Big Question - Scottsboro Electric Power Board
Download
Report
Transcript Big Question - Scottsboro Electric Power Board
Big Question: What is it
like to live life at sea?
Author:
Gloria Rand
Genre:
Historical Fiction
Small Group
Timer
Review Games
Story Sort
Vocabulary Words:
Arcade Games
Study Stack
Spelling City: Vocabulary
Spelling City: Spelling Words
Spelling
Words
Multisyllabic Words
• reaction
• prerecorded
• incorrectly
• incredibly
• disobedient
• disagreeable
• refreshment
• unbreakable
• declaration
• retirement
• misdialed
• undefined
• unhappily
• watchfully
• gleefully
• sportsmanship
• repayment
• questionable
• displacement
• midshipman
• multicultural
• universally
• understatement
• outlandish
• inflammable
Big Question: What is it
like to live life at sea?
Monday
Tuesday
Wednesday
Thursday
Friday
Vocabulary Words
Vocabulary Words
More Words to Know
bow
nautical
cargo
plush
celestial
blasts
conducted
tempest
dignified
tide
navigation
quivered
stern
Monday
Question of the Day
What is it like to live
life at sea?
Today we will learn about:
Build Concepts
Author’s Purpose
Predict
Build Background
Vocabulary
Fluency: Pauses
Grammar: Adjective and Articles
Spelling: Multisyllabic Words
The Sea
Fluency
Pauses
Fluency: Pauses
Listen as I read “The Sea.”
As I read, notice how I pause
after phrases and complete
thoughts and between stanzas to
help listeners understand the
poem’s rhythm and meaning.
Be ready to answer questions
after I finish.
Fluency: Pauses
What is the author’s purpose
for writing this poem?
What details from the poem
help you visualize what the sea
looks, sounds, and feels like?
Concept Vocabulary
blasts – strong, sudden gusts of
wind or air
tempest – a violent windstorm or a
violent disturbance
tide – rise and fall of the ocean
about every twelve hours, caused
by the gravitational pull of the
moon and sun
(Next Slide)
Concept
Vocabulary
(To add information to the graphic organizer, click on end
show, type in your new information, and save your
changes.)
Build Concept Vocabulary
blasts, tempest, tide
Dangers
The Sea
Movements
Author’s Purpose,
Predict
Turn to Page 516 – 517.
Prior Knowledge
What do you know about sailing ships?
How
Ships Are
Sailed
Life on
a Ship
Sailing
Ships
Parts of a
Ship
Prior Knowledge
This week’s audio explores
life at sea and traveling the
world. After you listen, we
will discuss what you found
out and what surprised you
most about sea travel.
Vocabulary
Words
Vocabulary Words
bow – the forward part of a ship,
boat, or aircraft
cargo – load of goods carried by a
ship, plane, or truck
celestial – of the sky or outer space
conducted – directed; managed
dignified – having dignity; noble;
stately
Vocabulary Words
navigation – skill or process of
finding a ship’s or aircraft’s position
and course
quivered – shook; shivered; trembled
stern – the rear part of a ship or
boat
More Words to Know
nautical – of or about ships,
sailors, or navigation
plush – luxurious; expensive;
stylish
(Next
Slide)
Grammar
Adjectives and Articles
albert unhapily attended school
on board the john ena
Albert unhappily attended school
on board the John Ena.
sometimes hed hide from him
teacher
Sometimes he’d hide from his
teacher.
Adjectives and Articles
The four children lived on a big
ship.
The words four and big are
adjectives, which are used to
describe nouns or pronouns.
The words The and a are a special
type of adjectives called articles.
Adjectives and Articles
Proper adjectives, which are
formed from the names of people,
places, or things, such as Swiss
cheese and Boston terrier, are
capitalized.
Adjectives and Articles
An adjective is a word that describes
a noun or pronoun. An adjective
usually comes before the word it
describes, but it can also follow the
noun or pronoun.
Many adjectives answer the question
What kind? They describe color,
shape, size, sound, taste, touch, or
smell.
Adjectives and Articles
Other adjectives answer the question
How many? or Which one?
What Kind? The ship made a
wonderful home. The ship was cozy.
How Many? The John Ena had four
masts.
Which One? This room is where we
have our lessons.
Adjectives and Articles
A, an, and the are special adjectives
called articles. A and an are used only
with singular nouns.
Use a before words that begin with a
consonant sound.
Use an before words that begin with a
vowel sound or a silent h.
The is used with both singular and
plural nouns.
Adjectives and Articles
I had an egg and a slice of toast for
breakfast. The hen laid the eggs.
Proper adjectives are formed from
proper nouns.
