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Big Question : When is it valuable to have unique interests?. Title : Rocks in H is Head Author : Carol Otis Hurst Illustrator : James Stevenson Genre : Biography. Small Group Timer. Spelling Words. prepaid midnight overflow outdoors outline overgrown p refix Midwest pretest
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Big Question: When is it valuable to have unique interests? Title: Rocks in His Head Author: Carol Otis Hurst Illustrator: James Stevenson Genre: Biography
Small Group Timer
Spelling Words • prepaid • midnight • overflow • outdoors • outline • overgrown • prefix • Midwest • pretest • midpoint • outgoing • overtime • overdue • outside • outfield • precaution • prediction • midsection • overweight • prehistoric
Vocabulary Words Vocabulary Words More Words to Know • attic • board • chores • customer • labeled • spare • stamps • janitor • minerals • quarries • forged • mentor • ornamental
Big Question: When is it valuable to have unique interests? • Monday • Tuesday • Wednesday • Thursday • Friday
Today we will learn about: • Build Concepts • Generalize • Prior Knowledge • Build Background • Vocabulary • Fluency: Model Characterization • Grammar: Possessive Pronouns • Spelling: Prefixes: pre-, mid-, over-, out- • Unique Interests
Monday Fluency: Model Characterization
Fluency: Model Characterization • Listen as I read “Catching the Fire.” • As I read, notice how I use different tones of voice when I read any dialogue. • Be ready to answer questions after I finish.
Fluency: Model Characterization • What generalization can you make about Simmons’s gates? • What details in the selection tell us what kind of person Simmons is?
Build Conceptsforged, mentor, ornamental Unique Interests
Monday Generalize Page 60 - 61
Vocabulary Words • attic – the space in a house just below the roof and above the other rooms • board - a group of people managing something • chores – small tasks or easy jobs that you have to do regularly
Vocabulary Words • customer – someone who buys goods or services • labeled – put or wrote a label on something • spare – extra • stamps – small pieces of paper with glue on the back for mailing letters and packages
OtherVocabulary Words • janitor – someone whose work is taking care of a building or offices • minerals – solid substances, usually dug from the earth • quarries – places where stone is dug, cut, or blasted out for use in putting up buildings
OtherVocabulary Words • forged – heated metal until it is very soft and then hammered it into shape • mentor – someone who advises and shows you how to do or be something • ornamental – used as decoration • Next Slide
Monday Grammar: Possessive Pronouns
colin and him finds rocks in miny places out doors • Colin and he find rocks in many places outdoors. • the rocks in my poket has gold flecks • The rocks in my pocket have gold flecks.
Possessive Pronouns • Mrs. Johnson got out her big Packard touring car, and my father got in. • The words her and my are possessive pronouns.
Possessive Pronouns • Some pronouns show who or what owns, or possesses, something. This kind of pronoun is a possessive pronoun. • My, mine, you, yours, her, hers, his, its, our, ours, their, and theirs are possessive pronouns. • I’ll look at your rock collection, and then you look at mine.
Possessive PronounsFind the possessive pronoun in each sentence. • Builders use rock in their work. • their • Your walls and floors are made of rock. • your • The cement in our driveway comes from rocks. • our
Possessive PronounsFind the possessive pronoun in each sentence. • Mr. Ferguson used limestone walls in his house. • his • Mrs. Ferguson has marble floors in her living room. • her
Possessive PronounsWhich possessive pronoun in ( ) that could replace the underlined word? • There are white cliffs in England, and the cliffs’ color comes from limestone. (their, its) • their • One beautiful area in Arizona stands out because the area’s rocks are red. (their, its) • its
Possessive PronounsWhich possessive pronoun in ( ) that could replace the underlined word? • We took a road through the mountains, and the mountains’ colors amazed us. (our, their) • their • The rocks on your side were yellow, while the rocks on my side were orange. (mine, yours) • mine
Monday Spelling: Prefixes: pre-, mid-, over-, out-
Spelling Words • prepaid • midnight • overflow • outdoors • outline • overgrown • prefix • Midwest • pretest • midpoint • outgoing • overtime • overdue • outside • outfield • precaution • prediction • midsection • overweight • prehistoric
Today we will learn about: • Prefixes: pre-, mid-, over-, out- • Context Clues • Generalize • Prior Knowledge • Vocabulary • Fluency: Choral Reading • Grammar: Possessive Pronouns • Unique Interests • Earth Science
Vocabulary Strategy:Multiple-Meaning Words Pages 62 - 63
Rocks in His Head Pages 64 - 69
Tuesday Fluency: Choral Reading
Fluency: ChoralReading • Turn to page 72. • As I read, notice how my voice changes as I use characterizations to read the dialogue. • We will practice as a class doing three choral readings of page 72.
Tuesday Grammar: Possessive Pronouns
the strangeest rocks are her’s • The strangest rocks are hers. • didnt she find them in the Middwest • Didn’t she find them in the Midwest?
Possessive Pronouns • Some pronouns show who or what owns, or possesses, something. This kind of pronoun is a possessive pronoun. • My, mine, you, yours, her, hers, his, its, our, ours, their, and theirs are possessive pronouns.
Tuesday Spelling: Prefixes: pre-, mid-, over-, out-
Spelling Words • prepaid • midnight • overflow • outdoors • outline • overgrown • prefix • Midwest • pretest • midpoint • outgoing • overtime • overdue • outside • outfield • precaution • prediction • midsection • overweight • prehistoric