- Have students work in groups to complete one or all of the activity sheets that support the skills covered in the Lazy Editor article you’ve selected. You might have students complete the activity for a particular grammar skill that you know they struggle with, or you might have them complete all three activity sheets.
- ALTERNATIVE IDEA: If students are already familiar with the concepts covered in the Lazy Editor, save the activity sheets for the end. Do the Lazy Editor first and assign the activity sheets on an as-needed basis for students to brush up on skills in areas where they showed weakness.

Donut Goes to China
This short nonfiction article about Dunkin’ Donuts in China is full of sloppy writing and grammatical errors that need to be fixed.
Learning Objective: to identify and correct errors involving capitalization, run-on and rambling sentences, and fragments
Close Reading, Critical Thinking, Skill Building
1. REVIEWING GRAMMAR AND WRITING CONCEPTS
2. PREPARING TO READ
3. READING THE LAZY EDITOR
4. DOING THE ACTIVITY
5. ASSESSING AND REINFORCING
Find the lower-level (Level 1) version of the Lazy Editor, which features only one type of error throughout the article, and the activity sheet that supports it. Begin by completing the activity sheet as a class. Then project the Lazy Editor and work through it together.
Find the higher-level (Level 3) version of the Lazy Editor, which includes more challenging errors than the version in the printed magazine. Have students complete the Lazy Editor individually, then work with partners to check each other’s work. Use the activity sheets on an as-needed basis.