Teach point of view, symbolism, figurative language, and emotional depth through Jacqueline Woodson’s award-winning novel-in-verse, Before the Ever After—designed to help your 6th–8th grade students engage in thoughtful discussion, deep literary analysis, and personal reflection.

This 9-day unit (plus 3 bonus lessons) provides everything you need to guide your students through Socratic Seminars, short responses, and text-based discussions focused on character traits, poetic devices, author’s purpose, theme, and literary conflict. The structure is ideal for whole-class novel studies or small group reading and is perfect for helping students explore complex texts through a supportive, discussion-based model.
What’s Included:
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9 Structured Lessons aligned to literary standards, with pacing suggestions and Socratic Seminar prompts
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Editable reading response notebooks (digital + printable)
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Slides for each day in PowerPoint, PDF, and JPEG formats
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Standards-aligned rubrics and conference tools for tracking growth
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Bonus lessons on Point of View Influence, Comparing Texts + Genres, and Objective Summaries
📘 Core Lessons (Days 1–9)
These lessons build literary skills, foster discussion, and guide students through the novel in manageable chunks.
- Lesson 1: Point of View
Students analyze how ZJ’s first-person narration shapes our understanding of events and characters, and how it builds an emotional connection with readers.
- Lesson 2: Character Types & Character Traits
Focus on direct and indirect characterization. Students examine ZJ, his father, and friends, and track how traits and roles shift over time.
- Lesson 3: Imagery + Figurative Language
Students identify similes, metaphors, and vivid imagery throughout the verse and reflect on how these devices build mood and tone.
- Lesson 4: Mood and Tone
Explore how Woodson’s word choice and structure influence mood and tone—and how those elements change as the story progresses.
- Lesson 5: Symbolism
Analyze recurring symbols (like football, trees, and music) to discuss what they represent and how they reinforce themes of identity, memory, and change.
- Lesson 6: Literary Conflict
Students explore different types of conflict (internal and external) and how ZJ’s struggles drive the emotional weight of the story.
- Lesson 7: Point of View (Revisited)
A deeper dive into narrative reliability and shifting perspective. Students consider what we do—and don’t—learn through ZJ’s lens.
- Lesson 8: Poem Structure + Author’s Purpose (Audio Version)
Students examine the structure of free verse and how Woodson’s poetic choices (line breaks, rhythm, pacing) support her purpose and message. Optional audio listening integration.
- Lesson 9: Author’s Craft + Literary Devices
Reflect on Woodson’s writing style, use of repetition, and carefully chosen diction to discuss how authors craft emotion and meaning in verse novels.
Bonus Lessons (Optional Enrichment):
Use these for test-prep, end-of-unit extensions, or small group scaffolding.
- Bonus Lesson 1: Point of View Influence
Students compare how different points of view affect storytelling and analyze passages rewritten from alternative perspectives.
- Bonus Lesson 2: Comparing Texts + Genres
Students compare Before the Ever After to a paired poem, short story, or nonfiction piece. Includes two versions—one tailored for 8th grade, and another for 6th/7th.
- Bonus Lesson 3: Objective Summaries
Practice writing concise, unbiased summaries that reflect key ideas, structure, and tone—a perfect skill for assessments or writing support.
Why Teachers Love This Resource:
This novel study encourages students to think critically and write authentically—while offering them a safe place to reflect on family, change, and identity. Every discussion and response task is designed to help students engage more deeply with the text, while building essential reading and writing skills they can apply all year.
TEACHERS LIKE YOU SAID…
⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ Sixth Grade A. says, " My students loved using this resource. They were engaged in the resource and had no trouble getting started. It didn't take much time to prepare this resource, so it was easy to use in a time crunch."
⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ Melissa L. says, "This was well planned out and easy to print and use. My students loved this novel, and this unit took the planning work off of me- it was very helpful and I would highly recommend this novel study."
⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ Krista L. says, "I was new to teaching middle school this year and this resource was such an asset! I will be buying for every novel we use this year. The structure of the discussions surrounding the guiding question was great to teach students SKILLS versus the novel itself."
⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ Kathryn M. says, "My students loved using this resource. They found the questions to be engaging and using this as a digital notebook was fantastic. As a teacher, I found that this unit truly does teach all the standards that I needed it to. Highly recommend!"
⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ Rachel H. says, "Very thorough product that allows students to dig deeper and show what they know. My kids, even my super reluctant readers, are really enjoying this book. I highly recommend the book and this novel study for kids who hate reading, writing and dicussing their reading."
