Monday, 10 July 2023

SUMMER EF56 Class 5 paragraphs, compound sentences

 

Paragraph – collection of sentences on one topic (approx. 4 minimum, often 7,8,10)

                     -EF6, EF7/Eng 10, Eng 11, Eng 12 about 150-250 words

                    

Grade 12 Provincial Exams-

“In paragraph form and in at least 150 words, answer question 1...”

-150-250 ww- the Goldilocks Zone- not too long, not too short

 

IDIOM  the Goldilocks Zone, a happy medium, a good compromise

 

com- together

promise- agreement

 

-a paragraph is a pretty short piece of writing, compact

-not an essay

 

CHARACTERISTICS OF A PARAGAPH

**has to be focussed on the topic

**get to the point quickly, stay on the point

**no room for wandering around the topic

**has to be well-organized-  make a plan before you write, make a few notes, brainstorm some key words, getting vocab,  make a plan before to write sentences

 

-longer pieces- long essay, paper (5-10-20 pages), more room to maneuvre, scope for exploration

 

A paragraph is about one thing, one topic.

paragraph – so short- has to really focussed, well-organized, laser sharp

 

TIMES

EF3/4 – (70-90m)

EF5/6- (50m-55m)  paragraph (150-250 ww)

EF67- (45-50m)

English 12 -much shorter amount of time (~20-25m)

 

Over the next few courses-EF5/6, EF7, Eng11, Eng12- there will be a speeding up for the writing time.

Time allotments will get shorter.

 

NATURAL REACTION -stress, anxiety, worry, panic!

Practicing may/will help to reduce the nerves.

Everything will be ok. I am/We are on your side!

 

* Source of anxiety, feel rushed, feel nervous, worried, emotional reaction  – time pressure, pressure to write good sentences, pressure to write good verbs, pressure to use good punctuation, pressure to give a good answer, brain fog- mind goes blank

 

MY ADVICE:

-mitigate these responses with good planning and practice

***take a few minutes and make a plan before you start writing the sentences of your paragragh

 

VOCAB mitigate(v) – make a difficult situation easier

e.g. In order to mitigate this problem, we are going to delay the project for two weeks.

 

 

*Writing a good paragraph and writing it quickly is a challenge. It is a challenge that you can rise to.

 

EUPHEMISM – a polite word that we use when we don’t want to use the real word

bathroom, restroom, washroom

pass away

challenge- difficult

 

 

There are steps we can take to make it easier.

Process and practice will make writing paragraphs less stressful, more routine.

routine – everyday, not emotional, not stressful, run-of-the-mill

 

We can learn to ameliorate that stress that we feel when we face difficult new tasks.

 

VOCAB ameliorate- make something bad better

 

Practice is the secret to improving.

Practice makes perfect.

 

For paragraph tests, I will always give as clear a topic as I can.

e.g. “Do you agree that marijuana should be legal in Canada?”

-opinion + 3-4 good reasons

 

 

 STRUCTURE OF A PARAGRAPH- Western school structure, academic writing

 

Structure of a Paragraph:

-Grabber/Hook

-Topic sentence – topic, controlling idea

-Supporting sentences

-Concluding sentence

 

1. Grabber- (optional) also called a Hook

          -usually the first sentence of your paragaph

-attention-getting sentence

          -pulls the reader in

- makes them want to read your paragraph

          **7 ways to do grabbers**

** I will teach grabbers**

 

OPTIONAL – HIGHLY RECOMMENDED

MY ADVICE: When you are writing a paragraph or essay, begin your paragraph or essay with a grabber/hook.

 

Grabbers/Hooks

-usually first sentence, before the Topic Sentence

-grabs the reader’s attention, hooks your reader attention

-makes them pay attention, makes them want to read your writing

-effective attention-getting device for writing, highly recommended

 

MY ADVICE: Use a grabber. It will make your writing way more interesting.

 

PARAGRAPH STRUCTURE

Grabber

Topic sentence

Supporting sentences

Concluding sentence

 

Good for paragraphs, for essays, for speeches

 

 

 

 

 

 

Seven different kinds of grabbers top choose from:

1.    -general to specific statement, a funnel

-say something big and general, then narrow it down to specific topic

funnel

 

 \   /

  ||

    

Marijuana paragraph

 

                     Everybody likes to have fun, but we should be careful how we have fun. Many people think using marijuana is fun, but it is actually very danderous. Therefore, marijuans should not be legal in Canada.

