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Big Question: How can we work together to achieve a goal?. Author: Joan Sandin 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 Irregular Plurals.
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Big Question: How can we work together to achieve a goal? Author: Joan Sandin Genre: Historical Fiction
Small Group Timer
Review Games Story Sort Vocabulary Words: • Arcade Games • Study Stack • Spelling City: Vocabulary • Spelling City: Spelling Words
Big Question: How can we work together to achieve a goal? • Monday • Tuesday • Wednesday • Thursday • Friday
Vocabulary Words Vocabulary Words More Words to Know • bawling • coyote • dudes • roundup • spurs • mesquite • promoted • convince • energetic • offers
Today we will learn about: • Build Concepts • Draw Conclusions • Prior Knowledge • Build Background • Vocabulary • Fluency: Model Emotion • Grammar: Regular Plural Nouns • Spelling: Irregular Plurals • Working Together
Fluency: Model Emotion • Listen as I read “A Big-City Dream.” • As I read, notice how I will express Luz’s emotions by changing my pacing and tone of voice. Reading with emotion makes dialogue more interesting. • Be ready to answer questions after I finish.
Fluency: Model Emotion • At the beginning of the story, how does Luz feel about her plan for creating a garden? • What kind of person is Luz? How do you know?
Concept Vocabulary • convince– to make someone feel sure; to persuade by argument or proof • energetic – full of energy; vigorous • offers– holds out to be taken; is willing if another approves
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 convince, energetic, offers Gathering a Team
Build BackgroundWhat do you know about life on a ranch? Life on a Ranch
Vocabulary Words • bawling– crying out in a noisy way • coyote– small, wolflike mammal living in many parts of North America • dudes – people raised in the city, especially easterners who vacation on a ranch
Vocabulary Words • roundup– the act of driving or bringing cattle together from long distances • spurs– metal points or pointed wheels, worn on a rider’s boot heels for urging a horse on
More Words to Know • mesquite– any of several trees or bushes common in southwestern United States and Mexico, which often grow in dense clumps or thickets • promoted– raised in rank, condition, or importance • (Next Slide)
Grammar Regular Plural Nouns
tornadoes sometimes sweep, through the western states • Tornadoes sometimes sweep through the western states. • they can blow. The rooves off houses • They can blow the roofs off houses.
Regular Plural Nouns • Many of the kids on the ranches rode ponies. • The underlined words are nouns, plural nouns. They name more than one person, place, or thing. • Some nouns form their plural by adding an -s, -es,or –ies.
Regular Plural Nouns • Singular nouns name one person, place, or thing. • Plural nouns name more than one person, place, or thing. • Add –s to form the plural of most nouns. • school/schools, dog/dogs, cow/cows
Regular Plural Nouns • Add –esto form the plural of nouns that end in ch, sh, s, ss, or x. • ranch/ranches, bush/bushes, bus/buses, cross/crosses, fox/foxes
Regular Plural Nouns • To form the plural of nouns that end in a consonant followed by a y, change the y to i and add –es. • family/families, party/parties, pony/ponies
Regular Plural NounsFind the plural noun in each sentence. • The students had a long bus ride to school. • students • They squeezed together like sardines in a can. • sardines
Regular Plural NounsFind the plural noun in each sentence. • Several families from the area rode the bus. • families • They lived on ranches and went to the same school. • ranches
Regular Plural NounsFind the plural noun in each sentence. • There were no big cities nearby. • cities
Regular Plural NounsWrite each singular noun as a plural. • chicken • chickens • story • stories • newspaper • newspapers
Regular Plural NounsWrite each singular noun as a plural. • box • boxes • baby • babies • recess • recesses
Regular Plural NounsWrite each singular noun as a plural. • teacher • teachers • dish • dishes • bench • benches
Today we will learn about: • Dictionary/Glossary • Draw Conclusions • Prior Knowledge • Setting • Vocabulary • Fluency: Choral Reading • Grammar: Regular Plural Nouns • Spelling: Irregular Plurals • Social Studies: U.S. Expansion • Spanish Explorers • Working Together
Turn to pages 164 - 165. Vocabulary Strategy: Dictionary/Glossary
Turn to pages 166 - 175. Coyote School News
Fluency: Choral Reading • Turn to page 172, paragraphs 2-3. • As I read, notice how my pitch and tone change to express Monchi’s feelings about Victor and Miss Byers. • Now we will practice together as a class by doing three choral readings of these paragraphs.
Grammar Regular Plural Nouns
we saw cows horsiessheeps chickens and pigs on the ranch • We saw cows, horses, sheep, chickens, and pigs on the ranch. • there were to many cowes two count • There were too many cows to count.
Regular Plural Nouns • A plural noun names more than one person, place, or thing. • Add –s to form the plural of most nouns. Add –esto form the plural of nouns ending in ch, sh, s, ss, or x. • When a noun ends in a consonant followed by y, form its plural by changing the y to i and adding –es.