writing informational essays 8th grade

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Informational Writing - Informative Essay - 8th Grade 8W2 CCSS

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Conducting Research for Writing Informative Essays 8th Grade W.8.7 CCSS aligned

Common Core Writing for 6th, 7th, & 8th Grades - Informative /Explanatory Essays

Informative Essay Writing Unit_W.2_8th Grade

6- 8th Grade Informational Essay Writing Rubric

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How to Write in Middle School - The 8th Grade Informational Essay

How to Write in Middle School - The 8th Grade Informational Essay - Video
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Problem and Solution Essay Writing Google Slides™ Lesson | Informative Essay

DIGITAL Paired Text (Passage) - TikTok™ Informational : 8th and 9th Grade Level

Cause and Effect Informative Essay Writing Lesson and Sample Google Slides™

6TH - 8TH GRADE ELA QUARTER 2 ARGUMENTATIVE WRITNG THESIS STATEMENT BUNDLE

INFORMATIONAL WRITING UNIT - WINTER THEME [5TH- 8TH GRADE ]

EXPOSITORY INFORMATIONAL COMPARE/CONTRAST ESSAY 6 - 8th Grade CC Aligned

6TH - 8TH GRADE ELA QUARTER 3 INFORMATIONAL WRITING AND READING BUNDLE

Informational Explanatory Writing Test Prep | Text-Based Writing | 8th Grade

EXPOSITORY INFORMATIVE /EXPLANATORY CAUSE EFFECT ESSAY 6 - 8TH GRADE -CC Aligned

SRSD: Ride the T.I.D.E. Graphic Organizers 2nd- 8th grade

TRUE Box 8th Grade English Language Arts Unit 8

Informational Essay Writing Prompt Choice Board

6- 8TH GRADE ELA QUARTER 4 END OF YEAR WRITING AND READING BUNDLE


Paired Text Passages - Informational Passages: 8th and 9th Grade Level | Pizza
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HMH 8th Grade Collection 1: Culture and Belonging- Writing Prompts

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How to Teach Informational Writing
You probably already know that I LOVE teaching writing. And you might think I’m crazy, but nonfiction writing might be my favorite type of writing. It’s hard to call favorites, but truthfully – I find it the easiest (personally) than other types of writing. I think that might be because informative writing is about “teaching.” And, well, if you’re a teacher…it just makes sense, right?
What makes informative writing really fun for your students is that they become “experts on a topic.” And becoming an expert on something builds confidence – and that confidence can translate into their writing. So I have 3 big tips for you when it comes to teaching nonfiction/informative writing.
Know Where You are Going!
If you don’t know where you are going, then how will you know when you get there? When you get ready for a unit of writing, you want to get really clear on what you expect of your students as an end result. You know it’s not going to look the same (how boring would that be!), but you know there is a goal and structure to produce something. Between here and there is a process.
On the low end, your goal may be a 3 paragraph essay/article/book/project.
- An Introduction
- A Body Paragraph
- A Conclusion
There is a clear beginning, middle, and end. Let’s not discredit that – it’s better than many adults!
In the middle, it may be a 4 paragraph essay.
- An Introduction: States Controlling Idea or Main Idea of the Whole
- A Body Paragraph: Main Idea #1
- A Body Paragraph: Main Idea #2
- A Conclusion: Restates the Controlling Idea, possibly with a Call to Action
On the high end, it may be a 5 paragraph essay.
This is a basic structure, but it is a skeleton of what you are trying to do. And it’s important to understand that not all writers will be able to pull off even a 3 paragraph essay. And many will struggle with just a paragraph. But you know where you are going.
I’m going to get on my soapbox real quick and then I’ll get off to stay on topic. DON’T stress yourself out about what your students can’t do. Focus on THEIR growth and progress. I KNOW you are hearing from possibly your admin, testing results, and your internal thoughts about all the things that your students can’t do. But you know what, ten years from now— they won’t care about their 4th Grade Writing FSA score. They’ll be sitting in their high school classroom having some kind of emotional attachment to writing. a) I love it so much – this is no big deal to write an essay on the Lord of the Flies b) I don’t really care about writing. I’ll do it, but it’s not that important. c) any time the word “writing” is mentioned: eyes roll, slump in seat, exasperated.
I’m telling you this because I lived it. I’m telling you this because I care. I’m telling you this because I think EVERYTHING we do in elementary – especially upper elementary has a big impact on our students’ ability to communicate via writing.
So, yes, I love writing. But I also know everybody doesn’t. And I ALSO know there is a reason for that. Who helped you decide how you feel about writing? And how is it empowering you to impact your students? Don’t let that define how you show up as a writing teacher. I KNOW that every teacher thinks writing is important. You think writing is important. That’s why you are here. The problem is with our beliefs about writing or US as writers. And I want to help you shift that thinking.
Thanks for that soap box moment. Moving along…
Once you know what your end goal is, then you can map out your teaching points to get you from here to there. I love using a unit calendar to see the unit as a whole. The writing calendar helps you determine what you are teaching and when.

