Outschool
Iniciar sesión

Una muestra de lo que vendrá: escritura esencial para prepararse para la escuela secundaria

¡Plan de estudios atractivo y creativo! ¡Instrucción explícita! ¡Retroalimentación auténtica! ¡Estudiantes felices! Los estudiantes trabajan para construir una base sólida de escritura en este curso anual para que estén listos y ansiosos por comenzar con el inglés de la escuela secundaria.
Lemons-Aid Learning
Puntuación media:
4.9
Número de reseñas:
(656)
Popular
Estrella en ascenso
Clase

Qué está incluido

1 reunión en vivo
45 minutos horas de clase por semana
Tarea
1 hora por semana. Students will do 15-30 minutes of work per week.
Letra de calificación
Students will receive authentic and helpful feedback on their writing from the instructor during class and when they turn work in. Please ask if you require percentage grades.

Experiencia de clase

Nivel de inglés - B2+
Grado de EE. UU. 4 - 6
Nivel Beginner - Advanced
💯 PLEASE NOTE: This is an academic course that prepares your upper elementary learner for the rigor of middle school writing. Parents have asked us to offer this in the ongoing/recurring format, giving you the ultimate in flexibility and convenience. 




🏁 🏎️ Ready? Set! Go! As elementary school concludes, it's time to gear up for the writing challenges awaiting students in middle school English language arts. This purposeful curriculum is tailored for upper elementary learners, ensuring a seamless transition into the intricacies of middle school writing. 
✅ Learners engage with various writing genres—creative, expository, argumentative, research-driven, poetic, technical, scientific, historical, and more. 
✅ Utilizing Google Docs enhances their digital writing skills, promoting proficiency in typing and formatting, mirroring practices in upper-grade levels.
✅ Explicit grammar instruction, with a focus on sentence combining and punctuation, fosters sophistication in written expression.





🍋 𝙏𝙝𝙚 𝙇𝙚𝙢𝙤𝙣𝙨-𝘼𝙞𝙙 𝙒𝙖𝙮 🍋
𝐋𝐞𝐚𝐫𝐧 𝐦𝐨𝐫𝐞 𝐚𝐛𝐨𝐮𝐭𝐋𝐞𝐦𝐨𝐧𝐬-𝐀𝐢𝐝, 𝐨𝐮𝐫 𝐩𝐡𝐢𝐥𝐨𝐬𝐨𝐩𝐡𝐲, 𝐚𝐧𝐝 𝐨𝐮𝐫 𝐭𝐞𝐚𝐜𝐡𝐞𝐫𝐬! CLICK THROUGH TO GET A SURPRISE COUPON CODE!
https://docs.google.com/document/d/1JwlFnta1ZYAlNn8t2GMMA8Bb6dd0ums1IbdtpzZwuRc/edit?usp=sharing

𝘌𝘹𝘱𝘭𝘪𝘤𝘪𝘵 𝘵𝘦𝘢𝘤𝘩𝘪𝘯𝘨: (𝘐 𝘥𝘰, 𝘞𝘦 𝘥𝘰, 𝘠𝘰𝘶 𝘥𝘰)
𝘚𝘵𝘶𝘥𝘦𝘯𝘵 𝘔𝘰𝘵𝘪𝘷𝘢𝘵𝘪𝘰𝘯 & 𝘈𝘤𝘤𝘰𝘶𝘯𝘵𝘢𝘣𝘪𝘭𝘪𝘵𝘺
𝘗𝘶𝘣𝘭𝘪𝘤 𝘚𝘱𝘦𝘢𝘬𝘪𝘯𝘨 & 𝘊𝘢𝘮𝘦𝘳𝘢𝘴 𝘖𝘯
𝘏𝘰𝘮𝘦𝘸𝘰𝘳𝘬
𝘎𝘳𝘢𝘱𝘩𝘪𝘤 𝘖𝘳𝘨𝘢𝘯𝘪𝘻𝘦𝘳𝘴
𝘚𝘵𝘶𝘥𝘦𝘯𝘵 𝘔𝘢𝘴𝘵𝘦𝘳𝘺
𝘛𝘦𝘢𝘤𝘩𝘦𝘳 𝘍𝘦𝘦𝘥𝘣𝘢𝘤𝘬--The back-and-forth work between a student and teacher significantly benefits a student if it is done well. We follow best practices in this area with how we design class time, assignments, and routines. According to Pennington Publishing, effective writing feedback (or grading) is:
• Specific, not general
• Immediate, not postponed
• Routine with a revision / feedback cycle
• Explanatory
• The right amount
• Targeted to the most critical issues
• Varied (written, audio, and video comments)
• Holding students accountable




