File - Coach to Coach
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Department of Teaching & Learning
Last Revision:9/5/14
1
How to Use this Guide
The purpose of this document is to connect the FSA test
item specs for your grade level with assessments and
curriculum materials. This is a suggested focus
sequence.
TIP: Pages can be viewed as a Powerpoint presentation or
pages can be printed back to back in order to form a flip
book.
More information on the FSA can be found at:
http://www.fsassessments.org/resources/?section=2-educators-general
Grade Level Standards can be found at:
http://www.cpalms.org/Public/search/Standard
2
How to Use this Guide
Textbook Resources:
Red Kayak
Leveled Readers:
Teacher Selected:
Wilma Rudolph, The Long Trip Home, The Signs,
Molly Pitcher
Possible Text
Resources
Grade Level State
Standard
How it Appears in Reading
Street
State Standard
Description
Determine the theme of a story, drama or poem from details in the text, including how
characters in a story or drama respond to challenges or how the speaker in a poem reflects
upon a topic; summarize the topic.
What does this look like?
Students select words or phrases from the text that explicitly state the theme of the
passage.
Students select words that support the theme from a text.
Students select sentences from the text that represent key events that should in
included in a summary.
Students select a summary of a text.
Students state the theme of a passage and a detail from the text.
Terms you may need to
introduce based on the
standards/FSA item specs
Sample DE question
stems
Sample FSA Questions:
Focus Standard: LAFS.5.RL.1.2 (Literature 2)
Terms to Teach
Theme, Detail, Summary, Support
Sample FSA
question stems
Select the details that support the theme of the text.
What does this passage suggest about ___________________?
How does the main character respond to ______________________?
What does the character’s response reveal about the relationship?
What does this passage suggest about __________________?
Use details to support your response.
Which statement correctly summarizes this passage?
Sample DE Questions:
What sentence best summarizes the article?
Readers can assume that __________________.
Example Questions :
Which sentences show Charlie’s feelings when the power goes out?
Go back into the passage and select words that describe Charlie’s traits after he yells
at his sister.
How is Charlie’s sister affected by Charlie’s actions?
What might this
look like on the
FSA?
Example questions from
Reading Street
3
How to Use this Guide
Teacher Selected:
Space for Teacher
Resources outside
of Reading Street
Teacher Created Questions
Space for planned teacher created
questions to refer back for future
use.
Looking for Text-Dependent Questioning Resources? Visit this site:
http://achievethecore.org/page/710/text-dependent-question-resources
Grade Level Standards can be found at:
http://www.cpalms.org/Public/search/Standard
4
Standards Covered
Standard
Question: Are these
ALL my grade level
standards?
Answer: No, these are
only the standards
covered on the
Language Portion of
the FSA from the test
item specs.
Week(s)
Covered
LAFS.3.RL.1.1
Standard
LAFS.3.RI.1.1
X
LAFS.3.RL.1.2
X
LAFS.3.RI.1.2
LAFS.3.RL.1.3
X X
LAFS.3.RI.1.2
LAFS.3.RL.2.4
LAFS.3.L.3.4
LAFS.3.L.3.5
LAFS.3.RI.1.3
X X X
X
X
Week(s)
Covered
X X
X
LAFS.3.RI.2.4
X
LAFS.3.RL.2.5
LAFS.3.RL.2.6
LAFS.3.RI.2.5
LAFS.3.RL.3.7
LAFS.3.RI.2.6
LAFS.3.SL.1.2
LAFS.3.RI.3.7
LAFS.3.RL.3.9
LAFS.3.SL.1.3
LAFS.3.RI.3.8
LAFS.3.RI.3.9
LAFS.3.L.1.1
LAFS.3.L.1.2
LAFS.3.RF.3.3 & 4.4
X
X5
Week 1
Textbook Resources:
Charlie McButton
Leveled Readers:
Focus Standard: LAFS.3.RL.1.2 (Literature 2)
Recount stores, including fables, folktales, and myths from diverse cultures; determine the
central message, lesson or moral and explain how it is conveyed through key details in the
text.
What does this look like?
Students select words or phrases from a text that support the main idea
Students restate the central message, idea or theme
Students place events in the correct order
Terms to Teach
Central Message, Details, Quotation
Teacher Selected:
Learning New Things, Camping with Aunt Julie,
Mr. Post’s Project, The Spanish Club
Sample FSA Questions:
Which of the following does the main character do first?
Place the events from the story in the correct order.
What is the central message of the passage?
One of the lessons from our passage is to use your imagination. Select two
details that support this idea.
