A pirate's life for me



Similar documents
Reading ELA/Literacy Claim 1

Minnesota K-12 Academic Standards in Language Arts Curriculum and Assessment Alignment Form Rewards Intermediate Grades 4-6

Handout for three day Learning Curve Workshop

Writing Essays. SAS 25 W11 Karen Kostan, Margaret Swisher

KINDGERGARTEN. Listen to a story for a particular reason

Grade 8 English Language Arts Performance Level Descriptors

Grading Benchmarks FIRST GRADE. Trimester st Student has achieved reading success at. Trimester st In above grade-level books, the

Components of a Reading Workshop Mini-Lesson

WRITING SKILLS IMPROVEMENT PROGRAM. The Art of Revision by Wendy Burk

Correlation: ELLIS. English language Learning and Instruction System. and the TOEFL. Test Of English as a Foreign Language

(by Level) Characteristics of Text. Students Names. Behaviours to Notice and Support

High School Communications Curriculum Indicators tested/taught indicator

"Why is it important for ELL students to be active in listening, speaking, reading and writing on a daily basis?"

McDougal Littell Bridges to Literature Level III. Alaska Reading and Writing Performance Standards Grade 8

Introduction to Reading Literacy Strategies

Haberdashers Adams Federation Schools

Revising and Editing Your Essay 1

Common Core Progress English Language Arts

Close Reading Read Aloud

& Sample Lesson. Before Reading. Sight Word Review (1 minute)

SIXTH GRADE UNIT 1. Reading: Literature

Developing students critical thinking skills in reading lessons Implementing the Scrambled Story strategy

3rd Grade Reading Standard Exceeds (4) Secure (3) Developing (2) Beginning (1)

ELA I-II English Language Arts Performance Level Descriptors

planning support & sample lesson

K-1 Common Core Writing Santa Fe Public Schools Presented by: Sheryl White

Treble Clef. Page How to Read Music - by Pebber Brown

Third Grade Language Arts Learning Targets - Common Core

Quick Guide. Oral presentations. Four-step guide to preparing oral presentations. What is in this guide. Step 1: Plan

A Student s Guide to Beginning Criterion. You re on your way to becoming a better writer!

Common Core Standards Pacing Guide Fourth Grade English/Language Arts Pacing Guide 1 st Nine Weeks

LANGUAGE! 4 th Edition, Levels A C, correlated to the South Carolina College and Career Readiness Standards, Grades 3 5

From Our Classroom Strategy Library During Reading

Performance Indicators-Language Arts Reading and Writing 3 rd Grade

Dr. Mary El-Mereedi. Office of Graduate Studies. 313 Administration Bld. Phone:

Strand: Reading Literature Topics Standard I can statements Vocabulary Key Ideas and Details

Academic Standards for Reading, Writing, Speaking, and Listening June 1, 2009 FINAL Elementary Standards Grades 3-8

UML for e-commerce. Doug Rosenberg ICONIX Software Engineering, Inc. iconixsw.com.

How To Write A Novel

Academic Standards for Reading, Writing, Speaking, and Listening

Building Your Business Online EPISODE # 203

parent ROADMAP SUPPORTING YOUR CHILD IN GRADE FIVE ENGLISH LANGUAGE ARTS

How to Write a Compelling Personal Statement. Be True to Your Voice. What Format Should You Use? What Story Should You Tell?

A Parent s Guide to Understanding Your Child s Results

Strand: Reading Literature Topics Standard I can statements Vocabulary Key Ideas and Details

English Language Arts Grade 8 PA Alternate Eligible Content

Research-Based Lesson Planning and Delivery Guide: Middle School

THE VIKINGS. bbc.co.uk/handsonhistory

The World is a Risky Place EPISODE # 207

Dragon Poster and Story (Literacy Time Number 2) Week 1 Day 1 setting adjective. Day 2 adjective Day 3 The Princess and the Dragon Week 2 Day 1

Using Your Credit - Crazy or Compelling? EPISODE # 115

BUILDING YOUR CHILD S LISTENING, TALKING, READING AND WRITING SKILLS KINDERGARTEN TO SECOND GRADE

Teacher s Pet Publications

Determine two or more main ideas of a text and use details from the text to support the answer

AN EDUCATOR S GUIDE TO

EDITING AND PROOFREADING. Read the following statements and identify if they are true (T) or false (F).

