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Vocabulary for Literacy: CfE

by Jane Cooper Rachel Alexander

Syllabus: CfE (Curriculum for Excellence, from Education Scotland) and SQALevel: BGE (S1-S3) and Senior Phase (National 4/5)Subject: LiteracyWords are powerful. Enrich your vocabulary and you will be able to speak, listen, read and write more effectively.Explore important aspects of vocabulary - decoding words, easily confused words, groups of words and new words - through simple explanations, strategies, progressive activities and revision tasks.This is the only book available that includes a dedicated chapter on inclusive language, to teach pupils how their words can make people feel accepted and understood.Vocabulary for Literacy equips pupils with the building blocks for success in exams, coursework and adult life, and facilitates literacy development across the curriculum.> Understand the essentials. Key concepts that pupils need to remember are introduced in 'explanation' boxes.> Put theory into practice. 'Building', 'Strengthening' and 'Extending' tasks enable pupils to apply their knowledge and skills, through a mix of solo and group work.> Check and consolidate. 22 photocopiable A-Z activity sheets at the end of the book can be used flexibly for classwork, homework, revision or assessment.> See the big picture. 'Crossover' boxes make links to prior and future learning, knowledge and skills, encouraging pupils to approach vocabulary holistically.> Avoid common errors. 'Mistake' boxes contain examples and tips to ensure that pupils get it right in their own speech and writing."There is a proven link between an improved vocabulary and increased attainment in Scottish schooling."Rachel Alexander

Vocabulary for Success, Common Core Enriched Edition, Grade 9

by Douglas Fisher Nancy Frey Ernest Morrell

A publisher-supplied textbook

Vocabulary for the College-Bound Student

by Harold Levine Norman Levine Robert T. Levine

To provide meaningful, organized vocabulary improvement for the high school student whose goals may be college admission, a responsible position, or self-improvement.

Vocabulary Power Plus for the ACT (Book One)

by Daniel A. Reed

Vocabulary Power Plus for the ACT will help you: * Introduce students to the ACT test format with ACT-style multiple choice questions * Build student writing skills with practical, ACT-style writing prompts * Reinforce correct grammar usage with ACT-style exercises * Use proven techniques to help students gain skills using word-in-context questions; prefix, suffix, and root practice; inference questions; and critical reading exercises

Vocabulary Spelling Poetry III (Fifth Edition)

by James A Chapman

Watch your child enhance his vocabulary and memorize classic poems from Shakespeare, Longfellow, and more with Vocabulary, Spelling, Poetry III. This work-text includes 24 Word Lists and 4 Review Lists that each contain 20 spelling words and 10 vocabulary words with definitions that correspond with selections from the 9th grade literature text—Themes in Literature. These lists include exercises that help your child understand and apply spelling rules, use words in the correct context, and recognize synonyms and antonyms. Ten well-known poems are also included for recitation and memorization to enhance the appreciation of poetry.

Vocabulary, Spelling, Poetry III Quizzes

by Sarah Eshleman Calyn Ohman

Perceptions are important. When we misspell or misuse a word, others perceive us as being careless or lacking education. Give your homeschooler the reinforcement he needs to represent both his training and his Savior well with these prepared spelling and vocabulary quizzes. The quiz book is correlated with the text Vocabulary, Spelling, Poetry III, 5th ed., and the Homeschool English 9 Parent Guide/Student Daily Lessons, which calls for spelling and vocabulary study for seven of the nine weeks of each quarter. Answers and grading instructions are sold separately in the Vocabulary, Spelling, Poetry III Quiz Key. Grade 9. <p><p> Product Features<p> · Both spelling and vocabulary words are quizzed in a variety of ways such as dictation, recognition of misspelled words, application of spelling rules, and choosing the correct vocabulary word for the definition or context. The variety of formats both within quizzes and from quiz to quiz allows you to evaluate whether your teen truly has an understanding of the words.<br> · The 28 weekly quizzes include additional review words from the previous two lessons to give extra reinforcement to your teen’s learning.<br> · The 4 quarterly review quizzes are cumulative over the entire quarter or semester. This continued exposure to the words builds your ninth grader’s comfort and confidence in spelling the words, applying spelling rules to other words he encounters, and using the vocabulary words in his own speech and writing.