Proper Nouns: America, Germany,
China
Proper Adjectives: American, German,
Chinese
Adjectives and Articles
Underline each adjective once and each article twice.
The family lived on a big ship.
The family lived on a big ship.
This ship was called the John Ena.
This ship was called the John Ena.
They kept chickens and a noisy
rooster.
They kept chickens and a noisy
rooster.
Adjectives and Articles
Underline each adjective once and each article twice.
The John Ena sailed to many parts of
the world.
The John Ena sailed to many parts of
the world.
It was an interesting place to grow
up.
It was an interesting place to grow
up.
Adjectives and Articles
Decide what kind of question each underlined adjective answers.
Once we got caught in a terrible
storm.
What kind?
The storm lasted for five days.
How many?
That experience frightened us all.
Which one?
Spelling
Words
Multisyllabic Words
• reaction
• prerecorded
• incorrectly
• incredibly
• disobedient
• disagreeable
• refreshment
• unbreakable
• declaration
• retirement
• misdialed
• undefined
• unhappily
• watchfully
• gleefully
• sportsmanship
• repayment
• questionable
• displacement
• midshipman
• multicultural
• universally
• understatement
• outlandish
• inflammable
Tuesday
Question of the Day
What would you like
about life at sea? What
would you miss?
Today we will learn about:
Context Clues
Author’s Purpose
Predict
Vocabulary
Fluency: Choral Reading
Grammar: Adjectives and Articles
Spelling: Multisyllabic Words
Science: Saltwater
The Ocean Ecosystem
The Sea
Vocabulary Strategy:
Homonyms and
Homographs
Turn to Page 518 - 519.
Sailing Home
Turn to Page 520 - 527.
Fluency
Choral Reading
Fluency: Choral Reading
Turn to page 525, paragraphs 1-3.
As I read, notice the punctuation
cues I use to determine logical
breaks.
We will practice as a class doing
three choral readings of these
paragraphs.
Grammar
Adjectives and Articles
a incredebly powerful storm battered
the john ena one christmas
An incredibly powerful storm
battered the John Ena one Christmas.
the childrens watched the terrible
storm
The children watched the terrible
storm.
Adjectives and Articles
An adjective is a word that
describes a noun or pronoun.
Adjectives answer the questions
What kind? How many? or Which
one?
A, an, and the are special
adjectives called articles.
Spelling
Words
Multisyllabic Words
• reaction
• prerecorded
• incorrectly
• incredibly
• disobedient
• disagreeable
• refreshment
• unbreakable
• declaration
• retirement
• misdialed
• undefined
• unhappily
• watchfully
• gleefully
• sportsmanship
• repayment
• questionable
• displacement
• midshipman
• multicultural
• universally
• understatement
• outlandish
• inflammable
Wednesday
Question of the Day
How is a ship like and
unlike other types of
homes?
Today we will learn about:
Author’s Purpose
Predict
Sequence
Vocabulary
Fluency: Pause
Grammar: Adjectives and Articles
Spelling: Multisyllabic Words
Science: Oceans and Weather
The Sea
Sailing Home
Turn to Page 528 - 534.
Fluency
Pauses
Fluency: Pauses
Turn to page 527, last paragraph.
As I read, notice where I pause
and how reading without pauses
could change meaning or make the
story harder to understand.
Now we will practice together as a
class by doing three echo
readings.
Grammar
Adjectives and Articles
what a battering the john ena
tooked during the storm
What a battering the John Ena
took during the storm!
at one point the ship lay on it’s
side like an dead fish
At one point the ship lay on its
side like a dead fish.
Adjectives and Articles
An adjective is a word that
describes a noun or pronoun.
Adjectives answer the questions
What kind? How many? or Which
one?
A, an, and the are special
adjectives called articles.
Adjectives and Articles
Adjectives often include
important information.
The sentence Get minutes of
exercise every day is far less
helpful than the same sentence
with an adjective added. Get
thirty minutes of exercise every
day.
Spelling
Words
Multisyllabic Words
• reaction
• prerecorded
• incorrectly
• incredibly
• disobedient
• disagreeable
• refreshment
• unbreakable
• declaration
• retirement
• misdialed
• undefined
• unhappily
• watchfully
• gleefully
• sportsmanship
• repayment
• questionable
• displacement
• midshipman
• multicultural
• universally
• understatement
• outlandish
• inflammable
Thursday
Question of the Day
What would you pack for
a solo voyage by sea?
Today we will learn about:
Narrative Nonfiction/Text
Features
Reading Across Texts
Content-Area Vocabulary
Fluency: Partner Reading
Grammar: Adjectives and Articles
Spelling: Multisyllabic Words
“Sharing a
Dream”
Turn to Page 536 - 537.
