Lesson Mysteries of Harris Burdick
Lesson Mysteries of Harris Burdick
Lesson Mysteries of Harris Burdick
Students write clear, coherent, and focused essays. The writing exhibits
students awareness of the audience and purpose. Essays contain formal
introductions, supporting evidence, and conclusions. Students progress
through the stages of the writing process as needed.
1.1
Choose the form of writing (e.g., personal letter, letter to the editor,
review, poem, report, narrative) that best suits the intended purpose.
1.3
Use a variety of effective and coherent organizational patterns,
including comparison and contrast; organization by categories; and
arrangement by spatial order, order of importance, or climactic order.
1.4
Use organizational features of electronic text (e.g., bulletin boards,
databases, keyword searches, e-mail addresses) to locate information.
1.5
Compose documents with appropriate formatting by using wordprocessing skills and principles of design (e.g., margins, tabs, spacing, columns,
page orientation).
1.6
Revise writing to improve the organization and consistency of ideas
within and between paragraphs.
STATE STANDARDS
COMMON CORE
General Goal(s):
Specific Objectives:
Required Materials:
Anticipatory Set (Lead-In):
Direct Instruction:
Assessment:
SW publish!
Published story will be the final assessment. Informal
assessments will occur during the drafting and editing process as I
conference with students over the three day lesson.
Modify the formatting and length requirements for the story.
Conference more frequently with struggling students.
Students who complete a well-constructed story and publish
ahead of schedule can create a podcast or animation to
accompany their story. They may use iMovie to record a reading
of their story and add illustrations and images to accompany their
work of fiction.