Wednesday, 18 February 2026

P1 EF71011 Class 11

 

UPCOMING SENTENCE WORK:

Parallelism

Sentence combining

Using quotations marks to incorporate borrowed text.

 

Today’s Agenda

·         Attendance

·      Quarter 4-

Registration for Q4 will begin next month.

I do not know what I will be teaching in Q4 yet.

I will find out hopefully in a few weeks.

WI567- Writing Improvement 567- excellent course for writing

You are welcome to join if I am teaching it, if you want to.

I rarely teach Eng 11 or Eng 12.

When I find out what I am teaching, I’ll tell the class.

 

Composition 11 and Literary Studies 11- OPTION First Peoples 11

Composition 12 and Literary Studies 12- OPTION First Peoples 12

*Likely not at the same time. Comp/Lit11 and FP11

Composition – writing- sentences, paragraphs, essay, verb tense, verb form, etc.

 

English 12 New name- Composition 12 and Literary Studies 12

Media Studies 12 or Creative Writing 12- not in-class at SHEC, self-paced in Room 203

 

self-paced- you and a computer, no teacher, do at home, do your tests at SHEC

*We ask you to come in at least once a week to work in the school in Room 203.

Statistic- Across all of BC, 90+% of SP students do not finish their self-paced course.

Maybe you are the special 5-10%.

Analogy/comparison- January is the busiest month at the gym.

New Years Resolutions- lose weight, gain muscle

do not last long

What kind of person are you when it come to goals?
What is important for achieving goals:

consistency, hard work, motivation, discipline, schedule

short-term goals-

long-term goals-

 

cheapest gyms, fitness centre- Community Centre

 

Daily practice is the secret of achieving goals.

-writing

-speaking

-video games

-sports

-musical instruments

 

Tiny small steps add up.

 

Literary Studies- fiction and non-fiction

- fiction- short story, novel

-non-fiction-

 

·      Visual representations of Canadian nature

*Emily Carr paintings

lodge pole pine

cedar trees- cedar does not rot when it gets wet

https://www.vanartgallery.bc.ca/visit/

 

*Group of Seven paintings

 

·      Continue sentence work- “Complex Sentences”

·      Begin “I Confess”

 

Thursday

·      Continue sentence work

·      Continue “I Confess”

 

Return Test 2

Go over

Emphasis C1 & C5

Optional RW for one point.

Teach using quotation marks in academic writing “ 

 

Friday

·      “Self-Assessment Reflection” Week 3

·      Prepare for Test 3 on “I Confess” probably Monday

 

Monday

 

 

 

 

 

VOCAB

lit

literature- fiction, written stories- short stories, novels

literate(adj) able to read and write

illiterate(adj)- unable to read or write

Most humans were illiterate up to two hundred years ago.

literary(adj)- showing the traits of literature, stories

trait- characteristic

Honesty is a good trait in a person.

 

literacy(n)- the ability to read and write

When I was a kid, I wanted to teach literacy to adults.

 

WORD FORMS

happiness            honesty                freedom (n)

happy                   honest                  free (adj)

happily                 honestly               freely (adv)

In my country, people can not speak freely.

 

***

 

Begin “I Confess”

Chat groups of 4-5 people

Work on “Thought Questions”

 

 

 

Tuesday, 17 February 2026

P2 EF710 Class 10

 

UPCOMING SENTENCE WORK:

Complex sentences

Parallelism

Sentence combining

 

IDIOM chew the fat- talk casually, catch up, imply gossip

We went to dimsum and chewed the fat.

 

dimsum-special kind of Chinese restaurant

 

IDIOM spill the tea- gossip

Mei spilled the tea about her friend’s divorce.

 

VOCAB spill the beans- tell a secret

She spilled the beans about his new girlfriend even though he told her to keep her lip zipped.

Mei has a big mouth. She cannot keep a secret. She talk all the time.

He is a motormouth.

 

IDIOM juicy gossip

 

Today is Chinese New Years.

 

 

Today’s Agenda

·         Attendance

·      Finish outstanding sentence work:

Topic compound sentences

“Comma Splices” & “Transitional Terms EF7/10/11”

·      Sentence work- talk about clauses

What is a clause? What are different types of clauses?

·      “Writing Paragraph Six-Step Process”

·      Test2- paragraph on “What Happened During the Ice Storm” (last ~50m)

·      HW Read and prepare notes for “I Confess”

 

Wednesday

·      Continue sentence work- “Complex Sentences”

·      Begin “I Confess”

 

Thursday

·      Continue sentence work

·      Continue “I Confess”

 

Return Test 2

Go over

Emphasis C1 & C5

Optional RW for one point.