Fluency
Partner Reading
Fluency: Partner Reading
Turn to page 527, last paragraph.
Read this paragraph three times
with a partner. Be sure to pause
at logical breaks in the text and
offer each other feedback.
Grammar
Adjectives and Articles
the family kept ducks but i dont
know if they kept gooses
The family kept ducks, but I
don’t know if they kept geese.
when they wanted a egg, they
taked one from a hens nest
When they wanted an egg, they
took one from a hen’s nest.
Adjectives and Articles
An adjective is a word that
describes a noun or pronoun.
Adjectives answer the questions
What kind? How many? or Which
one?
A, an, and the are special
adjectives called articles.
Adjectives and Articles
Test Tip: An adjective that
describes a noun usually comes
before the noun. However, the
adjective may also follow the
noun and a linking verb. Even so,
the adjectives still describes the
noun.
Adjectives and Articles
Before: The happy children
loved stormy weather.
After: The children were happy
when the weather was stormy.
(Happy describes children,
stormy describes weather.)
Spelling
Words
Multisyllabic Words
• reaction
• prerecorded
• incorrectly
• incredibly
• disobedient
• disagreeable
• refreshment
• unbreakable
• declaration
• retirement
• misdialed
• undefined
• unhappily
• watchfully
• gleefully
• sportsmanship
• repayment
• questionable
• displacement
• midshipman
• multicultural
• universally
• understatement
• outlandish
• inflammable
Friday
Question of the Day
What is it like to live
life at sea?
Today we will learn about:
Build Concept Vocabulary
Author’s Purpose
Author’s Viewpoint
Context Clues
Grammar: Adjectives and Articles
Spelling: Multisyllabic Words
Parts of a Book
The Sea
Author’s Purpose
An author might have more than
one reason for writing. Four
common reasons are to persuade,
to inform, to express ideas or
feelings, and to entertain.
How you read can depend on what
you’re reading. For example, you
might read a funny story faster
than a news article.
Author’s Viewpoint
The author’s viewpoint is the way an
author looks at a subject he or she is
writing about. It is the author’s
attitude toward the subject.
You can sometimes determine the
author’s viewpoint by thinking about
the words the author uses.
Look for an author’s viewpoint on
setting or characters as you read a
story.
Homonyms and Homographs
Homographs are words with the same
spelling but different meanings and
pronunciations.
Homonyms are words spelled and
pronounced the same but with
different meanings and origins.
When a familiar word does not seem
to make sense in context, it may be a
homograph or homonym.
Homonyms and Homographs
Read the phrases listed in the first
column and then restate it in your own
words.
You can look up pronunciations or
unknown words in a dictionary, if
needed.
Homonyms and Homographs
Word in Context
1. bandage the wound
2. wound the clock last
night
1. a long row of beans
2. a noisy, angry row
3. row the boat
1. sliding on cardboard
boxes
2. the fighter boxes in a ring
Restatements
Parts of a Book
A book has many parts.
A title page shows the title,
author, and publisher.
A copyright page tells the year a
book was published.
A table of contents lists chapter
titles or section headings and
page numbers for them.
Parts of a Book
A bibliography lists sources the
author used to research or write
a book.
An appendix is an addition near
the end of a book that gives more
information, such as a graph,
chart, list, or table.
Parts of a Book
A glossary gives definitions of
important words in the book.
An index lists a book’s topics in
alphabetical order and shows page
numbers where information
related to each topic can be
found.
Parts of a Book
Captions tell more about a book’s
graphic sources.
Footnotes appear at the bottom
of pages. They give more
information about words or ideas
in the book.
Grammar
Adjectives and Articles
their lifes were exciting But
sometimes dangerous
Their lives were exciting but
sometimes dangerous.
id like to live on a sailing ship. it
would be a lot of fun
I’d like to live on a sailing ship. It
would be a lot of fun.
Adjectives and Articles
An adjective is a word that
describes a noun or pronoun.
Adjectives answer the questions
What kind? How many? or Which
one?
A, an, and the are special
adjectives called articles.
Spelling
Words
Multisyllabic Words
• reaction
• prerecorded
• incorrectly
• incredibly
• disobedient
• disagreeable
• refreshment
• unbreakable
• declaration
• retirement
• misdialed
• undefined
• unhappily
• watchfully
• gleefully
• sportsmanship
• repayment
• questionable
• displacement
• midshipman
• multicultural
• universally
• understatement
• outlandish
• inflammable
We are now ready to
take our story tests.
Story test
Classroom webpage,
Reading Test
AR
Other Reading Quizzes
Quiz #