It gives short reading passages, charts, primary source activities, a reference map, and a glossary.
Not exact matches
Although I spent only about five minutes with each student every two weeks, I made those interactions meaningful and constructive through various strategies, from asking the student to
read his or her favorite
short passage out loud to me (helping me assess
reading level) to asking the student what the text meant (again,
giving me insights into his or her abilities).
Maybe you'll need a creation tool to help students demonstrate their understanding of a food chain, or an app that
gives students access to
short passages for a
reading unit on informational text.
For example, a typical question on the old Nevada 4th grade English Language Arts test would have
given students a
short passage to
read, then asked them to find a simile in the
passage.