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Learn how a sentence is put together with character-based
instruction, engaging practice worksheets, dynamic writing prompts
and exercises, and quizzes to check comprehension. Based on the
revolutionary Grammaropolis approach, this skill-building workbook
makes learning grammar fun! The Sentence Factory is hiring! Now
that you know the parts of speech and punctuation, we need you to
help us build our town's #1 export: grammatically correct
sentences. Let the Mayor take you on a tour of the factory, where
you'll learn about subjects and predicates, phrases and clauses,
types of sentences, direct and indirect objects, subject and object
complements, and more! The ultimate goal of learning grammar isn't
to do well on worksheets and quizzes, though, which is why we've
included sentence and paragraph writing exercises to put every
grammatical concept into practice. Aligned to Common Core and state
standards.
Four unaccompanied migrant children come together along the arduous
journey north through Mexico to the United States border in this
ode to the power of hope and connection even in the face of
uncertainty and fear. Every year, roughly 50,000 unaccompanied
minors arrive at the US/Mexico border to present themselves for
asylum or related visas. The majority of these children are
non-Mexicans fleeing the systemic violence of Central America's
"Northern Triangle": Honduras, El Salvador, and Guatemala. A
Journey Toward Hope tells the story of Rodrigo, a 14-year-old
escaping Honduran violence; Alessandra, a 10-year-old Guatemalan
whose first language is Q'eqchi'; and the Salvadoran siblings Laura
and Nando. Though their reasons for making the trip are different
and the journey northward is perilous, the four children band
together, finding strength in one another as they share the dreams
of their past and the hopes for their future. A Journey Toward Hope
is written in collaboration with Baylor University's Social
Innovation Collaborative, with illustrations by the award-winning
Susan Guevara (Chato's Kitchen, American Library Association
Notable Book, New York Public Library's 100 Great Children's Books
/ 100 Years). It includes four pages of nonfiction back matter with
additional information and resources created by Baylor University's
Global Hunger and Migration Project.
Get to know the eight parts of speech with character-based
instruction, engaging practice worksheets, dynamic writing prompts
and exercises, and quizzes to check comprehension. Based on the
revolutionary Grammaropolis approach, this skill-building workbook
for fifth grade makes learning grammar fun! In Grammaropolis,
adverbs don't just modify verbs; adverbs are bossy. They tell the
verbs where to go, when to leave, and how to get there. A pronoun
doesn't just replace a noun; Roger the pronoun is a shady character
who's always trying to trick Nelson the noun into giving up his
spot. Grammaropolis personifies the parts of speech based on the
roles they play in the sentence, increasing both engagement and
retention. Our story-based approach combines traditional
instruction with original narrative content, appealing to different
learning styles and encouraging students to make a deeper
connection with the eight parts of speech: nouns, verbs,
adjectives, adverbs, pronouns, conjunctions, prepositions, and
interjections. Aligned to Common Core and state standards.
Vinny the Action Verb & Lucy the Linking Verb may disagree on
some things, but they both love teaching about verbs. It's book two
of the Meet the Parts of Speech series, in which the eight parts of
speech are personified based on the roles they play in the
sentence. Vinny and Lucy approach life differently. He's all
action, while she's content to sit back and be. With their friend
Jake the adjective in trouble, however, the two verbs must put
aside their differences and work together to save the day. Clear
and informative back matter includes textbook-style definitions and
usage examples of transitive action verbs, intransitive action
verbs, and linking verbs. In Grammaropolis, adverbs don't just
modify verbs; adverbs are bossy. They tell the verbs where to go,
when to leave, and how to get there. A pronoun doesn't just replace
a noun; Roger the pronoun is a shady character who's always trying
to trick Nelson the noun into giving up his spot. The Meet the
Parts of Speech series uses the mechanics of character and story
(plot, motivation, setting, etc.) to breathe life into what has
traditionally been unengaging subject matter. Our story-based
approach combines traditional instruction with original narrative
content, which appeals to different learning styles, increases both
engagement and retention, and encourages students to make a deeper
connection with the parts of speech and punctuation marks.
Get to know the punctuation marks with character-based instruction,
engaging practice worksheets, dynamic writing prompts and
exercises, and quizzes to check comprehension. Based on the
revolutionary Grammaropolis approach, this skill-building workbook
makes learning grammar fun! Let tender-hearted Officer Period,
no-nonsense Chief Comma, and police dogs Hyphen and Dash show you
the ropes as you learn how to punctuate, abbreviate, and capitalize
your writing properly and keep those sentences running smoothly.