 

                     Everybody wants to have success in their lives. Everybody wants to achieve their goals. Using goalsetting techniques can help us to accomplish the objectives we want to accomplish. Grabbers. Topic Sentence

goalsetting techniques- making specific, realistic, measureable, time-bound plans

 

2.    -write a short anecdote- short personal story, very short (1-2 short sentences)

 

personalizes your writing, establishes a connection to your reader,

establishes empathy- same feeling
sympathy – feel sorry about someone’s situation

anecdote is told first-person “I”

first person is very personal, friendly-sounding, close

You can identify with them.

 

                     When I was younger, I always had trouble realizing the goals that I dreamed about for myself. Then I learned about Goalsetting. This changed everything for me! Now, I will teach you.

 

3.    -historical reference- knowledge about history

                     Throughout history, women have usually been in less powerful positions than men. These days, women have been claiming their rights to equality.

 

4.    -fact or statistic- numbers

                     80%, four out of five, 2/3 of ..., 37,000,000 people...

 

   People who use Goalsetting techniques to help them achieve their goals have a 65% higher chance of achieving their goals than people who do not. (bbc.com)

 

5.    -ask a question (answered by the topic sentence or thesis statement) PROBABLY THE EASIEST WAY

                     How do you keep yourself on track? What steps do you take when you want to achieve something new in your life? Goalsetting works for many people. It might work for you, too.

 

6.    -relevant quotation by a famous/important person

Dr. Jordan Peterson says, “Make a plan. A plan is not a prison. It is a guide.”

“Make a plan. A plan is not a prison. It is a guide.” This was said by Dr. Jordan Peterson.

 

Barack Obama once said, “Blah blah blah.”

My mother always used to say, “Blah blah blah.”

Buddha said, “Life is suffering. We must have empathy for all living creatures.”

Mao Zhe Dong said, “Women hold up half the sky.”

 

PRO TIP: Books of quotations.- Have some quotations in your memory. It is very helpful to reference when you are writing.

Look up quotations organized by theme.

 

7.                 -relevant idiom from any language, proverb, saying

                     -don’t translate well, have a lot of meaning

                     -these can be really fun and colourful

In Chinese, we say that a good career is a ‘golden rice bowl.’

In Farsi, we say that a person who is making good money has their “bread in the oil.”

There is a saying in Japanese: ‘Even monkeys fall from trees.’ It means everyone makes mistakes. It’s important to keep going after you did something wrong.

 

IDIOM         The apple doesn’t fall far from the tree. (English)

                     Christmas cake. (Japanese)

                     Playing piano/violin to a cow. (Chinese)

                     Pearls before swine. (English) -showing beautiful pearls to a

                                                                        pig

 

REVIEW of ways to do grabbers/hooks:

1.    funnel

2.    anecdote

3.    historical

4.    fact/statistic

5.    question

6.    quotation

7.    idiom/saying

 

Choose one. Start your paragraph off with it. It will make your paragraph, essay, or presentation lively and engaging.

 

PRO ADVICE: When writing a paragraph or essay, write the grabber last. You can mull it over (think about it, roll it around in your mind) as you are writing the rough draft. A good grabber might jump out at you. If not, if you can’t think of anything for a grabber, just ask a question. The question is the easiest way to do a grabber.