Select the central idea of the passage. Then, select a quotation from the
passage that support this idea.
Sample DE Questions:
What happened right before ______?
Which words will complete the story web?
Example Questions :
What does the main character, Charlie do after his mom’s suggestions? Go back into
the text and find the quotation from the text.
What key words does the author use to show a progression of time (sequence) in this
story?
Focus Standard: LAFS.3.RL.1.3 (Literature 3)
Terms to Teach
Motivations, Traits, Character
Describe characters in a story (traits, motivations, or feelings) and explain how their actions
Sample FSA Questions:
contribute to the sequence of events.
What does this look like?
Students select words or phrases from the text that provide details to support a
description of a character
Students select an inference about a character, their actions of sequence of events
Students provide details and determine how these descriptions of events affect the
text
The main character is __________ in the passage. Which sentences show
this feeling?
Which sentences show that the main character is _____(feeling)___?
How are the __(Character)__’s actions affected by the main character’s
actions?
Which of the following describes both the main character’s feelings and the
author’s writing?
Example Questions :
Which sentences show Charlie’s feelings when the power goes out?
Go back into the passage and select words that describe Charlie’s traits after he yells
at his sister.
6
How is Charlie’s sister affected by Charlie’s actions?
Week 1
Focus Standard: LAFS.3.RL.1.3 (Literature 3)
Sample DE Questions:
What is the main problem at the end?
In the beginning, the (character) feels______.
How are the details arranged in the paragraph?
What best explain what the narrator thought about ______?
What is the main problem at the beginning?
Which word best describes (character)?
The details in the last sentence tell ________.
Why did the narrator of this story ___________?
Focus Standard: LAFS.3.L.3.4 (Language 4)
Determine or clarify the meaning of unknown or multiple-meaning words and phrases
based on grade 3 reading and content, choosing flexibly from a range of strategies.
What does this look like?
Students select words or phrases that provide content for an unknown word
Students distinguish between shades of meaning among related words
Students select words or phrases based on the tone of the text
Students select the correct meaning of the word
Students select words that both literal and nonliteral meanings
Student distinguish shades of meaning among related words
Terms to Teach
Shades of Meaning, Phrase, Literal, Nonliteral, Illustrate
Teacher Created Questions
Sample FSA Questions:
Choose the correct meaning of the word __________ as the author used it
in the passage.
Select the words from the passage that help the reader understand what
____________ means.
What does the author mean by the phrase ___________?
How does the author illustrate this phrase in the passage?
What does _______ mean as it is used in the passage?
What does the author suggest by the phrase _____________?
Sample DE Questions:
What does the phrase ____ mean?
What can the readers tell from this line?
Why does the author compare ______ to ___________ in the story?
What mood did the author create when he/she used the words
___________?
Which word is used in the sentence in the same way as the story?
Example Questions :
Reread the first two lines of page 40. What does the author want to show us when
the word toddle was used?
What does the words kind mean as it is used on page 36-37?
7
Week 2
Textbook Resources:
What About Me?
Leveled Readers:
Teacher Selected:
Trading This for That, Let’s Make a Trade,,
What’s Money All About, It Started with Nails
Focus Standard: LAFS.3.RL.1.1 (Literature 1)
Sample FSA Questions:
Select two sentences that show that the main character is excited about the
arrival of __________________.
How do we know that the main character’s
___(father,teacher,mother,etc.)__did not understand the question?
Select
the example from the text that shows Character A visited Character B
What does this look like?
several
times.
Students select words or phrases from a text that to answer questions using explicit or
implicit information in the text
Based on the information in the passage, how does the reader know that
Students select information from a text to inform or support an inference
the main character has used the ___________ before?
Ask and answer questions to demonstrate understanding of a text, referring explicitly to the
text as the basis for the answers.
Students place events in the correct order
Terms to Teach
Central Message, Details, Quotation
Focus Standard: LAFS.3.RL.1.3 (Literature 3)
Example Questions :
How do you know the boy is eager to reach his goal? What sentences from the
passage show this?
Based on the first few sentences, what does the reader know about the boy’s goals?
Sample FSA Questions:
The main character is __________ in the passage. Which sentences show
Describe characters in a story (traits, motivations, or feelings) and explain how their actions
this feeling?
contribute to the sequence of events.
Which sentences show that the main character is _____(feeling)___?
What does this look like?
Students select words or phrases from the text that provide details to support a
description of a character
Students select an inference about a character, their actions of sequence of events
Students provide details and determine how these descriptions of events affect the
text
How are the __(Character)__’s actions affected by the main character’s
actions?