Use the Unit Calendar for Writing Conferences
You can also keep a copy of your unit calendar inside your conferring binder or writing notebook to refer to during conferences and small group. If you aren’t sure what to teach your students during a conference, then just go to your calendar to see which teaching points fit with their needs. Your students may need something that is not on the calendar, but this is a great way to gauge determine whether your students are applying the skills taught in the unit.

Begin with choice!
If you teach in an upper elementary testing grade, then this part might be difficult if you have a set curriculum that you must follow. If that’s you, then you might need to be more strategic – more about that in a moment.
Giving students choice in their topic increases engagement. This is because they are invested in the quality of their work. They genuinely care about what they are writing about. If they are reading about their topic, then they are also going to make meaning of the content on their own terms. Hello, reading comprehension benefits!
Giving students choice leads to their voice. When students are writing about a topic they care about, they are going to write in a way that they might speak. They get excited and enthusiastic about the topic. Our job as a writing teacher is to help them translate that excitement and enthusiasm to their writing.
Think about that one student in your classroom that can’t stop talking about sharks. He teaches you about the Megalodon and how he thinks it possibly still exists. He reminds you of Ross talking about rocks. (Are you a Friends fan, too? ?) THAT’s the writer in that student. Giving that student the power to write about something that he cares about will unlock his writing voice. And it’s also going to make him care about his writing far more than any assignment would!
In my 4th Grade classroom, we aligned this unit with our Life Science unit. Students chose an animal for their topic and then we used the things we were learning about in science to figure out the different parts/paragraphs of their writing. For example, learned behaviors vs. instincts, life cycles, and seasonal behaviors. This way students were deepening what they were learning in science by writing about it.

If you teach 2nd or 3rd Grade, you might begin with All About Books. And I’m not saying they aren’t appropriate for 4th or 5th either – you just might want to up the rigor by having them do actual research. This was one of my favorite units to teach in 3rd Grade. Let me tell you how much teaching 3rd grade writing teaches YOU about YOURSELF. 🙂 I’ve got an All About book unit in the works, but for now I’ll leave this little throwback teaser for you. I hear you.
What if my students need to write in response to prompts and texts to prepare for a state writing test?
If you don’t have time in your teaching progression to have students first write about a topic of choice, then here are some ways you can hack choice. I can’t believe I just wrote that – but let’s go with it.
1.Students can write about a topic of choice, but they must have 2-3 teacher-approved articles from the internet and/or books from the library. In my classroom, we had access to laptops one day a week. Students were able to find an article online. If you go this route, you might have students copy and paste the link into a Google Doc and share with you OR simply write the website in their notebook.
2. Have a Class List of Topics that Students Choose From. One way that you can give choice is by having specific topics you want students to write about based on a theme, or integrate into your Science or Social Studies content areas. Then, allow students to choose from a list. You can make these around a theme such as animals, endangered animals, state animals, inventors, women inventors, inventions, and the list goes on.
3. Select the texts based on your students’ interest. You could have students vote on a topic they write about or as a class, make a list of their interests that they would like to write about. Exude enthusiasm about all topics, but if they are helping you come up with the list, then there is going to be way more engagement.
4. Select high-interest texts. At the end of the day, you may be teaching in a setting where you know giving student choice is best practice, but you also have to get them ready for state testing or writing to deadline. There are a lot of texts out there, but be a critical consumer when it comes to what you put in front of your students. If YOU aren’t interested in a text, then that may be a sign that your students most likely won’t be either. You won’t bring that same energy into teaching how to write in response to the text, so if you find yourself with a lackluster text set in front of you – scrap it and move on.
One of the reasons I created the monthly text sets was to have more options for the topics my students were writing about. You can grab this free Informational Shark Text Set here!

