The Haunted Sausage Laughed in His Awesome Saucer Made Out of Laundry...
Dear Reader,
In Silly Spelling Stories V, we composed our stories a little differently: instead of taking a look at our word list and then launching into our story, we took the Refrigerator-Poetry-Magnets approach.
We first cut out our words and sorted them into nouns, adjectives, verbs and adverbs. Next, we spent a patient (!) half-hour moving them around into different combinations on an 11x17 piece of paper. As interesting word combinations emerged and a story began to take form, we taped down our words and added text with a pencil. We hope that these stories are, for you, more interesting, more surprising, and more enjoyable. It has been fun to mix vocabulary, story-writing, and nine-and-ten-year-old humor.
- Mr. B's Spellers
Wednesday, May 26, 2010
Sunday, April 11, 2010
Silly Spelling Stories IV
April 11, 2010
Dear Silly Writers,
We have time for one more story before Spring Break. I can see that your imaginations are alive and humming!
Now, for this story, please:
1) capitalize your titles and all names.
2) make sure your sentences make sense (have a subject and a verb).
3) once you've written it, try to rework your story and your sentences so it all make more sense as a story. Olivia did this in her last post. Take a look at it.
4) have fun!
Dear Silly Writers,
We have time for one more story before Spring Break. I can see that your imaginations are alive and humming!
Now, for this story, please:
1) capitalize your titles and all names.
2) make sure your sentences make sense (have a subject and a verb).
3) once you've written it, try to rework your story and your sentences so it all make more sense as a story. Olivia did this in her last post. Take a look at it.
4) have fun!
Wednesday, March 24, 2010
Silly Spelling Stories III
Spring is here! The sap is flowing, and so are the nutty thoughts in my students' heads. Read on, and we sure appreciate you comments.
Mr. Bolger
Mr. Bolger
Monday, February 1, 2010
For Ms. N's Book Group: Creating a Whangdoodle Dictionary
Ms. N's Book Group: you have been reading Julie Andrews Edwards' book, The Last of the Really Great Whangdoodles. As you know, the story is about three kids who go on a fantastic (meaning full of fantasy) journey to find the last of the mystical Whangdoodles. The kids come upon places and beings and new ideas -- all with strange names. YOUR CHALLENGE is to create a Whangdoodle Dictionary so the rest of us can better understand this great book. Please post your terms and their definitions in the Comment section below. Good luck, Whangdoodlers!
- Mr. Bolger and Ms. N
- Mr. Bolger and Ms. N
Wednesday, January 27, 2010
Silly Spelling Stories II
This week, our five spelling groups learned the different ways to spell the /ow/ sound (thousand vs. coward); they learned thr- and shr- words (thread and shriek...); and they learned the many different vowel + r spellings like search and pearl vs. worth and lurk and nerve. Finally, a couple of intrepid students studied the /oy/ sound (noisy vs. destroy).
Read on and enjoy!
- Mr. Bolger
Read on and enjoy!
- Mr. Bolger
Thursday, December 3, 2009
Silly Spelling Stories
Hello Spellers! Please share your best Silly Spelling Story from all you have written so far this year.
- Mr. Bolger
- Mr. Bolger
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