writing assignments elementary students
Education in the United States is provided mainly by government, with control and funding coming from three levels: federal, state, and local. School attendance is mandatory and nearly universal at the primary and secondary levels (often known inside the United States as the elementary and high school levels). At these levels, school curricula, funding, teaching, and other policies are set through locally elected school boards with jurisdiction over school districts. School districts are usually separate from other local jurisdictions, with independent officials and budgets. Educational standards and standardized testing decisions are usually made by state governments.....
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Number of writing assignments elementary students Topics: 5
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100% Q: For elementary teachers: How important is writing in your classroom?
Hi, I'm writing a research paper and I'd like to gather some information from elementary teachers. If you don't want to post this, then please email your responses to me by clicking on my profile. Thank you!
1) What grade do you teach?
2) What do you feel is the most important subject for students? Why?
3) Do you put a lot of emphasis on writing? Why or why not?
4) Do you connect writing to other content areas? How?
5) What do you think are the benefits of writing?
6) Do you require that below grade level students and second language learners write as much as the rest of the class?
7) What is the overall feeling that your students have regarding writing?
8) Do you motivate them to write or do you just expect them to complete the assignment?
9) Do you assign topics for students to write about or do you let them choose their own?
A:1. 3rd grade
2. Reading and Writing. They are interconnected. They are the way we will interact with the rest of the world. All elem. students are English Language Learners and need explicit instruction in both reading the writing
3. Yes we write everyday using the Writing Workshop model of instruction.
4. Writing integrates all subject areas. We journal in social studies, science and math. It deepens our thinking of subjects when we write about them.
5. Stronger writers are strong readers. Students become more observant. They have deeper connection to subjects they study.
6. I require that students write to the best of their ability. All students are graded based on progress towards CA state standards.
7. They love writing workshop
8. I motivate them through examples and minilessons
9. both self selected and teacher selected topics throughout school year.
hope this helps.
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100% Q: What is your opinion of my latest Journal Entry for my writing course?
Journal Entry #7
(102208)
Our current writing course assignment is “A Memory.” The teacher wants the entry to be amusing, but not silly. It should illustrate a moral or a lesson learned by the writer. I don’t write comedy, but I believe in morality, so here goes:
A Memory
by Elaine Polin
As a Student Teacher, I was asked to teach Elementary Spanish to a class of slower learners. The students’ ages ranged from 16 to 18. The students seemed not at all interested in learning a second language.
Setting: A high school classroom
Characters: Señora Polin, Student Teacher, age 21
Henry/Enrique, Student, age 17
29 other students
Riiing: (Students should be seated, but Henry is fooling around, as usual).
Señora Polin: Enrique, siéntate, por favor. (Henry, please be seated).
Enrique: Señora, fóckate, por favor!
Students: (Joyful laughter, whistling, foot stomping).
S.P.: Enrique, would you please repeat what you said in English?
E: (Dead silence from Henry and his fellow students).
S.P. Bueno, Enrique, escribe la fecha en la pizarra. (Okay, Henry, write the date on the board).
E: Sí, Señora. (Henry follows the instructions without another word).
Moral: She who does not ‘lose her cool’ wins.
DM: mahjor = mejor
Translation of Greci: Many thanks for what you're teaching us and you teach us to practice. Thanks, G.
A:Y como se dice : "God Bless the Child who's got her own!"
That's you.
Muchas gracias por lo que nos enseño y nos "enseño" a practicar: The Moral!
Grecia.
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100% Q: Are English and grammar classes failing our youth or are kids just not paying attention?
Is it just me or do people have a bad habit of mispelling words and not using proper grammar? I see a lot of grammatical errors nowadays as well as people using "there" instead of "their" and vice versa. This is mostly among the young adult, teen-age populaton.
Is the education system on English and grammar failing our kids or are they just not paying attention? The elementary school I attended back in the 80s and 90s was unfailingly strict with the English language, going so far as to requiring students (2nd through 8th grades) to complete homework assignments known as "dictation" (students had to write different sentences over and over again). I admit that this helped me shape my grammatical usage as well as the grasp of the English language. Schools should implement this to help kids improve their language skills.