Select a Mentor Text (s)
Once you have determined WHAT your students will write about, select a mentor text or two that you will use throughout the unit. Animals are always high-interest with kids, so I tend to go that route because it’s a low-hanging fruit. Kids are naturally interested in animals – even – especially with the creepy ones like snakes or spiders. And the majestical ones like butterflies. You also want to choose a text that has the features that you want to teach!
If you have the option – teach your nonfiction reading unit at the same time you are teaching your nonfiction writing unit. This will work wonders! Your teaching will be side by side. If you’re teaching students how to identify and use text features as a reader, then you can deepen your teaching by showing them how to do the same thing as a writer. Snakes by Time for Kids is a wonderful way of doing this.
My 3 favorite books for teaching informational writing are:
- Snakes by Time for Kids
- Butterflies by Kevin J. Holmes
- Spiders by Seymour Simon (His books are AMAZING for craft, voice, main idea, and elaboration!!!)
Inside my Informational Writing Unit, I’ve included Read Aloud plans that identify the specific strategies and teaching points you can pull from the books: Snakes by Time for Kids and Butterflies by Kevin J. Holmes.

Read Like a Writer
Before you teach strategies and techniques about informative writing – study that type of writing. And I don’t mean just you. You and your students. Each of my units begin with the same lesson tweaked in the slightest bit – the genre.
Writers study the characteristics of the kind of writing they will do – ______. For this unit, it’s informational writing. We spend a full day studying the characteristics of that type of writing. This is important because students see the big picture! They see what their endgame is. As humans, that’s important! We want to know what we are working towards. We want to see our end. We are beginning with the end in mind.
1.Read the text once for the gist. Preferably, you have already read this text as part of Reading Workshop to model reading strategies. If you have not already read the text before the lesson, then select a section of the text. I highly recommend first introducing the text to your students during your reading block. I can’t stress this enough. You can use this SAME BOOK to teach your Reading teaching points. Don’t create more work for yourself. Leverage what you are already using. You could even use a text you have already used in reading and then repurpose it for your writing block.
2. Read the text a second time with a “writer’s eye.” Slow down and stop to notice what the writer to identify what the writer did to make this writing so amazing. Use the Read Aloud Plans included with this book as a guide.
3. Create a class anchor chart to note the characteristics of informational writing. Use the notebook chart included to guide students thinking, but you want them to come up with some characteristics on their own.
4. Use the notebook chart as a guide. You can then give them the writing notebook chart after the lesson OR hand out the chart before the lesson. They can use highlighters/colored pencils to highlight certain things they notice or key words while you are teaching. The more I use notebook charts, the more I find the value of using them to teach the lesson so that students know how to use them during Independent Practice. Also, they begin to use them as a continuous resource, not just another sheet of paper.
Messy = Learning in Progress

You definitely want to have some ideas in mind for what you expect students to identify as the characteristics. And that’s when the notebook chart comes in handy!

