Research your event by reading and taking notes from a variety of non-fiction texts (e.g. books, magazine articles, websites).

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News Article Writing (Standards 9, 10, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16) 9. Create an expository/inional text examining a topic, conveying ideas and inion clearly with facts and details. 10. Apply the structure of non-fiction texts to the creation of a text (e.g. sequence, transition words, topic sentences, etc ). 12. Implement knowledge of correct grammar, spelling, punctuation, capitalization and structure. 13. Follow a writing process to develop and strengthen writing (i.e. planning, composing, revising, editing, and publishing). 14. Evaluate personal and peer writing, according to the 6+1 writing traits: ideas, organization, voice, sentence fluency, word choice, conventions, and presentation. 15. Conduct research that builds knowledge relevant to a topic. 16. Provide and accept constructive criticism in collaboration with peers and adults throughout the writing process. Task: We have been studying Astronomy, specifically the Moon, in Science. You are going to write a news article about a space-related event that has occurred in the last 50 years. This could be any big event from the first Moon landing to the Mars Rover. Research your event by reading and taking notes from a variety of non-fiction texts (e.g. books, magazine articles, websites). Write a news article summarizing your event. Remember sequence! Follow the writing (expanded paragraph) that we have been studying (introduction fact with detail fact with detail - etc - conclusion). Make sure to turn in all pieces of this project: the final article, teacher approval form, mind-map, color-coded rough draft, and peer evaluation. Evaluation: Formative Assessment 1: Teacher approval Present topic and sources to teacher for approval. You may look for sources in the school and classroom libraries, or from home, the Internet, or the public library. Teacher Approval Teacher initials Topic No Yes Sources No Yes

Formative Assessment 2: Mind map Before beginning your news article, you will complete a mind map to demonstrate your research. This will be completed in the computer lab following a saved template: event name on the left, with the sequence of facts directing to the right in order. Off of each fact should, details should be included. Make sure to include a sources branch from the event name, also. Template: Mind Map Rubric News Article (15) 0 1 2 /10 Facts Fewer than 2 facts 2 or 3 facts 4 or 5 facts Details No facts amplified with details Some facts amplified with details Each fact is amplified with details Sequence of evidence Sources are noted Follows mind map Facts are not in correct order No sources noted Does not follow described Facts are mostly in correct order One source is noted Mostly follows described All facts are in correct order Two or more sources are noted Follows described Formative Assessment 3: Color-coded rough draft After your first teacher-student writing conference, upon completion of your first draft (sloppy copy), you will make changes in your second draft

and color-code it to show your news article s organization (underline with colored pencil, or write text in colored pencil). Follow this pattern: introduction - red; facts - orange; details - blue; conclusion - green; transition words - purple. Color-coded Rough Draft Rubric Paragraph (13) Correct paragraph structure (10) is color-coded Introduction Facts Details Conclusion Transition words 0 1 Total /5 Red Blue Orange Green Purple Formative Assessment 5: Peer evaluation Following your second draft (the color-coded one), you will be revising with a partner in the class. Complete the 6+1 Writing Traits checklist carefully and thoughtfully. Provide positive comments and suggestions for improvement. Be specific and tell ways in which the news article could improve! Peer Evaluation Rubric Paragraph (14) 0 1 2 Total /8 Completes 6+1 Writing Traits checklist Little or no effort Satisfactory effort Great effort X2 Positive written comments Critical written comments are not helpful are not helpful are positive are appropriate are positive and specific are appropriate; strategies for improvement provided Name Date *Peer Evaluation (Not to scale)

Directions: Read your partner s paragraph carefully three times. Then, answer the following questions. 6+1 Writing Traits Circle the answer that fits the paragraph. There are no right or wrong answers try your best! Ideas It is easy to recognize the main idea of this paragraph. No Mostly Yes Voice This paragraph put pictures in my mind. No Mostly Yes Organization This paragraph is organized. No Mostly Yes Word Choice The words in this paragraph are juicy. No Mostly Yes Sentence fluency The sentences in the paragraph flow together well. No Mostly Yes Conventions This paragraph doesn t have mistakes. Many A few None! Tell about what is good in the paragraph. Be specific! Tell about what needs to be fixed in the paragraph. Tell HOW the writer can fix it. Summative Assessment: Final News Article (Attached)

News Article Rubric 0 1 2 3 Total /48 Overall creation of a non-fiction text; inion clearly communicated (9) Little or no attempt made Overall news article is unsatisfactory; major revisions needed to effectively communicate inion Overall news article is adequate; minor revisions needed to effectively communicate inion Overall news article is excellent; Inion clearly communicated X3 Accurate Research (15) Writing follows nonfiction structure (10) Writing mechanics (12) Presentation Introduction Facts Sequence examples Closing sentence Transition words Grammar Spelling Punctuation Capitalization Sentence fluency Any inaccuracies Facts are not sequential Run-ons or fragments included; choppy Messy; Unreadable Ineffective communication of main idea Fewer than 2 facts examples unrelated to facts Does not restate main idea Few transitions used; repetitive Some revision needed to effectively communicate main idea All facts are accurate Communicates main idea successfully 2 or 3 facts 4 or 5 facts examples mostly related to facts Main idea repeated Some transitions used; simple Correct structure; simple and unvaried Correct structure; complex and varied sentences Neat; Readable Facts follow a logical and consistent sequence examples expand understanding of facts Restates main idea in new way Used appropriately; varied X2 X2