Still, I have a low tolerance for people who cannot write English properly, with the exception of those with learning disabilities.
Any thoughts?
Should schools assign "dictation" homework (constant writing and re-writing a group of four sentences or more) to improve the language skills of our youth? I hated this assignment in school but it helped me improve my language and grammar.
A:Both. In many classrooms, the curriculum [what is taught, how much time is spent teaching a certain topic] is determined by the teacher. The decision is made based upon the teacher’s opinion of what is important and necessary. However, students are also not paying attention and they are not taught by parents and/or society that good grammar is important [reference email style of writing]. Luckily, the recent surge of interest in testing and standards, will help to take care of some of these issues.
That being said...I would like to point out that the educational issues and priorities for each school and district are actually set by parents. If you review public perception and parental behavior toward education over the past decade, there is a definite correlation with problems that we have had in the educational system. As a teacher, I remember NUMEROUS parent conferences, report cards, and phone calls warning of an impending failure and possible retention of a student. After the decision was made by all of the teachers, it would be overruled because the parent didn't want their student to be held back a grade--despite the fact that the student failed all of his/her classes. The student was moved to the next grade, where he/she continued to earn failing grades, and was eventually moved up again.
This very long story is pointing out the fact that the recent surge in interest in testing is a direct result of the many complaints about students graduating from high school without learning how to read.
My final answer to your question is the student, teacher, principal, district officials, and parents are ALL responsible for the misuse and/or inability to use grammar properly. It requires a team effort, and if one member of the team does not believe in the outcome... everyone loses. Sadly, most of the blame is currently being placed on the teacher and the schools, rather than everyone equally.
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100% Q: Please give me some ideas for an effective homework policy?
I am a 4th year teacher but I am trying to revamp my approach in terms of a homework policy for my elementary students.
This year I will be teaching 2nd graders (special ed). What would an effective homework policy look like? I want there to be certain routines in place so they know what to expect.
My ideas included:
weekly homework sheet (distributed on Monday)
Reading every night for 20 minutes and a reading log
*Maybe one specific day out of the week would require a reading response, another day would be sentence writing, another might be some reading comprehension passage, ABC order, etc.
*Journal writing prompt daily
*Daily math worksheet or assignment (depending on the unit)
ALSO:
I work in a low income community. Many of my students' parents are illiterate, uninvolved, don't speak English, or don't have the capacity to assist with even certain elementary level assignments. As a result, kids may not complete all of their assignments nor even try to. Some come to school with nothing even when I encourage them to do their best and that I'm not grading for wrong answers. I'm just looking at their work to see how I can help them better. Any tips for this?
I want my homework policy to be effective and clear for the students and their parents. Advice?
A:Personally, I correct all pieces of paper that the students do. This is a choice that I make so that students will know if they did it right. I have also used stickers on homework folders (the little round ones) when they return their homework. The kids compare the amount of stickers they have and so forth. I also do not give a grade, but if they are close, say a B- and an A, I will look to see if homework is turned in and then I bump it up. I also give a weekly conduct grade and homework and classroom work is part of conduct. I tell the parents if they had missing assignments that week. and it makes their grade go down.
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100% Q: What do you think of the following article?
EXTRA HELP
When Special Education
Goes Too Easy on Students
Parents Say Schools
Game System, Let Kids
Graduate Without Skills
By JOHN HECHINGER and DANIEL GOLDEN
August 21, 2007; Page A1
GREENPORT, N.Y. -- On June 25, 2006, Michael Bredemeyer threw his tasseled cap in the air and cheered after getting his high school diploma. Two days later, his parents mailed the diploma back.
[More Data on Mainstreaming]
* * *
Plus, read more about the challenges of integrating special-needs students, at WSJ.com/Mainstreaming.
Michael, now 19 years old, has learning disabilities and finished high school at a seventh-grade reading level, despite scoring above average on IQ tests. The Bredemeyers say he passed some classes because teachers inflated his grades and accepted poor work. By awarding him a meaningless diploma, they say, school officials avoided paying for ongoing instruction.
