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Where do creative ideas come from? Click to listen to story. Small Group Timer. Vocabulary & Amazing Words: Arcade Games Jigword Matchword Speedword Wordsearch Word Web Spelling City-Voc. Spelling City-Amazing. Spelling Words: Speedword Word Web Quia Games Spelling City
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Vocabulary & Amazing Words: Arcade Games Jigword Matchword Speedword Wordsearch Word Web Spelling City-Voc. Spelling City-Amazing Spelling Words: Speedword Word Web Quia Games Spelling City High Frequency Words Fill-in-the Blank Spelling City Review Games
Big Question:Where do creative ideas come from? • Monday • Tuesday • Wednesday • Thursday • Friday
Today we will learn about: • Amazing Words • Comparative endings –er, -est • Fact and Opinion • Verbs: am, is, are, was, were • Writing a review
Writing on Demand Write for 3 minutes about sources that give you creative ideas! Do your best writing! Use your best handwriting!
Click to listen to a song about what you can make out of a peanut.
excel • ex – cel • When you excel at something, you’re better than most people at it. • Kayla excels at math. • Inventors excel in creative thinking.
process • proc – ess • When you process something, you prepare it by following a set of steps. • My raincoat has been processed to make it waterproof. • People process peanuts into many things, including shaving cream and shampoo.
research • re – search • Research means a very careful investigation or hunting for facts. • I did a lot of research to make sure the facts in my report about weather were correct. • People found many ways to use peanuts through research.
Comparative Endings • joking - dried • What do you know about reading these words? • Both has a base word, an ending and a spelling change. • What are the endings? • What are the spelling changes? • Today you’ll learn about the endings –er and –est.
Comparative Endings • funnier - funniest • The base word in these words is funny. What spelling changes do you see? • To blend these words, read one chunk, or syllable, at a time and then blend the chunks together: • fun, ni, er, funnier; fun, ni, est, funniest
Comparative Endings • We add –er to words when we compare two things. • My joke is funnier than yours.
Comparative Endings • We add –est to words when we compare three things: • Kelly told the funniest joke of all.
Comparative Endings • Chunk the word into parts, the base word and the ending. • See if the base word has a spelling change. • Read the chunks from left to right and then blend all the chunks together.
Comparative Endings • slow, slower, slowest • big, bigger, biggest • polite, politer, politest • fluffy, fluffier, fluffiest • sunny, sunnier, sunniest • long, longer, longest • mad, madder, maddest • fine, finer, finest
hottest rarest lovelier biggest braver funniest maddest tamest healthiest fatter later sunnier thinner safest scarier Comparative Endings
Read together! Take turns, choral, back to desk read and practice words.
Pretest! Spelling words. I’ll say, you say! I’ll give you a sentence.We will clap, count, write sounds!
Read-Aloud Louis Braille