Which of the following describes both the main character’s feelings and the
author’s writing?
Example Questions :
How do the main character’s actions affect the sequence of this story? What in the
text can help us make a predict about what will happen next?
Which detail on page 72 provides a clue about the sequence of this story?
Terms to Teach
Motivations, Traits, Character
8
Week 2
Focus Standard: LAFS.3.RL.1.3 (Literature 3)
Sample DE Questions:
What is the main problem at the end?
In the beginning, the (character) feels______.
How are the details arranged in the paragraph?
What best explain what the narrator thought about ______?
What is the main problem at the beginning?
Which word best describes (character)?
The details in the last sentence tell ________.
Why did the narrator of this story ___________?
What words describe both the (character) and the (character)?
Focus Standard: LAFS.3.L.3.4 (Language 4a)
Use sentence-level context as a clue to the meaning of the word or phrase.
What does this look like?
Students select words or phrases that provide content for an unknown word
Students distinguish between shades of meaning among related words
Students select words or phrases based on the tone of the text
Students select the correct meaning of the word
Students select words that both literal and nonliteral meanings
Student distinguish shades of meaning among related words
Terms to Teach
Phrase, Context Clue
Teacher Created Questions
Sample FSA Questions:
Choose the correct meaning of the word __________ as the author used it
in the passage.
Select the words from the passage that help the reader understand what
____________ means.
What does the author mean by the phrase ___________?
How does the author illustrate this phrase in the passage?
What does _______ mean as it is used in the passage?
What does the author suggest by the phrase _____________?
Sample DE Questions:
What does the phrase ____ mean?
What can the readers tell from this line?
Which word is used in the sentence in the same way as the story?
What does this word mean from the passage?
Example Questions :
What sentences or phrases tell you the point of view of this story?
What words or phrases help you understand what the word straying means on
pg.70?
9
Week 3
Textbook Resources:
Kumak’s Fish
Focus Standard: LAFS.3.RI.1.1 (Informational Text 1)
Leveled Readers:
Teacher Selected:
We Want Soup, Ice Fishing in the Artic, Journey
Across the Artic, Time for the Team
Sample FSA Questions:
When was the ____________ found?
Ask and answer questions to demonstrate understanding of a text, referring explicitly to the Select a detail from the article that shows that the animal’s ______ was
text as the basis for the answers.
made for catching prey.
What does this look like?
Students select words or phrases from a text that to answer questions using explicit or
implicit information in the text
Students select information from a text to inform or support an inference
Students place events in the correct order
Terms to Teach
Phrase, Informational Text, Detail
Which details do not show that that the animal’s ______ was made for
catching prey?
Why was the location of the discovery described as _____________?
Sample DE Questions:
Base your answers on the webpage above.
The heading tells readers that _____.
What does this date tell us?
Why are certain words in bold and centered?
What is the purpose of the _____ section?
What is the purpose of the picture?
Example Questions :
What details in the story would change if the author had selected a different setting?
What do the details on pg.103 tell you about the temperature?
Focus Standard: LAFS.3.RI.1.3 (Informational Text 3)
Describe the relationship between a series of historical events, scientific ideas or concepts,
or steps in a technical procedures in a text, using language that pertains to time, sequence,
and cause/effect.
Terms to Teach
Phrase, Chronological, Process, Structure
What does this look like?
Students select words or phrases from a text that provide details to describe a
relationship between events, concepts or steps.
Students select descriptions about relationships between time and sequence.
Students select a correct inference about a relationship between events, concepts or
steps.
Students support a relationship between events, concepts or steps in words and
support the description with details from the text.
10
Week 3
Focus Standard: LAFS.3.RI.1.3 (Informational Text 3)
Sample DE Questions:
What was the reason for _______?
What probably caused _____?
The details in the last sentence tell ________.
Sample FSA Questions:
Select the phrase that describes how the chronological structure helps the
reader to understand the process of ___________.
How does the structure of the text help the reader to understand how
__________ are found?
Example Questions :
What details show that Kumak is correct when he says “It’s a good for fish”?
What story structure does the author use in this text? What would the structure look
like if you were creating a summary (problem/solution, chronological order, etc.)?
What evidence supports your answer in the text?
Focus Standard: LAFS.3.RF.3.3/ LAFS 3.L.3.4 (Foundational Skills 3/Language 4) Sample FSA Questions:
Choose the correct meaning of the word __________ as the author used it
Distinguish shades of meaning among related words that describe states of mind or degrees
in the passage.
of certainty (e.g. knew, believed, suspected, heard, wondered) & Use a known root word as Select the words from the passage that help the reader understand what
a clue to the meaning of an unknown word with the same root word
____________ means.
What
does the author mean by the phrase ___________?