"I felt proud because he had worked so hard," says Michael's mother, Beverly, her voice breaking. "You don't want to take that away from him. But you knew it wasn't real. What's he going to do in the future? Will he be able to go to college and get a job?"
The Bredemeyers represent a new voice in special education: parents disappointed not because their children are failing, but because they're passing without learning. These families complain that schools give their children an easy academic ride through regular-education classes, undermining a new era of higher expectations for the 14% of U.S. students who are in special education.
Years ago, schools assumed that students with disabilities would lag behind their non-disabled peers. They often were taught in separate buildings and left out of standardized testing. But a combination of two federal laws, adopted a quarter-century apart, have made it national policy to hold almost all children with disabilities to the same academic standards as other students.
The 1975 statute now known as the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act promoted putting special-education students in mainstream classrooms. The 2001 No Child Left Behind Act said schools would be punished if disabled children don't pass the same state tests as other students. It also requires states to set standards for high-school graduation rates and meet them for all students, including those with disabilities.
By some measures, the extra attention is paying off. Test scores and classroom grades of disabled students are rising, and their high-school graduation rate increased to 54% in 2004 from 42% in 1996.
But critics say some of the gains have come because schools have learned to game the system. For instance, federal rules allow states to make "reasonable accommodations" to help disabled students pass tests and graduate, such as allowing extra time on exams. Some schools, say critics, are giving students too much help, for instance by guiding students to the right answers on multiple-choice tests.
MAKING THE GRADE
• The Issue: Some parents of students with learning disabilities say their children are graduating too easily.
• The Background: Federal laws raised school standards, but left loopholes. Increasingly, special-education students get special help to pass tests.
• The Problem: If schools game the system, those students move on without the skills they need.
From 2000 to 2005, special-education fourth graders showed more improvement in reading and math than the general population on an important benchmark test, the National Assessment of Educational Progress. But accommodations also increased. In 2005, 70% of fourth-grade special education students received some sort of accommodation while taking the math portion, up from 44% five years earlier. In reading, 63% used accommodations in 2005, up from 29% in 2000.
On tests used to measure compliance with No Child Left Behind, more states are permitting students with disabilities to use calculators on arithmetic tests or have reading-comprehension tests be read aloud. Massachusetts education commissioner David Driscoll warned school administrators in February that an alarming number of special education students -- a quarter or half in some cases -- were receiving such accommodations on state exams. With unclear guidelines, "People start driving trucks through loopholes," he said in an interview.
Some school districts have an informal policy against failing students with disabilities even if they miss many classes or aren't learning. "I can go into any school we represent and have somebody tell me we have to pass special education students" to avoid being blamed for not providing the right services if students fail, says Janet Horton, a Texas special-education attorney. Federal law says special-education students should receive a "free appropriate public education," but it doesn't prohibit failing them.
Mardys Leeper and Carol Merrill, former teachers at West Philadelphia High School in Pennsylvania, say a special-education administrator there ordered them to pass special-education students. Ms. Leeper says she made concessions for students with disabilities, such as letting them write shorter essays or copy paragraphs she wrote onto a word processor rather than composing their own. But when those students didn't make an effort, or skipped class, both teachers say they sometimes sought to fail them -- only to have the administrator insist on passing grades. The reason they were given: Students had met the goals of their federally mandated individual education plans, IEPs, spelling out goals and services for each special-education student.
"Students who weren't even participating, even trying, we couldn't fail them," says Ms. Merrill, an English teacher who retired this year. Even if they couldn't read, "I had to give them a 'D.'"
The administrator couldn't be reached for comment. Brenda Taylor, head of special education for the Philadelphia school district, called the matter a "breakdown in communication." The district has no written policy against failing special-education students, she says. But rather than being "punitive" if a student performs poorly or cuts class, she says, the district prefers to revise a student's IEP. "We're not in the business of failing students," Ms. Taylor says.
Only 19 states require all students to earn the same kind of diploma, according to a recent University of Minnesota survey. Some of those states let special-education students amass fewer course credits to earn the degree, the survey found. Other states give substitute certificates, in some cases called IEP diplomas, to special-education students who don't qualify for standard diplomas.
