A Preview Review – weird, I know, but I couldn’t come up with anything better.
I will be co-teaching a Grammar, Written Narration, and Composition Course to 11 kids ages 9-13 this coming year. We will meet 3 weeks/month from Sept. – Apr. and 12 weeks per term.
Fall Term
- Grammar using JAG with 4th-6th, AG Season 1 with 6th-8th
- Written Narrations using My Little Handbook of Written Narrations by Angela Wilson as a guide of sorts (4th-8th)
Spring Term
- Mechanics using JAG Mechanics with all (4th-8th)
- Beyond the Book Report Season 1 (6th-8th)
With that bit of background, I have received BBR-1 and have begun reviewing it. It covers the following:
From http://www.analyticalgrammar.com –
SEASON ONE includes three different sections (click on the hyperlinks to see the sample):
The Basic Book Report
– Concepts introduced:
Following a rubric
Conflict, Point of View, Climax, Protagonist,Antagonist
Paraphrase and summary
– Activity:
Watch video lecture on literary terms
– Final Product (100 pt total):
Reading Log
Plot summary
Paraphrase of favorite scene
Study questions or crossword
Literary Terms worksheet
The Pamphlet Book Report
– Concepts introduced:
Elements of the plot, mood and tone, setting, genre
– Activity:
Watch second video lecture on literary terms
– Final Product (100 pt total):
Reading log
Pamphlet about the book (60 pts)
Study questions or crossword
The News Article Book Report
– Concepts introduced:
Headline, byline, dateline, inverted pyramid, lead
Objectivity, bias, objective point of view
– Activity:
Watch video lecture on news writing
Nursery rhyme news
Exercise in bias detection
– Final Product (100 pt total):
Reading log
News article on favorite scene
Opposite bias news article, same scene
Study questions/crossword
I really like the looks of this simple program. It suggests spending 30-45 minutes per day on BBR-1. We will be covering the topics together using the DVDs during our class weeks. We will spend 3-4 weeks on each project. Our schedule will have us view the video lesson in class, answer questions and perhaps start a bit of an assignment. Then the students will choose their books and have 2-3 weeks to read the book and complete the assigned reports.
I have not reviewed the full program yet, but here are my Pros & Cons.
Pros
- Concise
- Introduces literary terms and elements in a simple way
- Helps kids break their assignments into doable chunks using the reading log
- Uses rubrics to help assess and evaluate in an objective manner
- Written (via videa, too) to the student
- Is a natural extention of written narration. Allows for some creative narration types.
Cons
- Perhaps the grading element. This is new for me, so I may tweak or simply use as another teaching opportunity. These kids are going to college, so they will see grading and should get used to it at some point.
- Packaging – Some shrinkwrapped papers with a DVD that has video clips and pdf files to print. Quality is good, but presentation lacking. I suspect because it’s rather new. I simply printed off all of my worksheets for the students at one time.
That’s my initial take. I will add more as I become more familiar with it. I think this will be a good fit for my family. I want a tiny bit of handholding to introduce some different literary elements and ideas for written narrations, but do not care for a full blown program like IEW, Classical Composition, etc.
HTH someone.
Christie