Teach “”

 

Friday

·      “Self-Assessment Reflection” Week 3

·      Prepare for Test 3 on “I Confess”

 

 

**

Comma Splices

 

Comma splices are related to run-on sentences.

A comma splice is two complete sentences (independent clauses) that are joined together with just a comma.

e.g.  I was tired, I went to bed early.

 

Both parts are simple sentences, so a comma by itself isn’t strong enough to join them together. A comma is meant to separate parts of a sentence, not connect two full sentences together on its own.

 

You can fix a comma splice in a number of ways:

I was tired, I went to bed early. XXX

 

1.    Use a period

I was tired. I went to bed early.

These are two simple sentences.

 

2.    Add a coordinating conjunction (SOBA) FANBOYS

I was tired, so I went to bed early.

This is a compound sentence.

 

3.    Use a semicolon  ;

I was tired; I went to bed early.

This is also a compound sentence.

 

4.    Use a semicolon with a transitional term.

I was tired; therefore, I went to bed early.

I was tired; consequently, I went to bed early.

I was tired; as a result, I went to bed early.

This is also a compound sentence.

 

5.    Make one clause dependent (usually an adverb clause)

I went to bed early because I was tired.

I went to bed since I was tired.

I went to bed as I was tired.

This is a complex sentence.

 

What is a clause?

-         a group of words that has a subject and a verb

Two types of clauses:

1.    independent clause, main clause- like a simple sentence

It is a nice day today.

 

2.    dependent clause, subordinate clause- not a full sentence

-adverb clauses

-noun clauses

-adjective clauses

 

Simple, compound, and complex sentences are made up of independent and dependent clauses. They are the building blocks of English.

building blocks- wooden blocks, Lego, etc.

 

 

Exercise 1

Each sentence below contains a comma splice. Choose some. Rewrite each sentence correctly by using one of the methods. Write the corrected sentences on your own paper.

 

Intermediate-level vocabulary

1.    I finished my homework, I went to bed early.

2.    She enjoys reading, she likes hiking.

3.    The meeting started late, everyone was understanding.

4.    He trained for weeks, he felt unprepared.

5.    The coffee was too strong, I couldn’t finish it.

6.    They planned the trip carefully, it played out seamlessly.

7.    The store was crowded, there was nowhere to sit.

8.    She saved enough money, she bought a new phone.

9.    The instructions were confusing, many students made mistakes.

10.                       We arrived early, the doors were already closed.

 

Higher-level vocabulary

1.    The project looked simple at first, unexpected issues kept appearing.

2.    She practiced the speech repeatedly, he felt confident.

3.    The train was delayed repeatedly, the passengers grew impatient.

4.    The instructions seemed clear, most of the students were able to do the exercise.

5.    The team worked late into the night, they made steady progress.

6.    The restaurant received great reviews online, we found the service and food to be excellent.

7.    He tried to remain optimistic, frustration showed in his tone.

8.    They agreed on the main goals, the details caused disagreement.

9.    The package was marked as delivered, nobody could find it. XXX

Even though the package was marked as delivered, nobody could find it.

The package was marked as delivered, but nobody could find it.

The package was marked as delivered; unfortunately, nobody could find it.

unfortunately   however   strangely   weirdly-odd, unusual

There was a weird guy on the bus talking to his hat.

bizarre, peculiar

 

bazaar- outdoor market

She haggled at the bazaar.

bargain(v)

bargain(n) – a good price

She got a bargain on Mandarin oranges.

 

The package was marked as delivered; nobody could find it.

The package was marked as delivered even though nobody could find it.

 

These are simple, compound, and complex sentences. All of our sentences have to be one of these.

We will keep working on them.

 

 

**

WRITING PROCESS: This is the process that many people follow. This is what I do. It works for me and many other people. It might work for you too.

 

*** PREWRITING STAGE (planning stage) ***  5-10m

 

1. Read the question carefully. Read it five times. Read every word. Make sure you understand what the teacher is asking you to do. You have to be on-topic.

