Grade 6 Language Mechanics Scope and Sequence

Grade 6 Language Mechanics Scope and Sequence

<p>Grade 6 -- Language Mechanics Scope and Sequence The Language Mechanics (Grade 6) Teaching Guide that you received in the workshop has activities for every concept. Recommendations: (1) Formative Assessments every week or couple of weeks (2) Looping for ongoing review – keep pulling in skills you’ve already taught (3) Format – Have students actually generate sentences that illustrate concepts and rules. You’ll be helping students become better readers and writers. Week Concept Notes 1 You should use the Overview PowerPoint to assess students’ knowledge. 2 Topic sentences/purposes of paragraphs I would teach these concepts (purposes and topic sentences) together to show students how to build topic sentences for specific purposes. I would teach all of the purposes this week. As you move on to teaching in depth the three types of writing, you can refer back to these purposes. 3 Review/continue topic sentences/purposes of As you teach these concepts, paragraphs keep referring to the overview Paragraph unity – eliminating irrelevant PowerPoint to remind information yourself how the questions Paragraphing – ordering of information will be asked. 4 Commas – setting off the words, for example Apostrophes – possessives 5 *Modifiers, misplaced 6 *Adjectives, comparative and superlatives *Quotation marks, around direct quotes and story titles 7 *Capitalization, first word of direct quotes *Adverbs, knowing when to use adverb instead of adjective 8 Capitalization, in titles (stories and paintings) *Capitalization – adjectives derived from place names; languages *Capitalization, title before a name *Overcapitalization – Term Paper, Book Report, etc.</p><p>9 *S-V Agr., singular and plural You will need to teach/review prepositions and prep. phrases here before you teach students that a subject can never be in a prep. phrase. 10 *Pronouns-subjective, objective, possessive Overuse – personal pronoun following a subject 11 *Commas, overuse, separating a subject and verb *Verb Tense – past, present, future</p><p>12 *Verb Tense cont. *Capitalization—title of people, languages * Capitalization – all words in location name</p><p>13 *Commas, with coordinating conjunctions *Commas, with subordinating conjunctions 14 *Commas, coordinating conj. or sub. cont. *Commas, in a listing; in a listing following a colon *Parallelism, in a listing 15 *Paragraphing, adding sensory detail (Teach in conjunction with narrative writing.) 16 *Fragments, prep. phrases *dependent clauses beginning with sub. conj. 17 *Run-ons, short sentence joined by only a comma or with no punct. 18 *Wordiness, repetition of words, words that mean the same</p><p>*Combining sentences to eliminate wordiness</p><p>19 *Voice – active rather than passive * Pronouns – who, whom 20 Give overview PowerPoint to assess students’ progress. 21 Reteach/review skills. 22 Reteach/review skills. 23 Reteach/review skills. 24 Reteach/review skills. 25 Reteach/review skills. 26 Reteach/review skills. 27 Reteach/review skills. 28 Reteach/review skills. 29 Reteach/review skills. 30 Reteach/review skills.</p>

View Full Text

Details

  • File Type
    pdf
  • Upload Time
    -
  • Content Languages
    English
  • Upload User
    Anonymous/Not logged-in
  • File Pages
    2 Page
  • File Size
    -

Download

Channel Download Status
Express Download Enable

Copyright

We respect the copyrights and intellectual property rights of all users. All uploaded documents are either original works of the uploader or authorized works of the rightful owners.

  • Not to be reproduced or distributed without explicit permission.
  • Not used for commercial purposes outside of approved use cases.
  • Not used to infringe on the rights of the original creators.
  • If you believe any content infringes your copyright, please contact us immediately.

Support

For help with questions, suggestions, or problems, please contact us