That said, it would be better — and far more fair — if test writers took care to
choose reading passages about subjects children are more likely to have encountered in school.
Not exact matches
«I would suggest you
read the Bible in its entirety, not pick and
chooses passages out of context without relevance, that are suggested
reading from sleazy websites.»
If you are investing so much of your time on the Bible, I would suggest you
read the Bible in its entirety, not pick and
chooses passages out of context without relevance, that are suggested
reading from sleazy websites.
Most of them have
read only select
passages chosen for them by someone else, who also tells them what to think about it.
Yet the context of Christian worship in which a
passage from another scripture is
read may suggest a particular meaning or interpretation for the
chosen passage.
It's one reason he
chose to have a
passage from the Quran
read at the United Church of Gainesville, part of the United Church of Christ, on Sunday.
Perhaps he will also
choose to
read passages from the Song on occasions of compelling social action.
Centralization of worship was out of the question at that time, and they rid Deuteronomy of any such program by ruling the
passage 12:1 - 7 to be a later intrusion; and by
reading 12:14 (RSV: «at the place which Yahweh will
choose in one of your tribes, there you shall offer...») «in any place which Yahweh shall
choose in any one of your tribes.»
Working with elementary students learning English as a second language, Georgia teacher Melissa Smith shares
reading passages that demonstrate how writers
choose their words carefully to help readers create brain movies.
Poster # 2 - Timeline # 3 -
Reading Passages # 4 - Synonym Match and Phrase Match # 5 - Fill - In the Blanks # 6 -
Choose the Correct Word Spelling # 7 - Put the Text Back Together Scrambled Sentences # 8 - Discussion # 9 - Student Survey # 10 - Writing # 11 - Homework # 12 - Answers # 13 - Reflection on MLK's Values *** Please see the thumbnails and preview for this resource before purchasing this product.
The texts themselves were
chosen by the leadership of my charter school network, Uncommon Schools, with guidance from both the Common Core text - selection criteria and the network's own curricular team The lesson plan sequence, questioning, activities, close
reading passages, schema, and focuses were up to me and my co-teacher.
Contains - Alphabet (topic word for each letter)- Comic Summary (
read a story and summarise it in comic form)- Hand (research a volcano in history and pull out main facts)- Imagination (descriptive writing prompt)- One Sentence Only (summarise each paragraph in a
chosen text)- Positive and Negative effects (foldable sorting effects of volcanoes)- Storyteller (narrative writing prompt)- Structure of a volcano (information sheet for students to create a volcano diagram)- Types of volcano (foldable that involves matching names, description and picture)- Volcanic Eruptions Comprehension (information
passage with questions)- Volcano cloze (information text with missing words about volcanoes)- Volcano explorer (gathering information from interactive voclano website)- Volcano Vocabulary (foldable involving matching topic words to definitions)- Witness vs. Scientist (foldable involving sorting statements)
The text
passages on
reading - comprehension tests are randomly
chosen, usually divorced from any particular body of knowledge taught in school.
She
chose to make a case for traveling to the Challenger Deep, for instance, partly because the
reading passage about the submarine voyage contained a lot of details about different sea creatures the travelers would see.
Choose the
passage that's easiest to
read first.
While
reading, you can use the Kindle's select wheel to highlight a
passage or
choose where to make an annotation.
I had
chosen several
passages that were particularly descriptive and had one of the members
read them aloud.
Amazon already has a vibrant community of readers who
choose to share favorite
passages and notes from their
reading through Kindle.amazon.com.
Rollins or one of the Kids would
read aloud a carefully
chosen passage from a book while the others made free - associative drawings reflecting on what they heard.