 

2. Brainstorm some ideas. Generate ideas. Brainstorm vocabulary. Choose the best 3-4 points. Make the points very clear.

 

3. Organize the ideas in a logical order. Put them in order of how you want to present them. Choose one organizational principle:        

1. order of importance

2. order of time

3. order of place

 

 

*** Writing Stage ***

4. Write the first draft (first copy) (at least 150 ww)

Topic sentence

Supporting sentences

Concluding sentence

Write the sentences of your paragraph. Make sure each sentence is a real sentence. Every sentence has to be simple, compound, or complex.

 

5. Proofread and edit the sentences. Doublecheck your problem areas: e.g. vt vf sp punc

 

6. Submit the proofread and edited rough draft. It must be legible, but it does not have to be perfectly written.

 

 

7. I will mark the writing and give comments. I will give it back to you.

 

8. You can do an optional RW for a bonus point.

 

 

 

Paragraph Structure and Writing Process

        OPTIONAL Grabber, Hook (I will teach this in a couple days)

        Topic sentence- make sure it addresses the question directly

        Supporting ideas- 3,4,5 ideas that you want to write about

        Concluding sentence

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

**

Don’t retell the plot of the short story.

 

Test 2

Dividers

Take out several sheets of paper

You can have the story out.

You can have “Transitional Terms” out

All other notes, phones, devices put away.

 

Write a well-organized paragraph of at least 150 words on the following topic:

Why did the boys decide to save the pheasants?

 

P1 EF71011 Class 10

 

UPCOMING SENTENCE WORK:

Complex sentences

Parallelism

Sentence combining

 

 

Today’s Agenda

·         Attendance

·      Finish outstanding sentence work:

Topic compound sentences

“Comma Splices” & “Transitional Terms EF7/10/11”

·      Sentence work- talk about clauses

What is a clause? What are different types of clauses?

·      “Writing Paragraph Six-Step Process”

·      Test2- paragraph on “What Happened During the Ice Storm” (last ~50m)

·      HW Read and prepare notes for “I Confess”

 

Wednesday

·      Continue sentence work- “Complex Sentences”

·      Begin “I Confess”

 

Thursday

·      Continue sentence work

·      Continue “I Confess”

 

Friday

·      “Self-Assessment Reflection” Week 3

·      Prepare for Test 3

 

 

 

**

Continue sentence work

Comma Splices

 

Comma splices are related to run-on sentences.

A comma splice is two complete sentences (independent clauses) that are joined together with just a comma.

e.g.  I was tired, I went to bed early.

 

Both parts are simple sentences, so a comma by itself isn’t strong enough to join them together. A comma is meant to separate parts of a sentence, not connect two full sentences together on its own.

 

You can fix a comma splice in a number of ways:

 

1.    Use a period

I was tired. I went to bed early.

These are two simple sentences.

 

2.    Add a coordinating conjunction (SOBA)

FANBOYS   SOBA- way more useful

I was tired, so I went to bed early.

This is a compound sentence.

 

3.    Use a semicolon  ;

I was tired; I went to bed early.

This is also a compound sentence.

 

4.    Use a semicolon with a transitional term.

I was tired; therefore, I went to bed early.

This is also a compound sentence.

 

5.    Make one clause dependent (usually an adverb clause)

I went to bed early because I was tired.

This is a complex sentence.

 

What is a clause?

A clause is a group of words that has a subject and verb.

two kinds of clauses:

-independent clause (main clause)- same as a simple sentence

          It is chilly today.

          Mei loves to sing and dance.

          -dependent clause (subordinate clause)- part of a sentence

          Because he wants to get a new phone.

 

*independent clause-main clause- like a simple sentence

*dependent clause-subordinate clause- not a complete sentence

phrase- group of words with no SV

e.g. prepositional phrase

in the park   beside the stream   on top of the house

 

either-either

neither-neither

potato-potato

tomato- tomato

 

Different vocab in North America and the UK (United Kingdom)

sweater      jumper

elevator     lift

fall               autumn

car trunk    car boot

car hood    car bonnet

pants           trousers

underwear pants

washroom/bathroom           toilet   WC (the water closet)

 

 

Spelling

US               Canada and UK

color           colour

center         centre

 

 

Exercise 1

Each sentence below contains a comma splice. Choose some. Rewrite each sentence correctly by using one of the methods. Write the corrected sentences on your own paper.

 

Intermediate-level vocabulary

1.    I finished my homework, I went to bed early.

2.    She enjoys reading, she likes hiking.

3.    The meeting started late, everyone was understanding.

4.    He trained for weeks, he felt unprepared.

5.    The coffee was too strong, I couldn’t finish it.

6.    They planned the trip carefully, it played out seamlessly.

7.    The store was crowded, there was nowhere to sit.

8.    She saved enough money, she bought a new phone.

9.    The instructions were confusing, many students made mistakes.

10.                       We arrived early, the doors were already closed.

 

Higher-level vocabulary

1.    The project looked simple at first, unexpected issues kept appearing.

2.    She practiced the speech repeatedly, he felt confident.

3.    The train was delayed repeatedly, the passengers grew impatient.

4.    The instructions seemed clear, most of the students were able to do the exercise.

5.    The team worked late into the night, they made steady progress.

6.    The restaurant received great reviews online, we found the service and food to be excellent.

7.    He tried to remain optimistic, frustration showed in his tone.

8.    They agreed on the main goals, the details caused disagreement.

9.    The package was marked as delivered, nobody could find it.

 

FIXES

The package was marked as delivered, but / yet nobody could find it.

SECRET INFORMATION ‘yet’ is not commonly used

The package was marked as delivered; however, nobody could find it.

however   nevertheless   strangely   unfortunately   nonetheless-less commonly used

The package was marked as delivered. Nobody could find it.

The package was marked as delivered; nobody could find it.

nobody = no one

Although / Even though the package was marked as delivered, nobody could find it.

 

HIGHER LEVEL -adjective clause

Nobody could find the package that was marked as delivered.

 

8.    He reviewed the document one last time, it all looked good.

He reviewed the document one last time; thankfully, it all looked good.

The document that he reviewed one last time all looked good.

He reviewed the document one last time, and it all looked good.

 

 

SENTENCE TYPES: simple, compound, complex

Every time you write a sentence, it has to be simple, compound, or complex.

Let’s take a few minutes to practice a little bit more.

We will keep working on these and practicing.

 

**

WRITING PROCESS: This is the process that many people follow. This is what I do. It works for me and many other people. It might work for you too.

 

A) PREWRITING (planning)- 5-10m

 

1. Read the question carefully. Read it five times. Read every word. Make sure you understand what the teacher is asking you to do. You have to be on-topic.

 

2. Brainstorm some ideas. Generate ideas. Brainstorm vocabulary. Choose the best 3-4 points. Make the points very clear.

 

3. Organize the ideas in a logical order. Put them in order of how you want to present them. Choose one organizational principle:        

1. order of importance

2. order of time

3. order of place

 

 

*** Writing Stage ***

4. Write the first draft (first copy) (at least 150 ww)

Topic sentence

Supporting sentences

Concluding sentence

Write the sentences of your paragraph. Make sure each sentence is a real sentence. Every sentence has to be simple, compound, or complex.

 

5. Proofread and edit the sentences. Doublecheck your problem areas: e.g. vt vf sp punc

 

6. Submit the proofread and edited rough draft. It must be legible.

 

7. I will mark the writing and give comments. I will give it back to you.

 

8. You can do an optional RW for a bonus point.

 

 

 

Paragraph Structure and Writing Process

        OPTIONAL Grabber, Hook (I will teach this in a couple days)

        Topic sentence- make sure it addresses the question directly

        Supporting ideas- 3,4,5 ideas that you want to write about

        Concluding sentence

 

 

 

 

**

Don’t retell the plot of the short story.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Test 2

Dividers

Take out several sheets of paper

You can have the story out.

You can have “Transitional Terms” out

All other notes, phones, devices put away.

 

Write a well-organized paragraph of at least 150 words on the following topic:

Why did the boys change their minds at the climax of the story?

Thursday, 12 February 2026

P2 EF710 Class 9

 

UPCOMING SENTENCE WORK:

Complex sentences

Parallelism

 

Today’s Agenda

·         Attendance

·      Talk about HW, RWs and phone usage

·      Titling documents to pass in- full name, period, class, date

·      “Self-Assessment Reflection” Week 2

·      Continue “Literary Terms”- theme, foreshadowing

·      Continue “Ice Storm” module

·      Talk about Test 2 paragraph on Tuesday

·      Distribute “Transitional Terms EF7/10/11”

·      Finish outstanding sentence work: “Verbs with Simple Sentences” and “Compound Sentences”

·      HW  Read “I Confess” for Tuesday. Prepare notes for “Thought

Questions” for discussion.

 

 

Friday- No school for you-

-Professional Development- teacher training day

- My focus tomorrow: students with autism

 

Saturday

-Valentines Day

 

Monday- No school

-BC Family Day

-Chinese New Year’s Eve

 

Tuesday

-Back in school

·      Sentence work- talk about clauses

What is a clause? What are different types of clauses?

