DOL level 4 week 5 • What season of the year do you like best? Use describing words to tell about that season. • Analogy 1.brook : river - ________: rope 2.shovel: _____ - fork : food 1. my mothers friend growed a large pumpkin. 2. were glad that you can come hear tomorrow string snow
DOL level 4 week 5. What season of the year do you like best? Use describing words to tell about that season. Analogy brook : river - ________: rope shovel: _____ - fork : food 1. my mothers friend growed a large pumpkin. 2. were glad that you can come hear tomorrow. string. snow. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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DOL level 4 week 5
• What season of the year do you like best? Use describing words to tell about that season.
1. my mothers friend growed a large pumpkin.2. were glad that you can come hear tomorrow
string
snow
Pledge
Fluency
6 min. reading solution
ObjectivesStudents will• Read each word with its inflectional verb ending –ed and ing• discuss the structural features for each line• Give information such as the tense of a verb or whether a
noun is singular or plural.• -identify the base form of the verbs in line one.• -point out the spelling changes that occurred when –ed was
added to the base form.
Word Structure
Line 1
Line 2
Line 3
Line 4
finished arrived decided tried
writing rising sitting trying
hours opportunities courses classes
curved setting stripped controlled
Word Structure
Line 1 finished arrived decided tried
The verbs in this line have the inflectional ending –ed. When putting the ed on the verb, what tense does it become? Identify the base form of the verbs in the line.
point out the spelling changes that occurred when –ed was added to the base form to make the past-tense form.
past tense
finish arrive decide try
The final e was dropped from arrive and decide before adding –edThe final y in try changed to i before adding –ed.
Word Structure
Line 2 writing rising sitting trying
This verbs in this line have the inflectional ending -ing.
How does the ending –ing change the verb?Find the base form of the verbs in the line.Point out the spelling changes that occurred when –ing was added to the base form .
Which word has no spelling change?
indicates continuing action
write rise sit try
trying
The final e was dropped from write and rise before adding –ing.The final consonant in sit was doubled before adding –ing.
Objectives
Students will• use context clues and word structure to learn
the vocabulary words.• use the comprehension strategies
Summarizing, Clarifying, and Adjusting Reading Speed.
• Use the comprehension Skill Author’s Purpose.• Understand the selection vocabulary.• review elements of a play.
Vocabulary lesson 4
concerned (k nsûrnd’) decent (dē’s nt)
showing worry good enough to make someone
comfortable
stable (stā’b l)
dependable
strive (strīv)
to work to get something
I’m really concerned about our new business. Twenty colors is a decent variety to paint a good picture..
Old faithful is so stable it erupts every hour.
e
She will strive to be a good dancer.
e
e
Vocabulary lesson 4
pleading (plē’ding) tensely (tents’lē)
to beg feeling emotional strain
paces (pās z)
to walk back and forth
opportunities (o’pûrtōōn tēz)
a chance to succeed in life
The dog is pleading for his dog food. “What’s so funny?” Miguel asked tensely.
The tiger continually paces in his cage.
e
We’re all given opportunities to succeed in life.
e
Reading and RespondingBuilding Background
• What do you know about plays?• have you ever read a play before?• Who was Langston Hughes? have you ever
read any of his poems?
Background Information
• Langston Hughes was one of America’s finest poets. As African Americans living in the United States in the early twentieth century, Langston and his father experienced race discrimination. Anger about racism caused his father to move the family to Mexico. Langston Hughes dealt with his anger in a different way – through his poetry.
• Plays are written to be performed by two or more actors speaking the parts of the characters. The character list, time, and setting are on the page of the selection. Note that the speaker of each line is written in boldfaced capital letters followed by a colon. The words after the colon are what the speaker says. Words in italics are stage directions.
Browse• Read the title aloud, and point out the names of the author and the
illustrator. • Because this is nonfiction, we will use the KWL chart to organize
information.
K W L
I know that this is a play.He was young when he first started.He writes poetry.
Why is Mr. Hughes upset about Langston?Why does he look so happy on the first page?Why does he look so sad on page 91?Is he still alive?Is he in New York?What is he wondering about?Did he learn lots of science?Why is he standing by the statue?
Set Purposes
• Why do people take risks?
• What risks is Langston Hughes taking? • What are the possible consequences of those
risks?
Reading the Selection• Identify the genre of “Langston Hughes: Poet of the People.• A play includes:characters who are often listed or described at the beginning in
the Cast of Characters.scenes for which the time and place (setting) are given and
described.• dialogue, or characters’ lines. Each character is identified by
name before he or she speaks.. Quotation mark are not used.
• Read the first half of the selection today.
Inquiry Process
Why are some people more wiling to take risks than others?
Conjecture:Some people are more willing to take risks than others
because they feel that the alternatives are worse. Resources
the internet, nonfiction books, encyclopedias, magazines, newspapers, and interviews, classmates,
etc.
Inquiry Process• You should be taking notes as you research. You should be
using your own words.• As students practice reading a section of a resource and
summarize the information in your own words.• You should not copy directly when you are taking notes
from other sources. You must use your own words.• If you use a direct quotation, you must put quotes around it
and provide the complete reference information.• After taking notes, you should organize your notes in a
logical sequence.Skills Practice 1 page 31
Language ArtsObjectives
• Students will• Learn basic elements of plays• draft, revise, and edit their plays• publish and perform their plays
Language ArtsWriting a Play
During the next two weeks, you are going to write a play that includes one or more of the elements of a fantasy. A play is a story written so that actors can perform it for an audience.
Language Arts• A fantasy is a story that includes situations that do not
exist or that cannot happen in reality. • A fantasy has one or more of the following elements:
1. The setting may be a world or a place that does not exist, or it may be the real world.2. The plot explains what happens and how it happens.3. People, animals, or things are able to do things that they cannot do in the real world.4. Event occur that could not happen in the real world.5. The story has creatures that do not exist in the real world.6. Problems that do not exist in the real world can occur in fantasies.
Language Arts
• Writers NotebookWrite ideas forCharacters:Setting:Plot:What do they wantbutso thenfinally
Spellingpleading building painting finished worried unplugged
plead + ing build + ing paint + ing finish + ed worry + ed un + plug +ed
open + ing insist + ed control + ed leave + ing dance + ed shed + ing
rate + ing stripe + ed strip + ed fit + ing ring + ing set + ing
bleach + ed curve + ed concern + ed begin + ing pre +occupy +ed
What were the spelling changes, and why did the spelling change?
Grammar, Usage and MechanicsNouns as Direct Objects and Objects of Prepositions
Mr. Hughes loved his son. Langston’s book lay on the desk.A noun can be the subject or an object in a sentence. A noun
that receives the action of the verb is the direct object; for example, son in the first sentence. A noun that is at the end of a prepositional phrase is the object of the preposition; for example, desk in the second sentence.
Noun names a person, place, thing or idea and a proper noun names a particular person, place, thing, or idea. Proper nouns should be capitalized.
Write sentences on the board that contain direct objects and objects of prepositions.
Rotations
Spelling page
Read with teacher
Red
Yellow
Green
Blue
Blue
Red
Yellow
Green
Green
Blue
Red
Yellow
Yellow
Green
Blue
Red
Read with partner
HandwritingLl
concerned decent stable strive
pleading tensely paces opportunities
showing worry good enough to make someone comfortable dependable to work to get
something
to beg feeling emotional strain
to walk back and forth a chance to succeed in life