As a Middle School ELA teacher, finding great short stories for students can be challenging, and so can lesson planning. That is why we made the LYS Classroom App. You can save up to 50% of your lesson planning time. We also decided to list some of our favorite books and authors to share with you! Here are some of the top stories that we found. We hope that this helps you empower and enrich your students and that it makes your life a bit easier as well:
- Bluford stories series
- Examination Day
- The Lottery
- Charles
- Treasure of Lemon Brown by Walter Dean Myers
- Thank You, Ma’am, by Langston Hughes
- The Landlady
- Trifles
- Sweat by Zora Neale Hurston
- Little Things Are Big
- Gate A-4
- Black Enough
- Look Both Ways
- Wildfire
- Desire’s baby
- Doris is coming
- The Circuit!
- User Friendly
- The Bracelet
- The Ransom of Red Chief,
- The Casque of Amontillado
- Flowers for Algernon
- Diary of Anne Frank
- The Monsters are Due on Maple Street (also a Twilight Zone episode)
- Aida
- Seed folks
- An Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge Rod Serling adaptation
- All Summer in a Day
- The Elevator
- The Monkey’s Paw
- The Hitchhiker
- Tell-Tale Heart
- Seventh Grade by Gary Soto
- Old Glory by Bruce Coville
- Harrison Bergeron by Vonnegut
- Third Wish (pair it with Monkey’s Paw)
- Fish Cheeks
- Eleven
- Salvador Late or Early
- Masque of the Red Death
- The Black Cat
- An Open Heart
- A Rose for Emily
- Three Brothers (Harry Potter)
- The Veldt
- Sound of Thunder
- The Pedestrian (Ray Bradbury)
- Death by Scrabble
- Fish Cheeks by Amy Tan
- Get chopsticks too
Here are some of our favorite authors!
- Sharon G. Flakes’ stories
- Ray Bradbury
- Gary Soto
- Bruce Coville
- Roald Dahl
- Walter Dean Myers
- Langston Hughes
We know there are many enjoyable books, but here are just a few of our top recommendations. They pair well with the Laddering Your Success Classroom App. Imagine making lessons rooted in character which are relevant and empowering your students to pursue their passions and purpose while reading these great titles. We hope this helps you, especially if you are a first-year teacher or just someone trying to lighten the load of lesson planning.