Vocabulary Workshop: Element of Language (Grade 9, 3rd Course)

by Holt Rinehart Winston Staff

Vocabulary Workshop (Elements of Language, Grade 9, 3rd Course) contains: Words in Context, Analogies, Synonyms, Prefixes, Suffixes, and Roots.

Vocabulary Workshop: Level D (New Edition)

by Jerome Shostak

Prepare students for the new standardized tests and teach 300 essential vocabulary words per level.

Vocabulary Workshop: Level D (Enhanced Edition)

by Jerome Shostak

For close to five decades VOCABULARY WORKSHOP has been a highly successful tool for guiding and stimulating systematic vocabulary growth for students. It has also been extremely valuable for preparing students to take the types of standardized vocabulary tests commonly used to assess grade placement, competence for graduation, and/or college readiness. Th Enhanced Edition has faithfully maintained those features that have made the program so beneficial in these two areas, while introducing new elements to keep abreast of changing times and changing standardized-test procedures, particularly the SAT.

Vocabulary Workshop, Common Core Enriched Edition, Level D

by Jerome Shostak Vicki A. Jacobs Louis P. De Angelo

A publisher-supplied textbook

Voice for Freedom: The Story of James Weldon Johnson

by Jodie Shull

James Weldon Johnson advanced further than anyone would have expected him to, and worked for justice, freedom, and equality in everything he said or did. Here's his story.

The Voice inside My Head

by S. J. Laidlaw

A fast-paced mystery, The Voice inside My Head is expected to be a commercial success and a hit with teens. Seventeen-year-old Luke's older sister, Pat, has always been his moral compass, like a voice inside his head, every time he has a decision to make. So when Pat disappears on a tiny island off the coast of Honduras and the authorities claim she's drowned - despite the fact that they can't produce a body - Luke heads to Honduras to find her because he knows something the authorities don't. From the moment of her disappearance, Pat's voice has become real, guiding him to Utila, where she had accepted a summer internship to study whale sharks. Once there, he meets several characters who describe his sister as a very different girl from the one knows. Does someone have a motive for wanting her dead? Determined to get to the bottom of Pat's disappearance, Luke risks everything, including his own life, to find the answer.

Voice of Gods

by Eleanor Herman

At nineteen, Ada of Caria yearns to take the Snake Blood throne from her mad older siblings. She seeks the help of a young orphaned girl named Helen, the first True Oracle to have walked the earth in more than three hundred years.Helen may be able to channel the voice of the gods, but she hates her gift and will do anything to get rid of it--even lie to her best friend, Myrtale, the priestess-princess of Epirus who is destined to marry King Philip II of Macedon even though she loves another.And in the shadows lurks a handsome green-eyed stranger who has more at stake--and more to lose--than anyone could possibly imagine.Amid jealousy and heartbreak, torrid affairs and secret rendezvous, it is spoken by the gods that either Helen or Myrtale--newly named Olympias--will carry the destiny of the known world within her womb.The prequel to Legacy of Kings, Voice of Gods traces the intricate web of love and betrayal that led up to the birth of history's most powerful leader, Alexander the Great.

A Voice of Her Own: Becoming Emily Dickinson

by Barbara Dana

When something is most important to me and I do not want to lose it, I gather it into a poem. It is said that women must employ the needle and not the pen. But I will be a Poet! That's who I am!Before she was an iconic American poet, Emily Dickinson was a spirited girl eager to find her place in the world. Expected by family and friends to mold to the prescribed role for women in mid-1800s New England, Emily was challenged to define herself on her own terms.Award-winning author Barbara Dana brilliantly imagines the girlhood of this extraordinary young woman, capturing the cadences of her unique voice and bringing her to radiant life.