·      Test2- paragraph on “What Happened During the Ice Storm”

 

Wednesday

 

 

 

 

**

Homework- usually some class time, read a story- several days to read and makes notes. My expectation and the school expectation is that students are engaged in the curriculum (school work).

 

RW- rewrites  Test/Quiz   Correct and RW on new paper.

I check it over quickly and give the extra point.

RWs have to handed in the same day or first thing the next day.

I won’t give points to late RWs.

Student will be doing their HW and RW while I am teaching.

 

Phone usage- mostly no problem

scrolling

I am not the phone police.

I have to support the VSB policies.

 

REMINDER

Titling documents to pass in- full name, period, class, date

Remember:

Full name

Period

Course

Date

 

Every day I get about 50 pieces of paper from students.

If I don’t know your period and course, I can’t give you the points.

 

**

“Self-Assessment Reflection” Week 2

 

 

**

“I Confess”

class monitor

monitor- special speakers for musicians to hear what they are playing and singing

monitor(v)- pay close attention

Her daughter had a fever. She monitored her temperature.

He had a heart monitor in the hospital. (n)

heart check name? You wear a heart monitor for 24 hours.

She is good about monitoring her blood pressure.

A diabetic has to monitor their blood sugar levels.

 

* *

More Literary Terms

 

supernatural- beyond nature- magic, superstition, witches, aliens, fortune-tellers, tarot cards, Ouija board, vampires, werewolves, astrology- star signs, fengshui, voodoo, etc.

 

 

1.     Theme is the central idea or message about human nature that is at the heart of a literary work. In fiction, the theme is usually not intended to be instructive, except in stories like fables. The theme of a story may address a certain issue without making a clear judgement on the issue. Also, the theme of a story is usually not presented directly.

 

watch good movies, read good books- learn about humanity, learn about ourselves

 

“Ice Storm” deeper themes

-be kind to living things weaker than you

-empathy comes from stopping and noticing what is the right thing to do even when it is hard

-high-status people treating low-status people

theme- What kind of person are you/am I? How do I treat people who are vulnerable or defenseless?

-showing respect, treating people with dignity

 

CHINESE Judge by the deeds, not the intention.

 

English literature class- talk about deep ideas

In my normal life, I don’t get to talk about deep ideas usually.

 

 

2.     Foreshadowing refers to the use of indicative words or phrases and hints that set the stage for a story to unfold and give the reader a hint of something that is going to happen without revealing the story or spoiling the suspense. Foreshadowing is used to suggest an upcoming outcome to the story.

fore- ahead, forward, coming first

 

forelegs

hind legs

cues, signs, clues

 

superstitious – bad omen

good omens- lucky numbers

 

shadow- darkness from blocking the light

 

Chekhov’s gun- foreshadowing

Anton Chekhov-

 

IDIOM shadow(v) follow someone at their work

The medical students shadowed the doctor when she did her rounds.

 

mentor(n,v) – supervisor, close teaching and supporter, inspiring guide

trainer, manager

 

 

3.     Flashback is a literary device wherein the author depicts the occurrence of specific events which have taken place before the events that are currently unfolding in the story. Flashback devices that are commonly used are past narratives by characters, depictions and references of dreams and memories. Flashback is used to create a background to the present situation, place or person.

 

 

 

**

“What Happened During the Ice Storm”

 

Test 2- Tuesday

Last 55m of class

Paragraph

Organize and write a paragraph

-at least 150 ww (150-250ww Goldilocks Zone)

-double space

-write between margins

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

I will ask you a basic question about the story, nothing tricky.

e.g. Why do the boys go out to get the pheasants?

 

PLAN

1. harvest the pheasants- catch and kill for food

2. curious, see what the adults were doing, follow the adults, act like the adults

3.adventure, something exciting, try something new

 

Do not retell the plot.

 

WRITE:

Write your ideas into sentences. – each point will be 2-3 sentences, explain and expand

 

STRUCTURE OF A PARAGRAPH

Topic sentence

Supporting sentences

Concluding sentence

 

I’m looking for a well-organized paragraph written with good sentences.

You can have the story out when you do the test. Don’t copy from the story. Use your own words and sentences to write about the question.

 

 

**

Choices:

1.Prepare for Test2 “Ice Storm”

2.Read “I Confess” and make noted

3.Work on sentence work- “Simple Sentences” “Compound Sentences”

NEW “Complex Sentences”