Double-Entry Journal

Double-Entry Journal

Activity Overview

Students create two-column notes with quotes, observations, or facts on the left and personal responses, analysis, or questions on the right.

Grade Levels

4th Grade5th Grade6th Grade7th Grade8th Grade9th Grade10th Grade11th Grade12th Grade

Subject Areas

ScienceEnglishHistoryForeign Language

Activity Types

IndividualWritingAnalytical

Detailed Example

Analyzing Primary Sources - Civil Rights Movement (History - 8th Grade)

Materials Needed

  • Double-entry journal template
  • Primary source documents
  • Highlighters
  • Sample completed journal for modeling

Preparation

Create or copy double-entry journal templates with left column labeled 'From the Text' and right column labeled 'My Response.' Select compelling primary sources with multiple entry points.

Step-by-Step Instructions

1.

Distribute double-entry journal templates and primary source documents.

2.

Explain the two-column structure: Left side is for direct quotes, facts, or observations from the text. Right side is for your thinking about what you recorded.

3.

Model with a sample quote from the document. In left column, write the quote with page/paragraph reference.

4.

Think aloud for right column: 'This makes me wonder... This connects to... I'm confused by... This reminds me of... I think the author means...'

5.

Students read the primary source, pausing to record 4-6 entries.

6.

Left column entries can be: direct quotes, paraphrased facts, descriptions of images, or statistics.

7.

Right column responses should be substantive - not just 'interesting' but explaining WHY.

8.

Partner share: Compare journals. What did your partner notice that you missed?

9.

Whole class discussion drawing on journal entries as evidence.

Differentiation Strategies

Provide sentence starters for the response column. Pre-highlight important passages for struggling readers. For advanced students, require specific types of responses: one question, one connection, one analysis, one evaluation.

Assessment Guidelines

Review journals for depth of responses and text-to-self connections. Look for evidence of critical thinking in the response column. Use journals as springboard for class discussion.

Send Feedback