Friday, February 28, 2014
An Assignment Checklist
Wednesday, November 13, 2013
Who Do You Ask?
Tuesday, January 5, 2010
Partner Project with First Grade
Wednesday, September 24, 2008
Read Aloud to Revise
As explained in the Reading Workshop Notes:
Reading Aloud to Revise
To revise your content, read an essay aloud. Have the listener alert you at any time when your writing does not make sense, or they have a question. Highlight that part, and after you are finished, go back and rewrite. Then read aloud again to a different person. Repeat the process until your essay is easy to understand and interesting to read.
For this to work, the listener must be actively involved, and not afraid to speak up whenever the essay does not make sense, or has grammatical errors. He must also listen for pauses, and be sure appropriate punctuation is included.
Friday, January 25, 2008
What Doesn't Matter
Student partners went through the article and looked for trivial details, unnecessary adverbs and adjectives, and minor facts, opinions, and quotes that didn't help understand the article.
Once the highlighting was completed, student partners were combined to make teams of four. The four students compared each team's work and discussed their decisions.
Scotty D. took over as the teacher next, and students looked at the article with the projector. With Brianne managing the computer, the class as a whole had to agree on what wasn't important. Today, students will use what text that is left as they search for the W's and write a gist statement.
This is how the article looked when they finished. If you look at what is not highlighted, you should be able to see the important details, and get the gist.
Tuesday, October 11—Stanley usually seems to know where he's going. He moves quickly over rocky ground and across puddles. He works hard and he's almost always on the move. Stanley is a robot car.
Last week, 23 teams—including the Stanford University team that built Stanley—gathered in the Mojave Desert in Nevada to compete in a special race known as the Grand Challenge. The race was special because none of the cars had drivers.
Stanley completed the dangerous 150-mile course through the desert in six hours and 53 minutes, earning the Stanford team a $2 million prize from the Department of Defense. Of the 23 teams that competed, only five actually finished. The others were stumped by mechanical or technological problems.
Sebastian Thrun, the lead robotics engineer for the Stanford team, realizes that driver-free, robot cars like Stanley still seem like something from a science-fiction film. "People by and large don't believe in this stuff," he said. "They've seen too many failures." This year's Grand Challenge was much more successful than last year's, when no vehicle was able to travel more than eight miles.
Friday, November 9, 2007
3rd Grade Study Island Help
I was especially proud of how the sixth grade "teachers" showed their younger students how to find the correct response when they struggled. The sixth graders did an awesome job helping make the first experience on Study Island a positive learning experience.
Great Helpers!
Tuesday, October 9, 2007
Committees For Writing Workshop
The process includes:
Step 1 Thinking, Prewriting, First Draft
Students can either write out the first draft or type it on a computer. If they write it out, they type it before going to step 2.
Step 2 Revision Committee
A member of the Revision Committee reads the first draft and writes down any questions he/she has as they read.
Step 3 Revise Content
Students use the questions to revise and improve the content.
Step 4 Editing Committee
Once students have checked their writing for mistakes, they go over it with a member of the Editing Committee checking for errors in spelling, sentencing, punctuation, and capitalization.
Students clean up mistakes, and print out a clean copy. Students then meet with a different member of the Editing Committee for a final look, checking for any mistakes.
Step 5 Correct Mistakes, Final Draft
Students correct any remaining mistakes, and give their essay a final look.
Students then print a final draft and turn in to be graded.
6-A Revision Committee
6-A Editing Committee
Congratulations to our Study Island Students of the Day, Catherine and Scotty!