图书简介
50 short texts written by famous
Americans driven by “an itch” to
say something provide students
with mentor texts to express their
own thoughts.
Foreword by Tom Newkirk \\ Introduction \\ Acknowledgments \\ Lesson 1 \\ Structure: Stepping Up to a New Role \\ Source Document: Hippocratic Oath, 400 BCE \\ Lesson 2 \\ Structure: Can’t We Just Get Along? \\ Source Document: Speech to Captain John Smith, Chief Powhatan, 1609 \\ Lesson 3 \\ Structure: Team Promise \\ Source Document: Mayflower Compact, 1620 \\ Lesson 4 \\ Structure: Humble Request for Help \\ Source Document: Plymouth Plantation, 1624 \\ Lesson 5 \\ Structure: No, Thank You \\ Source Document: Letter to William and Mary College, The Indians of the Six Nations, 1744 \\ Lesson 6 \\ Structure: Lighting a Fire Under a Procrastinator \\ Source Document: Speech, Patrick Henry, 1775 \\ Lesson 7 \\ Structure: How Bullying Works \\ Source Document: \"Journal of a Lady of Quality,\" Janet Schaw, 1775 \\ Lesson 8 \\ Structure: Problem-Solution Message \\ Source Document: Declaration of Independence, 1776 \\ Lesson 9 \\ Structure: Time for a Real Solution \\ Source Document: Common Sense (Excerpts), Thomas Paine, 1776 \\ Lesson 10 \\ Structure: Letter From Home \\ Source Document: Letter to Her Husband John Adams, Abigail Adams, 1776 \\ Lesson 11 \\ Structure: How Bad Is It? (A Description) \\ Source Document: Letter to George Washington, Benjamin Rush, 1777 \\ Lesson 12 \\ Structure: Reprimanding a Group \\ Source Document: Speech to Angry Officers, General George Washington, 1783 \\ Lesson 13 \\ Structure: Purposes of an Action \\ Source Document: Preamble to the Constitution, 1787 \\ Lesson 14 \\ Structure: Charm Check \\ Source Document: \"The Star Spangled Banner,\" Francis Scott Key, 1814 \\ Lesson 15 \\ Structure: S.O.S. \\ Source Document: \"Victory or Death\" Letter From the Alamo, William B. Travis, 1836 \\ Lesson 16 \\ Structure: Sightseeing \\ Source Document: \"Observations on a Steamboat Between Pittsburg and Cincinnati,\" American Notes, Charles Dickens, 1842 \\ Lesson 17 \\ Structure: Tour of an Unfamiliar Place \\ Source Document: \"Factory Life,\" Labor Reformer, 1846 \\ Lesson 18 \\ Structure: Breaking Into a Heated Argument \\ Source Document: \"Ain’t I a Woman?\" Speech, Sojourner Truth, 1851 \\ Lesson 19 \\ Structure: Controversial Decision \\ Source Document: Emancipation Proclamation, Abraham Lincoln, 1862 \\ Lesson 20 \\ Structure: At the Moment of a Milestone \\ Source Document: Gettysburg Address, Abraham Lincoln, 1863 \\ Lesson 21 \\ Structure: We’re Both Wrong; We’re Both Right \\ Source Document: Second Inaugural Address, Abraham Lincoln, 1865 \\ Lesson 22 \\ Structure: Letter to an Author \\ Source Document: Letter to Harriet Beecher Stowe, Frederick Douglass, 1868 \\ Lesson 23 \\ Structure: Fighting Unfairness With Logic \\ Source Document: “Women’s Rights to the Suffrage\" Speech, Susan B. Anthony, 1873 \\ Lesson 24 \\ Structure: Valuable Advice \\ Source Document: \"Advice to Youth\" Speech, Mark Twain, 1882 \\ Lesson 25 \\ Structure: Comforting a Friend in Pain \\ Source Document: Letter to a Friend, Henry James, 1883 \\ Lesson 26 \\ Structure: I Want More (While I Have the Chance) \\ Source Document: Letter to Professor Baird, William G. Hornaday \\ Lesson 27 \\ Structure: First Earnings \\ Source Document: Hard Times Cotton Mill Girls (Excerpt), Bertha Miller, b. 1890 \\ Lesson 28 \\ Structure: My Symbol \\ Source Document: The Pledge of Allegiance, 1892 \\ Lesson 29 \\ Structure: Narrative: Just the Facts \\ Source Document: On Lynchings (Excerpt), Ida B. Wells-Barnett, 1895 \\ Lesson 30 \\ Structure: Letter of Recommendation \\ Source Document: Letter to Jessie Gladden, Clara Barton, 1898 \\ Lesson 31 \\ Structure: Why Something Goes Viral \\ Source Document: \"A Modern Day Devil Baby\" (American Journal of Sociology, 20(1), (117–118), Jane Addams, 1914 \\ Lesson 32 \\ Structure: Understanding the Scars of Our Elders \\ Source Document: \"Remembering Slavery\" (Excerpt), Tonea Stewart, 1930 \\ Lesson 33 \\ Structure: Objects of Affection \\ Source Document: \"The Pleasure of Books,\" William Lyon Phelps, 1933 \\ Lesson 34 \\ Structure: True or False? Neither \\ Source Document: Letter From Phyllis, Albert Einstein, 1936 \\ Lesson 35 \\ Structure: How an Experience Changed Me \\ Source Document: It’s a Great Life, Robert L. Miller, 1937 \\ Lesson 36 \\ Structure: A Bad Situation a Lot of Us Are In \\ Source Document: \"I’d Rather Not Be on Relief,\" Lester Hunter Song, 1938 \\ Lesson 37 \\ Structure: Picking Up the Pieces \\ Source Document: Pearl Harbor Address to the Nation, Franklin Delano Roosevelt, 1941 \\ Lesson 38 \\ Structure: Heads Up From Your Wingman \\ Source Document: Letter to Her Husband, Eleanor Rooseevelt, circa WWII \\ Lesson 39 \\ Structure: What Do I Mean? Well . . . \\ Source Document: \"I Love You\" Letter, Ayn Rand, 1948 \\ Lesson 40 \\ Structure: My Advice About Your Strong Feeling \\ Source Document: Letter to His Son Thom, John Steinbeck, 1958 \\ Lesson 41 \\ Structure: Pep Talk \\ Source Document: Inaugural Address, John F. Kennedy, 1961 \\ Lesson 42 \\ Structure: Memory Reflection \\ Source Document: Black Like Me (Excerpt), John Howard Griffin, 1961 \\ Lesson 43 \\ Structure: Parting Advice to Your Replacement \\ Source Document: \"Duty, Honor, Country,\" General Douglas MacArthur, 1962 \\ Lesson 44 \\ Structure: Bon Voyage \\ Source Document: Letter to His Astronaut Son, Scott Carpenter, 1962 \\ Lesson 45 \\ Structure: I Feel Your Pain \\ Source Document: \"Ich bin ein Berliner\" Speech, John F. Kennedy, 1963 \\ Lesson 46 \\ Structure: Flashpoint Moment of Truth \\ Source Document: \"And We Shall Overcome\" Special Message to Congress (Excerpt), Lyndon B. Johnson, 1965 \\ Lesson 47 \\ Structure: Walking the Walk to Make a Difference \\ Source Document: \"Lessons of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.,\" Cesar Chavez, 1990 \\ Lesson 48 \\ Structure: Using a Story to Make a Point \\ Source Document: Nobel Lecture (Abridged), Toni Morrison, 1993 \\ Lesson 49 \\ Structure: New Perspectives From a Photo \\ Source Document: \"Pale Blue Dot\" Speech, Carl Sagan, 1996 \\ Lesson 50 \\ Structure: So You’ll Know Me After I’m Gone \\ Source Document: Letter to My Sons (Preface), Lieutenant Colonel Mark Weber, 2012 \\ Appendices \\ 1. Complete Collection of 50 Text Structures \\ 2. Text Structures Useful as Promises to Others \\ 3. Text Structures of Our Identity \\ 4. Text Structures for Travel \\ 5. Text Structures for Important Moments \\ 6. Text Structures for Desperation \\ 7. Text Structures Useful as Persuasion About Some Needed Change \\ 8. Text Structures Useful for Bad Times \\ 9. Text Structures for Times of Conflict \\ 10. More Ways to Use the Lessons in an English Language Arts Classroom \\ 11. More Ways to Use the Lessons for Academic Play in a Social Studies or History Classroom \\ 12. Character Project Assignment and Tracking Sheet
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