Friday, November 30, 2018
Creative Collaborative Paragraph #03
DUE: Wednesday 12/5/18 by 3:15 pm.
Creative Collaborative Paragraph #03
1. Choose your favorite sentence from your Sentence Composing Journal from the subject compliments section (#051 - #060).
2. Give your favorite sentence to your partner through either email or a shared Google Doc.
3. They will write a creative paragraph of at least 150 words using your favorite sentence as the first sentence.
4. They will then hand the paragraph back to you, read what they wrote, and you will write a final sentence to end the story idea.
So you will end up with a paragraph where you wrote the first and last lines, and your partner wrote everything in between with not less than 150 words.
5. Also, vice versa. They will do the same with you, where you will get a sentence from them to write a paragraph, and then you will hand it back to them to complete.
6. Do not forget to include the total word count at the end.
7. You will submit the paragraph that you started and ended to Turnitin.com with a shared “by line.”
For Example: The Great Chess Game
by Mr. Chappell & Mr. Auten
8. They will do the same
Thursday, November 29, 2018
The Outsiders Micro CERS #06
DUE: Monday before 3:15 pm.
CHAPTER 6
*SPOILERS*
In the ambulance, a teacher tells Ponyboy, “I swear, you three are the bravest kids I’ve seen in a long time… I think you were sent straight from heaven. Or are you just professional heroes?” (95).
Is he wrong?
Some might argue that Johnny and Ponyboy are heroes for risking their lives to save the children in the burning church.
Others might argue that the boys aren’t really heroes because they just reacted without thinking. They were being impulsive and therefore were not heroic.
Or, they felt guilty for causing the fire and it would be their fault if any of the children died. They were trying to avoid committing yet more murders and therefore were not heroic.
Or, because of their terrible home lives and being wanted by the police, they have less to live for than those children. They had nothing to lose and therefore were not heroic.
Write a Micro CERS on whether you believe Johnny and Ponyboy are heroes for running into the burning church to save the children or not.
CLAIM – Mention the title, author and type of media. Turn the prompt into a clear position. (1 sentence)
EVIDENCE – State the best evidence to support your claim. It may be a quotation from the text, or the best single point to prove your argument. (1 sentence)
REASONING – Use logic to explain and elaborate how your evidence proves your claim. (2 – 4 sentences).
SYNTHESIS – Briefly restate the claim using different wording.
Tuesday, November 27, 2018
Subject Compliments Tips
The Outsiders Micro CERS #05
DUE Friday, 11/30/18, to Turnitin.com before 3:15 pm
Chapter 5
*Spoiler Alert*
PROMPT –
When Ponyboy shares the Robert Frost poem Nothing Gold
Can Stay, Johnny states how he has changed how he looks at the world
because of Ponyboy sharing poetry. Also,
Johnny seems to have really deep insights about the novel Gone with the Wind.
Some people seem to appreciate literature (poetry and
novels) more than others. In either the
real world or in the story world of The
Outsiders, are people who appreciate literature better off than those who don’t?
Or is appreciating literature just a
personal preference without any real benefit?
Write a Micro CERS on which side you agree with.
CLAIM – Mention the title, author and type of media. Turn the prompt into a clear position. (1 sentence)
EVIDENCE – State the best evidence to support your
claim. It may be a quotation from the
text, or the best single point to prove your argument. (1 sentence)
REASONING – Use logic to explain and elaborate how your
evidence proves your claim. (2 – 4
sentences).
SYNTHESIS – Briefly restate the claim using different
wording
Monday, November 26, 2018
Tuesday, November 20, 2018
The Outsiders Micro CERS Chapter 4
DUE submitted to Turnitin.com by Wednesday 11/28/18 by 8:15 AM
Chapter 4
*Spoiler Alert*
PROMPT – After Johnny kills Bob the Soc, Ponyboy and Johnny
get help from Dallas and choose to run away, leaving town.
Write a Micro CERS on whether, given the situation, you believe
that their decision to leave town made sense from their
perspective. Or do you believe that,
given the situation, they more realistically would have chosen to immediately turn
themselves into the police?
Remember: this
is not about what you
would have done. Put yourself into their perspective as Greasers and think
about the way the world works from their
point of view.
CLAIM – Mention the title, author and type of media. Turn the prompt into a clear position. (1 sentence)
EVIDENCE – State the best evidence to support your
claim. It may be a quotation from the
text, or the best single point to prove your argument. (1 sentence)
REASONING – Use logic to explain and elaborate how your
evidence proves your claim. (2 – 4
sentences).
SYNTHESIS – Briefly restate the claim using different
wording
Friday, November 16, 2018
Late Work Policy
Late work is accepted up until the end of the marking period.