🤝 𝙋𝙖𝙧𝙚𝙣𝙩𝙨, 𝙒𝙚 𝙂𝙤𝙩 𝙔𝙤𝙪!
Although parents are equipped and have wise feedback for their children, students often take constructive criticism from a teacher with less resistance. Recognizing this familiar dynamic, our teachers integrate feedback and evaluation into live class interactions and homework submissions. This alleviates the burden on parents who may find it challenging to provide constructive criticism. By optimizing teachers' time on this crucial task, we ensure that students receive valuable input from a supportive and skilled perspective so students benefit from the feedback/revision process.




🎥 To see teacher introduction videos, go to the Lemons-Aid profile page where you can view the video and also read bios. 
https://outschool.com/teachers/Karen-Lemons?usid=0BAnv5zn&signup=true&authTrigger=follow_teacher&follow=true&utm_campaign=share_leader_link




📆 WEEKLY SCHEDULE: Pop in and out as you like! 


✅ The week starting Aug 11: Intermediate Research - Writing about Historical Context. The When. We are preparing them for historical research and writing, but we're breaking it down! This week, students learn how to look at a timeline, take notes, then describe what led up to the main historical event, the timing of the main event, and what happened after the main event. 

✅ The week starting Aug 18: Intermediate Research - Writing about Historical Significance. The Why or "So What?" We are preparing them for historical research and writing, but we're breaking it down! This week, students think about the significance of the historical event by doing a little more reading, taking notes, and then paraphrasing their notes in an argumentative piece about the significance of a historical event. 

✅ The week starting Aug 25: Into to the Middle School Recurring Class SMART COOKIE - Writing Suspense. We all know the tense feeling of reading or watching something suspenseful. The tension builds, and we start to feel more and more uncomfortable! Crafty authors know how to to this, relieving the tension at the right time, making the reading experience enjoyable. Students will learn how to do this and will write their own suspenseful passages.

✅ The week starting Sept 1: Intro to the Middle School Recurring Class SO THE STORY GOES - "All Summer in a Day." Learners read the short story and have a discussion on the essential questions, learning to analyze literature. 



✭⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯✭
                   🚌 𝕋ℍ𝔼 𝟚𝟘𝟚𝟜-𝟚𝟘𝟚𝟝 𝕊ℂℍ𝕆𝕆𝕃 𝕐𝔼𝔸ℝ 𝔹𝔼𝔾𝕀ℕ𝕊 ✏️
       You can jump in any time, but this is a good place to start!

✅ The week of Sept 8-14: The How-to Piece. This is a technical piece of writing that forces writers to break down a simple process into its component parts. It takes some thinking and then organizing before they put their pens to paper. Just a heads-up to parents--this class will make your learners hungry! :)

✅ The week starting Sept 15: The Informational Essay. A building block of upper elementary and middle school writing is the informational essay! Scholars will write about their favorite person while learning to use elaboration techniques, descriptive writing, and more. 

✅ The week starting Sept 22: The Simple Summary. Is this a literature lesson or a writing lesson? It's both! Students will learn two different types of narratives and observe important characters, places, and objects, all in preparation for writing a simple summary. This requires analysis and concise writing skills. 