What s Up With The Stock Market? EPISODE # 404

Child-speak Reading Level 1 APP AF1 AF2 AF3 AF4 AF5 AF6 AF7 Use a range of strategies, including accurate decoding text, to read for meaning

An Enquire guide for young people

There s a Boy in the Girls Bathroom by Louis Sachar

The World is a Risky Place EPISODE # 207

Annotated work sample portfolios are provided to support implementation of the Foundation Year 10 Australian Curriculum.

Character Traits. Teacher Talk

Advice for Class Teachers. Moderating pupils reading at P 4 NC Level 1

Teacher's Guide to Meeting the Common Core State Standards* with Scott Foresman Reading Street 2008

What you need to know about NIH grant writing

Cambridge Primary English as a Second Language Curriculum Framework

Primary Curriculum 2014

Common Core State Standards Grades 9-10 ELA/History/Social Studies

FSD Grade 2 READING. Ask and answer such questions as who, what, where, when, why, and how to demonstrate understanding of key details in a text.

READING. Common Core Standards-Based. Graphic Organizers for GRADES In-Depth Analysis. Created by Tracee Orman

NAEP released item, grade 8

Chapter. The Weekend

READY NCEXTEND2 End-of-Grade English Language Arts (ELA)/Reading Grades 3-8 Assessments

Rubrics & Checklists

Background to the new Staffordshire Grids

Guided Reading Prompts for the Assessment Focuses KS2

Gifted Middle School Summer Reading Animal Farm

Word Meaning Helping Your Child Determine the Meaning of Words

Understanding Income and Expenses EPISODE # 123

Formal, Analytical Essay Writing. Review: Literary Analysis Format; Plagiarism (page # s refer to Writers Inc.)

A Year in Antarctica. Features of This Text. Focus for Instruction

Prentice Hall Literature Grade Correlated to: Kansas Reading Education Standards for Grade 8 (Grade 8)

Gulliver s Travels. Reflections: A Student Response Journal for. by Jonathan Swift. written by Derek Spencer

Mendham Township School District Reading Curriculum Kindergarten

Speakout Pre-Intermediate

Unit Map Columbia University Teachers College Collaboration / Writing* / Kindergarten (Elementary School)

Grade Level: 2 nd Grade

Common Core Progress English Language Arts. Grade 3

Check in and introductions Reading academic articles - strategies Essay Basics : The assignment fulfilling requirements Three prewriting strategies &

Using sentence fragments

Fairfield Middle School Summer Reading Assignment for 7 th grade going into 8 th grade

Date Re-Assessed. Indicator. CCSS.ELA-Literacy.RF.5.3 Know and apply grade-level phonics and word analysis skills in decoding words.

Year 5 Poetry based on Unit 2 Classic/narrative poems

Transcription:

A pirate's life for me Have you ever thought aout eing a pirate? You may have read aout pirates in stories and thought that it would e a great life. Pirates sail all day and never have to go to school. But think again! A pirate's life may not e as much fun as you think. Food is not easy to find at sea. There are no refrigerators onoard so you can forget aout eating fresh food. Meat goes ad after just a few days. Dry food like flour and read has weevils and other nasty creatures crawling inside. Imagine eating a sandwich full of insects or meat served with maggots. Pirates' hammocks are often hung over arrels of stored food. That's the perfect place for rats and mice to live. If you ecome a pirate you could wake up each morning sharing your ed with a few friendly rodents. Going to the toilet is not that easy either! Over the side of the ship is the only place for this. Rough weather makes this really tricky, even for the most experienced sailor. It's not all plain sailing on a pirate ship. Some of the time you will have to do attle with other large, hairy pirates with long swords, huge guns and very loud cannons. This could e extremely dangerous deadly even! So if you are thinking of eing a pirate, maye you should go ack to school and find out a few more facts efore you set sail. Being a pirate might not e as much fun as you think. 1

