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Penguin Chicks. How have animals adapted to solve the problems of their environment?. Author: Betty Tatham Illustrator : Helen K.Davie Genre : Expository Nonfiction. Small Group. Timer. Spelling Words. finish pilot even wagon music silent rapid female lemon
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Penguin Chicks How have animals adapted to solve the problems of their environment? • Author: Betty Tatham • Illustrator: Helen K.Davie • Genre: Expository Nonfiction
Small Group Timer
Spelling Words • finish • pilot • even • wagon • music • silent • rapid • female • lemon • pupil • focus • robot • tulip • camel • salad • resident • spinach • climate • tradition • innocent
More Words to Know Vocabulary • cuddles • flippers • frozen • hatch • pecks • preen • snuggles • rookery • squid • inhospitable • predatory • refuge
Big Question: How have animals adapted to solve the problems of their environment? • Monday • Tuesday • Wednesday • Thursday • Friday
Today we will learn about: • Build Concepts • Main Idea and Details • Graphic Organizers • Build Background • Vocabulary • Fluency: Accuracy and Appropriate Pace/Rate • Common and Proper Nouns • Syllable Pattern V/CV, VC/V • Animal Adaptation
Monday Fluency: Model
Fluency: Accuracy and Appropriate Pace/Rate • Listen as I read “Swamp Scramblers.” • As I read, notice how I pause slightly after each comma and a little longer after periods and before and after the dashes. • Be ready to answer questions after I finish.
Fluency: Accuracy and Appropriate Pace/Rate • Identify the topic, the main idea, and one supporting details of the selection. • In what way are mudskippers and other fish similar? • In what way are they different?
Build Concept Vocabulary: inhospitable, predatory, refuge Animal Adaptations
Main Idea and Details Turn to page 150
Prior Knowledge:Take 2 or 3 minutes to think about as many things as you can about penguins in general and Emperor penguins specifically.
Vocabulary Words • cuddles – lies close and comfortably; curls up • flippers – broad, flat body parts used for swimming by animals such as seals and penguins • frozen – hardened with cold; turned to ice • hatch – to come out of an egg
Vocabulary Words • pecks– strikes with a beak • preen – to smooth or arrange feathers with a beak • snuggles – lies closely and comfortably together; cuddles
Other Vocabulary Words • rookery– a large group of birds together raising their young; a nesting colony • squid – a sea animal that has a pair of tail fins and ten arms
Other Vocabulary Words • inhospitable – offering no shelter or good conditions for living • predatory – living by killing and eating other animals • refuge – shelter or protection from danger or trouble • Next slide
Monday Grammar:
does penguin live in alaska • Do penguins live in Alaska? • the feemale bird look for food • The female bird looks for food.
Grammar: Common and Proper Nouns • But on the ice in Antarctica, there are no twigs or leaves. • Ice, twigs, and leaves are common nouns. • They name any person, place, or thing. • Antartica is a proper noun. • It names a particular place and beings with a capital letter.
Grammar: Common and Proper Nouns • A common noun names any person, place, or thing. • A proper noun names a particular person, place, or thing. Proper nouns being with capital letters. • Common Nouns: These birds live in cold places. • Proper Nouns: It is cold in Antarctica in July.
Grammar: Common and Proper Nouns • Capitalize each important word in a proper noun: Fourth of July • The names of days, months, and holidays are proper nouns. They begin with capital letters: Monday, January, Christmas
Grammar: Common and Proper Nouns Tell if the underlined noun is a common or proper noun. • Penguins have black and white feathers. • common noun • Some penguins live in zoos in the United States. • proper noun • Penguins have webbed feet. • common noun
Grammar: Common and Proper Nouns Tell if the underlined noun is a common or proper noun. • New Zealand has many penguins. • proper noun • This penguin hatched in July. • proper noun
Grammar: Common and Proper Nouns Underline the common nouns and circle the proper nouns in the sentences. • Penguins eat fish from the water. • Penguins eat fish from the water. • There is much food in the Pacific Ocean. • There is much food in the (PacificOcean). • Australia has many penguins • (Australia) has many penguins.
Grammar: Common and Proper Nouns Underline the common nouns and circle the proper nouns in the sentences. • Seals and whales also live in Antarctica. • Seals and whales also live in (Antarctica). • Are there penguins at the zoo in Washington. • Are there penguins at the zoo in (Washington).
Monday Spelling:
Spelling Words • finish • pilot • even • wagon • music • silent • rapid • female • lemon • pupil • focus • robot • tulip • camel • salad • resident • spinach • climate • tradition • innocent
Today we will learn about: • Context Clues • Main Idea and Details • Graphic Organizers • Develop Vocabulary • Fluency: Choral Reading • Common and Proper Nouns • Syllable Pattern V/CV, VC/V • Adaptation
Vocabulary Strategy for Synonyms Turn to page 152.
Penguin Chick Pages 154 - 161
Tuesday Fluency:
Fluency: Choral Reading • Turn to page 156. • As I read, notice the pace I read. • You may want to read a nonfiction selection at a slower rate so you can understand it better. • Now we will practice together doing three choral readings of page 156.
Tuesday Grammar:
babys cant get there own food • Babies can’t get their own food. • it is silent on the ice of antarctica • It is silent on the ice of Antarctica.
Grammar: Common and Proper Nouns • A common noun names any person, place, or thing. • A proper noun names a particular person, place or thing. • Proper nouns begin with capital letters. • In proper nouns of more than one word, the first word and each important word are capitalized. • The names of days, months, and holidays are proper nouns.
Tuesday Spelling:
Spelling Words • finish • pilot • even • wagon • music • silent • rapid • female • lemon • pupil • focus • robot • tulip • camel • salad • resident • spinach • climate • tradition • innocent