✅ The week starting Sept 29: Descriptive Writing: an Object. Students will learn all sorts of things and it will be so super great. They'll do awesome work. Ack! What did I just write? General, no-good words! Learners will understand why specific, clear, and strong language is important as they practice writing descriptively so that their readers develop a sharp, detailed picture in their minds. 

✅ The week starting Oct 6: Descriptive Writing: Developing a Setting. These are not your average, everyday, boring places. The settings our writers will describe are unusual and other-worldly. They will have to use their descriptive writing tools to paint these word pictures! 

✅ The week starting Oct 13: Descriptive Writing: Developing a Character. It's alive! Students will turn inanimate objects into walking, talking, and maybe even flying characters with detailed external and internal traits. They are authors creating their own unique characters. 

✅ The week starting Oct 20: Descriptive Writing: Feelings. It's hard to describe a feeling! But students will do it! They will write short passages using descriptive writing to SHOW a character with a feeling rather than just TELL us what a character is feeling. 

✅ The week starting Oct 27: The Problem Story: a Focus on Conflict. We do not live in a perfect world, with perfect people, with perfect lives! The human story is one of conflict. In this lesson, learners will analyze the conflict in a Pixar Short, which takes some critical thinking. The conflict is not so easy to discern without looking a little deeper. They will use this lesson to create a conflict between two characters. They can be characters they have developed on their own, or they can use well-known characters but in a different conflict. 

✅ The week starting Nov 3: The Problem Story: Blend, Baby, Blend. The grammar and punctuation of using dialogue is tricky! But using dialogue in a narrative is a lot more than just what people say! Students learn to give their characters voices  by writing dialogue while blending other important narrative elements. They learn to BLEND, BABY, BLEND! 

✅ The week starting Nov 10: The Memory Story: a Personal Narrative. Learners should come to class with a very special object for show-and-tell. The object should be meaningful and be associated with a memory. If they forget to bring one, they will be able to run off from class and grab something. It usually just takes a few seconds. This will be the inspiration for writing a memoir, or the "memory-story" we're calling it at this age. In class, we will read an example memoir for even more inspiration. 

✅ The week starting Nov 17: The Biographical Sketch. This mini-biography will bring our little writers closer to someone they know. They will learn about a favorite adult through an interview, then they will write the true story about that life. Of course, this will come after they read a sample biographical sketch! 

NOV 24 - 30: NO CLASS

✅ The week starting Dec 1: The Fable. We all know those memorable characters we meet in fables. Fables are different from other stories, and that's not just because they teach a moral. They are written with certain characteristics. Our scholars will read fables to understand the genre, then they will write their own! 

✅ The week starting Dec 8: The "If I Were..." Poem. Just like artists use tracing paper to learn different strokes and artistic techniques, authors can mimic beloved poetry to learn poetic elements and stretch their creative muscles. Writers will write the "If I Were..." poem this week. I will warn you though. This lesson, along with the next one, has been known to develop passionate poets! You have been warned. 


✅ The week starting Dec 15: The "New Animal" Poem. Again, poetry does not have to be scary! It's fun to bend language, learn to rhyme, and develop and maintain a rhythm. Again, lifelong poets are born in this lesson. 

Dec 22 - Jan 4: NO CLASS

✅ The week starting Jan 5: The Pet Essay. Do you have ferrets? Parakeets? A pet stuffy? Students will learn the aspects of expository writing as they write a three-paragraph essay on what it's like to own a pet. They will especially learn to organize and how to elaborate. No easy tasks! But, they will do it and do it well! 

✅ The week starting Jan 12: Writing about Conflict. This class is a combo of literary analysis, critical thinking, and writing. Students watch Pixar Shorts, analyzing a character for his external and internal traits. This teaches them to look closely at a narrative, evaluate a character, and analyze the author's craft of character development. 