Many special-education parents are happy to see their children advance through school and graduate. Reggie Felton, director of federal policy for the National School Boards Association, says special-education students learn more in regular classes even if they're given a break on assignments or grading. The federal government recently decided to triple the percentage of students allowed to take easier tests, to 3% from 1%. Some legislators have proposed exempting more students.
But the rebellion against too-easy passing is growing, says Pam Wright, who with her husband has co-authored books on special education issues and operates a Virginia-based information clearinghouse for special-education parents. She estimates she now receives more than 1,000 email messages a year from parents lamenting that their children with disabilities take mainstream courses but aren't being taught as much as their classmates. Dozens of parents have contended in recent administrative appeals that their children did not deserve the diplomas they received, she says.
The family of Alba Somoza, who has cerebral palsy and speaks only with the help of a computer, filed one such case. Alba drew national attention in the 1990s when her family successfully pushed to include the then-third grader in a regular classroom. Then-President Bill Clinton backed her cause, and Alba, now 23, graduated with honors from a New York City high school in 2002.
Last year, Alba and her family filed an administrative case claiming her education was a sham. A school report prepared weeks before she graduated showed she had language and math skills at an elementary school level, court records show. "You cannot shunt children through -- you cannot scam them through the system," says Alba's mother, Mary.
[Michael Bredemeyer]
Since shortly after she graduated, New York has been paying for a special program for Alba that costs $400,000 a year -- including a full-time teacher, an aide, transportation and extensive technology. The city says it is doing so out of compassion, not legal obligation. The family is seeking to continue the public funding another year to help Alba receive enough education to work as a museum docent.
The Somozas lost the administrative case, but a judge in U.S. District Court in Manhattan ruled in the family's favor earlier this year and ordered another hearing. Rather than develop a program that would help Alba reach her academic goals, teachers lowered the curriculum's "level of difficulty" and removed "large and meaningful portions of its substantive content," the judge said. One teacher testified that he did most of the work on Alba's final project in 2002. New York officials say the school properly adapted the curriculum for a severely disabled student.
In northern California, Jennifer McGowan, an 18-year-old who is deaf in one ear and suffers from attention deficit hyperactivity disorder and learning disabilities, was supposed to graduate from Vacaville Unified School District in June. She didn't get her diploma -- because her family won a court injunction to stop it.
In an interview, Jennifer said she often received A or B grades for poorly completed work or, at times, when she didn't do assignments at all or show up for class. Achievement tests she took in January 2005 showed that she had the math and reading skills of an elementary-school student, according to her administrative complaint.
The school district denies her grades were inflated and said she showed her proficiency by passing a high-school exit exam. John Aycock, Vacaville's superintendent, said teachers did "a great job working with Jennifer." Jennifer says she failed the exit exam several times despite intensive preparation. "They just wanted to pass me and let me fly by," she says. The school system says it's not unusual to make several attempts to pass.
At the Mercer Island school district in Washington state, the family of a girl with severe learning disabilities complains that, instead of the intense instruction she needed to master reading and math in eighth and ninth grades, teachers showered her with accommodations: a peer note-taker, a peer to read materials to her, oral exams, reduced assignments and a calculator on math tests.
At an administrative hearing, the family -- whose names are not disclosed in the court papers -- sought to force the school system to pay for her private schooling. Noting her strong A and B grades, the district successfully argued that accommodations were helping her learn. In U.S. District Court in Seattle, a judge hearing an appeal of the case disagreed last year, saying the system improperly relied on accommodations rather than instruction, and has returned the case to a hearing officer to determine financial relief for the family.
Boxes of school correspondence and Michael Bredemeyer's old tests and assignments line the hallways of his family's weather-beaten saltbox house in Orient, N.Y., on Long Island's North Fork. Michael's parents are demanding public funding for more services until age 21, to which students are entitled unless they graduate, so he can improve his academic skills for college.
John Bredemeyer, a county public-health inspector, and his wife, Beverly, had high hopes for Michael, who has a strong work ethic and a knack for repairing machines. But once he entered public middle school in nearby Greenport, his parents worried that teachers were letting him skate through classes and tests.
