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Post by Renee on Jun 1, 2009 16:06:08 GMT -5
I read somewhere on a review that the teacher must mark up her own copy because this is not done for you. What does this mean? What if I don't know how, or if I do it wrong (whatever it is)? Are there answers for the student workbook?
Thank you, Renee
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Post by Carolyn on Jun 1, 2009 19:18:57 GMT -5
It is difficult to provide exhaustive answers to any writing curriculum, and our teacher books do not try to be exhaustive. We do provide answers for questions involving parsing and diagramming. We have not gone through the literature selections used and identified every part of speech in them. The teacher's material for our poetry books includes the identification of parts of speech, meter and stanza form, and other information along those lines.
You can see a preview of the teacher's book for whichever level you are considering, to get a feel for which sorts of answers are provided and which are not.
If you don't know how to do something after studying the lesson, you can ask on these boards.
Carolyn
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Post by Lene Mahler Jaqua on Jun 2, 2009 12:32:52 GMT -5
Renee,
As a rule we provide answers where the answers are precise and exact.
But in writing, many answers will vary, even the way you mark up a text will sometimes vary.
We provide guidance and examples where there are no exact answers.
Lene
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