MAPS: Mindset, Active, Play, Success

You can print this free downloadable by following the link and design your own box! It's incredibly simple...and loads of fun. 
DOWNLOAD HERE: 
THE BOX LESSON
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Once your student completes The Box Lesson
, find a book to read together which includes the words would, could, and should. Lois’s choice is
The Story of The Little Mole who knew it was none of his business by Werner Holzwarth. Reading this book highlights the challenges of the pronoun “IT” and its complex meaning.


ABOUT THE BOX LESSON

The Box Lesson is Lois's tried-and-true activity. She created the concept while teaching her son, Nicholas, who had been struggling with connecting sight words. Gaining insight from Isabel Briggs Myers' book Gifts Differing: Understanding Personality Type, Lois realized that without the necessary background—or connections—a child has no framework for storing new information. The sentence I saw a cat climb up a tree can be incredibly challenging for a struggling learner to comprehend, especially if they've never seen a cat climb up a tree. Briggs Myers writes that separate and arbitrary facts are hard to understand and remember. Yet making learning intrinsically interesting, surprising, or funny helps make learning happen with no effort at all. 

Nicholas had especially struggled with connecting the sight words: couldshould, and would. A few shoe boxes, a letter from a zoo, and a bottle of "elephant pee" helped Nicholas not only understand and learn these words, but enjoy the process of doing so—making all the difference for a struggling learner.

A PHOTOGRAPHIC STEP-BY-STEP
ON HOW TO USE THE BOX LESSON: