Introduction
Text Evidence
Explanation
Conclusion
Writing Skills
100

What word does the prompt you respond to start with?

Explain!

100

How many pieces of text evidence should you have?

Two!

100

Where do the explanations go?

After the text evidence!

100

What is the last thing you write in your ECR?

The conclusion!

100

What goes at the beginning of every sentence?

A capital letter!

200

Which part of the introduction should be in YOUR words?

Your Answer!
200

BONUS QUESTION

What do you need to ask for before you start your ECR? (Hint: It cannot be provided unless you ask...)

Scratch paper!

200

What should be longer: Text Evidence or Explanation?

Explanation!

200

How do you write a conclusion?

Restate your introduction!

200

Other than the first letter of a sentence, what else needs to be capitalized?

Proper Nouns! (Names of things/people)

300

How many ECR points could you ear WITHOUT an introduction?

Zero!

300

What are the TWO transition phrases you've been provided for starting text evidence?

"In the text it says," and "The author states"!

300

What do our explanations add to our ECRs?

Value!

300

BONUS QUESTION

How many sections should you have on your planning paper?

Six!

300

What word fits in this sentence (MUST SPELL)?

The students are (two, too, to) smart for STAAR.

Too!

400

What are the two ways Ms. Jones has taught you to answer the prompt in your introduction?

Make it Vague or List It!

400

Why do we provide Text Evidence in our ECRs?

- To provide the reader context

- To show how we found our answer in the passage

400

Why is evidence important in an ECR?

- It defends your TE
- It adds your thinking

400

Why do we write a conclusion in our ECRs?

To remind the reader of our main idea!

400

Where should the period go in the following:

The author states, "All of you will do amazing on your ECR"

Before the quotation mark!