SIOP® LESSON PLANS Grade 9/SIFE Reading/Language Arts/Writing Unit/Theme: Emotions and The House on Mango Street *Content Objective(s): *Students will describe Cisneros’ voice and style, listing some of her creative uses of language as characteristic of this author’s craft*Students will explore the physical and emotional prisons in which people live. *Students will discover and evaluate different methods of escape from these prisons. *Students will practice writing in the persuasive mode
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2011 Identifying the Science Processes Observing Gathering information by using sense and instruments that extends the senses such as microscopes, magnifier glasses and telescopes. Students collect and array of leaves and describe the leaf pattern and texture. Classifying Objects or organism are sorted according to characteristics, attributes and features. Sort different type of animals with backbones and those without backbone. Communicating Record observation, measurements and experiment
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stagnation and feeling useless and impotent. In the story we meet the protagonist Stolpestad who is a police officer, husband and father of two. After his shift has ended on a Saturday night, the mother of a nine year old boy calls him to go out on one last job for the night. He arrives at the address and he is asked to put down a wounded dog. Later that night, Stolpestad is approached at his doorstep by the little boy and his father. They came to tell him that the dog had survived Stolpestad’s attempt
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Communications You are walking down the street and there is a ladder on the sidewalk. Do you go under it or around it? You walk a little further and you see a four leaf clover. Would you pick it up or keep walking? As your walking, you see a black cat cross your path. Would you ignore it or run to the nearest tree so you could “knock on wood”? You may have found that one or more of your answers have proved you to be superstitious. According to Forbes, twelve percent of Americans are superstitious
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Andrew Quarless ENGL 202-D Leslie Robertson Mateer Spring 2009 Business Communication Essentials Practice Your Knowledge (pgs. 94-95, nos.1-47) The “You” Attitude: 1. We request that you have the order form supplied in the back of our catalog. So that your order is processed properly, please complete the order form located in the back of our catalog. 2. We insist that you always bring your credit card to the store. Having a credit card will most
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Taxonomy and terminology Throughout most of the history of science from Aristotle to Linnaeus and into the 20th century, species were divided into two kingdoms: animals and plants. Driven by DNA characterizations and other modern analysis, fungi and bacteria have now been removed to separate kingdoms; in particular, fungi have cell walls that contain chitin rather than cellulose. Lichens, which are a symbiotic association of a fungal and photosynthetic organism, are generally not considered plants
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participated in that sport. The last column would be marked as no sports for those that do not play sports at all. d) Crime rate and unemployment rate. I would use cross tabulation here and list a number of crime rates or crime rate ranges on the left. Each row would represent the crime rates of that percentage or the range. Then each column would represent a range of unemployment. From Concept to Practice 7) Use the data in Exhibit 16-5 to construct a stem-and-leaf display. 5|13 15 17
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Janie Killicks/Stark/Woods: A Hero or A Failure? In Hurston’s novel, Their Eyes Were Watching God, the most prevalent imagery consistent throughout the whole novel is of nature, both beautiful and powerful. Nature’s temperament gradually shifts from an innocent ideal into a destructive force in synchronization with Janie’s life. Janie’s wish is to be in a loving marriage, represented by the pear tree and blossoms; however, once she finally achieves this desire, the hopeful nature she had once longed
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Henry David Thoreau’s Walden, published in 1854, is a book composed of the author’s reflections on living simply for several years near Walden Pond. One of the final chapters of this book entitled “Spring” opens the gateway for a physical and metaphorical change in the author’s life. This chapter will be examined through several topics including historical context, the audience, the speaker and the text itself in an attempt to analyze the rhetoric utilized by Thoreau. “Spring” calls forth a transformative
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One of the most important inventions of the past two hundred years is, of course, the automobile. The automobile has been around since before the 1900s and has continued to evolve since then. From the time the automobile started to where it is now, it almost seems like a new invention. Initially, most cars of the time all looked the same, with some slight differences here and there. When looking at cars today, some of the most noticeable difference from decades ago are safety features, gas mileage
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