Voice of the Valley

by Sheena Koops

Voice of the Valley is a poetic, multi-layered, coming-of-age story inspired by the controversial flooding of Saskatchewan's Souris Valley. Onja Claibourn is almost fifteen. Her world is one of sage, buffalo bills, brown-eyed susans, cactus, flax, buckbrush, foxtail and orange moss—the world of the valley just beyond the family farm. Old roads twist like a game of snakes and ladders into the valley. Onja and her horse Ginger spend their summer days in exploration. But things begin to change when Onja discovers first an archeological dig and then the startling fact that there is a plan to dam and flood her valley. She cannot contemplate this change to the landscape she loves so much. And when she also discovers sixteen-year-old Etthen, working with the archaeologists, she begins those first faltering footsteps toward a totally unfamiliar landscape—romantic love. Onja Claibourn is a wonderfully complex and very real character—innocent, wise, shy, stubborn, playful, and caring. The other major character in the novel is the prairie landscape itself—huge sky, harsh sun, rolling hills, sweeping fields of grain.

The Voice That Challenged a Nation: Marian Anderson and the Struggle for Equal Rights

by Russell Freedman

"A voice like yours," celebrated conductor Arturo Toscanini told contralto Marian Anderson, "is heard once in a hundred years." This insightful account of the great African American vocalist considers her life and musical career in the context of the history of civil rights in this country. Drawing on Anderson's own writings and other contemporary accounts, Russell Freedman shows readers a singer pursuing her art despite the social constraints that limited the careers of black performers in the 1920s and 1930s. Though not a crusader or a spokesperson by nature, Marian Anderson came to stand for all black artists -- and for all Americans of color -- when, with the help of such prominent figures as Eleanor Roosevelt, she gave her landmark 1939 performance on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial, which signaled the end of segregation in the arts.<P><P> Carefully researched, expertly told, and profusely illustrated with contemporary photographs, this Newbery Honor and Sibert Medal-winning book is a moving account of the life of a talented and determined artist who left her mark on musical and social history. Through her story, Newbery Medal-winning author Russell Freedman, one of today's leading authors of nonfiction for young readers, illuminates the social and political climate of the day and an important chapter in American history. Notes, bibliography, discography, index.<P> Newbery Honor book and Winner of the Sibert Medal

The Voice Upstairs

by Laura E. Weymouth

In 1920s England, a working-class girl who can see spirits works with a lord&’s son to solve mysterious deaths at the local manor home in this &“intensely atmospheric and eerie…compelling, secret-filled gothic tale&” (Kirkus Reviews, starred review) perfect for fans of The Haunting of Bly Manor and Downton Abbey.Wilhelmina Price has a dubious reputation in the village of Thrush&’s Green. Ever since her mother&’s untimely death, she has been able to see a person&’s spirit leaving their body days or hours before they die. Wil has never been able to prevent these deaths, so her unusual skill has made her an outsider to most except her lifelong friend, Edison, the youngest son of Lord Summerfield. But when a maid at the Summerfield&’s estate dies in the same mysterious way as Wil&’s own mother, Wil takes on a housemaid&’s position to investigate whether these women might, in fact, have been murdered. There is nothing Ed Summerfield values more than his friendship with Wil, which is why he&’s desperate to disguise how hopelessly in love with her he&’s become—and his belief that he may be haunted by the ghost of his older brother, Peter. Because if Wil, with her supernatural powers, can&’t see the same evidence of hauntings that Ed does, he worries he may actually be losing his mind. Together, Wil and Ed must dig deeper into the Summerfields&’ hoard of secrets, though the truth won&’t give itself up without a fight that could prove deadly to the both of them, as they face cunning adversaries among the living and the dead.

Voices: The Final Hours of Joan of Arc

by David Elliott

"Stunning . . . elegant . . . arresting . . . supple and harrowing.” - The Wall Street Journal★“An innovative, entrancing account of a popular figure that will appeal to fans of verse, history, and biography.” - Kirkus, starred reviewIn poems that surprise and move readers, bestselling author David Elliott explores how Joan of Arc changed the course of history and remains a figure of fascination centuries after her extraordinary life and death.Told through medieval poetic forms and in the voices of the people and objects in Joan of Arc’s life, (including her family and even the trees, clothes, cows, and candles of her childhood), Voices offers an unforgettable perspective on an extraordinary young woman. Along the way it explores timely issues such as gender, misogyny, and the peril of speaking truth to power. Before Joan of Arc became a saint, she was a girl inspired. It is that girl we come to know in Voices.

