writing process TEKS talk image

Knowledge and Skills Statement

Composition: listening, speaking, reading, writing, and thinking using multiple texts--writing process. The student uses the writing process recursively to compose multiple texts that are legible and uses appropriate conventions.

Provide students with teacher-created sentences in which a prepositional phrase appears between the subject and its verb. In each sentence, leave a blank line where the verb should be and have the students write the correct verb tense in the blank.
 

Further Explanation

Students should be able to demonstrate an understanding of the functions of prepositions and prepositional phrases and to use them effectively in their writing. Ample opportunities should be provided for students to review their writing drafts, evaluating the use of prepositional phrases for correctness and make necessary changes to improve the quality of their writing.

During the editing stage of the writing process, students further improve their drafts and often prepare them for publication by correcting conventions errors. Applying the standard rules of the English language correctly helps the audience understand the information more easily by not having to interrupt their thinking to decide what the writer intended to say.
a class of function words that are followed by nouns, creating a prepositional phrase (e.g., by in “by the river”; at with “at school”)
Students are expected to demonstrate an understanding of the functions of prepositions and prepositional phrases and use them effectively when writing. Students should know how to identify the true subject in a clause when a prepositional phrase appears between the subject and its verb and then use the appropriate subject-verb agreement. For example, in the sentence “Each of the contestants was ready to hear the results,” the subject is each and not contestants and therefore, the correct verb is was not were. Students should review their drafts, evaluating the use of prepositional phrases for correctness, and make necessary changes to improve the quality of the writing.
standard rules of the English language, including written mechanics such as punctuation, capitalization, spelling, paragraphing, etc. and written/oral grammar such as parts of speech, word order, subject-verb agreement, and sentence structure
the grammatical state of a sentence when the subject and verb match in number (singular or plural) and/or person (first person, second person, third person)