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Unit 25. Lesson 3. Connections Recognize it!. WALT. We are learning to expand our knowledge of vowel sounds, practice fluency, focus on vocabulary, focusing on idioms, review adjectives, and prepositions and understand poetry. WHY is this important?.
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Unit 25 Lesson 3
WALT • We are learning to expand our knowledge of vowel sounds, practice fluency, focus on vocabulary, focusing on idioms, review adjectives, and prepositions and understand poetry.
WHY is this important? • Reviewing idioms allows a person to begin to understand commonly used clichés.
Position – Spelling Patterns • When • /f/ • /l/ • /s/ • /z/ • /ch/ • Follow a short vowel sound at the end of a syllable or word, they are usually spelled with double consonants. • ff, • ll, • ss, • zz, • And • tch
Position-Spelling PatternsPage 20 Still notch Stress scratch Bluff press Jazz stretch Patch itch
Position-Spelling PatternsPage 20 Still notch Stress scratch Bluff press Jazz stretch Patch itch When the f,l,s,z,andch sounds follow a short vowel sound at the end of a syllable or word, they are usually spelled with double consonants.
Position – Spelling Patterns • The /j/ sound can also be spelled –dge. • Which sound does the –dge spelling make? • Is the vowel sound in each word short or long? BADGE EDGE RIDGE DODGE FUDGE /j/ Short
Position-Spelling Patternspage 21 When /j/ follows a short vowel at the end of a word, it is spelled -dge
Position-Spelling Patternspage 21 When /j/ follows a short vowel at the end of a word, it is spelled -dge Badge Edge Ridge Dodge Fudge
Soft C Soft G -dge Bank IT R67 • Bank the words that you have used in this lesson and past lessons
Fluency • Turn to Fluency in the back • PAGE R14 • Give your binder to your partner and take theirs. • Each will take turns reading as many words as they can in one minutes. Their partner will write down errors and the last word on their sheets. • Using the count column – calculate the words read per minute. • Place that number on the chart on page R43 • http://www.online-stopwatch.com/large-stopwatch/
Idiom focus English learners are often confused by idioms because their meanings differ from the literal meanings of the words. Because idioms such as add fuel to the fire. Students need to know the meanings of common idioms. Grab an idiom focus The inner circle
Circle PoemsTC: 1-6 Are there any words you don’t know? Circle the Prefixes Underline the Vowels Use vowel consonant patterns to divide the word into syllables Read the word Ful/ fill/ ment Suffix Closed Vowel Syllable Closed Vowel Syllable
Circle PoemsTC: 1-6 Are there any words you don’t know? Circle the Prefixes Underline the Vowels Use vowel consonant patterns to divide the word into syllables Read the word Spar /ing/ ly Suffix Closed Vowel Syllable Closed Vowel Syllable
Circle PoemsTC: 1-6 Are there any words you don’t know? Circle the Prefixes Underline the Vowels Use vowel consonant patterns to divide the word into syllables Read the word con/vey Open Vowel Syllable Closed Vowel Syllable
Circle PoemsTC: 1-6 Are there any words you don’t know? Circle the Prefixes Underline the Vowels Use vowel consonant patterns to divide the word into syllables Read the word Con/ tem/ po/ rar/ y Open Vowel Syllabl Closed Vowel Syllable Open Vowel Syllable R-Controlled Vowel Syllable
Circle PoemsTC: 1-6 Vocabulary What do these words mean?? Sparingly Flout Convey Profound Gaping
Circle PoemsTC: 1-6 Use the Clues
Circle PoemsTC: 1-6 Use the Clues
Circle PoemsTC: 1-6 Use the Clues
Circle PoemsTC: 1-6 Adjectives, Prepositional Phrases, and Predicate Adjectives • What type of word describes a noun or pronoun? • What type of phrase begins with a preposition and ends with a noun or pronoun? • What is the term for an adjective that follows a linking verb and describes the subject? Adjective Prepositional Phrase Predicate Adjective
Circle PoemsTC: 1-6 Adjectives, Prepositional Phrases, and Predicate Adjectives
Circle PoemsTC: 1-6 Adjectives, Prepositional Phrases, and Predicate Adjectives
Circle PoemsTC: 1-6 Predict • What do you think these poems will be about? • What is a poem? • How is a poem different from a story?
Circle PoemsTC: 1-6 Richard Wright • Richard Wright wrote two of the Haikus that you will be reading. • He was an important African American writer.
Circle PoemsTC: 1-6 Elements to be discussed • Thought/Theme: Universal Truth – not limited to space or time. • Forms: Closed, Open, Haiku, and Concrete
Circle PoemsTC: 1-6 Follow along as we read in the EREADER We will stop to complete the comprehend it and take note sections!
Circle PoemsTC: 1-6 OutWitted • What is the theme for outwitted? • People can win over others with love and kindness. • What does it mean to outwit someone? • to outsmart them • What does the speaker refer to when he says “He drew a line to shut me out?” He is talking about a time when someone excluded him. • THE CIRCLE REPRESENTS INCLUSION AND EXCLUSION
Circle PoemsTC: 1-6 The Life of a Man is a Circle • What is the theme for “The Life of a Man is a Circle?” • Our lives are like circles because we begin as helpless children, grow to strong adulthood, and if we live long enough, return to helplessness. • What circular item are in this poem? • What does a circle represent in the poem?