Voices from the March on Washington

by George Ella Lyon J. Patrick Lewis

The powerful poems in this poignant collection weave together multiple voices to tell the story of the March on Washington, DC, in 1963. From the woman singing through a terrifying bus ride to DC, to the teenager who came partly because his father told him, "Don't you dare go to that march," to the young child riding above the crowd on her father's shoulders, each voice brings a unique perspective to this tale. <P><P> As the characters tell their personal stories of this historic day, their chorus plunges readers into the experience of being at the march--walking shoulder-to-shoulder with strangers, hearing Martin Luther King Jr.'s famous speech, heading home inspired.

Voices of the American Past: Documents in U.S. History, Volume I

by Raymond M. Hyser J. Chris Arndt

NIMAC-sourced textbook

Voices of the American Past: Documents in U.S. History, Volume II

by Raymond M. Hyser J. Chris Arndt

NIMAC-sourced textbook

Voices of the Holocaust

by Perfection Learning Corporation

Contains short stories, poems, biographical accounts, and essays about the Holocaust intended to help readers answer the question: Could a holocaust happen here?

The Void of Mist and Thunder (13th Reality #4)

by James Dashner Brandon Dorman

Suspense meets sacrifice in the action-packed conclusion to "New York Times "bestselling author James Dashner's 13th Reality series. Atticus Higginbottom--aka Tick--has known all along that when the battle for every reality is on the line, his role will be a crucial one. But he never could have imagined how this final challenge would go down. While Tick's friends Paul, Sofia, and Sato work together with the Realitants to fight the newest and biggest threat to the very fabric of all that exists, Tick finds himself alone with the villains responsible for the damage: Mistress Jane and Reginald Chu. Each character faces unimaginable choices and death-defying odds in this breathless conclusion to a quirky, clever series. Ultimately, it will take a stunning sacrifice to save the day. . .

A Void the Size of the World

by Rachele Alpine

A haunting novel about a girl who must face the consequences after her actions indirectly lead to her sister’s disappearance.Rhylee didn’t mean to kiss her sister’s boyfriend. At least, not the first time. But it doesn’t matter, because her sister, Abby, caught them together, ran into the dark woods behind their house…and never came home. As evidence mounts that something terrible has happened to Abby, no one wants to face the truth. Rhylee can’t bring herself to admit what she’s done: that she is the reason her sister ran away. Now Tommy, Abby’s boyfriend, is the prime suspect in her disappearance, and Rhylee’s world has been turned upside down. Slowly, Rhylee’s family is breaking—their lives center on the hope that Abby will return. Rhylee knows they need to face the truth and begin healing—but how can they, when moving on feels like a betrayal? And how do you face the guilt of wishing a person gone…when they actually disappear?

Volcano

by June Colbert

Sara is fifteen and secretly in love with Kel Pearson. Her dad is a Meatball. Kel?s dad is a Meatball too. `Meatballs? like to jump into earthquakes and climb inside volcanoes to take their temperatures. When they clamber out, shoes burning and hair smoking, they pass their findings on to Coneheads. `Coneheads? analyse data and make recommendations to local governments. Together they make up an `AusDAR? team ? Disaster Assessment and Relief (Australian Division) ? experts in Disaster Casualty Minimisation. They?ve just been asked to go to the exotic Andes to gauge the safety of the new gas and oil pipeline being dug through the base of a sleepy little extinct volcano called Mt Cumbal. They are all set for the adventure of a lifetime ? after all, the volcano is in no danger of erupting. But what about that murky, brown water coming out of the tap in Sara?s caravan? It?s not supposed to smell like sulphur ? June Colbert, bestselling author of THE KING OF LARGE and THE LAST BOY, masterfully weaves together teenage themes of identity, pride, secret `crushes? and the sense of belonging in her well-researched, detailed and fast-paced novel VOLCANO.

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Showing 18,376 through 18,400 of 19,637 results