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Parallel Curriculum Units for Language Arts, Grades 6-12
220
by Jeanne H. Purcell, Jann H. Leppien
Jeanne H. Purcell
Parallel Curriculum Units for Language Arts, Grades 6-12
220
by Jeanne H. Purcell, Jann H. Leppien
Jeanne H. Purcell
Paperback(New Edition)
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Overview
Sample units demonstrate how to use the Parallel Curriculum Model to design high-quality curriculum in language arts. Each unit includes instructions, assessments, and skills/standards.
Product Details
ISBN-13: | 9781412965385 |
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Publisher: | SAGE Publications |
Publication date: | 08/25/2009 |
Edition description: | New Edition |
Pages: | 220 |
Product dimensions: | 8.40(w) x 10.90(h) x 0.60(d) |
About the Author
Jeanne H. Purcell is the consultant to the Connecticut State Department of Education for gifted and talented education. She is also director of UConn Mentor Connection, a nationally recognized summer mentorship program for talented teenagers that is part of the NEAG Center for Talent Development at the University of Connecticut. Prior to her work at the State Department of Connecticut, she was an administrator for Rocky Hill Public Schools (CT); a program specialist with the National Research Center on the Gifted and Talented, where she worked collaboratively with other researchers on national issues related to high-achieving young people; an instructor of Teaching the Talented, a graduate-level program in gifted education; and a staff developer to school districts across the country and Canada. She has been an English teacher, community service coordinator, and teacher of the gifted, K-12, for 18 years in Connecticut school districts and has published many articles that have appeared in Educational Leadership, Gifted Child Quarterly, Roeper Review, Educational and Psychological Measurement, National Association of Secondary School Principals’ Bulletin, Our Children: The National PTA Magazine, Parenting for High Potential, and Journal for the Education of the Gifted. She is active in the National Association for Gifted Children (NAGC) and serves on the Awards Committee and the Curriculum Committee of NAGC, for which she is the co-chair for the annual Curriculum Awards Competition.
Jann Leppien served as a gifted and talented coordinator in Montana prior to attending the University of Connecticut, where she earned her doctorate in gifted education and worked as a research assistant at the National Research Center for the Gifted and Talented. She has been a teacher for 24 years, spending 14 of those years working as a classroom teacher, enrichment specialist, and coordinator of the Schoolwide Enrichment Model in Montana. She is past president of the Montana Association for Gifted and Talented Education. Currently, she is an associate professor in the School of Education at the University of Great Falls in Montana. Leppien teaches graduate and undergraduate courses in gifted education, educational research, curriculum and assessment, creativity, and methods courses in math, science, and social studies. Her research interests include teacher collaboration, curriculum design, underachievement, and planning instruction for advanced learners. Leppien works as a consultant to teachers in the field of gifted education and as a national trainer for the Talents Unlimited Program. She is coauthor of The Multiple Menu Model: A Parallel Guide for Developing Differentiated Curriculum. She is active in the National Association for Gifted Children (NAGC), serving as a board member and newsletter editor of the Curriculum Division, and a board member of the Association for the Education of Gifted Underachieving Students.
Jann Leppien served as a gifted and talented coordinator in Montana prior to attending the University of Connecticut, where she earned her doctorate in gifted education and worked as a research assistant at the National Research Center for the Gifted and Talented. She has been a teacher for 24 years, spending 14 of those years working as a classroom teacher, enrichment specialist, and coordinator of the Schoolwide Enrichment Model in Montana. She is past president of the Montana Association for Gifted and Talented Education. Currently, she is an associate professor in the School of Education at the University of Great Falls in Montana. Leppien teaches graduate and undergraduate courses in gifted education, educational research, curriculum and assessment, creativity, and methods courses in math, science, and social studies. Her research interests include teacher collaboration, curriculum design, underachievement, and planning instruction for advanced learners. Leppien works as a consultant to teachers in the field of gifted education and as a national trainer for the Talents Unlimited Program. She is coauthor of The Multiple Menu Model: A Parallel Guide for Developing Differentiated Curriculum. She is active in the National Association for Gifted Children (NAGC), serving as a board member and newsletter editor of the Curriculum Division, and a board member of the Association for the Education of Gifted Underachieving Students.
Table of Contents
About the EditorsAbout the ContributorsIntroduction to the Parallel Curriculum Model1. Understanding and Finding Your Author's Voice: An Intermediate Language Arts Unit (Grades 6-7)Introduction to the Unit - Lee-Ann HayenContent Framework - Judy WalshAssessments - Judy WalshUnit Sequence, Description, and Teacher ReflectionsLesson 1.1: The Contributors to IdentityLesson 1.2: Shaping Your VoiceLesson 1.3: The Influences on MoodLesson 1.4: Analyzing an Author's VoiceLesson 1.5: Finding the Right Voice and Mood for Your PurposeLesson 1.6: Your Turn2. The LIttle Napoleon in Us All: Literary Criticism and the Battle for Power (Grade 8)Introduction to the UnitContent FrameworkAssessmentsUnit Sequence, Description, and Teacher ReflectionsLesson 2.1: Preassessment/BrainstormingLesson 2.2: What Is Allegory?Lesson 2.3: Diary of an AuthorLesson 2.4: Write a Personal AllegoryLesson 2.5: Character Analysis, Part ILesson 2.6: Orwell's ResponsibilityLesson 2.7: Literary CriticismLesson 2.8: WRite a Literary Critique of Animal FarmLesson 2.9: Character Analysis Map, Part IILesson 2.10: What Is a Classic?Lesson 2.11: Survivor: The IsmsLesson 2.12: Final Assessment3. Reacting to a Literary Model: Writing Original Pieces (Grades 9-10)Introduction to the UnitContent FrameworkAssessmentsUnit Sequence, Description, and Teacher ReflectionsLesson 3.1: PreassessmentLessons 3.2 and 3.3: Setting and MoodLessons 3.4 and 3.5: Creating Realistic CharactersLessons 3.6 and 3.7: Prejudice, Conflict, and ThemeLesson 3.8: Postassessment4. You Be the Critic: Understanding, Using, and Writing Literary Criticism (Grades 11-12)Introduction to the UnitContent FrameworkAssessmentsUnit Sequence, Description, and Teacher ReflectionsLesson 4.1: Introduction to Literary CriticismLesson 4.2: Analyzing a Fictional passage for ContentLessons 4.3, 4.4, and 4.5: Character Development and Point of ViewLessons 4.6 and 4.7: Understanding ToneLessons 4.8 and 4.9: What Is Style?Lesson 4.10: Recognizing StyleLesson 4.11: Rhetoric and Rhetorical DevicesLessons 4.12 and 4.13 The Persuasive Essay and the EditorialLessons 4.14 and 4.15: Writing a Literary AnalysisIndexFrom the B&N Reads Blog
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