Michael, who has attention deficit hyperactivity disorder and learning disabilities including dyslexia, says in some classes he "definitely earned" a passing grade, but others were "borderline." He took regular classes except for one period a day. "A little more one-on-one" instruction would have helped, he says.
On state achievement exams, Michael's IEP permitted him extra time, simplified instructions and guidance from a teacher to slow him down if he rushed through answers. But when he completed the eighth-grade math test, his special-education teacher also took him to the resource room and directed him to redo problems he had answered incorrectly. According to a memo from Greenport Superintendent Charles Kozora, the teacher "exceeded the intent" of Michael's accommodations, boosting his score. The state investigated and invalidated Michael's test.
[Revolt]
Mr. Kozora said the school system had only two cases of testing irregularities in six years, few conflicts with parents over special education and "many successes" among students with disabilities. The district says achievement, and not cost, dictates its decisions on graduating students.
When Michael was a junior at Greenport High, his chemistry teacher passed him with the minimum grade of 65, even though he says he spent much of the class doodling and playing solitaire on his laptop. Checking his assignments and tests, his parents couldn't understand how he could be passing.
In a letter, the school principal acknowledged that the final grade was a "miscalculation" and should have been 56.6, or an F. The school offered to let him make up his lost credits by volunteering in the town library. When his parents balked, he was instead placed in courses in sociology and psychology. On one psychology pop quiz, five of Michael's seven answers were marked wrong, but a failing grade was crossed out on the paper and a passing score of 65 was substituted. The school district declined comment.
For a senior English assignment, he received an A for one untitled paragraph. "I believe competition today has changed dramatically," he wrote. "Back in the day, sports was some of the only sports that had competition. Today, everyone wants to compete and only be successful. School work, school sports, major league sports, all involve high amounts of success and competition. Competition today has become very extreme." His English teacher, Michael Connolly, said he didn't remember the assignment and had no comment on the grade.
On standardized tests, Michael had mixed results: On the SATs, which have a 200 to 800 scale, Michael received 330 and then 370 in two tries on the reading test, in the bottom 10% of all students nationally. On math, he scored 460 both times. He failed two state exams and passed five others. His school grades put him in the bottom one-third of his class.
A month before graduation, the Bredemeyers debated whether he should accept the degree. "I wanted to have it," Michael says. "Get it and forget it."
On graduation day, a school band played "Pomp and Circumstance." Michael's parents, his sister, his grandmother, aunts and uncles watched as he walked up to the podium and a school official handed him a purple diploma case with his name etched in gold letters.
Michael says he knew his parents might not let him keep it. "I had a feeling they'd do something like that," he said, shrugging. "I'll eventually get it back, one of these days, months, years." This summer, Michael has been mowing lawns and picking up trash at a state park for $9 an hour. This fall, he plans to enter his second year at Suffolk County Community College, which does not require a high-school diploma. Last semester at Suffolk, he received a D-plus in freshman composition, D's in statistics and Western Civilization and an F in the history of rock 'n' roll.
Write to John Hechinger at john.hechinger@wsj.com and Daniel Golden at dan.golden@wsj.com
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A:I saw this with my own eyes when I was a substitue teacher for a class of deaf students in a hearing school. One deaf student came up to me very upset, because she found out that she was not getting a real high school diploma. All she was getting was a certificate for attending this high school.
Parents are failing to be their children's advocate. They mistakenly believe that the schools will take care of their disabled kids. The schools don't have the means and the staff to spend extra time with these kids. They need to develop an IEP and make sure the schools follow the IEP and also make sure themselves that their disabled child is on target with their education.
I am a child of the 60's. As a deaf child, there were no such thing as special education classes etc. My parents were told to send me to a deaf school, which my mother refused to do. She helped form a group of parents that advocated for their deaf kids and petitioned the General Assembly to pass laws allowing disabled children to be put into the public school system. What everyone failed to realize was that not every disabled child can function or learn in a public school setting. As a result of these laws, a majority of schools that were geared to children with disabilities have closed down.
As I said before, it is up to the parents to be their children's advocates. The public school system is ill equipped to educate disabled children.
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