This is only the beginning of what’s possible when teaching Informational Writing, but I promise you it sets a powerful foundation for you and your students. I’ve put together a unit sampler of the Informational Writing unit. Inside this sampler, you will get:
- teaching point calendar
- the first 3 lesson plans in the unit
- notebook charts for the first 3 lessons
- PowerPoint/Google Slides for the first 3 lessons
I also want to walk you through what is provided for you inside the complete unit.

Each lesson includes a PowerPoint or Google Slide. You can use these during whole group or share with your students using Google Classroom.

If you are looking for more support in teaching Informational Writing, be sure to join the TLL Membership , which and includes ALL of my ELA resources for Grades 3-5 at a low monthly price. You can also purchase the Informational Writing Unit as part of any of the bundles below:

What is your favorite nonfiction mentor text? Let me know in the comments!
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The Hub: Grade 8 Informational Writing
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Resource Overview
For teachers looking for teacher-friendly writing instruction, this resources is for you!
Empowering Writers Informational & Opinion Writing guides provide you with everything you need to be successful at teaching writing. This includes:
Product Description
This product is a license for one individual to access the Informational & Opinion Writing Guide for Grade 8 on Empowering Writers HUB platform.
- Enhanced digital replicas of time-tested EW instructional materials
- Professional development videos on the foundational skills taught by EW certified instructors
- Virtual Field Trips that provide background for text annotation and analysis
- Skill Power! PowerPoints to introduce the foundational skills
- New ways to engage students and appeal to every learning style
Connect your digital guide to your digital classroom to assign student content, lessons and activities. Make sure to view the digital requirements before purchasing a license.
This product is a license for the digital guides only. The printed guide is sold separately.
License expires a year from date of purchase.
SKU: DB Expos 8
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More About the Resource
Access all foundational informational and opinion writing skills, strategies, lesson plans, sample texts and exemplars necessary for effective informational, opinion, and response to text writing. Informational writing skills are applied to not only essays and reports, but become the backbone for the more challenging response to text tasks. Also includes research skills, note-taking, and how to cite textual evidence without plagiarizing.
- Structured lessons that target each skill necessary for effective informational/expository and opinion writing
- Step-by-step lesson plans with clear, measurable objectives
- Mentor texts that support guided annotation and analysis and prepare students for response to text
- Strategies to break the writing discipline into a series of smaller, more manageable tasks
- Scripted lessons to help implement more effective modeling
- Suggestions for differentiating instruction to meet diverse needs
- Opportunities for applying writing skills across the curriculum
The Digital Guide on the HUB
The HUB takes you beyond the book and combines professional development, digital teaching tools, how-to demonstration videos and direct to student content all in one convenient place!
Embedded professional development including:
- Teacher Background - get a deeper understanding of the genre with brief, topic-specific video segments that reinforce every lesson.
- Modeled Lessons - watch actual classroom footage of foundational skills being taught by experienced writing instructors—pragmatic insight that can be applied right away.
- Coaching Segments - elevate teaching practices with valuable overviews, pacing advice and troubleshooting tips from certified Empowering Writers Teachers.
Digital Student Content
We designed our engaging videos to introduce students to the topic, and to provide valuable background information and vocabulary. In an engaging multi-sensory fashion, your students will have a better knowledge base with which to approach the related reading and writing tasks. Embedded digital student content includes:
- Virtual Field Trips
- Skill Power! PowerPoints
- Narrated Text Audio
- Digital Student Pages
COPYRIGHT LAW GUIDELINES – PLEASE READ. Our copyright agreement for a single user license allows one person to download, print, and copy FOR USE WITHIN HIS OR HER INDIVIDUAL CLASSROOM ONLY. Copying or sharing materials for use in other classrooms or for training purposes is a violation of copyright law. Use in multiple classrooms will require the purchase of additional licenses – one per classroom. Copying, recreating, or modifying this product for the intended purposes of redistributing or selling is strictly forbidden.
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- Share Share on Facebook
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- Pin it Pin on Pinterest
- Choosing a selection results in a full page refresh.
- Press the space key then arrow keys to make a selection.

