Tuesday, September 11, 2012

English 8

Everyday Editing: Combine the sentences below using a serial comma.
The sky is clear blue.

A light breeze blows from the west.

 Pale green water sloshes against the side of the rickety old rowboat that brought us here.
 
SSR (Keep reading at home too!)
 
Quick Write: Share writer's notebooks (By the way, you get a grade for decorating your writer's notebook.)
 
Lesson and Homework:
Read "The House on the Hill" and mark up the text looking for the following items:
 
1.      Where do you see showing vs. telling details.

2.      What are some sensory details?

3.      How does the author control time in this story? (How does time flow? How does the author move through time periods to tell her story?)

4.      Note anything you notice that the author did!
 
 
** Please take home note to parents and return by Friday!
 
What we've learned so far in our narrative writing unit:
Narrative Writing is telling a story and scenes from the story connect in a complex way!

1 comment:

  1. What note are we suppost to have signed? I don't really understand what excatly you mean by saying 'show not describe it', because they have to describe it, in there writing! There is no way the author could not write the discription without telling the details.(pictures are the exception) thanks,
    Maggie Thom

    ReplyDelete

Thoughts on Writing...

"As writers, we learn most of what we know just by
watching the pros, don't we?" ~John R. Trimble


“We need to teach our students to read like writers and
write like readers.” Kelly Gallagher

Thoughts on Reading...

“Reading changes your life. Reading unlocks worlds unknown or forgotten, taking travelers around the world and through time. Reading helps you escape the confines of school and pursue your own education. Through characters – the saints and the sinners, real or imagined – reading shows you how to be a better human being.” ― Donalyn Miller, The Book Whisperer: Awakening the Inner Reader in Every Child

“I try to teach my students that books are a mirror, reflecting their own lives, and a window, giving them a peek into someone else's.” ― Donalyn Miller


“Deeper comprehension is more likely to occur when we
discuss our reading with others.” Kelly Gallagher

“A critical reader in the classroom makes for a discerning
reader outside of the classroom.” Kelly Gallagher