Quill Connect

Help your students advance from writing fragments and run-ons to composing complex, well-structured sentences with Quill Connect. By combining sentences, students learn how to demonstrate relationships between ideas. Then, they receive instant, custom feedback designed to help them improve the clarity and precision of their sentences.

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Try a sample activity

Concept Reports

Teachers see reports that state exactly which errors the student made and which concepts the student mastered.

Activity Summary Report

Teachers can use their activity summary report to see which concepts the student has mastered and which ones they need to practice.

Common Core Language Standards

Teachers have access to over 200 exercises aligned with the Common Core language standards.

What Skills Are Being Targeted

Adjectives

Appositive Phrases

Articles

Commonly Confused Words

Complex Sentences

Compound Sentences

Conjunctive Adverbs

Nouns

Open Combining

Parallel Structure

Participial Phrases

Prepositions

Pronouns

Questions

Relative Clauses

Subjects, Objects, Predicates

Verbs

How Quill Connect Works

Students are prompted with four ideas and asked to join them together. There are many different ways of combining them, and Quill serves feedback on hundreds of potential answers. Here is a student's progression from their first attempt to a strong sentence.

Prompt:

Patrick Henry opposed new British taxes.

He gave a speech.

The speech was powerful.

The speech was to inspire the colonists.

1st Attempt

Write Concisely

The student used and to join multiple ideas together. This is a very common pattern for emerging writers. Quill breaks this pattern by challenging students to revise their work.

Prompt:

Patrick Henry opposed new British taxes.

He gave a speech with a powerful impact.

The speech was powerful.

The speech was to inspire the colonists.

Student’s Response:

Patrick Henry opposed new British taxes and he gave a speech and the speech was powerful to inspire the colonists.

2nd Attempt

Show Relationships

While using and to join the two main ideas is grammatically correct, it is not the strongest way of conveying the relationship between these ideas. Students are prompted to use a conjunction that expresses a cause and effect relationship. This is an important step towards conveying complex ideas.

Prompt:

Patrick Henry opposed new British taxes.

He gave a speech with a powerful impact.

The speech was powerful.

The speech was to inspire the colonists.

Student’s Response:

Patrick Henry opposed new British taxes and he gave a powerful speech to inspire the colonists.

3rd Attempt

Use Punctuation

The student showed the correct relationship but left out the comma. Quill provides feedback and shows a model sentence to help guide the student.

Prompt:

Patrick Henry opposed new British taxes.

He gave a speech with a powerful impact.

The speech was powerful.

The speech was to inspire the colonists.

Student’s Response:

Patrick Henry opposed new British taxes so he gave a powerful speech to inspire the colonists.

4th Attempt

Strong Sentence!

The student wrote a clear and concise sentence!
Quill provides additional feedback to reinforce what the student learned.

Prompt:

Patrick Henry opposed new British taxes.

He gave a speech with a powerful impact.

The speech was powerful.

The speech was to inspire the colonists.

Student’s Response:

Patrick Henry opposed new British taxes, so he gave a powerful speech to inspire the colonists.

Check Out These Relevant Articles

Why Sentence Combining?

Sentence combining is an evidence-based practice proven to help students master grammar concepts and improve their writing.

How Quill Gives Feedback

In this article, we’re going to look underneath the hood at how Quill generates this immediate, targeted feedback for students.

Best Practices: How to support students during independent-practice activities

By engaging with students while they practice their writing skills, teachers can provide the impactful intervention that students need to become the best writers they can be.

Best Practices: Use Quill to support students with IEPs

Read about Quill's best practice recommendations for using Quill with students with IEPs.

"Quill has been a wonderful tool for my third graders, many of whom are second language learners. We especially love the immediate feedback provided after each practice; it has definitely made us pay closer attention to detail. Quill has greatly contributed to our growth mindsets this year!"

Laura Marshall, Caswell Elementary School

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