Sunday, March 29, 2015



STAAR Week for Writing

WE ARE READY! WE ARE READY!

FALCONS: IT'S TIME TO SOAR!!!!


Image result for soaring falcon

Monday, March 23, 2015

March 23, 2015



STAAR POWER!!!!!
      

     Next week, March 30-31, 2015, is the time to show our STAAR Power! Our AC2E writing goal is 100% passing. We can do this!

Sunday, March 15, 2015

March 15, 2015

STAAR  Preparation for 7th Grade Writing

This week will be a more intensive period of review and polishing up on some skills that need to be honed. For example, on the dialogue rules, many students are a bit careless as to where to put the opening or closing quotation marks especially in a paragraph where the speaker's words are still continuing.

Consider this: " I love to go bowling when you are with me. Your company gives me so much fun," Tony declared.

Some students punctuate it this way: " I love to go bowling when you are with me. " Your company
gives me so much fun,"Tony declared.

The sentence after ...me is still part of the speaker's words, and he has not finished speaking. The open quotation  before "Your... is a mistake.

I am planning to give a mini-campus benchmark on revising and editing alone this coming Wednesday, March 18, if Mrs. Gonzalez permits, just to see again our progress in this area.
    

 
Image result for quotation marks

Sunday, March 1, 2015

March 1, 2013

Continuing Comprehensive Revising and Editing Review

          Revising and editing review for STAAR continues. Students take charge of several problems and teach the class how to arrive at the correct answers. 
         

I vs. Me

           One objective which drew a lot of arguments among the students and teacher was the I vs. Me personal pronoun. So, a mini-lesson on that was conducted.

I vs Me

Mistakes made with the English pronouns I and me have been increasing exponentially for years. The difference is actually very simple – let me explain it to you.
I
I is the first person singular subject pronoun, which means that it refers to the person performing the action of a verb.
I want to go.
This is the one I like.
You and I need to get ready.
Tom and I are going to the movies.

Me
Me is an object pronoun, which means that it refers to the person that the action of a verb is being done to, or to whom a preposition refers.
David told me to leave.
He gave me ten dollars.
Between you and me, this is a bad idea.
She needs to talk to Joe or me.

The Bottom Line
This confusion usually occurs when you have I/me connected to another pronoun or name with "and" or "or." I believe that the confusion begins when someone says something like "John and me are ready" and that is corrected to "John and I are ready." The speaker then thinks, "Oh, the word ‘and’ means that I should always use I." This is not the case. "And" has nothing to do with it; the reason you say "John and I" in that sentence is that "John and I" are the subject. If they were the object, you’d use me: "He told John and me to get ready."
If you are not good with grammar concepts like subject and objects, there is still a very easy way to decide whether to use I or me: try out the sentence with just I or me (or if you need a plural, we or us – "we" is equivalent to "I" and "us" is equivalent to "me."):
He told Tom and (I or me?) to get ready.
He told I to get ready? NO
He told me to get ready? YES
Therefore,
He told Tom and me to get ready.
If John and (I or me?) get married, we’ll have two kids.
If me get married? NO
If I get married? YES
Therefore,
If John and I get married, we’ll have two kids.
Just between you and (I or me?), this is a bad idea.
Because "between" needs to be followed by a plural, we’ll use "we" and "us" to figure this out.
Just between we? NO
Just between us? YES
Just between you and me, this is a bad idea.
And whatever you do, please don’t use a subject pronoun and object pronoun together!
He and I – correct: "He and I are going to town."
Him and me – correct: "She told him and me the truth."
Him and I – WRONG
He and me – WRONG