Legends for kids

Introduce your kids to fascinating legends that will ignite their imagination. Explore the world of mythical creatures and heroic tales with our top collection of legends for kids.
The legend of King Arthur - English ESL Worksheets for distance learning and physical classrooms Legends For Kids, The Legend Of King Arthur, Myth Stories, Post Reading Activities, King Arthur Legend, Esl Reading, Legend Stories, English Stories For Kids, Pre Reading Activities

A reading activity of the famous legend. The lesson plan is included: pre-reading activity, reading activity by levels and post-reading activities, also with a song, documentary videos and a film. I hope you find it useful. We will make a project with role plays out of it. - ESL worksheets

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Lana Hossam
We have put together a FREE set of "What are Myths and Legends?" posters as an introduction to your Myths and Legends or Māori Myths and Legends exploration. These will help your upper primary and upper elementary students to understand the differences between a myth and a legend. Use these in your traditional literature reading and writing time. Teaching Myths And Legends, Fairy Classroom, Legends For Kids, Maori Legends, Traditional Literature, Omari Hardwick, Writing Time, Higher Order Thinking Skills, Create A Comic

We have put together a FREE set of "What are Myths and Legends?" posters as an introduction to your Myths and Legends or Māori Myths and Legends exploration. These will help your upper primary and upper elementary students to understand the differences between a myth and a legend. Use these in your traditional literature reading and writing time.

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Top Teaching Tasks - ELA Reading and Writing Resources
Fun, Fantastic, Fourth: Mythology Anchor Charts Mythology Activities Middle School, Ancient Greece Anchor Chart, Myths Anchor Chart, Mythology Activities For Kids, Myth Anchor Chart, Mythology Activities, Ela Anchor Charts, Traditional Literature, Lightning Thief

This is the first anchor chart that my students saw when they walked in the morning we began mythology! The week prior to the unit, we discussed legends and watched Hercules after testing one afternoon. This was the perfect connection to have going into a unit surrounding myths. We still refer back to this chart throughout our reading/activities - I recommend having something similar to this in your classroom when you teach Greek Mythology or read The Lightning Thief! As Percy's journey…

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Lisa Taylor

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