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This book delves into various literary genres like fiction, nonfiction, fables, fairy tales, and more, providing insights into their characteristics and examples. It covers short stories, novels, biographies, poems, plays, and offers explanations through Frayer Models and Verbal-Visual Word Association exercises.
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Fiction Nonfiction Fables Fairy Tales Short Stories Novels Biographies Letter/Articles Instructions/Procedures Charts Retells Genre Poetry Drama Simple Poems Proverbs Riddles Limericks Plays Skits
Frayer Model Definition (in own words) Characteristics Word Examples Nonexamples (Teaching Reading In Mathematics, 2nd Edition, p. 69)
Frayer Model • Closed • Simple (curve does not intersect itself) • Plane figure (2 dimensional) • Made up of three or more line segments • No dangling parts A simple, closed plane figure made up of three or more line segments. Polygon • Examples • Rectangle • Triangle • Pentagon • Hexagon • Trapezoid • Nonexamples • Circle • Cone • Arrow (Ray) • Cube • Letter A (Teaching Reading In Mathematics, 2nd Edition, p. 69)
Verbal-Visual Word Association Definition (from dictionary and in the student’s own words) Personal Association (they must connect the word to themselves or something they already know in order to learn it) Word Examples (students write the definition in their own words) Non-example (must be relevant, I tell the students to think about the thing that is opposite of the vocabulary term) (Teaching Reading In Mathematics, 2nd Edition, p. 69)