A Division of Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Heinemann

Dynamic duo. Dynamic duo.

At the bottom line, the relationship between a coach and her principal is paramount. more »

Come to Class

Lessons for High School Writers

Carol Jago, Santa Monica High School, California

ISBN 978-0-325-01295-7 / 0-325-01295-4 / 2008 / 416pp / Paperback
Imprint: FirstHand
Availability: In Stock
Grade Level: 9th - 10th
*Price and availability subject to change without notice.

StarMore Products From Carol Jago

 

List Price: $87.50
Web/School: $70.00


 

 

Teaching students to write well is hard. Team teaching with a master writing teacher can make it easier—and more productive. Come to Class offers you that opportunity. In Come to Class, Carol Jago shares the writing lessons and classroom survival skills she honed over 32 years of teaching. Each lesson describes Carol’s teaching moves and language and includes suggestions on pacing the lesson, setting students up for success, organizing flexible groups, and troubleshooting common classroom management problems.

 

Organized around five fundamental types of writing—expository writing, persuasive writing, writing about literature, narrative writing, and reflective writing—Come to Class will help you personalize your writing curriculum while at the same time it will support you as you prepare your students for district assessments.

 

To download sample lessons or to learn more visit: www.lessonsforhighschoolwriters.com

 

Through its five writing units Come to Class offers a systematic method for teaching the various types of writing.

 

Writing to Explain highlights the relationship between writers and readers and helps students explain themselves clearly, convincingly, and cohesively.

 

Writing to Persuade focuses on persuasive writing and, using a wide variety of literary and rhetorical examples, demonstrates how teachers can help students craft effective essays.

 

Writing About Literature offers novel methods for helping students write both analytically and insightfully about poetry, plays, short stories, novels, and literary nonfiction.

 

Narrative Writing teaches students how to use the features of fiction—anecdote, dialogue, setting, tone—to tell stories and to enliven analytical essays.

 

Reflective Writing invites students to explore important issues in personal essays that go beyond simple autobiography and use personal experience as a springboard for analysis.

 

Each unit contains an opening essay, seven lessons, and the texts, templates, and rubrics that students need to successfully compose a specific type of writing. By the end of each unit, students will have planned, drafted, revised, edited, and assessed a finished essay or story.

Label companion resources
Label support materials
Label product support
Reviews

PD Resources From Carol Jago

Speakers

  • Invite Carol Jago to speak at your school, district, or conference through Heinemann Speakers.

No sales resources available for this title