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Tuesday, September 6, 2011

Week 4 Day 2

Science:  Mixtures sheet from Mrs. Clayton (Due: Wed)

 
Congratulations on turning in your very engaging writing assignemnts. Watch the blog for samples of work from our class posted for comments.

 
We began working on developing our sentence fluency today. It is imperative that you start ot use a variety of different sentence techniques as you write. the easiest of these are the different ways to create the compound sentence. Watch these videos below that recap the lesson and do the online exercises that follow. Then tackle the worksheets

 
http://www.quia.com/quiz/242899.html?AP_rand=563668244
http://webschool.wash.k12.ut.us/language/lessons/compoundsentences.html questions 1-8
http://www.quia.com/pop/37751.html?AP_rand=2069798505
Do you remember the key characteristics of Compound Sentences?

 

 
Four Key Rules to make an effective COMPOUND SENTENCE

 
1) The two halves could stand alone as individual sentences.
e.g. Peter likes tennis, but Mark likes pizza.

 
2) Two halves are joined by a comma and conjunction
e.g. Claire and Mary enjoy watching television, but their children prefer the internet.

 
3) Information in two halves of sentences must be linked in some way
e.g. Bolognaise is made of tomatoes and pasta, and it contains shredded meat.

 
4) A semi colon can replace the comma and conjunction
e.g. Peter likes tennis; Mark likes pizza.

We learned  some scary words today:
  • Independent Clause
  • Conjunction
 Who's afraid of them?
Will you know what they mean tomorrow?

 
Optional
Look back at your writing on a description of a place. Did you create any compound snetences?

 
Math
Reflect on your Math Assessment today. Which questions were the hardest? Why?

 
Tonight - There is no officical Math H/W. Use this evening to work on your popplet or your Current Events (first presentations -  Fri 16th)

14 comments:

Anonymous said...

Mr.Buxton? Isn't science on Thursday? Shouldn't the science sheet be due on Thursday?

berrysweetπ said...

Mr.Buxton, what should be in the bubble that is connected to non fiction and fiction (middle)?

berrysweetπ said...

Mr. Buxton for the genre's, you forgot mystery

Unknown said...

Anisha - You! - it's your reading Genre analysis.

Your science teacher wants them back tomorrow so she can have them graded for Thursday.

Who can find a mistake with what I just wrote above?

berrysweetπ said...

Oh! You did didn't have a comma before "so".

Anonymous said...

Oh, I thought it was just you typing fast without punctuation just like when you're texting.

Maddy Z said...

I agree with Anisha, you needed a comma before so!!! Do we need to tell you our scores for the online tests?

Rachel L said...

I got 10/09, but I could have done better. :-)

Rachel L said...

This time I got 10/10, and I did better.

Unknown said...

What did you think of the video?

Who is afraid of the big bad wolf?

berrysweetπ said...

sorry maddy. I meant to say: You didn't have a comma before "so", not" You did didn't have a comma before so.

AJDForTheFuture said...

The video was cool and very weird. Compound and clause sentences are pretty ambiguous.

berrysweetπ said...

I am not aftraid! I will remember tommorow!
I had a favourite part in the video; it was when the guy shows himself in a classroom. That part was funny, but very useless to my learning.

berrysweetπ said...
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