Our story-based approach combines traditional instruction with
original narrative content, appealing to different learning styles
and encouraging students to make a deeper connection with twelve
punctuation marks: periods, question marks, exclamation marks,
commas, hyphens, dashes, semicolons, colons, quotation marks,
apostrophes, parentheses, and brackets. (Plus bonus sections on
capitalization and abbreviation!) The ultimate goal of learning
grammar and punctuation isn't to do well on worksheets and quizzes,
though, which is why we've included sentence and paragraph writing
exercises to put every grammatical concept into practice. Aligned
to Common Core and state standards.
Get to know the eight parts of speech with character-based
instruction, engaging practice worksheets, dynamic writing prompts
and exercises, and quizzes to check comprehension. Based on the
revolutionary Grammaropolis approach, this skill-building workbook
for fourth grade makes learning grammar fun! In Grammaropolis,
adverbs don't just modify verbs; adverbs are bossy. They tell the
verbs where to go, when to leave, and how to get there. A pronoun
doesn't just replace a noun; Roger the pronoun is a shady character
who's always trying to trick Nelson the noun into giving up his
spot. Grammaropolis personifies the parts of speech based on the
roles they play in the sentence, increasing both engagement and
retention. Our story-based approach combines traditional
instruction with original narrative content, appealing to different
learning styles and encouraging students to make a deeper
connection with the eight parts of speech: nouns, verbs,
adjectives, adverbs, pronouns, conjunctions, prepositions, and
interjections. Aligned to Common Core and state standards.
Get to know the eight parts of speech with character-based
instruction, engaging practice worksheets, dynamic writing prompts
and exercises, and quizzes to check comprehension. Based on the
revolutionary Grammaropolis approach, this skill-building workbook
for third grade makes learning grammar fun! In Grammaropolis,
adverbs don't just modify verbs; adverbs are bossy. They tell the
verbs where to go, when to leave, and how to get there. A pronoun
doesn't just replace a noun; Roger the pronoun is a shady character
who's always trying to trick Nelson the noun into giving up his
spot. Grammaropolis personifies the parts of speech based on the
roles they play in the sentence, increasing both engagement and
retention. Our story-based approach combines traditional
instruction with original narrative content, appealing to different
learning styles and encouraging students to make a deeper
connection with the eight parts of speech: nouns, verbs,
adjectives, adverbs, pronouns, conjunctions, prepositions, and
interjections. Aligned to Common Core and state standards.
La historia de cuatro ninos migrantes no acompanados que se unen a
lo largo del arduo viaje hacia el norte a traves de Mexico hasta la
frontera de los Estados Unidos, Una jornada hacia la esperanza es
una oda al poder de la esperanza y la conexion ante la
incertidumbre y el miedo. Cada ano, aproximadamente 50,000 menores
no acompanados llegan a la frontera entre los Estados Unidos y
Mexico para presentarse para asilo o visas relacionadas. La mayoria
de estos ninos huyen de la violencia sistemica del "Triangulo del
Norte" de Centroamerica: Honduras, El Salvador y Guatemala. Una
jornada hacia la esperanza cuenta la historia de Rodrigo, un nino
de 14 anos que escapa de la violencia hondurena; Alessandra, una
guatemalteca de 10 anos cuyo primer idioma es el Q'eqchi '; y los
hermanos salvadorenos Laura y Nando. Aunque sus razones por hacer
el viaje son diferentes y la jornada hacia el norte es peligroso,
los cuatro ninos se unen y se fortalecen mientras se comparten los
suenos de su pasado y las esperanzas de su futuro. Escrito en
colaboracion con el Proyecto Global sobre el Hambre y la Migracion
en la Colaboracion de Innovacion Social de la Universidad de
Baylor, Una jornada hacia la esperanza presenta cuatro paginas de
informacion adicional y recursos para padres, maestros de escuela,
bibliotecarios y otros. This is the Spanish Language Edition of A
Journey Toward Hope. Four unaccompanied migrant children come
together along the arduous journey north through Mexico to the
United States border in this ode to the power of hope and
connection even in the face of uncertainty and fear.
Roger the Pronoun wants to do the noun's job even though he knows
that he'll always be just a pronoun. It's book five of the Meet the
Parts of Speech series, in which the eight parts of speech are
personified based on the roles they play in the sentence. Feeling
that he's destined for more than just renaming nouns, Roger opens
up his own store next to Nelson's Nouns. But when Nelson goes
missing, Roger realizes that for life to mean anything at all,
every pronoun has to have an antecedent. Clear and informative back
matter includes textbook-style definitions and usage examples of
subject and object pronouns, reflexive and intensive pronouns, and
indefinite pronouns. In Grammaropolis, adverbs don't just modify
verbs; adverbs are bossy. They tell the verbs where to go, when to
leave, and how to get there. A pronoun doesn't just replace a noun;
Roger the pronoun is a shady character who's always trying to trick
Nelson the noun into giving up his spot. The Meet the Parts of
Speech series uses the mechanics of character and story (plot,
motivation, setting, etc.) to breathe life into what has
traditionally been unengaging subject matter. Our story-based
approach combines traditional instruction with original narrative
content, which appeals to different learning styles, increases both
engagement and retention, and encourages students to make a deeper
connection with the parts of speech and punctuation marks.
