Other Reading Assignments





PARENT JOURNAL CHECK

The response journal is sent home once each term for parents to look over and discuss with their children. It is accompanied by a letter like the one that follows for parents to sign and return indicating they have looked over the journal. If you look on the "Keeping track of Reading Grades" sheet you will see the Monday the Parent Journal Check is due and know that the journal will be coming home the weekend preceeding it

Dear Parents:

Thank you for sending me such a wonderful group of students. I have really been enjoying them! I hope that you have seen the NEW "Keeping Track of Reading Grades" sheet on which you will find your child's assignments and due dates for the entire term. Students will receive one each nine weeks. I would like to remind you that you may be updated on what we are doing in class by calling 955-6942 (teacher number 5202) or through the Net (http.//www.sbac.edu/~jonesbr). I also encourage you to check your child's FALCON PLANNER on a regular basis. Hopefully this will help explain the report card grade.

Your child has brought his/her Reading Response Journal home this weekend so that you may have a chance to see what s/he has done so far this grading term. I hope that you will look through the journal and discuss it with your child. THE JOURNAL MUST BE RETURNED ON MONDAY, APRIL 10. At any other time, journals can be taken home when the parent sends a note requesting it and taking responsibility that it be returned the next school day.

Journal letters are graded about every three weeks. At each interval students are to have written one new letter to any classmate (with a response from the classmate) and a response to the teacher's letter. Letters should go beyond summarizing the books read and should show higher level thinking like predicting outcomes; analyzing writing techniques; comparing the book to other books, personal experiences, movies, etc.; analyzing characters or setting; describing reactions to the book; telling why the book was chosen; etc. In the front pocket you should find handouts giving suggestions for journal writing. There will be more as the year goes on. They should also have recorded on their journal response log the letters they have responded to in a classmate's journal.

When the journal is graded, if all the letters and answers are there, the grade is a 70. If this minimum requirement is not met, the grade is below 70. Also, deductions are made if the title is not included and underlined, entries are not dated, etc. A letter is chosen at random to be read and graded. The grade above 70 is based on the degree to which the student has shown more reflective thinking in the entry.

Please sign below that you have looked over and discussed the journal with your child. Please write any comments or questions you have. For extra credit, your child may write a journal entry to you this weekend about the book s/he is currently reading and have you answer his/her letter, responding to his/her thoughts about books as well as telling about your own reading.


Sincerely,
Beverly Jones

STUDENT'S NAME _______________________________________________ period_____

PARENT'S SIGNATURE:_________________________________________________________


BOOK JACKETS

On 12  x 18 construction paper you will create a book jacket that represents the best book you read in sixth grade.  First you will fold it in half.  Then you will fold in the two ends (about one and a half to two inches).  On the front you will create an eye-catching book cover that includes the title and author.  On the back you will write quotes from two readers about the book (you can be one of the readers).  On the front inside flap you will write a plot summary of the book.  On the back flap you will give information about the author.  Both of these will be in your own words.  In the inside you will give information about yourself as a reader and writer, including why you chose this book as the best book you read this year.  You can include other information about yourself, too.  We will talk more about this in class and a sample will be shown.

HOUSE FOR SALE


 You will be given a classified ad from the newspaper and will be given the task of drawing the house described.  This involves both reading for detail and visualizing what you read.  We will talk about the decisions you will have to make like the best view to use, what the various abbreviations mean, what the vocabulary means, etc.  You must use the ad given, but if you lose it you can get a new one for 10 stamps.


CHARTS AND GRAPHS

We will work in cooperative groups answering questions that can only be answered by reading various charts and graphs, which is a different, but important, kind of reading in the real world.  You will be working on these in class.

VOCABULARY

Students should keep a list of words that they come across in their reading which are new to them. By the end of the term each student should have at least twenty words with definitions. These words will be added to the twenty learned in the each of the previous  terms. Vocabulary should be done in four-column notes. The first column is the word, the second column is the word in a sentence (students are encouraged to just copy the sentence right from the book), the third column is the dictionary definition that fits the sentence, and the last column is a keyword/phrase or picture to help in remembering.

During goal conferences the teacher will quiz each student by asking him/her to define five of the words. If a student does not find new words in reading then s/he needs to find books on a more suitable level. If a student is not finding enough words, then s/he needs to read more.



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