Like every day, this is what we fill in when the bell rings.
What is our agenda?
Reading reduces the risk of _____.
What is dementia/depression/anxiety?
To build a habit of reading, you should read at the same ____ every day.
What is the same time?
According to the planners we made, a narrative has three parts: a ____, ______, and an _______.
What is beginning, middle, and end?
This is the day that our book logs are always due.
What is every Friday? (Except this one-- you just started)
What is my independent reading book?
Readers are ______.
What are leaders?
"I can't get better at reading" is an example of this.
What is a fixed mindset?
Narratives are different from essays because they ask you to write a ______, not an argument.
What is a story?
You must press this specific button on Google Classroom to get credit for your Book Log.
What is the "Submit" button?
This is what we'll do at the end of every class until April Break.
What is silent read?
Reading helps us become kinder. In other words, it helps us build ________.
What is empathy?
This is the right mindset to have when learning how to do anything, especially reading.
What is a growth mindset?
Narratives for MCAS almost always ask you to write from the _____ person perspective.
What is the first person perspective?
This is what you have to write inside of the reading log.
What is a summary of what I had read?
This will be our homework every day of the week.
What is independent reading?
Reading improves this side of the brain.
What is the left side?
If you're writing a narrative for an MCAS prompt, always stay true to how it ______.
What is starts?
If you already started your book, this is what you do differently when filling in the notes for 3/24 (today).
What is make the start number the page number I'm currently on?
This is the last day we read, and the last day before April Break.
What is April 14th?
A habit you attach to another habit (like reading) is called an ______.
What is an anchor?
All narratives begin by establishing these three key parts of a story:
What is character, setting, and conflict?