Monday, Sept 16 Welcome to English I.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
English 10 Honors Day 28 Objective: To effectively use the SIFT strategy to understand author’s message.
Advertisements

“I’m ready for my close- up Mr. DeMille!” CLOSE READINGS By: Kimberley Cooper.
TODAY WE ARE GOING TO LEARN... HOW TO WRITE AN EXPOSITORY ESSAY !!!!!!
Traits of Reading Review GOAL: We will review Comprehension and Interpretation We will achieve this goal using a note- taking organizer.
Answering the inference question Inference cannot be lifted, paraphrased or quoted. It is the underlying idea in the extract. How to structure the first.
Funded by the Library of Congress.
Literary Analysis Mrs. Hagy. Standards Common Core Standard RL7.1- Cite several pieces of textual evidence to support analysis of what the text says explicitly.
Close Reading of Complex Texts in the 3-8 Modules
Bell Ringer Complete the Ch. 5 & 6 Outsiders Pop Quiz. On the back of the quiz respond to the following: Quick write: In a paragraph, explain how setbacks.
Text Evidence Anchor 1: Cite the text evidence that most strongly supports an analysis of what the text says explicitly as well as inferences drawn from.
Mr. D. Greene Early/Middle College GTCC Jamestown Greensboro, NC.
Words commonly found in the PARCC Words from Rutgers-PARCC powerpoint Information & Pictures from various websites Sandy Rocco 2015.
Funded by the Library of Congress.
Exploring the Literacy Standards: CCSS & Main Idea.
By William Shakespeare Module 1 Unit 2 Lesson 7.   Determine two or more themes or central ideas of a text and analyze their development over the course.
Orange County Public Schools Top 5 Big Ideas Your Child Will Learn in the First Quarter of English Language Arts 8 th Grade Literary Standards.
7th Grade ELA Lesson Plans: Week of September 26-30, 2016 Mrs. Wooton Monday September 26 th Tuesday September 27 th Wednesday September 28 th Thursday.
Florida English Language Arts Standards (LAFS)
Academic Improvement – Reading Ms. Schmidt
a. comparison and contrast c. setting b. flashback d.dialogue
Thursday, Sept. 5 Welcome to English I!.
7th Grade ELA Lesson Plans: Week of October 17-21, 2016 Mrs. Wooton
Welcome to Unit 1: Text Analysis
Front Back CCR PreTest 3. What does the text mean?
Academic Improvement – Reading Ms. Schmidt
Introduction of Lesson
Expository Unit Vocabulary
Michigan Reading Standards
MONDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 2015 Scrolling text repeating until end of slide.
I Can…… Vocabulary 5 1 Sentence Stems Bump Up What Came Before
Engaging Students With Primary Sources
Bell Work: You must have either your composition book or a folder with 5-10 sheets of paper in it for the writing you will be doing this week. The writing.
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 2015 Scrolling text repeating until end of slide.
“The Birds By Daphne du Maurier.
Text-based Analysis: Introduction Copyright © 2015 by Write Score LLC.
Creating Essential Questions.
Daily Agenda 9/17/18 English II.
9th grade literature and composition
Essay.
Non-Fiction Text Structure
Ask yourself these questions to help you understand what you read:
Text Structure English 7 & 8.
TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 2015 Scrolling text repeating until end of slide.
Course Organizer Standards Based Grading The This Course: ELA- Grade 8
A Long Walk to Water The Unit Organizer thaela.weebly.com
Bell Ringer Wednesday August 10, 2016
Dr. George’s 9th Lit. Agenda
Comparison of Texts.
“Reading Books is Fundamental”
Writing Response Vocabulary
Bell Ringer Tuesday August 9, 2016
Agenda A Quick Note on Research Questions
Creating Essential Questions.
Course Organizer Standards Based Grading The This Course: ELA- Grade 7
Bell Ringer Thursday August 11, 2016
Text Structure English 7 & 8.
9th grade literature and composition
Welcome Grade 6: Language Arts Reading and Writing Mrs. Thompson
Incentives.
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 2015 Scrolling text repeating until end of slide.
Raider rev 1/25/16 HOW DOES JULIET DEMONSTRATE HER DEFIANCE/DISRESPECT TOWARDS HER PARENTS?
9th grade literature and composition
Raider rev 1/26/16 WHAT DOES JULIET SAY THAT SHE WOULD RATHER DO THAN MARRY PARIS IN ACT I?
Objective Summary I can determine the theme of a text
Standard: RL.01: Cite several pieces of textual evidence to support analysis of what the text says explicitly as well as inferences drawn from the text.
MONDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 2016 LITERATURE TERMS.
Annotating Texts Mr. Laurich.
Citing Textual Evidence
DO Now-5/16/18 Module 4, Unit 2 Lesson 2
Narrative Text The gist/central idea
Presentation transcript:

Monday, Sept 16 Welcome to English I

Announcements Google Share Folder for English I should already be made. Be sure you’re checking the Modules to see what needs to be done and when it needs to be completed. English Study Lab TONIGHT at 7pm-8pm Email me if you’d like a link to it

Module 2: Theme It’s Not Just For Parties Anymore

Intro Video

Standard 3P: Citing Textual Evidence

1 2 3

3 2 1 4: Innovating 3: Applying 2: Developing 1: Beginning   4: Innovating 3: Applying 2: Developing 1: Beginning 3P: Cite Textual Evidence I can cite textual evidence from multiple sources properly and go beyond what was taught in class. I can cite textual evidence by using quotes and paraphrasing to support my explanation of what the text says as well as inferences I drawn from a text. I can cite textual evidence by paraphrasing to support my explanation of what the text says as well as inferences I drawn from a text. I can summarize the story and paraphrase what the text says. 3 2 1

You will fill out this box, after your first assessment on citing textual evidence

Standard 4P: Theme

3 2 1 4: Innovating 3: Applying 2: Developing 1: Beginning   4: Innovating 3: Applying 2: Developing 1: Beginning 4P: Theme/Central Idea I can identify more than one theme of a text and explain in detail how they are developed and shaped by specific details from the text and compare how the author develops each theme. Or, I can identify similar central ideas in more than one non-fiction piece and compare how authors use details or organization to support their central ideas or claims in two or more pieces. I can identify and explain the theme or Central Idea of a text in detail and how it is developed over the course of the text, including how it is shaped and refined by specific details from the text I can identify a simple theme of piece of fiction or the central idea of a piece of non-fiction and summarize the events of the text. I can Identify the intended audience and purpose of a non-fiction piece. I can define the terms Theme, Central Idea, Audience, Purpose, Tone, Chronological Organization, Compare and Contrast, Cause and Effect, Problem-Solution, and Sequential organization. 3 2 1

1 2 3

Self Monitoring Video

Google Share Folders