What does this look like?
How
does
the author illustrate this phrase in the passage?
Students select words or phrases that provide content for an unknown word
What
does
_______ mean as it is used in the passage?
Students distinguish between shades of meaning among related words
What
does
the author suggest by the phrase _____________?
Students select words or phrases based on the tone of the text
Students select the correct meaning of the word
Students select words that both literal and nonliteral meanings
Student distinguish shades of meaning among related words
Terms to Teach
Phrase, Context Clue
Teacher Created Questions
Sample DE Questions:
What does –er mean at the end?
Which word has the same base as ____?
Which words have the same meaning?
Which words have opposite meanings?
Example Questions :
What words or phrases help the reader understand events that are unlikely to
happen in real life?
What does the author mean when he includes the word entire in this passage?
11
Week 4
Textbook Resources:
Supermarket
Focus Standard: LAFS.3.RI.1.1 (Informational Text 1)
Leveled Readers:
Teacher Selected:
Our Food, The Shopping Trip, The Road to New
York, Going to the Market
Sample FSA Questions:
When was the ____________ found?
Ask and answer questions to demonstrate understanding of a text, referring explicitly to the Select a detail from the article that shows that the animal’s ______ was
text as the basis for the answers.
made for catching prey.
What does this look like?
Students select words or phrases from a text that to answer questions using explicit or
implicit information in the text
Students select information from a text to inform or support an inference
Students place events in the correct order
Terms to Teach
Phrase, Informational Text, Detail
Which details do not show that that the animal’s ______ was made for
catching prey?
Why was the location of the discovery described as _____________?
Sample DE Questions:
Base your answers on the webpage above.
The heading tells readers that _____.
What does this date tell us?
Why are certain words in bold and centered?
What is the purpose of the _____ section?
What is the purpose of the picture?
Example Questions :
What words or phrases help the reader understand events that are unlikely to
happen in real life?
What does the author mean when he includes the word entire in this passage?
Focus Standard: LAFS.3.RI.1.8 (Informational Text 8)
Describe the logical connection between particular sentences and paragraphs in a text (
comparison, cause/effect, first/second/third in a sequence)
Terms to Teach
Compare, Cause, Effect, Sequence
What does this look like?
Students select words or phrases from a text that show the connect between different
parts of the text.
Students select a connection that exists between different part of the text and to
select words or phrases within the text that demonstrate the connection.
Students describe the connection between different parts of a text.
12
Week 4
Focus Standard: LAFS.3.RI.1.8 (Informational Text 8)
Sample FSA Questions:
Which description explains the relationship between paragraphs 8 and 9 or
Article 1?
Select the sentence in the article that demonstrates a shirt between
storytelling and factual explanation.
Focus Standard: LAFS 3.L.3.4 (Language 4)
Example Questions :
What is the relationship between the supermarket and the farm?
What sentences or details in the text illustrate the relationship between the farm and
the shoppers?
Sample FSA Questions:
Choose the correct meaning of the word __________ as the author used it
Distinguish shades of meaning among related words that describe states of mind or degrees
in the passage.
of certainty (e.g. knew, believed, suspected, heard, wondered) & Use a known root word as
Select the words from the passage that help the reader understand what
a clue to the meaning of an unknown word with the same root word
What does this look like?
Students select words or phrases that provide content for an unknown word
Students distinguish between shades of meaning among related words
Students select words or phrases based on the tone of the text
Students select the correct meaning of the word
Students select words that both literal and nonliteral meanings
Student distinguish shades of meaning among related words
Terms to Teach
Phrase, Context Clue
Teacher Created Questions
____________ means.
What does the author mean by the phrase ___________?
How does the author illustrate this phrase in the passage?
What does _______ mean as it is used in the passage?
What does the author suggest by the phrase _____________?
Sample DE Questions:
What does the phrase ____ mean?
What can the readers tell from this line?
Why does the author compare ______ to ___________ in the story?
What mood did the author create when he/she used the words
___________?
Example Questions :
What words or phrases does the author include that help the reader experience the
way things look and sound in a supermarket?
What details in the text help you understand what the word spoiled means?
13
Week 5
Textbook Resources:
My Rows & Piles of Coins
Focus Standard: LAFS.3.RL.2.5 (Literature 5)
Refer to parts of stories, dramas and poems when writing or speaking about a text, using
terms such as chapter, scene, and stanza; describe how each successive part builds on
earlier sections.
What does this look like?
