- freewriting -- a great way to increase writing fluency
- annotation of texts -- an active reading technique where students write directly on text to track their understanding, their questions, the gaps in vocabulary, main ideas, interesting uses of language, evidence and support for arguments -- an essential college skill
- independent free reading -- in addition to academic reading, it is our goal to establish a reading habit, born of pleasure and curiosity. Students are encouraged to choose books that they will enjoy and we spend our short Mondays with our noses stuck in a book.
- minilessons -- short and potent lessons covering a singular aspect of either reading or writing
- they say/I say -- a series of sentence templates that help students to master the rhetorical "moves that matter" in academic writing. These are small sentence starters to assist students engage directly with the words of others, summarize and paraphrase important points, and to negotiate a position between 100% agreement and 100% disagreement
- development and support
- finding meaning in context
- grammar, usage, and idiom
- identifying important ideas
- organization and coherence
- reasoning from text
- recognizing purpose and strategy
- sentence control and clarity
- understanding direct statements
Finally, I polled my students by asking the following question: Assuming nobody is "making you" read (like me), why do you read and what do you like to read? I am still compiling that data, so stay tuned here for some of their responses.
That's it for now. Keep checking back here from time to time. I am going to do a better job this year of writing down what we are doing, and why we are doing it -- especially for these college bound seniors.
Next unit starts next Tuesday: College Admission Essay Writing
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