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Wendy Windust

Curriculum Plan for Content Literacy - 0 views

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    Year-long sequence from Juli Kendall
Wendy Windust

student example personal narrative | youngwritersproject.org - 0 views

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    Young Writer's Project
Wendy Windust

WritingFix: Writing about Reading...Summarizing (instead of Plagiarizing) - 0 views

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    Teaching Summarization
Wendy Windust

Nonfiction Genre Study | Scholastic.com - 0 views

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    By learning to how to use information presented in various types of nonfiction material, students will prepare to use the multitude of expository texts that readers of all ages encounter daily, including newspapers, brochures, magazines, instruction manuals, recipes, and maps. These lessons can help students understand the differences between fiction and nonfiction and develop reading fluency in this important genre.
Wendy Windust

English Language Arts 6-9: Assessment and Evaluation - 0 views

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    Evaluating Student Portfolios At the end of the term/semester/year when the portfolio is submitted for summative evaluation, it is useful to review the contents as a whole and record data using the previously set criteria. One method of recording data is to prepare a grid with the criteria listed down one side and the checklist or rating scale across the top. If there is need to assign a numerical grade, designate numbers to each set of criteria on the checklist/rating scale and convert the evaluation into a number grade. Some examples of portfolio assessment and recording forms follow. The teacher can adapt these sample forms or create new ones.
W Jun

Neuroscience For Kids - books and articles - 0 views

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    nonfiction articles middleschool
Wendy Windust

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

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    6 traits scoring guide from NWREL
Wendy Windust

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

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    Resources for educators
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

The Persuasive Essay - 0 views

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    Writing workshop curricular calendar for writing persuasive essays
Wendy Windust

JISEAL - home - 0 views

shared by Wendy Windust on 28 Sep 09 - No Cached
Wendy Windust

Comprehension Strategies for Content Literacy - 0 views

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    Unit 2 (6 weeks) Comprehension Strategies for Content Literacy
Wendy Windust

Reading and Writing Organizers - 0 views

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    Check this out!
Wendy Windust

BBC - Skillswise Words - Types of text worksheet - 0 views

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    'Types of text' worksheets Types of text worksheets and examples. Read the examples and then try to write some texts of your own using the question guides to help you decide what you need to write.
Wendy Windust

10 Technology Enhanced Alternatives to Book Reports - TheApple.com - 0 views

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    10 Technology Enhanced Alternatives to Book Reports
Wendy Windust

From Jim Wright: Intervention Ideas for READING - 0 views

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    The ability to read allows individuals access to the full range of a culture's artistic and scientific knowledge. Reading is a complex act. Good readers are able fluently to decode the words on a page, to organize and recall important facts in a text, to distill from a reading the author's opinions and attitudes, and to relate the content of an individual text to a web of other texts previously read. The foundation that reading rests upon is the ability to decode. Emergent readers require the support of more accomplished readers to teach them basic vocabulary, demonstrate word attack strategies, model fluent reading, and provide corrective feedback and encouragement. Newly established readers must build fluency and be pushed to exercise their reading skills across the widest possible range of settings and situations. As the act of decoding becomes more effortless and automatic, the developing reader is able to devote a greater portion of cognitive energy to understanding the meaning of the text. Reading comprehension is not a single skill but consists of a cluster of competencies that range from elementary strategies for identifying and recalling factual content to highly sophisticated techniques for inferring an author's opinions and attitudes. As researcher Michael Pressley points out, reading comprehension skills can be thought of as unfolding along a timeline. Before beginning to read a particular selection, the skilled student reader must engage prior knowledge, predict what the author will say about the topic, and set specific reading goals. While reading, the good reader self-monitors his or her understanding of the text, rereads sentences and longer passages that are unclear, and updates predictions about the text based on what he or she has just read. After completing a text, the good reader summarizes its main points (perhaps writing them down), looks back in the text to clarify any points that are unclear, and continues to think about the text and its imp
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    The ability to read allows individuals access to the full range of a culture's artistic and scientific knowledge. Reading is a complex act. Good readers are able fluently to decode the words on a page, to organize and recall important facts in a text, to distill from a reading the author's opinions and attitudes, and to relate the content of an individual text to a web of other texts previously read. The foundation that reading rests upon is the ability to decode. Emergent readers require the support of more accomplished readers to teach them basic vocabulary, demonstrate word attack strategies, model fluent reading, and provide corrective feedback and encouragement. Newly established readers must build fluency and be pushed to exercise their reading skills across the widest possible range of settings and situations. As the act of decoding becomes more effortless and automatic, the developing reader is able to devote a greater portion of cognitive energy to understanding the meaning of the text. Reading comprehension is not a single skill but consists of a cluster of competencies that range from elementary strategies for identifying and recalling factual content to highly sophisticated techniques for inferring an author's opinions and attitudes. As researcher Michael Pressley points out, reading comprehension skills can be thought of as unfolding along a timeline. Before beginning to read a particular selection, the skilled student reader must engage prior knowledge, predict what the author will say about the topic, and set specific reading goals. While reading, the good reader self-monitors his or her understanding of the text, rereads sentences and longer passages that are unclear, and updates predictions about the text based on what he or she has just read. After completing a text, the good reader summarizes its main points (perhaps writing them down), looks back in the text to clarify any points that are unclear, and continues to think about the text and its imp
Wendy Windust

Back to Square One: What To Do When Writing Workshop Just Doesn't Work - National Writi... - 0 views

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    Back to Square One: What To Do When Writing Workshop Just Doesn't Work
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