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I Choosing a Book 1 You must read a book. State requirements are for you to read 8-10 books this year (ELA 11 Michigan Merit Curriculum Course Requirements, Page x ). Framing the requirement in this manner encourages reading short books. If you wish to read longer books, you may use a modified requirement as follows:
8 books @ 190 pgs each = 1520 pages per year, or 1520/4=380 pages per quarter.
Magazines, newspapers, and comic books don't have the quantity of text you need to develop reading fluency.
2 Look over the 11th Grade Books and choose a book you like. Don't read a book you don't like. Don't waste your time. There are too many good books out there waiting for you. If you don't like your book, you are required to find another one. Find a book that's fun, or one that matters to you, to your life, to who you are and who you want to become. Check out which books have been our favorites on the 11th and 12th grade page of books, but don't let other people make your choices for you. Don't be afraid to read one of the new books.
3 Choose some books that expand your reading territory. Sometime during the year, read at least one book form each of the three basic genres: novel, poetry, and nonfiction. Try new authors, subjects, purposes, and genres.
II Reading Time in Class Understand that reading is thinking. Don't distract other readers. Don't put your words in our brains as we're trying to escape into the worlds created by the authors of our books.
At the beginning of the year, each student will be given ten points for daily reading. You will lose one of these points if you are not reading or writing in response to your reading the whole time that is given.
Take care of the books that have been provided for you. Return each book borrowed from the classroom library to its shelf, and alphabetize it by the author's last name.
III Create Mini Reviews. For each book that you read, create a mini-review. Your mini-reviews will make up 15% of your final grade. You will be given credit for each book when the mini-review is done.
Most of this information has been taken from Nancie Atwell's In the Middle: New Understandings About Writing, Reading, and Learning. 2nd Edition. Portsmouth, NH: Boynton/Cook Publishers. Pages 113-114 & 116-117.
If you are an English teacher and you haven't read, studied, noted and highlighted this book, immediately visit Amazon.com or , better yet, your local bookstore.
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