Write a paper that discusses the crash course to syllabus design.
Create a 8 pages page paper that discusses the crashcourse to syllabus design. Objectives: Upon completion of the course, the student should be able to construct complete simple sentences to express an idea, ask a question, express a command or wish, or express an emotion. Upon completion of Part 1, the student should be able to define what a sentence is, identify the parts of a sentence, and determine whether a group of words is a sentence or not. Upon completion of Part 2, the student should be able to construct simple complete sentences. Upon completion of Part 3, the student should be able to know what the different kinds of sentences are, their function, and the punctuation used. Upon completion of Part 4, the student should be able to identify kinds of sentences used in the reading and construct different kinds of sentences.
Discussion Notes: Introduce the topic of sentences with a short discussion regarding words, groups of words, and sentences. Have the students identify whether your examples are mere words, a mere group of words, or sentences. (Examples: bag, a bushel of fun, wait, I am working, when she arrived, etc.) Note that there are one-word sentences. Proceed to define what a sentence is. Explain the definition by enumerating what a sentence should have for it become a sentence. Have students give their own sentence examples and let them identify the subject, the verb, and whether or not the sentence can stand alone. Give the students a short quiz before the end of the hour for this topic.
“A sentence has at least 3 things – a subject: what we are talking about, a verb: tells that the subject does something or is something, a characteristic: can stand alone, can be independent.” (What is a Sentence?)
Quiz: Write an S for “sentence” or NS for “not a sentence”. Sample items: (1) The quaint town of Aringay in the Philippines, (2) Aringay is 250 kilometers from Manila.