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Over 300 words to use instead of said PC version šŸ” This is page is updated often. Be sure to refresh the page to ensure you are seeing the latest version. For the mobile version of this page, click the button below: mobile There is nothing wrong with using the word said in written dialogue. Battling Fake News in the Classroom In this post-election period, there has been a lot of discussion about fake news, particularly about how it is spread and shared online, and whether it influenced the recent presidential election. On November 22, Stanford University released an influential study showing that middle and high school studentsā€”and even some in collegeā€”have trouble distinguishing which online resources are credible. The inescapable fact is that young people need to be prepared for the Wild West of information that they live in and will grow up in. It is also imperative that we, as educators, prepare young people for the important job of responsible and informed citizenship.

Finding It for Free By Meredith Scaggs Found in: Advice & Support It came from catastrophe. Upper Elementary Snapshots: Rethinking the Rough Draft: A Simple Strategy that Leads to Better Revising Of all the stages of the writing process, doesn't it feel like revising often gets the short end of the stick? One of the obstacles that always seems to be in the way is the simple logistics of where to do it. Students write their rough drafts in their composition notebooks, filling the lines, front and back, eventually "finishing," and we move them into the revising stage. Okay, make it better, we say. And students caret in a few adjectives. Maybe they even cross out a sentence or arrow one into a better place. Six Amazing Websites that Make Your Writing Stronger Long writing activities are not very frequently done in class. I tend to think that my students are like me; I need the right kind of atmosphere. Writing requires time, silence and lots of inspiration. Ideally, at this time of the year, I would probably wish to be sitting next to a fireplace with the most perfect instagrammable snow falling outside my window while drinking a nice cup of coffee waiting for inspiration to strike. Unfortunately, there isnā€™t any snow where I live so Iā€™ll have to make do with a bit of rain and some reddish trees.

10 Great Ways that Educators are Using LiveBinders It is so much fun to go to the LiveBinders site and see all the new ways that educators are using LiveBinders to curate content. Every day that I go to the site I see a new interesting binder, so I thought it would be great to highlight some great examples in this post: ePortfolios ā€“ I think Jackie Gerstein created one of the first ePortfolios on LiveBinders and it continues to be one of the best: Computer Lab ā€“ Are you always finding more sites that you want to share in the computer lab? If you keep them in a LiveBinder, the students will always have access to your latest finds, like this one created by ā€˜dboydā€™: Administration ā€“ Sometimes there is an event at school (like state testing) where the information changes constantly. In this case, it is helpful to have all relevant information in one place, where everybody can access it. Fun ā€“ Ok, I know I was going to stop at 10, but who says binders are all work and no play?

My Beginning of the Year Parent Questionnaire Two of my three kids; and thatā€™s who this is all about Yesterday I shared my student questionnaire so I find it only apt to share my parent questionnaire as well. While there are so many things I wanted to ask my parents, I wanted to keep it short and to the point. edutopia A while ago, I wrote a post called Doing It Differently: Tips for Teaching Vocabulary which spells out (get it?) the process and rationale for selecting certain vocabulary words and also describes six steps for teaching new words. Here, I'm going to add to that earlier musing on this topic by offering up some must dos that took me a few years down the teaching road to figure out. Must Do #1: Be Very Selective As for vocabulary lists, less is better.

Grade 7 Paragraph ā€“ The Canswedian English Teacher ā€œScaffold learningā€ ā€“ one of those hot button words in teaching. I got on the scaffold-their-learning train with this assignment which builds each year in hƶgstadiet. The irony is thoughā€¦ that in Grade 8 when you say, ā€œDo you remember how I taught you how to write a paragraph in Grade 7?ā€ you will be met with a sea of blank and confused faces.

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