 

 

2. Topic sentence- essential, can’t skip it, need it!

-introduces the main idea/topic of the paragraph

-helps the reader know what the paragraph is about and what your take on the topic will be

                               -focusses on the question that was asked

-TS has to relate directly to the question that the teacher asked

 

3. Body sentences – supporting sentences

          -explain, describe, give examples, etc

          -all related to the topic sentence

          -focussed on the topic sentence

          -support the topic sentence

 

4. Concluding sentence- final sentence

-summary of the main points

OR

-restatement of the

topic sentence- same idea, different words

-way to wrap up the paragraph smoothly and naturally

-the paragraph will not end abruptly

-lighter, personal, academic

 

STRUCTURE OF A PARAGRAPH

Grabber (optional, but highly recommended)

Topic sentence

Body sentences/supporting sentences

Concluding sentence

(150-250 words)

 

 

WtC (Writing to Communciate) p3 “Golden Week”

 

POINTERS FOR READING ALOUD: take a break at periods

                                                              commas are breath marks

                                                              rising and falling tone

                                                              drop your tone at periods

                                                  

 

Organization:

Grabber

Topic sentence

Supporting sentences

Concluding sentence

 

Model Paragraph #1

“Golden Week” paragraph

 

Golden Week

How does it look on the page?

It looks like a paragraph- neat and organized

- one block of writing

- first word indented

- double-spaced

 

 

*Topic sentence – sets up expectation for the reader

          Golden Week, Japan, four days

 

topic and controlling idea

-topic- the subject of the paragraph, the topic that will be addresses

-controlling idea- your take on the topic, your focus, the direction you are going go with the topic, limits the scope of the paragraph, focusses, the reader knows what to expect

Our job as writers is to set the parameters of the paragraph and then satdify those parameters.

 

Golden week is Japan is a combined celebration of four holidays.

 

*Supporting sentences

Support #1- ‘first’

 Point - subpoint

 

Support #2 ‘second’

 Point – subpoint

 

Support #3 ‘next’

 Point - subpoint

 

Support #4 ‘fourth’

 Point – subpoint, subpoint, subpoint, subpoint

 

Why? Why change the stucture? -most important point, explain more, cultural value

There are reasons why you can break the pattern. Have a good reason. Be aware of your pattern.

 

Concluding sentence -wrap-up, way to end the writing, bring it to a conclusion, nice, gentle, land the airplane, like saying ‘Goodbye’ on the phone

 

The stucture is basic. Tomorrow you can try one.

 

 

** Establish a structure to follow: point+ subpoint

 

There is no grabber in this paragraph.

-missed opportunity

-good idea to use a grabber

 

 

REVIEW

paragraph – organized collection of sentences, all on the same topic, one topic

– express your idea in full within a short format

 

Your main point of contact with teachers, instructors, professors, customers, etc, will be through writing.

The ability to construct and formulate a coherent, organized piece of writing is a wonderful gift that you can give yourself.

It is wonderful thing to be able to write something that is clear.

 

coherent- following a logical order, well-organized, makes sense, no ? when the reader is reading

 

cohere(v) The restaurant must cohere to food handling requirements.

adhere(v) – connect to, glue  adhesive-glue

coherent(adj) incoherently(adv) The man on the bus was talking incoherently.

The piano teacher explained very coherently how to place your fingers on the keyboard.

 

 

likely 6-8 approximately, around 150 words approx.

I’m not counting the words.

- not too short, not too long- Goldilocks range

 

IDIOM Goldilocks zone- just right, not too much, not too little

 

90 words is too short, 300 words is too long

Students are much more likely to go long than short.

 

150-220 words is the ‘sweet spot’

‘sweet spot’ a good spot

IDIOM sweet spot – sports term

‘sweet spot’ – the best place to hit a ball, tennis racquet, ping pong, baseball bat, golf club

 

pitcher- throws the ball

catcher- catches the ball

batter- tries to hit the ball with the bat

umpire – call strikes and balls

You can watch a ballgame at Nat Bailey Stadium close to Hillcrest Community Centre near QE Park.

 

*How to count your words: word processor on computer – word count

MS Word, Googledocs, Notes (free with Apple)

 

*How to count your words on paper: count two lines and multiply

 

College – 1500, 2500-word paper

 

 

USEFUL TRANSITIONAL TERMS

 

Sequence- Time-order transitional words:

first, second, third, firstly, secondly, at first, first of all, to begin with, in the first place

secondly, in the second place

next, then, after that,

also, at the same time, for now, for the time being

in time, in turn, later on, soon, later, earlier, simultaneously, afterward

 

Summarizing – alternatives to in conclusion

after all, all in all, all things considered, briefly, by and large, finally, in any case, in a nutshell, in the end, in any event, in brief, in short, in summary, in the final analysis, in the long run, on balance, on the whole, to sum up, to summarize,

 

By and large, Golden Week is...