Students model how parts of a text interact with each other
Students select parts of a text
Student identify specific parts of a text and analyze it’s impact on the whole
Students describe in words how parts of the text interact with each other
Terms to Teach
Interact, Chapter, Scene, Stanza, Climax, Resolution
Focus Standard: LAFS 3.L.3.4 (Language 4)
Use a known root word as a clue to the meaning of an unknown word with the same root
word
Terms to Teach
Root Word, Prefix, Suffix
Leveled Readers:
Teacher Selected:
I have a dollar, The Market Adventure, With a
Twist, Money to Spend
Sample FSA Questions:
Provide support for a given cause or effect of an event from the text
Analyze how multiple events relate to each other and lead to subsequence
critical events (climax, resolution)
Create an inference about parts of the text using text-based evidence
What would the reader miss if the ___________ were not included?
In the story, the author uses _______ to share information with the reader
What do the _______ show the reader?
Sample DE Questions:
The heading tells readers that _____.
Why are certain words in bold and centered?
What is the purpose of the _____ section?
What is the purpose of the picture?
What does this look like?
Students select words or phrases that provide content for an unknown word
Students distinguish between shades of meaning among related words
Students select words or phrases based on the tone of the text
Students select the correct meaning of the word
Students select words that both literal and nonliteral meanings
Student distinguish shades of meaning among related words
14
Week 5
Focus Standard: LAFS 3.L.3.4 (Language 4)
Sample FSA Questions:
Choose the correct meaning of the word __________ as the author used it
in the passage.
Select the words from the passage that help the reader understand what
____________ means.
What does the author mean by the phrase ___________?
How does the author illustrate this phrase in the passage?
What does _______ mean as it is used in the passage?
What does the author suggest by the phrase _____________?
Sample DE Questions:
What does –er mean at the end?
Which word has the same base as ____?
Teacher Created Questions
15
16
Standards Covered
Standard
Week(s) Covered
LAFS.3.RL.1.1
X
LAFS.3.RL.1.2
X
LAFS.3.RL.1.3
X X
Standard
X
LAFS.3.RI.1.1
X X
LAFS.3.RI.1.2
X
LAFS.3.RI.1.3
X
Week(s) Covered
X
X
X
X
X
LAFS.3.RL.2.4
LAFS.3.L.3.4
X X X X X
LAFS.3.L.3.5
X
X
LAFS.3.RI.2.4
X
X
X
LAFS.3.RL.2.5
LAFS.3.RL.2.6
X
LAFS.3.RI.2.5
LAFS.3.RL.3.7
X X
LAFS.3.RI.2.6
LAFS.3.SL.1.2
LAFS.3.RI.3.7
LAFS.3.RL.3.9
LAFS.3.SL.1.2
LAFS.3.SL.1.3
LAFS.3.RI.3.8
LAFS.3.RI.3.9
LAFS.3.L.1.1
LAFS.3.L.1.2
LAFS.3.RF.3.3 & 4.4
X
X
X
X
17
Week 6
Textbook Resources:
Penguin Chick
Focus Standard: LAFS.3.RI.1.2 (Informational Text 2)
Determine the main idea of a text; recount the key details and explain how they support
the main idea.
What does this look like?
Students select the main idea of a text.
Students select explicit or implicit details that support the main idea.
Students state the main idea of a text.
Students describe how the main idea is conveyed in the text.
Terms to Teach
Detail, Main Idea
Focus Standard: LAFS.3.RI.1.1 (Informational Text 1)
Leveled Readers:
Teacher Selected:
Keeping Warm, Birds Can’t Fly, All About
Penguins, Different Beaks, Different Jobs
Sample FSA Questions:
Which of the following best describes the main idea of the text?
What is the main idea of the article?
Select the statement that describes the main idea of the article. Select the
sentence that best supports your answer.
Sample DE Questions:
The main idea is ______.
This story was written to ______.
What is the main reason the story was written?
Example Questions :
What is the main idea? Read p.210-211 and select the details that support your main
idea.
How does the sequence of events on pages 212-213 help you understand what the
mother penguin goes through to find food?
Sample FSA Questions:
When was the ____________ found?
Ask and answer questions to demonstrate understanding of a text, referring explicitly to the Select a detail from the article that shows that the animal’s ______ was
text as the basis for the answers.
What does this look like?
Students select words or phrases from a text that to answer questions using explicit or
implicit information in the text
Students select information from a text to inform or support an inference
Students place events in the correct order
Terms to Teach
Phrase, Informational Text, Detail
made for catching prey.
Which details do not show that that the animal’s ______ was made for
catching prey?