For little assignments, like 10 point homework, students get half credit for work turned in past the deadline.
For larger assignments, like a 50 point paper, students lose -10% per day with a floor of 50%. So, if a student turned in quality work for even three weeks late, they can still get 50%.
Thursday, November 15, 2018
Subject Compliment Tips
TIP #01
Use the verbs from the verbs bank in the slides!
By either using linking verbs (for predicate nominatives) or sensory verbs (for predicate adjectives) you will make your life a lot easier.
TIP #02
How to Check Your Subject Compliments
A good rule of thumb to check to see if you correctly wrote a Subject Compliment is to ask yourself two questions:
Does my subject compliment rename my subject with another noun or a phrase that acts as a noun (ie; a predicate nominative)?
or
Does my subject compliment describe my subject with an adjective or adjective phrase (ie; a predicate adjective)?
If it does, you succeeded in writing a subject compliment.
If it doesn't, go back to the drawing board and try again.
Micro CERS Intended Audience
When writing a Micro CERS, assume that the audience is mature and has read the novel The Outsiders. You don't have to explain the entire story to them. However, it is fine to focus on key details if it helps support your argument.
Outsiders Micro CERS Prompt for Chapters 3
Chapter 3
*Spoiler Alert*
PROMPT – Cherry tells Ponyboy, “… if I see you in the hall at school or someplace and don’t say hi, well, it’s not personal or anything, but… we couldn’t let our parents see us with you all,” (45 – 46).
Write a micro C.E.R.S. on whether you believe that Cherry’s publicly not acknowledging her friendship with Ponyboy (because he is a Greaser) is “personal” or not.
CLAIM – Mention the title, author and type of media. Turn the prompt into a clear position. (1 sentence)
EVIDENCE – State the best evidence to support your claim. It may be a quotation from the text, or the best single point to prove your argument. (1 sentence)
REASONING – Use logic to explain and elaborate how your evidence proves your claim. (2 – 4 sentences).
SYNTHESIS – Briefly restate the claim using different wording
Monday, November 12, 2018
Quiz Curved
The curved grading scale for the Common Sentence Errors Quiz broke down as follows:
20 - 19 A
18 A-
(39 total)
17 B+
16 B
15 B-
(33 total)
14 C+
13 - 10 C
9 C-
(44 total)
8 D+
7-4 D
3 D-
(25 total)
0-2 E
(none)
The Outsiders Micro CERS - Chapter 02
Chapter 2
*Spoiler Alert*
PROMPT – Cherry tells Ponyboy, “I bet you think the Socs have it made… We have troubles you’ve never heard of… Things are rough all over,” (34-35).
Write a micro C.E.R.S. on whether you believe that families who are affluent (as represented by the Socs) have the same level of problems and difficulties that the poor have (as represented by the Greasers) in the story world of The Outsiders. You may make important connections to the real world, but keep the main focus on the characters, the setting, and the story.
CLAIM – Mention the title, author and type of media. Turn the prompt into a clear position. (1 sentence)
EVIDENCE – State the best evidence to support your claim. It may be a quotation from the text, or the best single point or idea you have to prove your argument. Quotes are preferred. (1 sentence)
REASONING – Use logic to explain and elaborate how your evidence proves your claim. (2 – 4 sentences).
SYNTHESIS – Briefly restate the claim using different wording.
Parent Teacher Conferences Schedule
Hello,
I will be available on Monday, 11/12/18, in room 205 from 6:00 - 9:00 pm to meet with parents. This is a make up evening for the night I will be absent on Thursday from 4 - 7 pm.
I will also be available on Wednesday, 11/14/18, in the gym during the regular parent teacher conferences time from 1- 4, and 5 - 8 pm.
Looking forward to seeing everyone.
Best,
Mr. Chappell
Friday, November 9, 2018
Monday, November 5, 2018
Paired Passages Reading Comprehension Sutdy Guide
Paired Passages Comprehension Study Guide
Academic
Vocabulary
Author’s
Purpose: The main reason the
author wrote the passage
Evidence
/ Facts: Information that
cannot be disputed
Opinions: Information that
may have more than one way to look at it
Point of View: The perspective the passage
is told from or representing: who is experiencing it
Perspective Bias: A position where the facts are
interpreted one way to promote an opinion or belief
Main
Idea: The most
important or central concept in the passage to which all ideas connect
Infer: To read
between the lines in order fill in the gaps of information – what is unsaid
Cause
and Effect: “This” triggers “that.” Newtonian physics. One idea or concept causes another.
Compare: Showing similarity /
sameness
Contrast: Showing difference
Paired Passage /
Informational Question Types:
Question 1: Focuses on the
nonfiction passage.
Question 2: Focuses on the
fiction passage.
