Raising Literati

a blog for the high school English class I am teaching for reluctant readers and writers

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Monday, September 22, 2014

"Sweeten" Your Writing With Sentence Variety








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Posted by Beth at 3:03 PM
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Labels: sentence variety, writing

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Literati

Lit-e-ra-ti

well-educated people who are interested in literature

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Beth
I am a Christian wife, retired homeschool mom, empty nester, and grandmother of two, living near Raleigh, North Carolina. I've been married to my best friend for 43 years. I enjoy spending time with my family, visiting with friends, sipping a cup of tea, baking, reading, writing, being creative, snuggling babies, playing with preschoolers, homeschool mentoring, and encouraging other women.
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Literature Class Roles


1. Questioner
The Questioner's job is to come up with 5 discussion questions that explore important ideas from the assigned reading , and to the lead the next class discussion.

2. Diction Detective
The Diction Detective studies the word choice (diction) of the assigned reading and chooses 3 passages or phrases that are especially descriptive, powerful, thought-provoking, funny, or even confusing. He must share why he chose them, why he thinks the author selected them, how they help the author achieve his or her purpose.

3. Illustrator
The Illustrator finds or creates an illustration related to the assigned reading. It can be a drawing, graphic, chart, or map. You can choose to illustrate a scene, character, idea. or symbol.

4. Storyteller
The job of the Storyteller is to choose an interesting or powerful passage from the assigned reading to recite in class.

5. Bridge Builder
The Bridge Builder looks for connections between events in the text and events in history, other literature, or current events.

6. Scripture Spotlight
Scripture Spotlight looks for connections between the text and a Bible story, passage or verse.

7. Summarizer
It is the Summarizer's job to write a summary paragraph for each chapter of the assigned reading, chronologically highlighting major events and ideas.

8. Vocabulary Sleuth
In the assigned reading, find 10 words or phrases that are unfamiliar to you and look up the definitions.

9. Reporter
Report on developments in the plot, any new characters or changes in the characters, and the current setting(s) and effect it has on the story.
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