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Home/ JIS English for Academic Purposes/ Contents contributed and discussions participated by Wendy Windust

Contents contributed and discussions participated by Wendy Windust

Wendy Windust

6plus1traits.PDF (application/pdf Object) - 0 views

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    6 traits scoring guide from NWREL
Wendy Windust

ReadWriteThink: Lesson Plan: Action Is Character: Exploring Character Traits with Adjec... - 0 views

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    In this activity, students "become" one of the major characters in a book and describe themselves and other characters, using lists of accurate, powerful adjectives. In class discussion, students support their lists with details from the novel.
Wendy Windust

persuasive writing - 0 views

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    This WebQuest challenges you to investigate techniques of persuasive writing and critical reading skills. It allows you to strengthen your technology skills, exercise your creativity, practice your research skills, and visit newspaper editorials to discriminate between fact from opinion.
Wendy Windust

6+1 Trait® Scoring - 0 views

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    There is absolutely no better way to understand the 6+1 Trait® Scoring analytical model than to use it yourself. Whether you are a teacher or a student, this instructional tool will help you better understand each of the six traits of writing. You will first have to select which area of writing you want to focus on. Select from the list below to further study an individual trait.
Wendy Windust

6-Traits Resources: Links Books Blog Searchss - 0 views

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    Teaching and Assessing Writing with the 6-Traits
Wendy Windust

6+1 Writing Traits Website (DOE) - 0 views

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    Resources for educators
Wendy Windust

ReadWriteThink: Lesson Plan: Empowered Fiction Writers: Generating and Organizing Ideas... - 0 views

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    Empowered Fiction Writers: Generating and Organizing Ideas for Story Writing Overview This three-part lesson introduces students to the use of speedwriting (also called free writing) as a prewriting technique. Learning the technique of speedwriting allows students to generate a foundation of ideas on which they can build a narrative structure. Students then identify key ideas and phrases in their speedwriting, and organize their ideas around the main elements of a story (exposition, rising action, climax, conclusion).
Wendy Windust

ReadWriteThink - All Lessons - 0 views

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    Collated lessons for grades 6-8 around the use of the writer's notebook
Wendy Windust

student example personal narrative | youngwritersproject.org - 0 views

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    Young Writer's Project
Wendy Windust

30 Ideas for Teaching Writing - National Writing Project - 0 views

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    The National Writing Project's 30 Ideas for Teaching Writing offers successful strategies contributed by experienced writing project teachers. Since NWP does not promote a single approach to teaching writing, readers will benefit from a variety of eclectic, classroom-tested techniques.
Wendy Windust

Tools for Workshop Teaching / Getting Started - 0 views

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    One initial lesson for writer's notebooks is to Read Ralph Fletcher's opening story in Keeping a Writer's Notebook. It's about digging a ditch and catching all kinds of critters. He compares writer's notebooks to that ditch -- a space we dig in our busy lives to catch stuff. After reading the story, my students and I brainstorm the different kinds of things we could catch in our writer's notebooks. Then I typed the chart in a format that made it easy for students to tape it to the inside cover of their notebooks. Here's what we came up with:
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