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Unit 3, Week 1 Roadrunner’s Dance

Unit 3, Week 1 Roadrunner’s Dance. O’Neal Elementary 4 th Grade. Reflection: Day 1. What is a synonyms for the word gaurdian? Write at least three. Reflection: Day 2. After reading pages 281-285, explain how the author is building suspense in this story. Reflection: Day 3.

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Unit 3, Week 1 Roadrunner’s Dance

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  1. Unit 3, Week 1Roadrunner’s Dance O’Neal Elementary 4th Grade

  2. Reflection: Day 1 • What is a synonyms for the word gaurdian? Write at least three.

  3. Reflection: Day 2 • After reading pages 281-285, explain how the author is building suspense in this story.

  4. Reflection: Day 3 • On page 291, what context clues help you find synonyms for the word abode? • How does the author create suspense on page 291?

  5. Reflection: Day 4 • What purpose do you think the author had for writing ROADRUNNER’S DANCE?

  6. Reflection: Day 5 • How did the author use foreshadowing on page 298? • How did the author use symbolism on page 301?

  7. Vocabulary • interfere- to take part in the affairs of others when not asked • awkward- without grace in movement or behavior • proclaimed- announced publicly • agile- able to move and react quickly and easily • guardian- someone or something who watches over or protests • tottered- walked or moved with unsteady steps Practice: Vocabulary GameQuia MatchingQuia Cloze

  8. Vocabulary: Story Words • inhibiting- slowing down or holding back • coiled- moved in a circling or twisting way • mesquite- a shrub with thorns that grows in the southwestern United States • yucca- a warm-climate plant with long leaves, strong stems, and white flowers • ruckus- a lot of noise and activity

  9. Vocabulary/Word WorkThesaurus: Synonyms • A synonym is a word that has the same or a very similar meaning to another word. • Finding synonyms for an unfamiliar word can help you to understand its meaning. • You can use a Thesaurus to find synonyms. Synonym Slider GameSynonym MemorySquanky’s Synonyms Thesaurus Practice

  10. Phonics: /ur/ • The /ur/ sound can be spelled: • er her • ir first • or worm • ur curb

  11. Fluency: Intonation/Pausing “I’ll never get it right,”/ he moaned.// “Yes, you will,”/ Desert Woman said,/ again helping him to his feet.//”You need only to practice.”// So Roadrunner practiced.// He ran back and forth,/ learning to use his skinny legs,/ learning to balance with his tail feathers.// “Practice,”/ he said again.// “Practice.”// With time, / he was swirling and twirling like a twister.// The once awkward bird was now a graceful dancer.//

  12. Comprehension:Evaluate • When evaluating a story, you can ask yourself: • Why has the author included these details? • Why has the author described the character this way? • Why has the author used poetic language, humor, or suspense? • By asking these kinds of questions, students can increase their understanding and appreciation of the story and of the author’s purpose in writing it.

  13. Comprehension: Author’s Purpose • As you read, ask yourself if the author is trying to entertain, inform, or persuade. • If a selection includes humor or suspense, the author’s purpose may be to entertain. • If the author gives a lot of information about a topic, the purpose is probably to inform. • An author whose purpose is mainly to persuade tries to get the reader to think or act a certain way. • Remember, many selections have more than one purpose. Often you are asked what the author’s purpose is for a selection. You will have to analyze the selection and choose the author’s MAIN purpose. Author’s Purpose Practice Author’s Purpose Quiz

  14. Comprehension: Inferences • Good readers make inferences to understand things the author wants them to know but does not directly state in the story. • To make inferences, you can use information from the text, illustrations, and things you already know to make connections.

  15. Comprehension:Paraphrase • You can check your understanding of what you have read by restating the main points in your won words. • You should make sure that you can restate important details and do not include any of your own opinions.

  16. Comprehension:Foreshadowing and Symbolism • Authors sometimes use literary elements to make writing more interesting and add suspense. • Foreshadowinghints at what is going to happen without giving a piece of the story away. It is used to build suspense in the reader. • Symbolism uses concrete objects to represent qualities or ideas such as love, happiness, or courage.

  17. Foreshadowing Chart

  18. Symbolism

  19. Unit 3 Week 1Text: Roadrunners :Surprising Birds (P.278) What is the meaning of awkward? What context clues helped you define the word? Use two details or examples from the story to support your answer. R1E Vocabulary1.6 patterns & relationships

  20. Unit 3 Week 1Text: Roadrunners Dance Describe a time when you or someone you know experienced a situation like the rattlesnake found himself in. Use details and/or examples from the story to support your answer. R1I Making connections1.6 patterns & relationships

  21. Unit 3 Week 1Text: Roadrunner’s Dance What are two ways that the roadrunner in the selection is the same as a real roadrunner? Use details and/or examples from the story to support your answer. R1I Making connections1.6 patterns & relationships

  22. Unit 3 Week 1Text: Flycatcher and Coyote Explain the meaning of the boulder in the road. Use two details or examples from the story to support your answer. R2B Fiction literary devices1.6 patterns & relationships

  23. R2C 1.6 continued • Identify author’s purpose The author wrote the selection on pages 278-279 to: • Entertain the readers • Inform the readers • Convince the reader to do something • Tell an important truth

  24. The Roadrunner • The Roadrunner or Ground Cuckoo, Geococcyx californianus, is a bird that lives in thorny scrub, sparse grasslands, and deserts of Mexico and the southwestern USA. The Roadrunner can run at speeds of up to 15 miles per hour (24 km per hour). It rarely flies and does not migrate. When it is in danger, it runs or crouches to hide. Anatomy: The Roadrunner is about 23 inches (58 cm) long. It has a shaggy crest on its head. The tail is long and narrow; it helps the Roadrunner with balance and lets it turn quickly when running. The wings are short and rarely used; the legs are long and make this bird a fast runner. Males and females are similar in appearance. Roadrunners make rattling and cooing calls. • Diet: Roadrunner eat fruit and small animals, including small lizards, scorpions, spiders, insects, eggs, small snakes, and some small rodents. • Reproduction: The Roadrunner is a type of cuckoo, but unlike many other cuckoos, it is not a nest parasite. It builds its cup-like nest in a thorn bush or a cactus. The female lays 3 to 8 white eggs.

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