1 The writer thinks eing a pirate would e full of prolems. fun ut dangerous. a great way to live. etter than going to school. This question requires students to integrate information after reading the whole text. Students must interpret the nature of the pirate experience as eing prolematical in order to select the correct response. Students may e misled y A pirate s life may not e as much fun as you think and select fun ut dangerous as a response. This could e due to the use of fun in the response or due to their pre-existing idea that it would e a great life tempered y textual references to the various challenges pirates face. Teaching tip: Challenge students to create questions for their peers ased on a shared text. Share with them the differences etween questions that require the reader to locate and retrieve answers and questions which require the reader to integrate several elements of the text in order to determine a correct answer. 2 The writer says that fresh food on a ship rots quickly. can e easy to find. is used for sandwiches. needs to e stored in a refrigerator. This question requires students to interpret information in the text in order to make an inference. Upon locating the relevant part of the text, students need to interpret the information ( you can forget aout eating fresh food. Meat goes ad after just a few days ) to infer that fresh food will rot. In this question, students enefit from possessing a roader vocaulary. Teaching tip: Have students compile a glossary of common words for a topic eing studied and then uild a personal thesaurus of words they will use instead. 2

3 Weevils can e found in flour. meat. fresh fruit. vegetales. This question requires students to locate explicitly stated information in the text, specifically, Dry food like flour and read has weevils. Teaching tip: Re-reading purposefully is an important skill for students to learn and use during tests. Prompt them to re-read sections of a text with a focus on key words or phrases from a question in order to identify significant parts of a text. Engaging in a think aloud can help students to eliminate incorrect responses. 4 The writer uses the words, a few friendly rodents, to show that only a few are good. make you elieve they are good pets. make an awful thing sound not so ad. show you how friendly rats and mice are. This question requires students to interpret the language which has een used y the writer and recognise that the phrase ( a few friendly rodents ) depicting one of the challenges of eing a pirate is used humorously. Students may e misled y a literal interpretation of the phrase and thus select the response show that only a few are good. Teaching tip: Share texts which use humour in various ways, such as irony or sarcasm, as part of a description. Discuss the effect of using humour and how it can seem to e saying the opposite of what it actually intends (as aove). Key: C 3

5 Going to the toilet on a ship is easy in good weather. difficult for all pirates. tricky only in ad weather. easy for experience pirates. This question requires students to make an inference ased on the language used to descrie going to the toilet on a pirate ship. Students need to recognise the significance of even for the most experienced sailor. Teaching tip: Encourage students to approach such questions logically, y locating points of information which could e relevant, restating them in order to gauge if they offer the correct answer and eliminating those which are not in accord with the stem. Key: B 6 It s not all plain sailing on a pirate ship In this sentence the words plain sailing means pirate ships are not easy to sail. decorated eautifully. can e dull and oring. need smooth seas to sail. This question requires students to interpret the meaning of It s not all plain sailing.... Students are ale to use their knowledge of vocaulary and idioms in conjunction with contextual clues such as an immediate description of attles and references throughout the text to a pirate s life not eing much fun. Teaching tip: Students can gain a deeper understanding of idioms and commonly used phrases (such as All clear ) y reading a wide range of texts. Encourage them to use terms and phrases typical to different types of characters when role-playing e.g. a policeman, a doctor, an annoyed parent. 4

7 This could e extremely dangerous (paragraph 5). The word This is referring to eing a pirate. rough weather. fighting other pirates. putting up the sales. This question requires students to interpret the relevant section of the text correctly. Students need to recognise that This is referring to the suject of the sentence immediately preceding it ( you will have to do attle... ). Students who do not recognise This as a referent may e drawn to the general statement seen in the response eing a pirate. Teaching tip: Provide students with a range of texts which require readers to make connections etween different parts of a text and inferences drawn from a text, for example, through the use of pronoun referents. Key: C 8 The writer gives four facts to support the argument in this text. Briefly state what these are. 1. 2. 3. 4. This question requires students to interpret information from the entirety of the text and infer. Students need to recognise that the four middle paragraphs, detailing challenges such as fresh food, sleeping arrangements, going to the toilet and surviving fights, are all facts to support the argument that A pirate s life may not e as much fun as you think. Teaching tip: Encourage students to highlight key details in each paragraph of a text and create suheadings in order to identify key topics. Key: Open ended 5