 

Try some new words when you are writing. Stretch your vocabulary. Stretch your word usage. Challenge yourself. It is the only way to grow.

 

Practice:

Do you think marijuana should be legal in Canada?

OR

Why did you move to Canada?

 

Course on action:

1. Make a clear plan.

2. Write your sentences.

 

GOAL: Getting comfortable organizing and writing paragraphs.

 

 

Title: Why did you move to Canada?

 

TS      I moved to Canada for three reasons.

There are many reasons why I moved to Canaa, but three of them are most important.

1.clean air and water/good environment

2.education system- learn English, for your children

3.job opportunities

4.freedom, rights

5.safe, peaceful

6.people are friendly

7.healthcare

8.new challenges

9.close to the US

10.be close to family

11.meet new international friends

 


COMPOUND SENTENCES

 

Sentence styles:

SIMPLE

COMPOUND

COMPLEX

COMPOUND-COMPLEX

 

*SIMPLE    SV   SSV   SVV   SSVV   Imperative (command)   Question (interrogative)

 

SIMPLE SENTENCES

It is overcast today. We will go for a walk on the beach. 2 SIMPLE SENTENCES

 

*COMPOUND – two simple sentences, join then together into one

 

It is sunny today. JOIN We will go for a walk on the beach.

 

How do you join them together?

 

FANBOYS – 7 coordinating conjunctions used for compound sentences

FANBOYS – for and nor but or yet so

FANBOYS  for and nor but or yet so   mnemonic, memory device

 

TRUTH   , FANBOYS not realistic, not that useful, not authentic English

 

In compound sentences: for nor yet rarely used in compound sentences by English speakers

-taught in grammar books, but not often used

 

 

-for  

Maria is going to carry her umbrella, for it is going to rain. VERY UNUSUAL, sounds like a grammar book, doesn’t sound like a real English speaker

MORE LIKELY: Maria is going to carry her umbrella because it is going to rain. COMPLEX SENT, ADVERB CLAUSE- will learn next week

because/since/as

 

-nor   Joan does not like dogs, nor does she like cats.  VERY UNUSUAL, NOT AUTHENTIC ENGLISH, like a grammar book

MORE LIKELY: Joan does not like dogs or cats. SIMPLE

 

You probably studied ‘neither...nor’. We don’t talk like that.

“either … or” – occasionally , not often

 

You can either get a new video game or a new pair of sneakers for your birthday.

 

-yet   It is cloudy today, yet it is still warm. NOT AUTHENTIC, SOUNDS WEIRDLY FORMAL

MORE LIKELY: It is overcast today, but it is still warm. AUTHENTIC

 

‘yet’ Are you finished yet? Have you had your supper, yet?

NOT A COMPOUND SENTENCE, SIMPLE SENTENCE

I didn’t do it yet.

 

SV , yet SV. XXX

 

 

MY ADVICE: Forget about ‘for’, ‘nor’, and ‘yet’ for compound sentences.

 

 

 

 

FANBOYS

SOBA

Forget about FANBOYS. Use SOBA. so or but and    New mnemonic

***These are the ones we use: so or but and ***

 

** When you think about compound sentences, think about a delicious plate of yakisoba.**

 

Let’s focus on SOBA.

 

Some teachers teach , FANBOYS. for and nor but or yet so

for nor yet Not commonly used

Why learn them if we don’t use them?

 

Focus on the four coordinating conjunctions that we use all the time:

, SOBA   , so   , or   , but   , and

 

Easier to remember: soba noodles- buckwheat noodles

yakisoba- Japanese noodles

 

 

**      FORM FOR COMPOUND SENTENCES:

SV, SOBA SV.

 

The cat is asleep. The dog is awake. 2 simple sentences

The cat is asleep. JOIN The dog is awake.

Join with , SOBA.

 

The cat is asleep, and the dog is awake. COMPOUND

The cat is asleep, but the dog is awake. COMPOUND

*NOTE: You need the comma.

I will teach you the details of punctuation.