Question 3: Asks what both
passages have in common.
Question 4 & 5: Require
students to differentiate between the passages and understand what topic is
covered in each one. A few will require
students to combine the information from both passages to infer or extrapolate
the answer.
- Quick
Fetch Relatively easy questions where you simply go back to the text and
the answer is right there.
- Number
Calculation Some questions require
the reader to do simple math by pulling relevant dates, quantities,
dollars, or other units to be calculated.
The challenge with these questions is to make sure you understand
what is being asked, and that you get the right numbers.
- Vocabulary
/ Background Knowledge Focuses
on a key word or fact that requires the reader to go back into the
sentence for context clues if the they don’t already know the definition.
- Cross-Text
Synthesis Synthesis means combining
of two or more things. In these
questions you are expected to gather information from both texts and apply
the knowledge by blending the two sources together for a deeper
understanding. In other words, your
grab some information from Text A and apply that information to Text B
- Inference. Inference is “reading between the
lines,” or filling the gaps that weren’t stated obviously and
directly. These questions expect
you to understand what is not
obvious, but requires the ability to infer -- or to make a logical
guess based upon the evidence is provided.
- Occam’s
Razor
These questions have multiple answers that could be correct, sort of like
varying shades of gray. Always
choose the most direct, straightforward answer. The more you have to
explain why the answer fits, the less likely it is the best choice.
- Least
Wrong. These answers are all wrong, again with
varying shades of gray. In this
case choose the answer that is the “least” wrong or most true, even if it
is partially wrong.
- Most
Right. Several answers are all correct, again
with varying shades of gray. In
this case choose the answer that is the “most” correct 100% of the time
wrong or most true.
Reading Strategies
1) VISIT THE QUESTIONS FIRST. Identify the important information from the
questions BEFORE your read. In other
words, check out the questions first.
2) GET A BIRD’S EYE VIEW. Get familiar with the format, titles, length,
and structure of the reading.
3) FULLY UNDERSTAND THE QUESTIONS. When you are ready to answer the questions,
make sure you completely understand what the question is asking you to
think about. Look for key words within
the question and read it several times.
Watch out for words that are subtle or can tip you up.
4) DON’T SKIP POSSIBLE ANSWERS. Make sure you read ALL of the possible
answers. Often students will rush their
responses when they find a good answer as “B” and skip looking at “C” and
“D.” But if they took their time and
read all of the possibilities, they might find that “D” was a superior choice.
5) GO BACK TO DIFFICULT QUESTIONS. If you get stuck on one particular question,
take a break from it and work on another section. Then go back to it with “fresh eyes.” Sometimes the answer will become more
clear. Also, sometimes you might find
clues to the answer within other questions later in the test.
6) PICK THE “BEST” ANSWER. Recognize that often there will be more than
one correct answer. Usually, one is more
direct and straight-forward. Always
choose the one that requires the least “explaining” in order to justify the
answer. Also, choose the one that is
correct 100% of the time instead of the one that is correct only in certain
cases.
7) USE THE CONTEXT CLUES. Use context clues to identify new words or
phrases that you are unfamiliar with.
Look at the surrounding words.
Look at the sentence that comes before and after the sentence that you
are struggling with.
8) ADJUST YOUR READING SPEED. Adjust your reading speed depending upon your
goal. If you are reading the text the
first time, take your time to fully understand it and don’t rush. If you are struggling with a particularly
difficult section, take your time and think about the meaning of each sentence
and how they are connected. If you are
skimming to go back to locate certain words or phrases, you can move
faster. Pace yourself if there is a time
limit.
9) TAP INTO YOUR BACKGROUND KNOWLEDGE. Tap into your background knowledge. The more you know about a subject, the easier
it will be to follow. This is why
students who read regularly will have an easier time.
10) USE YOUR NOTE SPACE. Write on the answer sheet and reading
selections as much as you want. Make
little notes and observations for yourself.
This is YOUR test. Throw some
helpful graffiti on there to make it your own!
11) VISUALIZE IT. Try to visual what is happening. Picture the story or information in your
imagination. Draw mental pictures to
organize information and ideas.
12) ELIMINATE IT. Use the process of elimination to cut out the
answers that make no sense. This will
limit your choices and help you to focus on your best options.
13) INFER IT. Make inferences. This is reading “between the lines.” You may have to fill in some gaps or look at
what is implied but not specifically stated.
14) LOGIC IT. Use logic.
Very often there will be questions that require the idea to be true in
BOTH stories. Use the following simple
logic chart to check your answers. Also,
use common sense.
True
|
True
|
=
True
|
True
|
False
|
=
False
|
False
|
True
|
=
False
|
False
|
False
|
=
False
|
Friday, November 2, 2018
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