✅ The week starting Jan 19: Writing about a Literary Character. This class is a combo of literary analysis, critical thinking, and writing. Students watch Pixar Shorts, analyzing a character for his external and internal traits. This teaches them to look closely at a narrative, evaluate a character, and analyze the author's craft of character development. 

✅ The week starting Jan 26: The TEE-it UP Opinion Essay. Using fairy tales and fables, students learn to discern an issue, what side of the issue is presented in the literature, and then respond to that literature with their own opinion. Opinion writing is a type of argument writing and this lesson starts to build a foundation of writing and supporting arguments. 

✅ The week starting Feb 2: Another TEE-it UP Opinion Essay. Using fairy tales and fables, students learn to discern an issue, what side of the issue is presented in the literature, and then respond to that literature with their own opinion. Opinion writing is a type of argument writing and this lesson starts to build a foundation of writing and supporting arguments. 

✅ The week starting Feb 9: The Literary Analysis Argument Essay. Easy as A-B-C. Here we go! We are working on argument writing and how to support arguments with details from narratives. 

✅ The week starting Feb 16: Another Literary Analysis Argument Essay. Easy as A-B-C. Here we go! We are working on argument writing and how to support arguments with details from narratives. 

✅ The week starting Feb 23: The Gift of Poetry. It's all about the verbs in this poetry lesson. We won't rhyme, but we'll segment poetic parts and create a couple of poems that can be given as gifts. Parents might want to wait to watch this recording for a couple of weeks. ;)

✅ The week starting Mar 2: The Imitation Poem. Have you ever placed a piece of tracing paper over a picture to learn how to draw something? This is sort of what we're doing in these two classes. Students will study classic poems while learning about poetic devices (metaphor, personification, & rhyme). Then we place that tracing paper, or rather, we imitate the poems but use new ideas. This helps students look deeply and analytically at a poem while trying their pen at using the same poetic devices and techniques. 

✅ The week starting Mar 9: The Imitation Poem, Again. Have you ever placed a piece of tracing paper over a picture to learn how to draw something? This is sort of what we're doing in these two classes. Students will study classic poems while learning about poetic devices (metaphor, personification, & rhyme). Then we place that tracing paper, or rather, we imitate the poems but use new ideas. This helps students look deeply and analytically at a poem while trying their pen at using the same poetic devices and techniques. 

✅ The week starting Mar 16: The Argumentative Piece. It's time to stake your claim! This is the beginning of argument writing. After brainstorming two sides to an issue, students stake their own claim and then support it. Elaborating by asking three important questions help learners generate ideas. Additionally, they learn how to consider the alternate side of an issue and then how to refute that argument. 

✅ The week starting Mar 23: The Literary Analysis Piece. We will use short sketches, which students love, to learn literary terms, then we will write an analytical paragraph as a class. They will practice doing it themselves for homework. 

✅ The week starting Mar 30: The Literary Analysis Piece. Is it a reading class or a writing class? It's both! Learners will read a piece of literature, learn a couple of literary terms, then write an analytical paragraph as a class. They will practice doing it themselves for homework. 

✅ The week starting Apr 6: The Elevator Summary. After learning the important plot points in a narrative such as exposition, inciting incident, rising action, etc., students will learn how to succinctly write a summary of a narrative without rambling, giving away too many details, and missing the main idea. I call this the elevator summary because it has to be short enough that you could say it in the time it takes to ride the elevator up one floor! This is a literature and writing combo class. 

✅ The week starting Apr 13: The Elevator Summary, Again. It’s tough, so we need to practice some more! It’s okay if students missed last week because we teach it again. If students attended last week, they need the repetition! After learning the important plot points in a narrative such as exposition, inciting incident, rising action, etc., students will learn how to succinctly write a summary of a narrative without rambling, giving away too many details, and missing the main idea. I call this the elevator summary because it has to be short enough that you could say it in the time it takes to ride the elevator up one floor! This is a literature and writing combo class. 

