280 likes | 387 Views
Unit 20, Lesson 1. W. A. L. T. Determine vowel digraphs in words with at least 80% accuracy Spell new words successfully at least 8 of 10 trials Determine adjectives in sentences successful 4 of 5 attempts Use commas successfully in sentences at least 80% accurately.
E N D
W. A. L. T. • Determine vowel digraphs in words with at least 80% accuracy • Spell new words successfully at least 8 of 10 trials • Determine adjectives in sentences successful 4 of 5 attempts • Use commas successfully in sentences at least 80% accurately
1. Review: Vowel Digraphs • A vowel digraph is made up of two vowel letters that combine to make a single vowel sound. The vowel sound represented by vowel digraphs is usually long. • Examples: • Gain, aim, stain, explain = all long a sounds
1. Discover It: Vowel Digraphs ay and ai • Rain, spray, aid, brain, tray, maybe, play, faint • Sort the words into two columns • Ay Ai spray rain tray aid maybe brain play faint
1. Discover It: Vowel Digraphs ay and ai • The words on the previous slide are sorted according to their sound/spelling pattern • Ay is found at the end of words or syllables • Aiis found at the beginning or middle of words or syllables
Workbook Page R4 play great
2. Spelling Pretest 1 • Please write the words to the best of your ability • When done, please write the correct spelling • Please turn to workbook page 56
relieve Workbook Page 56 decrease course chimney hollow guarantee guard feast guess shallow guest delay great meanwhile friend
3. Unit Vocabulary • Hardcover page 45 has the vocabulary words for the unit • We have to • Identify words that are unfamiliar • Discuss the meanings of these words
3. Review: Synonyms • Synonyms are words that have the same or similar meanings • What is a synonym for monster? • What is a synonym for damage? • What is a synonym for ambitious? • What is a synonym for empty? beast break eager hollow
3. Multiple Meaning Map • Multiple meaning maps allow you to see a word in different contexts • It organizes the meanings of one word • It also helps us better understand words that have more than one meaning in the context
1. To participate in a game or engage in a sport 2. To perform on an instrument I want to play on the elite hockey team this year The violin is a difficult instrument to play. play 4. A dramatic production 3. To pretend My little sisters play house all day long. Dean was chosen for the lead role in the school play.
3. Idioms • Play with fire • Literal meaning: “fool around with something that is burning” • Idiomatic meaning: “take part in a dangerous or risky activity”
4. Review: Adjectives • Words in English have different functions, or jobs • Adjectives are words that describe nouns or pronouns. • Adjectives tell which one? what kind? or how many? • Please turn to workbook page 57 • Read the sentences • Decide whether each underlined adjective tells which one? what kind? or how many? • Write each of these adjectives in the correct column of the chart • Check and revise their answers • Example to follow
4. Sort It: Adjectives • Ogden Nash used words in a unique manner. unique
Workbook Page 57 those unique many that funny some prominent few stressful special
4. Review: Commas in a Series • When three or more words are listed together in a sentence, the items are written one after the other. • Commas are used to separate the items • A comma is not placed in front of the first word • The last item is usually connected to the others in the series by and or or. A comma is placed before and or or. • The same rules are true for three or more groups of words listed together in a sentence
4. Punctuate It: Commas in a Series • Please turn to workbook page 58 • Read the sentences • Identify the words, or word groups, in the series in each sentence • Place a comma between each item in the series
, , , , , Workbook Page 58 , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,
5. Independent Text: “Nash’s Bashes: Word Play” • Before you read: (hardcover page 56-57) • Discuss the title of the story • Read the introductory poem • According to the poem: • What are some uses for words? • Sample: Response • Get attention, get things done, have fun
5. Phrase It • Please turn to workbook page 59 • Use cueing questions you can use to decide which words go together to form meaningful phrases • Read the sentences • Use those cueing questions to identify meaningful groups of words • Scoop the meaningful phrases together • Example to follow
5. Phrase It • Example: • Some folks use words to get attention.
6. Use the Clues • Please turn to workbook page 60 • Read the paragraph from “Nash’s Bashes: Word Play” • Find each underlined pronoun • Pronoun: replaces a noun (he, they, him, she, her, etc) • Identify and circle the noun or nouns that each pronoun replaces
6. Rewrite It • Please look at the bottom of page 60 • Rewrite the last two sentences as a single sentence by replacing the first pronoun, they, with the nouns it represents and combining the two sentences with and. • Check the revised sentence for sentence signals- capital letters, commas, and end punctuation
Workbook Page 60 X Answers will vary! Repetition, rhythm, and rhyme all triggered memory, and they also helped him celebrate language.