Why was the location of the discovery described as _____________?
Sample DE Questions:
Base your answers on the webpage above.
The heading tells readers that _____.
What does this date tell us?
Why are certain words in bold and centered?
What is the purpose of the _____ section?
What is the purpose of the picture?
18
Week 6
Focus Standard: LAFS.3.RI.1.1 (Informational Text 1)
Example Questions :
What details on p.213 help you understand how difficult it is for the mother to find
food?
How can you compare and contrast the life of a baby penguin chick with a baby
robin? Use details from pp.214-215 to support your responses.
Focus Standard: LAFS.3.RI.1.2 (Informational Text 7)
Use information gained from illustrations (e.g., maps, photographs) and the words in a text
to demonstrate understanding of the text (e.g., where, when, why and how key events
occur).
What does this look like?
Students select words or phrases from a text that explicitly or implicitly identify what
the illustration contributes to the text.
Students choose what an illustration contributes to the text.
Students choose the meaning the illustration has in a text.
Students explain how an illustration relates to a text.
Terms to Teach
Implicit, Explicit
Sample FSA Questions:
Which of the following phrases correctly describes what the illustration
contributes to the text?
What is the main idea of the presentation?
Which detail from the presentation supports the idea that ____?
Sample DE Questions:
What does this date tell us?
Why are certain words in bold and centered?
What is the purpose of the _____ section?
What is the purpose of the picture?
Base your answers on the webpage above.
The heading tells readers that _____.
Example Questions :
How does the time line on pgs.218-219 help the reader better understand the stages
in a chick’s life?
Teacher Created Questions
19
Week 7
Textbook Resources:
I Wanna Iguana
Leveled Readers:
Teacher Selected:
Which way is better?, Iguana takes a ride, Puppy
Problems, Mama’s Birthday Garden
Focus Standard: LAFS.3.RL.1.7 (Literature 7)
Explain how specific aspects of a text’s illustrations contribute to what is conveyed by the
words in a story (e.g., create mood, emphasize aspects of a character or setting).
What does this look like?
Students select words or phrases from a text that explicitly or implicitly identify what
the illustration contributes to the text.
Students choose what an illustration contributes to the text.
Students choose the meaning the illustration has in a text.
Students explain how an illustration relates to a text.
Terms to Teach
Cite
Focus Standard: LAFS.3.RL.1.1 (Literature 1)
Sample FSA Questions:
Which of the following phrases correctly describes what the illustration
contributes to the text?
What is the main idea of the presentation?
Which detail from the presentation supports the idea that ____?
Sample DE Questions:
What does this date tell us?
Why are certain words in bold and centered?
What is the purpose of the _____ section?
What is the purpose of the picture?
Base your answers on the webpage above.
The heading tells readers that _____.
Example Questions :
How do the illustrations make this selection humorous? Cite examples from the text.
Based on the illustration on p.246, what kind of home does Alex expect to have when
he grows up?
Sample FSA Questions:
Select two sentences that show that the main character is excited about the
arrival of __________________.
How do we know that the main character’s
___(father,teacher,mother,etc.)__did not understand the question?
Select
the example from the text that shows Character A visited Character B
What does this look like?
several times.
Students select words or phrases from a text that to answer questions using explicit or
implicit information in the text
Based on the information in the passage, how does the reader know that
Students select information from a text to inform or support an inference
the main character has used the ___________ before?
Ask and answer questions to demonstrate understanding of a text, referring explicitly to the
text as the basis for the answers.
Students place events in the correct order
Terms to Teach
Central Message, Details, Quotation
Example Questions :
Has the mother’s opinion changed about Alex having an iguana? How can you tell?
Do you think Alex researched iguanas? What information supports your answer?
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Week 7
Focus Standard: LAFS.3.RL.1.3 (Literature 3)
Sample FSA Questions:
The main character is __________ in the passage. Which sentences show
Describe characters in a story (traits, motivations, or feelings) and explain how their actions
this feeling?
contribute to the sequence of events.
Which sentences show that the main character is _____(feeling)___?
What does this look like?
Students select words or phrases from the text that provide details to support a
description of a character
Students select an inference about a character, their actions of sequence of events
Students provide details and determine how these descriptions of events affect the
text
Terms to Teach
Motivations, Traits, Character
How are the __(Character)__’s actions affected by the main character’s
actions?
Which of the following describes both the main character’s feelings and the
author’s writing?
Example Questions :
Describe the relationship between Alex and his Mom.
Alex refers to himself as a lonely boy. What effect is Alex hoping this will have on his
mother? Use information in the story to support your answer.
