Thursday, January 22, 2009

Courtney's Mini-Lesson: Comma splices aren't fun neither are run-on sentences.







1. Engage: Bring students eyes to the comedic example of a comma splice.

2. Explore: Why is this sentence a comma splice?

What do we typically think of when we think of a run-on sentence?

Examples of run-on sentences:

Seth ate a hamburger he had no bread or ketchup.

I can't get rid of my hiccups I think I'm going to scream.

You smell really bad take a bath.

3. Explain: I will define and discuss how to correct these types of sentence boo-boos.

4. Explore: Students will write one comma splice and one run-on sentence each and correct them.

5. Evaluate: Students will correct the sentences with me on the board.

and

1 comment:

Twangie said...

I appreciate the mini-lesson on "Comma Splices..." because I actually learned valuable information that I can routinely use. I learned that a semi-colon comes before the word "so" when you're connecting two seperate thoughts in a sentence. I guess I was just throwing "sos" anywhere I wanted to throw them before, huh? :-)