Izzy the Interjection makes learning about interjections fun. Yay!
It's book eight of the Meet the Parts of Speech series, in which
the eight parts of speech are personified based on the roles they
play in the sentence. No matter whether the emotion is strong or
mild, positive, negative, or somewhere in between, Izzy lives to
express it. Loneliness can be a problem sometimes because she's not
grammatically connected to the other words in the sentence, but
when the time comes, she leaps at the chance to express her
strongest emotion yet. Clear and informative back matter includes
textbook-style definitions and examples of how interjections
express mild and strong emotion. In Grammaropolis, adverbs don't
just modify verbs; adverbs are bossy. They tell the verbs where to
go, when to leave, and how to get there. A pronoun doesn't just
replace a noun; Roger the pronoun is a shady character who's always
trying to trick Nelson the noun into giving up his spot. The Meet
the Parts of Speech series uses the mechanics of character and
story (plot, motivation, setting, etc.) to breathe life into what
has traditionally been unengaging subject matter. Our story-based
approach combines traditional instruction with original narrative
content, which appeals to different learning styles, increases both
engagement and retention, and encourages students to make a deeper
connection with the parts of speech and punctuation marks.
Join Connie the Conjunction for a conjunction lesson you'll love
and remember. It’s book six of the Meet the Parts of Speech
series, in which the eight parts of speech are personified based on
the roles they play in the sentence. Nobody in all of Grammaropolis
has more style than Connie; she simply knows how to put things
together. After a bump on the head makes her give bad advice, she
uses all the conjunctions at her disposal to set everything right
again. Clear and informative back matter includes textbook-style
definitions and examples for coordinating conjunctions, correlative
conjunctions, and subordinating conjunctions. In Grammaropolis,
adverbs don't just modify verbs; adverbs are bossy. They tell the
verbs where to go, when to leave, and how to get there. A pronoun
doesn't just replace a noun; Roger the pronoun is a shady character
who's always trying to trick Nelson the noun into giving up his
spot. The Meet the Parts of Speech series uses the mechanics of
character and story (plot, motivation, setting, etc.) to breathe
life into what has traditionally been unengaging subject matter.
Our story-based approach combines traditional instruction with
original narrative content, which appeals to different learning
styles, increases both engagement and retention, and encourages
students to make a deeper connection with the parts of speech and
punctuation marks.
Get to know the eight parts of speech with character-based
instruction, engaging practice worksheets, dynamic writing prompts
and exercises, and quizzes to check comprehension. Based on the
revolutionary Grammaropolis approach, this skill-building workbook
for first grade makes learning grammar fun! In Grammaropolis,
adverbs don't just modify verbs; adverbs are bossy. They tell the
verbs where to go, when to leave, and how to get there. A pronoun
doesn't just replace a noun; Roger the pronoun is a shady character
who's always trying to trick Nelson the noun into giving up his
spot. Grammaropolis personifies the parts of speech based on the
roles they play in the sentence, increasing both engagement and
retention. Our story-based approach combines traditional
instruction with original narrative content, appealing to different
learning styles and encouraging students to make a deeper
connection with the eight parts of speech: nouns, verbs,
adjectives, adverbs, pronouns, conjunctions, prepositions, and
interjections. Aligned to Common Core and state standards.
Benny may be extremely bossy, but if you listen to him carefully,
you'll quickly learn a lot about adverbs. It’s book four of the
Meet the Parts of Speech series, in which the eight parts of speech
are personified based on the roles they play in the sentence. When
his prized rock collection is stolen from the bank, Benny opens an
investigation into how and when the theft took place and where the
thief might have gone! Clear and informative back matter includes
textbook-style definitions and examples for adverbs modifying
verbs, adjectives, and other adverbs; telling how, when, where, or
to what extent; comparative and superlative adverbs, and adverb
clauses. In Grammaropolis, adverbs don't just modify verbs; adverbs
are bossy. They tell the verbs where to go, when to leave, and how
to get there. A pronoun doesn't just replace a noun; Roger the
pronoun is a shady character who's always trying to trick Nelson
the noun into giving up his spot. The Meet the Parts of Speech
series uses the mechanics of character and story (plot, motivation,
setting, etc.) to breathe life into what has traditionally been
unengaging subject matter. Our story-based approach combines
traditional instruction with original narrative content, which
appeals to different learning styles, increases both engagement and
retention, and encourages students to make a deeper connection with
the parts of speech and punctuation marks.
