10th Grade ELA Lesson Plan Templates
ELA lesson plans are most effective when anchored to a specific text and skill. The best lessons balance reading, writing, speaking, and listening within a coherent purpose — students should always know why they're reading or writing, not just what to produce.
Generate a 10th Grade ELA Lesson Plan →Lesson Plan Structure for 10th Grade ELA
Warm-Up / Activate Prior Knowledge
5–7 minConnect to prior learning, vocabulary, or the day's text through a brief hook.
Teaching Tip
Try a quick-write, vocabulary preview, or discussion question about the text's theme. Avoid long summaries of previous lessons.
Introduce / Read the Text (I Do)
10–15 minModel skilled reading — thinking aloud, annotating, and asking questions while reading.
Teaching Tip
Read a short passage aloud and model what strong readers do: monitor comprehension, make inferences, identify craft moves.
Guided Practice (We Do)
10–15 minStudents practice the skill with a partner or small group using the same or a parallel text.
Teaching Tip
Assign a focused task: annotate for a specific element, complete a graphic organizer, or discuss with a partner before sharing out.
Application / Writing (You Do)
10–15 minStudents apply the reading or writing skill independently.
Teaching Tip
Quick-writes, journal responses, drafting a paragraph, or completing a graphic organizer are all effective. Match the task to the objective.
Share Out / Closure
5–7 minSynthesize learning through discussion, sharing, or an exit ticket.
Teaching Tip
Cold-call two or three students to share. Validate and build on responses. Close by restating the skill and previewing tomorrow's learning.
Sample Learning Objectives for 10th Grade ELA
Strong objectives name the skill, the content, and how mastery will be demonstrated.
- Students will identify the main idea and three supporting details in an informational text
- Students will analyze how an author's word choice contributes to tone and meaning
- Students will write a claim-evidence-reasoning paragraph in response to a text
- Students will compare and contrast two characters' perspectives using textual evidence
- Students will identify and explain the effect of figurative language in a poem
- Students will evaluate the credibility of a source using established criteria
- Students will construct a thesis statement that makes an arguable claim
- Students will analyze how story structure contributes to the development of theme
Generate a Complete 10th Grade ELA Lesson Plan
Enter your topic, grade level, and any standards you're targeting — get a full lesson plan with objectives, hook, direct instruction, guided practice, and assessment in under 60 seconds.
Open the Lesson Plan Generator →Effective Strategies for 10th Grade ELA Lessons
Common Lesson Planning Mistakes in ELA
Tips for 10th Grade ELA Lesson Plans
- Anchor every lesson to a specific text — even writing lessons benefit from a mentor text
- State the skill first, then the content: 'We're learning to identify text structure — and we'll use this article to practice'
- Plan two or three discussion questions in advance that move from literal → inferential → evaluative
- One focused skill per lesson — depth over breadth always produces better writers and readers
Frequently Asked Questions
How do I lesson plan for a novel study?
Chunk the novel into manageable reading sections (15–25 pages). Each lesson should have a focus skill (character development, foreshadowing, theme) that students practice with that day's reading. Don't just read and discuss — tie every session to a transferable skill.
Should I always require written responses in ELA?
Not always — discussion, annotation, and oral response are equally valid. Mix formats across the week. What matters is that students are actively processing the text, not passively listening.