✅ The week starting Apr 20: Just the Facts! The Straight News Article. Students will learn the elements of a straight news article, read examples, and sort details according to how important they are. Then they grab their reporter's notebook and watch a surprise event unfold. Their job will be to write their own straight news article with organized and sorted facts and without any bias.

✅ The week starting Apr 27: The Op-Ed. After reading examples, they jump right in as editorial journalists. They learn how to see both sides of an issue, introduce facts and evidence, and refute the opposing argument in their own opinion article. The topic is high-interest and many students have passionate opinions! 

✅ The week starting May 4: Email Etiquette. Is email a dying form of communication? Certainly not, especially in education and business. Students learn email etiquette, such as having the right attitude, using professional words, choosing the correct style, and including the proper parts of a professional email. Keeping their audience and purpose in mind, students learn how to deal with a problem by addressing it head-on in a polite email. 

✅ The week starting May 11: The Better Book Review. Book reviews are everywhere, and students read them a lot! They read them on amazon.com, on other websites, they hear from friends, and they have to decide if they want to read the book. We will look at various book reviews from different places to see which book reviews are good and which ones are not; students will come up with a list and outline for writing their own book reviews. 

✅ The week starting May 18: It's Greek to Me! The Drama. It's time to break out the Greek mythology! Students will read a short drama, learning how dramas are written. They will rewrite the ending to one drama, practicing with the unique structure.

✅ The week starting May 25: Technical Writing, Simplified. Have you ever heard of Wikipedia Simple? While focusing on technical writing, integrating precise instructions, content-specific vocabulary, and a clear process, students will write a Wikipedia Simple page explaining how to do something they're good at: mounting a horse? Tap dancing? Shooting a hockey puck? Playing a video game? It's a hard genre of writing but they will learn to break down a sequenced process and communicate in writing. 

✅ The week starting Jun 1: The Personal Narrative. What is the meaning of life? We probably won't discover the answer to that question, but students will think of a significant memory in their own lives and pull out the deeper meaning, reflecting, thinking, remembering, and then will write a memoir, a personal narrative. While doing this, they learn to blend important narrative elements such as dialogue, thoughts, feelings, action, and descriptive writing.  

✅ The week starting Jun 8: Response to Literature. Writing a response to a piece of literature is more than just saying whether it was good or not. Students will read a piece of literature and learn to use textual evidence to answer a question. This forms a foundation of argument writing and literary analysis, and the practice of this genre of writing prepares students for the most difficult writing they will do in secondary English classes. I break this down for students so they understand the difference between an argument, evidence, and analysis, but in age-appropriate terms.  

✅ The week starting Jun 15: The Travel Blog. Based on a real-life travel experience or on a virtual field trip, students become travel bloggers, detailed, casual, and with great personalities. We explore the genre of the blog and how different it is from formal pieces of writing. Students learn to write to a specific audience and how to modify their writing stylistically so that their blog is informal and interesting to read. This opinion writing teaches students to use specific details in their writing as well. I always travel to Bermuda, my favorite place on the planet, in my mind and in my model blog, and students can go anywhere they want virtually! 

✅ The week starting Jun 22: Elaboration Techniques in an Expository Paragraph. Have your kiddos ever said, "I don't know what to write?" They stare at a blank page or a blinking cursor on the computer as their mind draws a blank. They need to be taught how to elaborate, or write more, much more. Students will use information and data to write a well-developed, fully elaborated main idea paragraph. They will learn how to ask themselves elaboration questions to guide their thinking and writing so that they have rich, specific details, descriptions, and reasoning in their paragraphs. 

✅ The week starting Jun 29: Create it! Write it! Sell it! Learners become inventors and advertising executives as they develop their own product and then write ad copy to sell it. While doing so, students will learn elements of persuasive writing and create an advertisement with convincing techniques. Will they create a magical mini-dinosaur that does their homework? Or will they create flying shoes that will take them through the air to a friend's house? Their imaginations can run wild!  