Sample DE Questions:
What is the main problem at the end?
In the beginning, the (character) feels______.
What best explain what the narrator thought about ______?
Which word best describes (character)?
The details in the last sentence tell ________.
Why did the narrator of this story ___________?
What words describe both the (character) and the (character)?
Teacher Created Questions
21
Week 8
Textbook Resources:
Prudy’s Problem
Leveled Readers:
Focus Standard: LAFS.3.RL.1.2 (Literature 2)
Recount stores, including fables, folktales, and myths from diverse cultures; determine the
central message, lesson or moral and explain how it is conveyed through key details in the
text.
What does this look like?
Students select words or phrases from a text that support the main idea
Students restate the central message, idea or theme
Students place events in the correct order
Terms to Teach
Central Message, Details, Quotation
Teacher Selected:
You can Solve It!, The Last Minute, A Family of
Collectors, Jack’s Library
Sample FSA Questions:
Which of the following does the main character do first?
Place the events from the story in the correct order.
What is the central message of the passage?
One of the lessons from our passage is to use your imagination. Select two
details that support this idea.
Select the central idea of the passage. Then, select a quotation from the
passage that support this idea.
Sample DE Questions:
What happened right before ______?
Which words will complete the story web?
Example Questions :
Identify the main idea on p.276 and one detail that supports it.
Reread pg.284-285 and identify the main idea.
Focus Standard: LAFS.3.RL.2.6 (Literature 6)
Distinguish their own point of view from that of the narrator or those of the characters.
What does this look like?
The students select the portion of the text that is told from the point of view of
someone else other than the main character.
Identify various points of view in the text.
Sample FSA Questions:
From which character’s point of view is the story told?
Example Questions :
Is this story told by a first-person narrator or a third party narrator? Give evidence
from the text to support your answer.
Terms to Teach
Point of View, First Person, Third Person, Narrator
22
Week 8
Focus Standard: LAFS.3.RL.1.7(Literature 7)
Explain how specific aspects of a text’s illustrations contribute to what is conveyed by the
words in a story (e.g., create mood, emphasize aspects of a character or setting).
What does this look like?
Students select words or phrases from a text that explicitly or implicitly identify what
the illustration contributes to the text.
Students choose what an illustration contributes to the text.
Students choose the meaning the illustration has in a text.
Students explain how an illustration relates to a text.
Terms to Teach
Cite
Sample FSA Questions:
Which of the following phrases correctly describes what the illustration
contributes to the text?
What is the main idea of the presentation?
Which detail from the presentation supports the idea that ____?
Sample DE Questions:
What does this date tell us?
Why are certain words in bold and centered?
What is the purpose of the _____ section?
What is the purpose of the picture?
Base your answers on the webpage above.
The heading tells readers that _____.
Example Questions :
What visuals support the main idea of pages 284-285?
How does the illustrator use humor to add interest to the story?
Teacher Created Questions
23
Week 9
Textbook Resources:
Tops & Bottoms
Focus Standard: LAFS 3.RL.3.4 & 3.5L. (Literature 4& Language 5a)
Determine the meaning of words and phrases as they are used in a text, distinguishing from
literal from nonliteral language.
What does this look like?
Students select words or phrases that provide content for an unknown word
Students distinguish between shades of meaning among related words
Students select words or phrases based on the tone of the text
Students select the correct meaning of the word
Students select words that both literal and nonliteral meanings
Student distinguish shades of meaning among related words
Terms to Teach
Literal, Nonliteral
Leveled Readers:
Teacher Selected:
Let’s be fair, Our Garden, The Magic of Coyote,
Garden for Everyone
Sample FSA Questions:
Choose the correct meaning of the word __________ as the author used it
in the passage.
Select the words from the passage that help the reader understand what
____________ means.
What does the author mean by the phrase ___________?
How does the author illustrate this phrase in the passage?
What does _______ mean as it is used in the passage?
What does the author suggest by the phrase _____________?
Sample DE Questions:
What does the phrase ____ mean?
What can the readers tell from this line?
Why does the author compare ______ to ___________ in the story?
What mood did the author create when he/she used the words
___________?
Example Questions :
On p.311, what does “in very bad shape” mean? Is this meaning literal?
What kinds of “tops and bottoms” does Hare mean? What information in the text
supports your answer?
Focus Standard: LAFS.3.RL.1.1 (Literature 1)
Sample FSA Questions:
Select two sentences that show that the main character is excited about the
arrival of __________________.
