I was going through some of my emails looking for more information about "lead and stretch", but I just couldn't seem to find the one with all the information. It was in regards to writing and apparently it had a connection with Carl Anderson. I have the email piece below. "Tell me and I forget.Teach me and I remember.Involve me and I learn" Benjamin Franklin
----- Original Message ---- From: Joy <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> To: Mosaic: A Reading Comprehension Strategies Email Group <[email protected]> Sent: Saturday, January 19, 2008 6:38:16 AM Subject: Re: [MOSAIC] Writing programs & philosophy Wow, this is powerful. Tell me more about the "stretch" part. [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: . . . Then we created a scroll that was divided into five parts: Lead and a stretch, beginning and a stretch, middle and a stretch, outside ending and a stretch, and inside ending with a show not tell. (The stretches are developed from Carl Anderson's ideas of how kids can expand their sentence by either 1) telling the next action, 2) telling their thinking or 3)telling what they said. Joy/NC/4 [EMAIL PROTECTED] How children learn is as important as what they learn: process and content go hand in hand. http://www.responsiveclassroom.org --------------------------------- Be a better friend, newshound, and know-it-all with Yahoo! Mobile. Try it now. _______________________________________________ Mosaic mailing list [email protected] To unsubscribe or modify your membership please go to http://literacyworkshop.org/mailman/options/mosaic_literacyworkshop.org. Search the MOSAIC archives at http://snipurl.com/MosaicArchive. ____________________________________________________________________________________ Be a better friend, newshound, and know-it-all with Yahoo! Mobile. Try it now. http://mobile.yahoo.com/;_ylt=Ahu06i62sR8HDtDypao8Wcj9tAcJ _______________________________________________ Mosaic mailing list [email protected] To unsubscribe or modify your membership please go to http://literacyworkshop.org/mailman/options/mosaic_literacyworkshop.org. Search the MOSAIC archives at http://snipurl.com/MosaicArchive.