 

DIFFERENCE BETWEEN SIMPLE AND COMPOUND

Mei loves dark chocolate but hates white chocolate. SIMPLE SVV

Mei loves dark chocolate, but she hates white chocolate. COMPOUND SV, SOBA SV.

 

COMPOUND:   SV, SOBA SV.

 

COMPARISON OF SIMPLE AND COMPOUND

SIMPLE-

Mei loves to dance but doesn’t like to sing.
SVV   Mei loves to dance but doesn’t like to sing.*

* no comma

Mei loves to dance, but doesn’t like to sing. XXX

* no comma in simple sentence

 

COMPOUND SV, SOBA SV.

Mei loves to dance, but she doesn’t like to sing.

Mei loves to dance, but she doesn’t like to sing.*

*need a comma

 

Can you see the difference?

 

Mei loves to dance but doesn’t like to sing. SIMPLE

Mei loves to dance, but she doesn’t like to sing. COMPOUND

Mei loves to dance but doesn’t like to sing. SIMPLE

Mei loves to dance, but she doesn’t like to sing. COMPOUND

 

Mike and John are heading to the school and chatting with each

other. SIMPLE  SSVV

Mike and John are heading to the school, and they are chatting with each COMPOUND  SSV, and SV.

 

LIST He likes dogs, cats, fish and turtles. SIMPLE

 

Commas with a list:

He likes dogs, cats, fish and turtles.

He likes dogs, cats, fish, and turtles. Oxford comma- a little bit old-fashioned

 

Your choice:

She lived in Canada, Japan and Chad.

She lived in Canada, Japan, and Chad.

 

 

STEP 1 for compound sentences:

SIMPLE SVV

I like dark chocolate but hate white chocolate.

 

COMPOUND SV, SOBA SV

I love dark chocolate, but I hate white chocolate.

 

 

COMPOUND SENTENCES

Example of , SOBA.

REMINDER: SOBA is an alternative to FANBOYS

 

SOBA  , so   , or   , but   , and

 

*  , so = give a reason

SV, so SV.

Misha’s son lives in Boston, so he is eager to visit him.

Janet really wants a new violin, so she is saving up her money to buy one.

 

*  , or = have a choice

SV, or SV.

You can work late tonight, or you can stay late tomorrow.

Sarah will go dancing tomorrow night, or she will stay home with her cat.

MY ADVICE TO MY CHILDREN: You can work hard when you’re young, or you can work hard when you’re old.

 

* , but = shows difference, contrast

Ling loves to go hiking, but she doesn’t like cycling. SV, but SV.

I like to visit the US, but I would not want to live there.

 

‘the states’ ‘the US’ ‘America

Her uncle lives in the states.

 

New York City- “the Big Apple”

Chicago- “the Windy City”

Vancouver- “Lotusland” “Raincouver”

 

* , and = add something

I can get the cake, and you get the plates.

Sarah plays volleyball, and Maria plays soccer.

 

 

Examples of compound sentences:

1.    Joe went to the store, and he bought some milk/groceries.

Joe went to the store, but the store was closed.

Joe went to the store, but he found it closed.

Joe went to the store, so he got the chocolate.

 

IDIOM: give your opinion- ‘find’

I find it warm in here. In my opinion, the room is too warm.

Shira found the curry spicy.

Ni finds the people in Vancouver very nice.

 

Try a few.

SV, SOBA SV.

5. The pizza smells delicious, so I buy some.  WEIRD

The pizza smells delicious, so I bought some. Vt OK

The pizza smells delicious, so I will buy some/a slice/a piece.

The pizza smells delicious, so I will buy a large.

The pizza smells delicious, but I won’t buy any.

The pizza smells delicious, and it looks appetizing.

appetite- your desire to eat

appetizer- a small snack to get your appetite going

She has a big appetite.

He lost his appetite after watching your brother eat.

He lost his appetite when he got Covid.

She has a huge appetite for music.

Canadians have a big appetite for hockey.

 

HW

Write a few (3-4) compound sentences using , SOBA and the vocab below. Email them to me by 7PM. We’ll share them tomorrow in class.

1. check

2. gorgeous

3. theatre

4. different

5. health

6. museum


No comments:

Post a Comment