✅ The week starting Jul 6: A Roadrunner Story--Exposition & Conflict. Roadrunner Story-a Setting, Characters & Conflict. Inspired by Wile E Coyote and the Roadrunner, students will learn to establish a setting, develop characters, and design a conflict in narrative writing. We use video clips for inspiration and practice painting pictures with words. Beep! Beep! 

✅ The week starting Jul 13: A Roadrunner Story--The Main Event. A Roadrunner Story--Narrative Writing. Inspired by Wile E Coyote and the Roadrunner, students will write a very short main event of a story, blending narrative elements. They practice writing action, dialogue, descriptive writing, and other narrative elements. You do not need to have attended last week's class.  

✅ The week starting Jul 20: A Roadrunner Story--The Climax & Resolution. A Roadrunner Story--Students write the climax and resolution of a roadrunner story. They will "Blend, Baby, Blend!" Students learn to blend all elements of narrative writing into a story of their own. They do not need to have attended last week's class.   

✅ The week starting Jul 27: Intermediate Research Writing--Writing about a Historical People. The Who. We are preparing them for historical research and writing, but we're breaking it down! This week, students learn how to look at a historical figure, take notes, synthesize the information, and write a short biographical piece we call the VIP Sketch.  

✅ The week starting Aug 3: Intermediate Research Writing--Writing about Historial Events--The What & the How. We are preparing them for historical research and writing, but we're breaking it down! This week, students learn how to look at a historical event, take notes, then paraphrase the notes in an expository piece informing the reader of a historical event. 

✅ The week starting Aug 10: Intermediate Research Writing--Writing about Historial Place (part of context)--The Where. We are preparing them for historical research and writing, but we're breaking it down! This week, students learn how to look at a map and its key and make sense of the importance of geography in historical research. Then they write an informational piece describing the place and why it was important to an event. 

✅ The week starting Aug 17: Intermediate Research Writing--Writing about Historial Times (part of context)--The When. We are preparing them for historical research and writing, but we're breaking it down! This week, students learn how to look at a timeline, take notes, then describe what happened led up to the main historical event, the timing of the main event, and what happened after the main event. 

✅ The week starting Aug 24: Intro to Argument Research Writing--Writing about the Historial Significance--The Why or "So What?" We are preparing them for historical research and writing, but we're breaking it down! This week, students think about the significance of the historical event by doing a little more reading, taking notes, and then paraphrasing their notes in an argumentative piece about the significance of a historical event. This is an introduction to argumentative research writing. 

✅ The week starting Aug 31: Into to the Middle School Recurring Class SMART COOKIE - Writing Suspense. We all know the tense feeling of reading or watching something suspenseful. The tension builds, and we start to feel more and more uncomfortable! Crafty authors know how to to this, relieving the tension at the right time, making the reading experience enjoyable. Students will learn how to do this and will write their own suspenseful passages.



🎓 🎓 🎓 🎓 🎓 🎓 🎓 🎓 🎓 🎓 🎓 🎓 🎓 🎓 🎓 🎓 🎓 🎓 🎓 🎓 
💯 YOU'RE DONE! YOU DID IT! It's time for Middle School! 

🍪  If you have finished these classes, 𝗵𝗲𝗿𝗲 𝗶𝘀 𝘁𝗵𝗲 𝗻𝗲𝘅𝘁 𝗳𝘂𝗹𝗹 𝘆𝗲𝗮𝗿 𝗼𝗳 𝘄𝗿𝗶𝘁𝗶𝗻𝗴 𝗰𝘂𝗿𝗿𝗶𝗰𝘂𝗹𝘂𝗺 similar to this one but more advanced: https://outschool.com/classes/smart-cookie-ongoing-middle-school-english-a-complete-curriculum-8kWkrY37?usid=0BAnv5zn&signup=true&utm_campaign=share_activity_link

