Thursday, December 15, 2016

Class Notes for the Fall Trimester, 2016

Middle School English has taken on a different look this year. Class is based on a Reader’s and Writer’s Workshop model. During Reader’s Workshop this trimester, students have been selecting their own titles, allowing them to follow their own interests and read at an individualized level and pace. Through one-on-one work with us, class mini-lessons, and partner shares, students have been developing the stamina and skills to understand and enjoy longer, more complex titles. We encourage our students to read a variety of genres; they have set personal reading goals and tracked their progress throughout the trimester in their Reader’s Notebooks.  To showcase their understanding of their independent titles, students write letter essays about their reading. Topics covered include understanding character, making inferences, and supporting ideas using textual details. Students have also presented book commercials to each other, persuading their peers read similar titles. The excitement in the room was palpable as they discussed why their books were worth selecting.
Since September in addition to their letter essays, students have been writing
expository, narrative, and descriptive pieces. Using their Writer’s Notebooks as a seed bed for ideas, students have been practicing different types of writing skills from how to hook a reader and write a thesis statement to varying sentence structure by playing with adjectives. They even spent a class observing the outdoors and then turned those observations into a poem that focused on sensory details and rich vocabulary. They practiced telling a story with very few words.
Students are able to additionally practice their grammar (compound sentences, compound-complex sentences, complex sentences beginning with subordinate clauses, opening adjectives and delayed adjectives) when they craft their original sentences for their weekly Word Voyage lessons based on  classic Latin and Greek roots.
This has been a busy trimester, and we continue to develop the skills that make our students lifelong readers and writers. We are looking forward to building on the foundation we’ve laid in the first trimester as we head into the winter term. Second trimester highlights will include book clubs - again self-selected but with more than one student reading the same book at the same time to allow for rich discussion - and a study of poetry culminating in The Country School’s longest and most celebrated tradition, The MacLane Poetry Recitation.

Friday, December 9, 2016

Letter-essay reminders

This letter-essay should focus on the major themes you have noticed in your book club books. You can center your essay on one theme (three body paragraphs demonstrating that theme) or choose a variety of themes to illustrate (a different theme discussed in each paragraph).

It is essential that you use evidence from your book to add to your argument. Each body paragraph should have a quote to back up the topic. Don't just drop the quotes in, however: remember to introduce and unpack them. Here is the example we looked at in class from a letter-essay about the themes in The Outsiders :

I believe The Outsiders is, first and foremost, a book about friends. Some of the friends are leaders and some are followers. I see evidence of this when Ponyboy says, “But I realized that these three appealed to me because they were like the heroes in the novels I read” (p. 76). This quote shows how much the younger guys looked up to the older ones.

Notice how the theme is first stated, then the quote is introduced. After the quote, the writer takes a moment to explain her point once more to really hammer home the argument. If you need a sentence starter to help you with this, look to the document in your reader's notebook called "Writing about Reading: Some Openers".  Number 23 on that list gives you an excellent framework for working textual evidence into your own writing.

Remember all the general requirements of a letter-essay (look back in your reader's notebook if you're unsure):

  • Include the title, author, and genre of the book
  • Attempt to rate the book (recognizing that rating might change once you reach the ending)
  • 2 pages double spaced, Times New Roman, 12 point font

Please email me if you have any questions. I'll look forward to seeing your letter-essays (printed and attached to your reader's notebooks) on Monday!

Happy writing!


Monday, December 5, 2016

Assignments for 12/5 - 12/9

Monday, 12/5
English 7 - Read 30 (book club book takes priority)
Word Voyage Lesson 3 (delayed adjective structure)


Tuesday, 12/6
English 7 - Read 30 (book club book takes priority); 3 post-its for Wednesday
Word Voyage Lesson 3 (delayed adjective structure)


Wednesday. 12/7
English 7 - Read 30 (book club book takes priority)
Word Voyage Lesson 3 (delayed adjective structure)


Thursday, 12/8
English 7 - Read 30 (book club book takes priority); letter-essay due Monday
Word Voyage Lesson 3 (delayed adjective structure)


Friday, 12/9
English 7 - Read 30 (book club book takes priority - catch up if you need to!)
Letter-essay due Monday (demonstrate themes using at least 3 quotes/passages from the book as evidence)