It takes the average reader 2 hours and 53 minutes to read Anytime Test Prep in 120 Days by Matthew J Blazek
Assuming a reading speed of 250 words per minute. Learn more
Begin with the end in mindA set of exercises for a person in high school.This is a customized personal study plan for a student who will start working at home.The next section is probably boring for the student. Here is the summary: Fill in a page a day. Write more if you want. You can write in a journal or on the pages of this playbook.Find a quote or use the quote on the page. Write about the quote in your own words or write about something that you find interesting.The idea is to write at least one page per day. The student can select the topic, and the student can quote at least one person and then comment about that quote. The quote can come from a song, a rap, a quote found on the Internet, or a story that the student has heard. Part of the writing would be to give the story as part of the essay.The quality of the writing will determine the number of points that are awarded. If it is clear that the student has given full attention to the task, then the student wins one point. If there are five words on the page written in large handwriting, and the student then makes a video and posts it on YouTube, that could be worth one point if the verbal explanation includes the reason why this quote was selected. For example, I can write the following words in large letters. You can do it. And then in my video I could explain that "Positive you statements help start the day. I can give a testimony that if I look at a poster that says you can do it, I feel in my heart the energy to get up and make my bed, to brush my teeth, to wash my face, to sweep the front door, to arrive 10 minutes early to the job, to plan how much time I'm going to give to the essay. And that's why I selected this quotation today. "And by talking and talking and talking, this will be equivalent to writing a full essay.What I just did is worth one point. Over the next four months, we expect to see at least 120 sheets. The sheets can be kept in a notebook, or in a loose leaf binder, or they can be written in a composition book. Or you can write in this book. Please: "tell me about something interesting."It is proposed that this or some other system could be used to create a series of 120 essays. I have given an example of writing five words on a page and then making a video that gives a verbal or video essay, we could call it the. "V-essay" or "Vessay"The goal is to accumulate at least 100 points. Each essay will be photographed and sent to the teacher. This can be done once a month or every day or once every two weeks. The student will get feedback about how many points each essay is worth. The teacher will post the photo and an explanation or a narrative for the grade.Spelling is not important. Ideas are important.If the student writes " leaf, stone, tree, cloud, bear." .... And takes a picture, this will get 0.02 points. Why? Because about 2% of the page will be covered with words. If the student adds a video that explains why these five words are related, then there would be a chance for 0.9 or even 0.99 as the score for this essay. And if the student drew a picture to further explain the five words, then the full point could be awarded. The points are based on a checklist of two points: a) How much effort has the student put into thinking about the reader? b) How much effort did the student invest to communicate an idea?So this daily work is expected.FLEXIBLEThese rules can be changed at any time and the teacher is allowed to change any rules to fit the situation. If the student is asked to work for three weeks at a farm away from electricity, where it's not possible to send photos of the previous week's essays, then the rules can be flexible. The goal is to show that distance learning is possible, and that the brain of a teenager can be guided to a stronger condition through regular, daily practice.We said that we begin with the end in mind. You can do this.
Anytime Test Prep in 120 Days by Matthew J Blazek is 172 pages long, and a total of 43,344 words.
This makes it 58% the length of the average book. It also has 53% more words than the average book.
The average oral reading speed is 183 words per minute. This means it takes 3 hours and 56 minutes to read Anytime Test Prep in 120 Days aloud.
Anytime Test Prep in 120 Days is suitable for students ages 10 and up.
Note that there may be other factors that effect this rating besides length that are not factored in on this page. This may include things like complex language or sensitive topics not suitable for students of certain ages.
When deciding what to show young students always use your best judgement and consult a professional.
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