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How can familiar things help us with changes? 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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How can familiar things help us with changes?Click to listen to story.
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:How can familiar things help us with changes? • Monday • Tuesday • Wednesday • Thursday • Friday
Today we will learn about: • Amazing Words • Syllables C + le • Compare and Contrast • Story Structure • Adjectives and Our Senses
preserve • pre – serve • When you preserve something, you keep it protected from anything that would cause it to be ruined or spoiled. • You can preserve a photo by putting it in a frame. • You can preserve food by freezing it.
represent • rep – re – sent • To represent something means to stand for it or symbolize it. • A person can represent another person or thing. • Flags represent countries. • A mayor represents the people of a city.
valuable • val – u - a - ble • If something is worth something or is important to you, it is valuable. • Your friends are valuable to you. • Your mother may have given you a valuable piece of jewelry.
Click to listen to a song about some favorite, familiar things.
Syllables: C + le • locate • You studied two-syllable words like this already. What do you know about reading two-syllables words? • Today we’ll learn about two-syllable words that end with a consonant and le. • If a word ends with a consonant and le, those three letters make the last syllable in the word. • bun / dle
Syllables: C + le • wiggle • You can blend two-syllable words with consonant + le by dividing them into smaller parts. • We usually divide the word so the last consonant + lemake up the last syllable of the word. • Read one syllable at a time and then blend them together. • wig / gle
dim / ple gig / gle ca / ble pud / dle sprin / kle ap / ple cra / dle sim / ple bub / ble spar / kle pur / ple sta / ble Syllables: C + le
Making Words a, e, u b, g, j, l, m, n, p, s, t
wiggle title lumber mumble pilot middle rifle focus panic ladle bugle tablet noble baby puzzle Syllables: C + le
Syllables: C + le Review: • If a word ends in a consonant plus le, those three letters usually make up the last syllable of the word. • Read one syllable at a time and then blend them together.
Word Family Word – part mart hart chart tart dart cart
Quilt Story Word Family Word – born corn (maize) horn torn thorn sworn
Compare & Contrast • Remember “A Walk in the Desert.” • How are our town and a desert alike and how are they different?
Compare & Contrast • A selection contains many different ideas. • A writer can organize these ideas in various ways. • Good readers pay attention to the way ideas are organized.
Compare & Contrast • One way to organize ideas is to tell how things are alike and different. • A writer can use clue words, such as like and also, to tell how things are alike. • A writer can use clue words, such as but and unlike, to tell how things are different.
Story Structure • Story structure is how the writer fits all the parts of the story together. • A writer can organize story ideas by contrasting how things are different or comparing how things are alike.
Daily Fix-It jill rod a purple bike Jill rode a purple bike. rick put tap on his ankel Rick put tape on his ankle.
Grammar: Adjectives • An adjective describes a person, place, animal, or thing. • An adjective can tell how something looks, sounds, tastes, feels, or smells. • My family loves hot cornbread. • Hot describes the way the cornbread tastes and feels.
Grammar: Adjectives • Grandmother always used yellow cornmeal.
Grammar: Adjectives • Grandmother always used yellow cornmeal. • She put in flour, eggs, and cold milk.
Grammar: Adjectives • Grandmother always used yellow cornmeal. • She put in flour, eggs, and cold milk. • She added pepper and green chilies.
Grammar: Adjectives • Grandmother always used yellow cornmeal. • She put in flour, eggs, and cold milk. • She added pepper and green chilies. • She stirred to make smooth batter.
Grammar: Adjectives • Grandmother always used yellow cornmeal. • She put in flour, eggs, and cold milk. • She added pepper and green chilies. • She stirred to make smooth batter. • Now I make delicious cornbread too.
Grammar: Adjectives • Grandmother always used yellow cornmeal. • She put in flour, eggs, and cold milk. • She added pepper and green chilies. • She stirred to make smooth batter. • Now I make delicious cornbread too.
Wrap Up Our Day! • Words that end with consonant + le • Compare and contrast • Let’s Talk About It • Tomorrow we will read about something that makes a girl feel like she is home—no matter where she is.
Quilt StoryMonday Write about why friendships are valuable.
Today we will learn about: • Syllables consonant + le • Amazing Words • Vocabulary Words • Prefixes • Word Structure • Adjectives and Our Senses
tough • tough • If something is difficult to do, it is tough. • If something can take a lot of wear and tear without breaking or being damaged, it is tough. • It might be tough to decide what kind of pet you want. • Jeans are made from a tough material. • Some meat is tough to chew.
concentration • con – cen – tra - tion • When you are thinking about one thing very carefully, that is concentration. • If you are trying to solve a math problem and are not paying attention to anything else, you are in deep concentration. • When all you will do for a morning is clean your room, your concentration is on cleaning.
frown • frown • When you frown, you wrinkle your forehead and draw your eyebrows together, usually when you are worried, angry, or thinking. • You may frown when you try to think of an answer to a hard question. • A person who is worried about a lost pet may frown. • A smile is the opposite of a frown.
Read-Aloud Kimi’s Ocean