👀 To see a 𝗰𝗼𝗺𝗽𝗮𝗿𝗶𝘀𝗼𝗻 𝗼𝗳 𝗮𝗹𝗹 𝗼𝘂𝗿 𝗺𝗶𝗱𝗱𝗹𝗲 𝘀𝗰𝗵𝗼𝗼𝗹 𝗘𝗻𝗴𝗹𝗶𝘀𝗵 𝗼𝗳𝗳𝗲𝗿𝗶𝗻𝗴𝘀, both semester & ongoing, click here: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1C4kPDI-gpxZD1Lap7vwqW9QwWsqQSwZ0/view?usp=sharing
🎓 🎓 🎓 🎓 🎓 🎓 🎓 🎓 🎓 🎓 🎓 🎓 🎓 🎓 🎓 🎓 🎓 🎓 🎓 🎓
Metas de aprendizaje
Have fun while writing!
Learn to use correct grammar when writing.
objetivo de aprendizaje

Otros detalles

Idioma en el que se imparte la clase
Inglés (Nivel: B2+)
Recursos externos
Además del aula de Outschool, esta clase utiliza:
Se unió el June, 2020
4.9
656reseñas
Popular
Estrella en ascenso
Perfil
Experiencia y certificaciones del docente
Pensilvania Certificado de Docencia en Artes del lenguaje inglés
Kimberly Parinisi
Nueva York Certificado de Docencia en Artes del lenguaje inglés
Kimberly Parinisi
Pensilvania Certificado de Docencia en Artes del lenguaje inglés
Jenn Riale
Tennesse Certificado de Docencia en Artes del lenguaje inglés
Elizabeth Leavitt
Washington Certificado de Docencia en Estudios Sociales/Historia
Karen Lemons
Washington Certificado de Docencia en Artes del lenguaje inglés
Karen Lemons
Washington Certificado de Docencia en Idioma extranjero
Karen Lemons
Misuri Certificado de Docencia
Ali Marie
Tennesse Certificado de Docencia en Ciencia
Danielle Mortimore
Maestría en Educación desde Carson Newman University
Elizabeth Leavitt
Maestría en Educación desde Western Governors University
Danielle Mortimore
Maestría en Educación desde Liberty University
Karen Lemons
Licenciatura desde Purdue University
Becky Padgett
Licenciatura en Educación desde Philadelphia College of Bible
Kimberly Parinisi
Licenciatura en Educación desde Millersville University
Jenn Riale
Licenciatura en Educación desde Liberty University
Kristen Freeman
Licenciatura en Inglés desde Florida State University
Karen Lemons
Licenciatura en Educación de la primera infancia desde Missouri State University
Ali Marie
Licenciatura en Música desde Western Connecticut State University
Blake Dahlmeyer
Licenciatura en Ciencias Políticas y Gobierno desde Patrick Henry College
Brian Smyth
Licenciatura en Biología/Ciencias Biológicas desde Middle Tennessee State University
Danielle Mortimore
The founder of Lemons-Aid, Mrs. Lemons has a B.A. in English and an M.Ed in Education Administration. She is certified to teach English, has a principal's license, and has many years of experience at every level. She also supervises teachers in their undergraduate and graduate level teacher preparation programs at Colorado Christian University. She is a teacher of teachers. 

All teachers who teach this class have an appropriate degree, teaching experience, and training, giving your learner a teacher who is a  content-area expert who loves kids. 

Reseñas

Clase grupal
Compartir

21 US$

semanalmente
1x por semana
45 min

Completado por 135 alumnos
Videoconferencias en vivo
Edades: 10-13
5-9 alumnos por clase

Acerca de
Apoyo
SeguridadPrivacidadPrivacidad de CAPrivacidad del alumnoTérminos
Obtener la aplicación
Descargar en la App StoreDescargar en Google Play
© 2024 Outschool