquelyupper.com/cups-strategy-for-student-editing/] CONNECT WITH RACHEL * Instagram: @uniquelyupper [https://www.instagram.com/uniquelyupper] * Show Notes: www.uniquelyupper.com [https://www.uniquelyupper.com/] * TpT Store: Uniquely Upper on TpT [https://my.captivate.fm/dashboard/podcast/aa597c77-29ee-41ad-8b8d-26be98930faf/episode?reloaded=1#] * Email: uniquelyupper@gmail.com * The Grammar Collective 👉 Don’t forget to subscribe to Commas in the Chaos wherever you listen to podcasts so you never miss an episode!

Ayer8 min
Portada del episodio 19. The Great Grammar Debate - Grammar and Writing

19. The Great Grammar Debate - Grammar and Writing

EPISODE SUMMARY There is a debate happening in grammar instruction, and most teachers are caught right in the middle of it. On one side, explicit instruction. On the other hand, grammar in context. Both sides have research. Both sides have teachers who swear by them. And neither side is actually wrong. In this episode, I walk through why both camps are pointing to something true, what gets assumed when we swing toward context-based approaches, and why the gap between knowing a grammar skill and using it in writing is not a failure. It is a pathway problem. Most importantly, we discuss the missing piece that neither side has addressed. If today's episode got you thinking about what a complete grammar system looks like, check out the BUILD Framework at https://www.thegrammarcollective.com/build-framework [https://uniquelyupper.com/cups-strategy-for-student-editing/] CONNECT WITH RACHEL * Instagram: @uniquelyupper [https://www.instagram.com/uniquelyupper] * Show Notes: www.uniquelyupper.com [https://www.uniquelyupper.com/] * TpT Store: Uniquely Upper on TpT [https://my.captivate.fm/dashboard/podcast/aa597c77-29ee-41ad-8b8d-26be98930faf/episode?reloaded=1#] * Email: uniquelyupper@gmail.com 👉 Don’t forget to subscribe to Commas in the Chaos wherever you listen to podcasts so you never miss an episode!

30 de jun de 20268 min
Portada del episodio 18. 3 Reasons Grammar Skills Disappear in Upper Elementary

18. 3 Reasons Grammar Skills Disappear in Upper Elementary

EPISODE SUMMARY Grammar skills disappear from student writing all the time. It is frustrating and fixable. In this episode, I break down the three most common reasons it happens in upper elementary classrooms: missing foundational skills, teaching a skill once and moving on, and students learning the rule without understanding why it matters. Each one comes with a practical fix you can use right away. If today's episode got you thinking about how you sequence grammar instruction, get on the waitlist for the BUILD Framework at thegrammarcollective.com/build-framework. SEE SHOW NOTES FOR MORE DETAILS: * Join the Waitlist: https://www.thegrammarcollective.com/build-framework [https://uniquelyupper.com/cups-strategy-for-student-editing/] * Read the full show notes: https://uniquelyupper.com/3-reasons-grammar-skills-disappear/ [https://uniquelyupper.com/3-reasons-grammar-skills-disappear/] CONNECT WITH RACHEL * Instagram: @uniquelyupper [https://www.instagram.com/uniquelyupper] * Show Notes: www.uniquelyupper.com [https://www.uniquelyupper.com/] * TpT Store: Uniquely Upper on TpT [https://my.captivate.fm/dashboard/podcast/aa597c77-29ee-41ad-8b8d-26be98930faf/episode?reloaded=1#] * Email: uniquelyupper@gmail.com 👉 Don’t forget to subscribe to Commas in the Chaos wherever you listen to podcasts so you never miss an episode!

23 de jun de 202613 min
Portada del episodio 17. Grammar Planning for Upper Elementary - Relaunch Episode

17. Grammar Planning for Upper Elementary - Relaunch Episode

EPISODE SUMMARY Grammar planning for upper elementary teachers is one of the hardest things to do without a curriculum, a sequence, or a real system to work from. In this relaunch episode, I'm sharing what I've been building behind the scenes: the BUILD Framework, a 7-module system that takes the guesswork out of grammar instruction. I'll walk you through what's inside each module, why I built it, and what's coming for the podcast this season. In this episode: * Why does grammar planning feel so hard * What the BUILD Framework is and what each module covers * What's coming on Commas in the Chaos this season SEE SHOW NOTES FOR MORE DETAILS: * Join The BUILD Framework: https://www.thegrammarcollective.com/build-framework [https://uniquelyupper.com/cups-strategy-for-student-editing/] * Read the full show notes: https://uniquelyupper.com/grammar-planning-for-upper-elementary/ CONNECT WITH RACHEL * Instagram: @uniquelyupper [https://www.instagram.com/uniquelyupper] * Show Notes: www.uniquelyupper.com [https://www.uniquelyupper.com/] * TpT Store: Uniquely Upper on TpT [https://my.captivate.fm/dashboard/podcast/aa597c77-29ee-41ad-8b8d-26be98930faf/episode?reloaded=1#] * Email: uniquelyupper@gmail.com 👉 Don’t forget to subscribe to Commas in the Chaos wherever you listen to podcasts so you never miss an episode!

16 de jun de 20268 min
Portada del episodio 16. CUPS Strategy for Student Editing

16. CUPS Strategy for Student Editing

EPISODE SUMMARY Let’s talk about the CUPS Strategy for Student Editing — and no, not the kind that holds your coffee. CUPS stands for Capitalization, Usage, Punctuation, and Spelling, and it is one of those classroom tools that most know about but rarely feel confident teaching. When I first started teaching, I would hand my students a CUPS checklist, tell them to edit, and then cross my fingers. I pretended that they knew what to do. Spoiler alert: they didn’t. In all transparency, I didn’t really know how to teach CUPS. I knew what each letter stood for, but not how to model it, break it down, or help students understand what “check for usage” even meant. So instead of our writing/editing block being productive, we ended up wasting time circling random words and missing real errors. Over the years, I taught myself and my students a simple way to teach the CUPS Strategy for Editing that made sense for my brain and theirs. THE HEART BEHIND THE CUPS STRATEGY I created this method because I wanted my students to stop guessing and start understanding. I was tired of editing, feeling like a scavenger hunt, and seeing testing scores that reflected it. I wanted it to feel structured, clear, and more meaningful. The routine I’m sharing in this episode is built around a simple pattern: Fix. Explain. Imitate. When students fix a mistake, explain the rule, and imitate it in their own writing, they move beyond surface-level editing. They start noticing patterns and applying them in new contexts. It’s short, it’s structured, and it actually works. The best part? It takes less than ten minutes a day. SEE SHOW NOTES FOR MORE DETAILS: * https://uniquelyupper.com/cups-strategy-for-student-editing/ [https://uniquelyupper.com/cups-strategy-for-student-editing/] CONNECT WITH RACHEL * Instagram: @uniquelyupper [https://www.instagram.com/uniquelyupper] * Show Notes: www.uniquelyupper.com [https://www.uniquelyupper.com/] * TpT Store: Uniquely Upper on TpT [https://my.captivate.fm/dashboard/podcast/aa597c77-29ee-41ad-8b8d-26be98930faf/episode?reloaded=1#] * Email: uniquelyupper@gmail.com 👉 Don’t forget to subscribe to Commas in the Chaos wherever you listen to podcasts so you never miss an episode!

11 de nov de 20256 min