Edit or remove this text inline or in the module Content settings. You can also style every aspect of this content in the module Design settings and even apply custom CSS to this text in the module Advanced settings. Each book has 10 lessons. When following the Three-Week Plan, most families finish one book in a school year.
Activities vary from day to day, but you can expect to spend minutes per day working 3 days per week. Most parents spend up to 30 minutes per 3-week lesson on preparation less than 10 minutes per week.
To save time, purchase a Time-Saver Pack of sturdy, ready-made props instead of creating your own game cards, spinners, and other tools for various activities. Because successful writing results from intentional instruction, we created WriteShop Junior with parent-and-child partnership in mind. Activities are designed for the two of you to work on together. While either is fine, a struggling 8-year-old might gain more confidence using WriteShop Primary Book C.
Either way, activities called Smaller Steps and Flying Higher let you easily tailor lessons when children function at different levels. Relax knowing that because WriteShop is a cyclical program, anything important from previous books will show up again in future levels. WriteShop Junior lessons appeal to multiple modalities visual, auditory, and kinesthetic. So hands-on learners and children with mild to moderate learning difficulties —including ADHD, autism, dyslexia, and dysgraphia—can gain confidence and experience success.
Printed on brightly colored paper, pages form 10 lapbook-style grammar and writing guides. Each focuses on a different skill such as parts of speech, self-editing, dialogue, or sentences. Learning or reviewing grammar becomes fun because of the simple rules, examples, and clever practice exercises. Fold-N-Go Grammar is not a comprehensive grammar program.
Therefore, most parents and teachers use these to introduce new skills or supplement their current grammar curriculum.
The students have a set time, say 30 seconds, to say something and pass the eraser back and forward in pairs. When the timer runs down, the student left holding the eraser loses. No preparation needed for this junior high warm up activity. Just like the old MB game, this activity is a lot of fun.
In the "Do you know? Your students compete in teams to accumulate the most points for fame and glory, or just stickers - whatever comes first! Each group tries to complete the English word challenge you give them by writing words that fulfill the requirements you set. For example - Six words ending in "e". Giving the students the words and letting them arrange the sentence is an oldie but a goodie.
This game adds some movement and the element of recall to make it more fun and competitive. This is a basic walking and talking activity using new English past tense for first graders in junior high. Download the excel spreadsheet and print out cards for the activity.
This warm up has students reviewing recently studied grammar in a very focused way. One student provides the Japanese and the next, the English. Play it out in a quick-fire way and students get caught up and can really enjoy reviewing grammar this way. This is a great vocabulary-building exercise for all ages. The thesaurus will help them come up with some challenging, advanced word choices.
Directions: Ask students to write the letters of the alphabet down the side of a sheet of lined paper. Next, have them leave a blank space followed by a noun that begins with each letter. Finally, tell them to go back and add an adjective in front of each noun.
If you want to give points, add an extra point for alliteration using the letter of the alphabet for both the noun and the adjective. Send us your questions or comments. Now part of Demme Learning. Find out more about Demme Learning here!
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