How do we know that the main character’s
___(father,teacher,mother,etc.)__did not understand the question?
Select
the example from the text that shows Character A visited Character B
What does this look like?
several times.
Students select words or phrases from a text that to answer questions using explicit or
implicit information in the text
Based on the information in the passage, how does the reader know that
Students select information from a text to inform or support an inference
the main character has used the ___________ before?
Ask and answer questions to demonstrate understanding of a text, referring explicitly to the
text as the basis for the answers.
Students place events in the correct order
Terms to Teach
Central Message, Details, Quotation
24
Week 9
Focus Standard: LAFS.3.RL.1.1 (Literature 1)
Example Questions :
Using pgs.316-317, compare and contrast Hare and Bear.
Do you think fair solutions may be part of the author’s purpose? What information
from the text supports your answer?
Focus Standard: LAFS.3.RL.1.2 (Literature 2)
Recount stores, including fables, folktales, and myths from diverse cultures; determine the
central message, lesson or moral and explain how it is conveyed through key details in the
text.
What does this look like?
Students select words or phrases from a text that support the main idea
Students restate the central message, idea or theme
Students place events in the correct order
Terms to Teach
Central Message, Details, Quotation
Sample FSA Questions:
Which of the following does the main character do first?
Place the events from the story in the correct order.
What is the central message of the passage?
One of the lessons from our passage is to use your imagination. Select two
details that support this idea.
Select the central idea of the passage. Then, select a quotation from the
passage that support this idea.
Sample DE Questions:
What happened right before ______?
Which words will complete the story web?
Example Questions :
What is the main idea of the selection? What details support your answer?
What details support the main idea that Hare tricks Bear?
Teacher Created Questions
25
Week 10
Textbook Resources:
Amazing Bird Nests
Focus Standard: LAFS.3.RI.1.2 (Informational Text 7)
Use information gained from illustrations (e.g., maps, photographs) and the words in a text
to demonstrate understanding of the text (e.g., where, when, why and how key events
occur).
What does this look like?
Students select words or phrases from a text that explicitly or implicitly identify what
the illustration contributes to the text.
Students choose what an illustration contributes to the text.
Students choose the meaning the illustration has in a text.
Students explain how an illustration relates to a text.
Terms to Teach
Implicit, Explicit
Focus Standard: LAFS.3.RI.2.5 (Informational Text 5)
Leveled Readers:
Teacher Selected:
Birds’ Nests, Bill and Beaks, Animals of the
Concrete Jungle, Animals Adapt
Sample FSA Questions:
Which of the following phrases correctly describes what the illustration
contributes to the text?
What is the main idea of the presentation?
Which detail from the presentation supports the idea that ____?
Sample DE Questions:
What does this date tell us?
Why are certain words in bold and centered?
What is the purpose of the _____ section?
What is the purpose of the picture?
Base your answers on the webpage above.
The heading tells readers that _____.
Example Questions :
Why does the author include the photo and caption, “Gray Rat Snake raiding a bird’s
nest” on p.244?
Sample FSA Questions:
Which of the following using the footnotes in the article?
Use text features and search tools to locate information relevant to a given topic efficiently. Select the information in the article that explains ____.
What does this look like?
Students select text that identifies information that can be located using text features
and search tools.
Terms to Teach
Text Features
Sample DE Questions:
Base your answers on the webpage above.
The heading tells readers that _____.
What does this date tell us?
Why are certain words in bold and centered?
What is the purpose of the _____ section?
Example Questions :
How does the structure of nonfiction help you understand the information better?
26
Week 10
Focus Standard: LAFS.3.RI.3.4 (Informational Text 4)
Determine or clarify the meaning of unknown or multiple-meaning words and phrases
based on grade 3 reading and content, choosing flexibly from a range of strategies.
What does this look like?
Students select words or phrases that provide content for an unknown word
Students distinguish between shades of meaning among related words
Students select words or phrases based on the tone of the text
Students select the correct meaning of the word
Students select words that both literal and nonliteral meanings
Student distinguish shades of meaning among related words
Terms to Teach
Sample FSA Questions:
Choose the correct meaning of the word __________ as the author used it
in the passage.
Select the words from the passage that help the reader understand what
____________ means.
What does the author mean by the phrase ___________?
How does the author illustrate this phrase in the passage?
What does _______ mean as it is used in the passage?
What does the author suggest by the phrase _____________?
Sample DE Questions:
What does the phrase ____ mean?
What can the readers tell from this line?
Which word is used in the sentence in the same way as the story?
Example Questions :
What does the word sturdy mean from pg.351?
What does changing environments means? What are some examples?
Teacher Created Questions
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