L. Nabulsi. ◦ Quiz over HURRICANES today! The entire WMS community will provide a positive school...
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Transcript of L. Nabulsi. ◦ Quiz over HURRICANES today! The entire WMS community will provide a positive school...
ESL 7Week 7
October 6-10, 2014L. Nabulsi
◦ Quiz over HURRICANES today!
TEST today
Wiesbaden Middle SchoolVision StatementThe entire WMS community will provide a positive school climate through which all students can mature academically, socially, emotionally, and physically while developing a lifelong love of learning.
Wiesbaden Middle SchoolMission StatementThe entire WMS community strives to provide a positive school climate through which all students can mature socially, academically, and physically, while developing a lifelong love of learning.
CSI GOALS
#1 All students will increase reading comprehension scores in analyzing text and reading/writing strategies.
#2 All students will increase scores in
math computation, word problems, and problem solving.
Standards Covered: 7E1a.1: Identify and understand idioms and comparison (such as analogies, metaphors,
and similes) in prose and poetry. Standard: 7E1b: Comprehension and Analysis of Nonfiction and Informational Text Students read and understand a variety of grade-level-appropriate nonfiction such as
biographies, autobiographies, books in many different subject areas, magazines, newspapers, reference and technical materials, and online information.
7E2a.2: Develop and use thesis and introductory statements to organize writing. 7E2a.5: Use strategies of note-taking, outlining, and summarizing to impose structure on
composition drafts 7E2a.10: Edit and proofread one’s own writing, as well as that of others, using an editing checklist or set of rules, with specific examples of corrections of frequent errors. 7E2b.4: Write summaries of reading materials that: Include the main ideas and most significant details.
Utilize the student’s own words, except for quotations.
Standards covered this week
OVERVIEW OF WEEK 7
Correct this sentence: In ancient eqyptian stories the foenix is said to be red and gold
and largerer than a eagle/Edit –it – See 68-69
TEST today over the hurricane Vocabulary – See next slide Grammar : The simple sentence Vocabulary – Week Seven words Idiom – “all along – from the beginning – I was not surprised at all when my friends had a party for me. I
knew all along they wanted to have a party for my birthday. Analogy – CAUSE is to EFFECT : Sun : Daylight::Study : _______ Have vocabulary1-7 and place it in your vocabulary notebook. In-CLASS: Begin pamphlet about a country
October 6-10, 2014
DAILY LESSON PLANS
Take roll Test over Hurricanes Announce that all vocabulary words for first
quarter are due 10/24/2014. No exceptions; no work will be accepted after 10/24/2014.
Do Edit It 68 Do vocabulary 7 – See next slide
Lesson Plans for October 6, 2014
Language Arts
Math Social Studies Science
1.by-line 1.Quartile 1.latitutde 1.fertilization
2. Lead paragraph 2.scatter plots 2. longitude 2. fetal stress
3. One-column headline
3.scientific notation 3. grid system 3.fetus
Vocabulary 7
Language Arts Math Social Studies Science
1.by-line – at the beginning of an article- tells by whom the article was written
1.Quartile – The value of the boundary at the 25th, 50th, or 75th percentiles of a frequency distribution divided into four parts, each containing a quarter of the population
1.Latitutde – lines that run east to west on the globe but that are measured north and south of the equator; equator is 0 latitude
1.Fertilization – the act of polarization in a flower;
2. Lead paragraph – first paragraph in an article- tells who, what, when, were, how and why in one or two sentences if possible
2.scatter plots - a graphical daigram with points plotted to show a relationship between two variables
2. Longitude – lines that run north and south on the globe but are measured east and west of the Prime Meridian
2. fetal stress - Exposure of the developing fetus to excessive levels of stress hormones in the womb can cause mood disorders in later life and now, for the first time, researchers have found a mechanism that may underpin this process,
3. One-column headline – a title of an article one-column in width
http://www.amathsdictionaryforkids.com/dictionary.htmlthe way of writing very large or small number using a number between 1 and 10 multiplied by the power of 10.
3. grid system - A map grid is a set of lines running horizontal and vertical forming small square on a map. These square form points of contact that give a location for a specific area.
