Classroom Notes that you might find helpful:
- Genre-
- Short Story Elements-
- Extended Response vs. Essay
- Recipe Card for Writing an Extended Response
- 6-Traits
Genre-
The way books, music, or movies are categorized.
Examples: Fiction, Non-Fiction, Fantasy, Rock, Country, Folk,
Drama, Comedy,
Action/Adventure
Short Story Elements-
The narrative elements that are consistently found in a piece of
literature.
The elements studied in sixth grade include, character, setting,
conflict,
plot, point-of-view and theme.
Extended Response vs. Essay
The difference between an extended response or "essay"
question and an
actual essay is the length of each and the parts included in
each. The
extended response is usally a short consise paragraph that
specifically
answers a quesion using examples from a piece of text and the
writer's
personal experiences. An Essay is a much longer piece of
writing,usually
three to five paragraphs that follows one of the following
formats;
narrative, persuasive, expository or descriptive.
Recipe Card for Writing an Extended Response
This is a handy tool to have when answering those pesky end of
unit science
and social studies questions :)
Ingredients:
1 Topic Sentence
2-3 Supporting Sentences
2-3 Detail Sentences
1 Concluding Sentence
Directions:
Start with a topic sentence that either answers the question or
provides the
background information the reader needs prior to reading the
answer to the
question. Next add a supporting sentence that provides
information taken
directly from the text. To your support sentence, add a detail
sentence that
offers the reader a connection or inference. Continue to add
support
sentences followed by detail sentences as needed. Finally pour
everything
into a concluding sentence which (if it hasn't already been)
answers the
prompt question.
6-Traits
The 6-traits to good writing include:
Ideas
Organization
Word Choice
Voice
Sentence Fluency
Conventions
We look at each of the traits individually with short pieces of
writing and then build them into longer pieces of text. Check out
the links page for more information.