Six Activities for Improving Informative/Explanatory Writing
Below are six strategy activities to support K–12 writers. Follow these easy steps to help students apply these strategies for effective writing:
Step 1: Watch the introduction and model lesson for the strategy activity. Step 2: Download the student pages by clicking the blue Strategy button. Step 3: Choose the appropriate grade level. You will notice student pages are listed by grade band: K–2, 3–5, 6–8, and 9–12. Step 4: Use the materials by printing or downloading in a virtual environment for instruction. Step 5: Let the writing begin!
Note: You can practice these strategies for writing about any informational text students read.
1. Turn a Writing Prompt into a Topic Sentence
Whether a topic is assigned or selected by the student, writers need to understand that developing a topic requires careful thinking about the purpose and audience. The result is a topic sentence that is precise as well as interesting.
Watch the video to see how to teach students in grades 6–8 to use key words from a prompt when writing a topic sentence for an informative/explanatory writing assignment or test. Download the accompanying activity tools for students in grades K–12.

2. Identify and Order Key Ideas
It’s never too early to teach students how to categorize and sort ideas. After some time, students learn the importance of distinguishing key ideas from details and organizing ideas logically.
Download activities to teach organization in fun, age-appropriate ways for students at all grade levels, K–12.

3. Connect Ideas with Transitions
Transitions help readers follow the development of the topic by showing relationships between ideas. The process of selecting the right transition words helps students clarify their own thinking about how their ideas are related.
Watch the video to learn how to teach transitions in meaningful sets to students in grades K–2 so they can connect key ideas to organize their writing and make it easy to understand. Download the accompanying activity tools for students in grades K–12.

4. Write Successful Conclusions
To write a successful conclusion, students need to tie back to the topic statement and also give readers food for thought.
Watch the video to learn tips for teaching students in grades 3–5 to identify conclusions and tie writing back to the topic without adding any new information to the informative/explanatory assignment. Download the accompanying activity tools for students in grades K–12.

5. Improve Writing with Revision
Revision is often hard for writers at any skill level. Using these tools can help students focus on aspects of their work and the work of peers that need improvement.
Watch the video to learn how to teach students in grades 6–8 to help each other revise and improve writing by participating in constructive peer-review interactions in the roles of reviewer and writer. Download the accompanying activity tools for students in grades K–12.

6. Add Text Features and Graphics
Adding drawings, charts, and pictures can make any writing topic more understandable and enjoyable. Understanding differences between types of graphics like charts, figures, diagrams, timelines, and maps is important—as is knowing where to locate them, where to place them in writing, and how to properly cite sources.
Watch the video to learn how to teach students in grades 9–12 to utilize graphics effectively to visually convey and clarify complex ideas and aid readers’ comprehension. Download the accompanying activity tools for students in grades K–12.

Each of these tips, tools, and videos are part of Step Up to Writing ® , systematic writing instruction designed for learners of all levels and types, from kindergarten through 12th grade. Step Up to Writing breaks writing skills into steps that provide variation and differentiation based on student needs. Help your students meet rigorous standards and become proficient and confident writers.


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Browse 8th Grade Informational Writing Lesson Plans. Award winning educational materials designed to help kids succeed. Start for free now!
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But you know what, ten years from now— they won't care about their 4th Grade Writing FSA score. They'll be sitting in their high school classroom having some
Resource Overview For teachers looking for teacher-friendly writing instruction, this resources is for you! Empowering Writers Informational & Opinion
Watch the video to see how to teach students in grades 6–8 to use key words from a prompt when writing a topic sentence for an informative/explanatory writing
Students have not had the experience learning the text features of informative text like they have with narrative writing. It is for this reason that I spend
Teacher Directions. • The texts provide the information needed to address the prompt, and students should independently read the texts carefully before writing.
WRITING/CONSTRUCTED REPONSE. ANCHOR PAPER EXEMPLARS. GRADE 8 INFORMATIVE. Page 2. GO ON. Grade 8 WRITING Section 1. Changing Your Mind—One Thought at a Time.