3.Fetus - unborn living being
Vocabulary 7-http://www.flickr.com/photos/demosphere/6217372239/in/photostream/
Lines of latitude and longitude
Take roll. Do Edit It #69 Do idiom and analogy. Take index cards and begin taking notes on
news articles about a African country. Find◦ 1 international story◦ 2 national stories (the country in which you were born)◦ 1 local (state, province, prefecture)
Take notes by putting ideas in your own words. Look for who, what, when, where, how and why.
See later slides for details.
Lesson Plans October 8, 2014
No school – CSI day
Lesson Plans for October 10
SPECIFIC ITEMS
1. Open SMART Notebook 2. Go to VIEW/Gallery 3. Click on Lesson Activity Toolkit 4. Look down and click on INTERACTIVE AND
MULTIMEDIA 5croll through selections and pick a game on which you
can put at least six items, one for each of your words. At the game, click on EDIT and place your information
on the template SAVE AS Q1W7voc7esl8last into your ESL folder and
then in GALLERY Open gaggle.net and place in Assignment Drop Box
How to make a SMARTBOARD quiz
1. What are the four sections of the newspaper? 2. What are the three types of news stories? 3. What are the four types of articles that appear
in the “opinion” section? 4. Give three examples of what might appear in
the feature section of the newspaper. 5. Why is the sports section a little newspaper
unto itself? 6. What are classified ads? 7. Where is a full page ad usually found and why? 8. What is on the nameplate? 9. What is the masthead? 10. What does the word “editor” mean?
Review Quiz – The Newspaper
1. Research your country on the Internet 2. Take notes on index cards 3. Document the sources 4. Put the websites in your FAVORITES 5. Sources:
◦ CNN.com◦ Search – your country’s name plus news◦ Select one national (only about that country)◦ Select one international (your country and another)◦ One local - a specific location in your country – the
capital city would be best.
Making a newspaper – Step One - Doing the research
The Census - Part 1We need to look at the census for your country,
Readings and Activities for this week learning how to take notes on index cards
Have an article to read Have several highlighters Have several index cards Have something to secure your index cards. FIRST: Make a bibliography card Color code the bibliography card (highlight, sticker, or different
color index card) SECOND: Read your article quickly looking for WHO, WHAT,
WHEN, WHERE, HOW, WHY and highlight as you go THIRD: Go back and take important notes on index cards IN
YOUR OWN WORDS using a specific procedure . NOTE: Find 1 international news article, 2 national news
articles, 1 local news article. Base the national and local articles on the country and state (prefecture, province) in which your were born.
Taking Notes on Index Cards
Subject of note Source
“direct words from article in “” if more than three words.” Must be documented
Paragraph – in own words but still needs documenting
Paragraph number
Taking notes on index cards
Last, First of author or article. “Title of
Article.” Title of Webpage. Copyright
date. WEB. Date retrieved.(If no author, start with “Title of Article.”
Put url for own reference. Put in your favorites on the toolbar.
Bibliography card for each source
October 6– Edit it 68 October8– Edit it 69
Edit It
Most peoples think of the blues as music, some people think of the blues as poems about the singer’s lifes
Most people think of the Blues as music; some people think of the Blues as poems about the singer’s life.
Correct this sentence
“air dirty laundry in public” My upstairs neighbors fight a lot and air their dirty
laundry in public. MEANING: to talk about your private disagreements
or embarrassing matters in public, usually while quarreling.
ORIGIN: Picture this: instead of hanging your clean washed clothes on a clothesline, you hang dirty clothes for all to see. How embarassing. Imagine”dirty laundry” represents personal secrets and that “to air” means to discuss out loud.
VARIATION- “Air dirty linen in public”
Idiom
CAUSE is to EFFECT Prosperity: Happiness : : exercise: ___ Answer: fitness
Analogy
Diagramming PowerPoint - Slides 1-5
Grammar
Diagramming Sentences
L. Nabulsi
Know the terminology
Verb or predicate? Verb is the part of speech that functions as
the predicate. The predicate tells the action or state of the sentence.
Simple predicate = simple verb Verb phrase = helping verbs and main
verb Complete predicate = verb phrase and all
of its modifiers which can be the direct object, predicate noun, predicate adjective, adverbs, and prepositional phrases that function as adverbs.
