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Teaching and Assessing Writing with the 6-Traits
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Scooped by Dennis T OConnor onto 6-Traits Resources
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Video: Persuasive Writing Made Easy With Adora

Eleven-year-old published author and seasoned speaker Adora Svitak talks about the Six Traits: Ideas and Content, with Persuasive Writing.
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Rescooped by Dennis T OConnor from E-Learning and Online Teaching
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Inquiry-Based Learning: Persuasive Writing

Inquiry-Based Learning: Persuasive Writing | 6-Traits Resources | Scoop.it

Should There Be Zoos? A Persuasive Text by Tony Stead is a mentor text, we used to introduce how to write an effective writing piece. Our students listened and took up the challenge to write their own book.


Via Virginia L Wallace, Carolyn Rhodes, Dennis T OConnor
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Rescooped by Dennis T OConnor from Media 21 Planning and Inspiration Fall 2011
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Life in a Inquiry Driven, Technology-Embedded, Connected Classroom: English | Powerful Learning Practice

Life in a Inquiry Driven, Technology-Embedded, Connected Classroom: English | Powerful Learning Practice | 6-Traits Resources | Scoop.it

"I teach in an inquiry, project-based, technology embedded classroom. A mouthful, I know. So what does that mean? To begin with, I don’t lecture. My students don’t take notes, at least not in the traditional sense, and we don’t read a novel and simply answer the questions.


It means my classroom is a place where my students spend time piecing together what they have learned, critically evaluating its larger purpose, and reflecting on their own learning. It also means my students don’t acquire knowledge just for the sake of acquiring it. They need to do something with it — that’s where “project-based” comes into play..."


Via Buffy J. Hamilton
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Rescooped by Dennis T OConnor from Teaching Digital Writing
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Life in a 21st-Century English Class | MindShift

Life in a 21st-Century English Class | MindShift | 6-Traits Resources | Scoop.it

"...my classroom is a place where my students spend time piecing together what they have learned, critically evaluating its larger purpose, and reflecting on their own learning. It also means my students don’t acquire knowledge just for the sake of acquiring it. They need to do something with it — that’s where “project-based” comes into play.

 

Finally, technology is embedded into the structure of all we do. It’s part of how we research, how we capture information, and how we display our learning. It’s never an accessory tacked on at the end."


Via Karen LaBonte
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