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Transcript
STUDENT LEARNING OUTCOMES (SLO’s) FOR WORD CLASSES
Question
No.
MODERN GRAMMAR
SLO
Demonstrate the ability to
1A
Conjugate “new” verbs using the five
forms for regular verbs.
Explain the formation of some new
words.
Classify words into one of the four form
classes (noun, verb, adjective, adverb)
Using the following shared
characteristics: derivational affixes,
inflectional suffixes, frame sentence, and
structure words that accompany the formclass word.
Classify words as noun, verb, adjective,
or adverb using the 8 suffixes of the
inflectional paradigm
Distinguish between adjectives ending in
–ly and adverbs ending in –ly.
Explain how structure words/signal words
(determiners, auxiliaries, conjunctions,
qualifiers/intensifiers) make a difference
in either meaning or interpreting nonsense
sentences.
Explain the importance of structure class
words in clarifying meaning
Distinguish between form and structure
class words
Distinguish between terminal prepositions
that are superfluous and those that are
grammatically correct because they are
particles in phrsal verbs, elliptical after an
infinitive marker, idiomatic, or
“postposed” (delayed in WH-questions or
in constructions in which the object
precedes the preposition).
Distinguish between a particle (a
preposition that accompanies a verb to
convey a single meaning) and a
preposition that introduces a prepositional
phrase.
Recognize and identify modals.
Explain how disagreement between a
subject and a verb is often affected by a
word that appears in the subject
slot/position of a sentence – the expletive
“there.”
Distinguish between a reflexive pronoun
and an intensive pronoun based on the
pronoun’s use in a sentence
1B
2A and 2B
3
4 and 5
6A and 6B
6C
7
8
9
10
11
12
TRADITIONAL
GRAMMAR
Prior Knowledge
Or Review
Needed
8 Parts of Speech
8 Parts of Speech
Nouns, Verbs,
Adjectives,
Adverbs
Adjectives and
Adverbs
Articles, Helping
Verbs/Auxiliaries
Articles, Helping
Verbs/Auxiliaries
Prepositions
Prepositions
Used as Adverbs
Prepositions
Prepositional
Phrases
Helping Verbs
“There” at the
beginning of a
sentence
Types of
Pronouns