Examples Run – part of speech is verb Tom was running fast. – The predicate verb
is was running Running - Simple verb Was running – Verb phrase Running – Predicate Verb Was running fast - Complete predicate HOWEVER
Verb phrase and complete predicate Tom has been running daily for three miles. What is the main verb? Running What is the verb phrase? Has been running What is the simple predicate? Has been
running Single word adverb modifiers? Daily Adverbial prepositional phrase modifier?
For three miles What is the complete predicate? Has been
running daily for three miles (simple predicate and its adverbial modifiers)
Read “The Census” and take notes on index cards. Hand in for checking – sorry substitute.
Have one bibliography card Have at least five note cards (subject,
source, paragraph, 1 direct quote, 1 paraphrase, 1 general information, 2 of any kind.
Reading
Download and save in H-Drive/ESL folder W7 PowerPoint
Conduct research on day you were born. Put all articles from Internet in your
FAVORITES and copy/paste url on slide. Note the title of the article, website and date downloaded, look for copyright date on article.
Readings and Activities for this week
Study for tests on the newspaper Complete finding news articles this week;
write your own
Homework – if not finished in class
Prior information
is, am, are, was, were, be, being, and been; the sense verbs look, taste, smell, feel, and sound; and verbs like become, seem, appear, grow, continue, stay, and turn, elect, name, select
Linking verbs are used in SVN and SVA sentences. It sets up an equation.
Linking Verbs
A predicate nominative or predicate noun completes a linking verb and renames the subject. It is a complement or completer because it completes the verb.
Predicate nominatives complete only linking verbs. The linking verbs include the following: the helping verbs is, am, are, was, were, be, being, and been; the sense verbs look, taste, smell, feel, and sound; and verbs like become, seem, appear, grow, continue, stay, and turn.
The verb in a sentence having a predicate nominative can always be replaced by the word equals. Examples: Mr. Johanson is a teacher. Mr. Johanson equals a teacher. Mr. Johanson is a father. Mr. Johanson equals a father. Mr. Johanson is my neighbor. Mr. Johanson equals my neighbor.
Instructions: Find the verb, subject and predicate nominatives in these sentences.
1. Ann is a new mother. 2. The black dog in the yard was a large Doberman. 3. The tall boy has been our best basketball player. 4. My uncle became a rich computer expert. 5. Mr. Bush may be our next President.
Predicate Nominative
1. Ann = subject, is = verb, mother = predicate nominative
2. dog = subject, was = verb, Doberman = predicate nominative
3. boy = subject, has been = verb, player = predicate nominative
4. uncle = subject, became = verb, expert = predicate nominative
5. Mr. Bush = subject, may be = verb, president = predicate nominative
Answers
Instructions: List the subject, verb and predicate nominatives/direct object in the following sentences. Remember- linking verb = predicate nominative; action verb = direct object and not all sentences have either.
1. My favorite pets were a squirrel and a rabbit. 2. Taro gave David a high-five. 3. Naomi bought the whole class ice cream. 4. Our chief crops are corn, wheat, and hay. 5. Mr. Jones is an accountant and a big game hunter. 6. Jamal smiled at the new student. 7. Cheyenne rode the horse, whose name is Sugar, in the tournament. 8.The owners of the race car include Bill, Pete, and Sam. 9. My favorite holidays are Christmas and Easter. 10. Vanessa, Naomi, and Cheyenne all got A’s on their Reading Logs.
Predicate Nominative or Direct Object?
SENTENCE PATTERNS S – V Subject - Verb S – V – DO Subject – (action) Verb – Direct Object S – V –I – DO Subject – (action) Verb – Indirect Obj – Direct Obj. S – V – N Subject – (linking) Verb – Predicate noun (Nominative)
S – V -A Subject – (linking) Verb – Predicate Adjective S –V–DO-C Subject – (action) Verb – DO – Complement-Modifier
Patrick sleeps in class. S – V (prepositional phrase) Arthur talks constantly. S- V (adverb) S AV DO S AV DO Patrick plays soccer. Arthur goes camping. S LV N LV A Arthur is a scout and is awesome. Patrick is a soccer player and is awesome. Patrick kicked the soccer ball high.
Sentence Patterns