Li'l Pete the Preposition will lead you down the path toward
preposition mastery. It’s book seven of the Meet the Parts of
Speech series, in which the eight parts of speech are personified
based on the roles they play in the sentence. When launching his
model rocket in the park, Li'l Pete gets excited and forgets to add
objects to his prepositional phrases. Without objects, the
prepositions become adverbs, and chaos ensues as the rockets fly
up, by, and around with no direction at all. Clear and informative
back matter includes textbook-style definitions and examples of
prepositions, compound prepositions, and prepositional phrases. In
Grammaropolis, adverbs don't just modify verbs; adverbs are bossy.
They tell the verbs where to go, when to leave, and how to get
there. A pronoun doesn't just replace a noun; Roger the pronoun is
a shady character who's always trying to trick Nelson the noun into
giving up his spot. The Meet the Parts of Speech series uses the
mechanics of character and story (plot, motivation, setting, etc.)
to breathe life into what has traditionally been unengaging subject
matter. Our story-based approach combines traditional instruction
with original narrative content, which appeals to different
learning styles, increases both engagement and retention, and
encourages students to make a deeper connection with the parts of
speech and punctuation marks.
Nelson the Noun is the resident noun expert in Grammaropolis. Visit
the Noun Office and learn from him! It’s book one of the Meet the
Parts of Speech series, in which the eight parts of speech are
personified based on the roles they play in the sentence. Nelson
takes a break from his stressful day job, leaving the Noun Office
in the hands of Roger the pronoun. After discovering that vacation
isn’t what he’d hoped it would be, Nelson returns just in time
to fix the confusion Roger has caused in his absence. Clear and
informative back matter includes textbook-style definitions and
usage examples of common and proper nouns, concrete and abstract
nouns, collective nouns, and compound nouns. In Grammaropolis,
adverbs don't just modify verbs; adverbs are bossy. They tell the
verbs where to go, when to leave, and how to get there. A pronoun
doesn't just replace a noun; Roger the pronoun is a shady character
who's always trying to trick Nelson the noun into giving up his
spot. The Meet the Parts of Speech series uses the mechanics of
character and story (plot, motivation, setting, etc.) to breathe
life into what has traditionally been unengaging subject matter.
Our story-based approach combines traditional instruction with
original narrative content, which appeals to different learning
styles, increases both engagement and retention, and encourages
students to make a deeper connection with the parts of speech and
punctuation marks.
Get to know the eight parts of speech with character-based
instruction, engaging practice worksheets, dynamic writing prompts
and exercises, and quizzes to check comprehension. Based on the
revolutionary Grammaropolis approach, this skill-building workbook
for second grade makes learning grammar fun! In Grammaropolis,
adverbs don't just modify verbs; adverbs are bossy. They tell the
verbs where to go, when to leave, and how to get there. A pronoun
doesn't just replace a noun; Roger the pronoun is a shady character
who's always trying to trick Nelson the noun into giving up his
spot. Grammaropolis personifies the parts of speech based on the
roles they play in the sentence, increasing both engagement and
retention. Our story-based approach combines traditional
instruction with original narrative content, appealing to different
learning styles and encouraging students to make a deeper
connection with the eight parts of speech: nouns, verbs,
adjectives, adverbs, pronouns, conjunctions, prepositions, and
interjections. Aligned to Common Core and state standards.
Jake the Adjective is your guide to all that is wonderful,
interesting, and lovely about adjectives. It’s book three of the
Meet the Parts of Speech series, in which the eight parts of speech
are personified based on the roles they play in the sentence. When
Jake’s nemesis pulls a prank and turns Grammaropolis into a grey,
misshapen, tasteless town, Jake is forced to run around restoring
everything—the colors, shapes, sizes, tastes, and more—to the
way it was all meant to be. Clear and informative back matter
includes textbook-style definitions and examples of adjectives
modifying nouns and pronouns along with comparative and superlative
adjectives. In Grammaropolis, adverbs don't just modify verbs;
adverbs are bossy. They tell the verbs where to go, when to leave,
and how to get there. A pronoun doesn't just replace a noun; Roger
the pronoun is a shady character who's always trying to trick
Nelson the noun into giving up his spot. The Meet the Parts of
Speech series uses the mechanics of character and story (plot,
motivation, setting, etc.) to breathe life into what has
traditionally been unengaging subject matter. Our story-based
approach combines traditional instruction with original narrative
content, which appeals to different learning styles, increases both
engagement and retention, and encourages students to make a deeper
connection with the parts of speech and punctuation marks.
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