Do Now 9/15/14 Please take out the HW (binder p. 9) and be ready for the next direction.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Text-Dependent Questions
Advertisements

Central Idea, Supporting Details, and Objective Summary
Curriculum Shifts in Reading and Writing Whetstone Elementary School Literacy Night October 2013.
Joanne Kaminski Increasing Non-fiction Reading Levels the Easy Way.
Respect Responsibility Resourcefulness. Common Core Math Overview.
Common Core State Standards Professional Learning Module Series
Non-Fiction. What is non-fiction? 2 Non-Fiction O The subject of nonfiction is real O The author writes about actual persons, places and events. O The.
Unit 3- Types of Nonfiction What should we learn?
GRADE BAND 4-5 CORE ACADEMY WELCOME! My name is _____ I teach at: _____ I’ve taught for _____ years. My item is _____, and it represents me because_____.
Characters People or animals in a story. Setting Tells where and when the story takes place.
PEARSON COMMON CORE LITERATURE GRADES 11 AND 12 (2015)
Do Now 9/16/14 Please take out your spiral notebook Write today’s date and title Module 1 “Academic Vocabulary”
PENNSYLVANIA COMMON CORE STANDARDS 1.2 Reading Informational Text Students read, understand, and respond to informational text—with emphasis on comprehension,
EDL/Reading. August 14 Target: I can answer a question.
When the bell rings you should be writing silently in your journal. Which do you enjoy more: fiction or nonfiction?
Do Now 9/12/14 1.Pull out binder p. 8 = M1 U1 L6 “The Vietnam Wars” 2.Silently read sections 2, 3, & 4 for gist. [Try to read for what each section is.
Common Core Reading Standards for Social Studies.
NONFICTION UNIT Nonfiction: prose writing that presents and explains ideas or tells about real people, places, ideas, or events; must be true.
1. WRITE DOWN THE QUOTE OF THE WEEK! 2. GET OUT YOUR VOCABULARY SHEET AND TURN TO THE SECOND PAGE 3. START MAKING FLASHCARDS FOR THE SECOND PAGE OF WORDS.
Analyzing Text Features National Geographic Reader: Polar Bears Author: Laura Marsh.
Do Now 10/20/14 1.If you need to hand in your article with gist statements, please get that out and ready. 2.Please take out signed test to hand in. 3.Open.
Jeopardy Poetry General Literacy FictionNonfiction Short Stories Q $100 Q $200 Q $300 Q $400 Q $500 Q $100 Q $200 Q $300 Q $400 Q $500 Final Jeopardy.
10 pt 15 pt 20 pt 25 pt 5 pt 10 pt 15 pt 20 pt 25 pt 5 pt 10 pt 15 pt 20 pt 25 pt 5 pt 10 pt 15 pt 20 pt 25 pt 5 pt 10 pt 15 pt 20 pt 25 pt 5 pt Literary.
Common Core Standards Reading Literature Grade 7.
Grade 7 The Power of Point of View Vocabulary ELA Grade 7 The Power of Point of View, Lesson 2 Resource 2.1.
6 TH GRADE ACADEMIC VOCABULARY 1 ST GRADING PERIOD.
PA State Reading Anchors Forms of questions from the test Click for index of Anchors Click to browse anchors and questions.
THE KAPLAN MODEL DEPTH AND COMPLEXITY IN LITERATURE By April Payne.
Warm-up 9/8- RL8.1-Take out HW! 1.On the next LEFT page in your notebook, make a prediction: According to the title, “The Scholarship Jacket” what do you.
LITERARY Elements of fiction
1.3 Reading Literature Students read and respond to works of literature—with an emphasis on comprehension, vocabulary acquisition, and making connections.
NONFICTION UNIT Nonfiction – prose writing that presents and explains ideas or tells about real people, places, ideas, or events; must be true.
ACT Reading Test The ACT Reading test is 40 questions long. There are four passages of ten questions. 52 seconds a question 8 minutes a passage 35 minutes.
Jeopardy Poetry General Literary FictionNonfiction Short Stories Q $100 Q $200 Q $300 Q $400 Q $500 Q $100 Q $200 Q $300 Q $400 Q $500 Final Jeopardy.
OUTCOMES TSWBAT acquire and use academic and course- specific vocabulary. TSWBAT cite strong and thorough textual evidence to support analysis of text.
Do Now 9/19/14 1.Add : Binder p. 12 = Multiple Choice Practice #1 Binder p. 13 = Tone & Character traits reference sheets Binder p. 14 = Three Threes in.
Reading Unit 1 Review Comprehension Skills. Author’s Purpose What is this skill? Author’s purpose is the reason(s) the author has for writing. An author.
CHARACTERISTICS OF NONFICTION. Nonfiction deals only with real people, events, or ideas. It is narrated or told from the author’s perspective (point of.
LITERATURE A piece of writing on a particular subject.
Analyzing Presentations of Information.  Nonfiction that presents events and people of the past. Often, history writing will combine narrative text (a.
6 TH GRADE ACADEMIC VOCABULARY 2 ND GRADING PERIOD.
 A type or category of literature. (biography, autobiography, documentaries, histories, non- fiction narratives, journals/diaries, news articles – newspapers,
UNIT SELF-TEST QUESTIONS
6th grade unit two vocabulary
Reading Literature & Informational Text
Accountable Independent Reading (AIR)
Chapter 4: How to Read? Why, Recursively, Of Course
EDL/Reading.
EDL/Reading.
EDL/Reading.
Reading Literature & Informational Text
NONFICTION UNIT Nonfiction – prose writing that presents and explains ideas or tells about real people, places, ideas, or events; must be true.
Nonfiction Introduction
Warm-Up Yesterday you learned the definition of theme. Explain what it means.
Do Now As I am checking homework you are to complete Quick Write #3 Independently.
Mini lesson Point of View. — 5th grade
EDL/Reading.
Author’s Purpose and Theme Vocabulary
Test-Taking Vocabulary
Literature Fiction Walk Retell / Recount COMPREHENSION
The Elements of Nonfiction Grade 8
Note Taking Format TERM NOTES MY TRANSLATION Nonfiction Literary Term
English Concepts & Vocabulary # 2.
8/29/2017 Please sit quietly Please write objective in your agenda
Homework: Check your this week for a link to the video of your practice FOA. Once you click the link, you will have access to the video & copy of.
The Elements of Nonfiction Grade 7
Literature: Key Ideas and Details
Literature 9th Grade Conflict: a struggle between two opposing forces
Literature Walk Recount/Summarize Fiction SECONDARY WALKS
UNIT STANDARDS-Language Artifacts to show I have mastered:
Presentation transcript:

Do Now 9/15/14 Please take out the HW (binder p. 9) and be ready for the next direction

Learning Targets 1.Determine the central idea of a text and analyze its development over the course of the text, including its relationship to supporting ideas. 2.By the end of the year, read and comprehend literary nonfiction at the high end of the grades 6-8 text complexity band independently and proficiently.

Agenda 1.Do Now 2.Group review section work 3.Gist per section (2, 3, & 4) 4.Vocabulary Notes 5.Quick write 3 – Read aloud – Writing piece in notebooks 6.Test results and reflection paragraph

Academic Vocabulary objective - just the facts; no bias, no opinion perspective - point of view; how someone sees something subjective – when events are described through a perspective, or point of view. Ha is telling us her experience, not “just the facts” tone - the specific attitude of a text that the author wants to say about the subject

Academic Vocabulary central idea – important idea; big picture idea; more often in informational text. plot – events that make up a story; typically used when describing a piece of fiction