Tuesday, 19 May 2026

P1 EF6 Class 18

 

Today’s Agenda

·      Attendance

·      Begin paragraph writing

·      Continue -simple future verb tense

·      Finish “The Cost of Living”

·      New dialogue “Interviewing for a Job”

 

Wednesday

·      Begin complex sentences- adverb clauses

·      Continue paragraph writing, Test coming up- paragraph

·      New dialogue “Interviewing for a Job”

 

 

 

**PAPER FORMAT for pass-in writing**

 

Quizzes and tests, paragraphs, essays

 

Please use lined ruled 8 1/2 X 11 inch paper.

You can get it at a dollar store. $1.25

 

ORIENTATION of the paper

right side up, not upside down

three holes to the left

 

 

NAME CLASS DATE

Put your full name, class, and date in the top/upper righthand corner above the line.

 

TITLE

Title line -Name of test, quiz

Quiz 1, Test 1, Quiz 1 RW

 

FORMAT

-Write in pen- black or blue ink

NOTE: Black ink gets higher marks on provincial exams.

Please! No pencil.

 

-Double space. Write on a line; then skip a line.

 

-Write between the margins.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Paragraphs

-Indent the first word of each paragraph- 2cm   ¾”   1”

 

Canada is a metric country; however, we still use Imperial measurements for a lot of things.

Metric system- cm km

Imperial- inch foot, mile

 

height- how tall you are

Metric 183cm, 173cm, 1.6m

Imperial 6 feet tall 6’ , five feet six inches 5’6”, 5’2”

  

 

“ inch e.g. 2”

‘ foot 6’     

6’2”  5’10” 

5’4”   “Doris is five four.”

 

If you are writing on a computer, how do you indent? What key do you press to indent?

Use the TAB key.

Press SPACE five times- amateur hour

 

 

Imperial – measurement – mile, foot, inch, gallon, pound

The US uses the Imperial system.

 

 

Metric and Imperial measurements

kilometre -mile  1mile = 1.6km

cm – inch   I inch – 2.54 cm

kg – pound I kg = 2.2 lbs

 

 

 

 

**

It’s easy to forget these details when you are focussed on writing.

When the formatting is right, it looks better.

 

Paragraph Format

format- layout

-         how a paragaph is presented on a page

 

1.    Use 8 ½ * 11 inch ruled paper

ruled – lined paper with margins

2.    Paper orientation- rightside up, not backwards

3.    Write between the margins (the red lines).

4.    Write in black or blue pen.

5.    Doublespace.

6.    Full name, class and date in top right corner

7.    Indent the first word of the paragraph

 

 

 

“Narrative Paragraph”

Structure of a Paragraph:

Grabber/Hook

Topic sentence – topic, controlling idea

Supporting sentences

Concluding sentence

 

Grabber- hooks your reader’s attention, grabs their attentiom

OPTIONAL – HIGHLY RECOMMENDED

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

Grabbers/Hooks- used in advertising

Grabber/Hook

-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, e.g. TED Talks https://www.ted.com/  TEDVancouver- downtown VPL

 

 

**

Seven different kinds of grabbers/hooks to choose from:

 

1.    - a funnel, general to specific statement

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

 

 \   /

  ||

    

 

NARRATIVE

                     Travelling to a new country is very exciting and often overwhelming. My first day after arriving in Vancouver was both of these.

 

 

                     Everybody has had an embarrassing experience. The time I met my husband’s parents for the first time was very embarrassing for me.

 

 

 

PROCESS

How to eat a taco.

GRABBER-FUNNEL

Some food is eaten with knife and fork; some food is eaten with chopsticks. However, tacos are eaten by hand. It can be a mess! TS

 

 

 

 

 

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

VOCAB anecdote- a short personal story that illustrates a point

 

personalizes your writing, establishes a connection to your reader,

establishes empathy- same feeling

anecdote is told first-person point-of-view “I”

first person is very personal, friendly-sounding, close

 

PROCESS

                     I eat a lot of tacos because my mother used to make them for me. They can be messy, but I will teach how to eat them.

 

 

 

3.    -historical reference- knowledge about history

PROCESS

                     Tacos are a traditional food from Mexico. However, that have spread of over the world. However, if you don’t know how to eat it, it will spread all over your shirt.

 

 

4.    -fact or statistic- numbers

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

 

                     10 million tacos are eaten every day in North America; also, billions of napkins are wasted wiping food off tables. I will teach you how to eat them more neatly.

 

 

 

 

5.    -ask a question, the topic sentence or thesis statement will be the answer PROBABLY THE EASIEST WAY

PROCESS

                     Are you a messy eater? Have you ever made a big mess eating tacos? Have you ever embarrassed yourself eating a taco?

If so, I can tell you how to do it right.

 

6.    -relevant quotation by a famous/important person

James Beard said, "Food is our common ground, a universal experience.” Another universal experience is dropping taco all over yourself.

 

 ***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.

Debating teams- technique to begin with a relevant quotation

 

GRAMMAR and PUNCTUATION FOR QUOTING DIRECT SPEECH

Jun said, I will be early tomorrow.

direct speech – exact word

Her mother said, “Be home by 10.”

“ “ quotation marks

single quotation marks ‘  

double quotation marks “    99.99% of the time

 

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

                     -sometimes don’t translate well

                     -have a lot of meaning

                     -these can be really fun and colourful

 

In Japanese, people say “Even monkeys fall from trees.”

In Mandarin, we say “If you are gold, you will shine eventually.”

In English, we say, “Cream rises to the top.”

In French, they say, “La creme de la creme.” The best of the best.

We say, “All that glitters is not gold.”

In Ukranian we say “A little gold is expensive, too.”

In Korean, we say, “Time is golden.”

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

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

In Farsi, we say a person fell in honey. That means that they got very lucky.

 

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 (music) to a cow. (Chinese)

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

                     pig

                     In one ear and out the other. – a person won’t listen to you

 

 

REVIEW of ways to do grabbers/hooks:

1.    funnel

2.    anecdote

3.    history

4.    fact/statistic

5.    question EASIEST

6.    quotation

7.    idiom/saying

 

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

 

PROFESSIONAL: 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.

 

 

PRACTICE:

Let’s get some ideas going for a narrative paragraph.

Choose one topic:

1. Write about your first day in Vancouver.

2. What would your perfect day be?

 

We can start building a paragraph. Finish for homework. Tomorrow, we will read them out loud.

IMPORTANT: Let’s not use translating apps, ChatGPT, etc.

 

 

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