Big Question: How can we work together to achieve a goal? Author: Joan Sandin Genre: Historical Fiction.

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Transcript Big Question: How can we work together to achieve a goal? Author: Joan Sandin Genre: Historical Fiction.

Big Question: How can we work
together to achieve a goal?
Author:
Joan Sandin
Genre:
Historical Fiction
Small Group
Timer
Story Sort
Vocabulary Words:
Arcade Games
Study Stack
Spelling City: Vocabulary
Spelling City: Spelling Words
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videos
teeth
potatoes
themselves
lives
leaves
cliffs
roofs
halves
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moose
radios
sheep
cuffs
beliefs
patios
banjos
tornadoes
tomatoes
hoofs
• loaves
• portfolios
• embargoes
• handkerchiefs
• calves
• lassoes
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 Monday
 Tuesday
 Wednesday
 Thursday
 Friday
Vocabulary Words
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bawling
coyote
dudes
roundup
spurs
More Words to Know
mesquite
 promoted
 convince
 energetic
 offers

Question of the Day
How can we work
together to achieve a
goal?
 Build Concepts
 Draw Conclusions
 Prior Knowledge
 Build Background
 Vocabulary
 Fluency: Model Emotion
 Grammar: Regular Plural Nouns
 Spelling: Irregular Plurals
 Working Together
Listen as I read “A Big-City Dream.”
As I read, notice how I will express
Luz’s emotions by changing my
pacing and tone of voice. Reading
with emotion makes dialogue more
interesting.
Be ready to answer questions after
I finish.
At the beginning of the story,
how does Luz feel about her
plan for creating a garden?
What kind of person is Luz?
How do you know?
 convince – to make someone
feel sure; to persuade by
argument or proof
 energetic – full of energy;
vigorous
 offers – holds out to be taken;
is willing if another approves
(To add information to the graphic organizer, click on end
show, type in your new information, and save your changes.)
Working
Together
Gathering
a Team
Performing
Tasks
Play
Life on a
Ranch
People
Work

bawling – crying out in a noisy way
 coyote – small, wolflike mammal
living in many parts of North
America
 dudes – people raised in the city,
especially easterners who vacation
on a ranch
roundup – the act of driving or
bringing cattle together from long
distances

 spurs – metal points or pointed
wheels, worn on a rider’s boot heels
for urging a horse on
 mesquite – any of several trees
or bushes common in
southwestern United States and
Mexico, which often grow in
dense clumps or thickets
 promoted – raised in rank,
condition, or importance
 (Next Slide)
Regular Plural Nouns
 tornadoes sometimes sweep,
through the western states
 Tornadoes sometimes sweep
through the western states.
 they can blow. The rooves off
houses
 They can blow the roofs off
houses.
Many
of the kids on the ranches
rode ponies.
The underlined words are nouns,
plural nouns. They name more
than one person, place, or thing.
Some nouns form their plural by
adding an -s, -es, or –ies.
Singular nouns name one person,
place, or thing.
Plural nouns name more than one
person, place, or thing.
Add –s to form the plural of
most nouns.
 school/schools, dog/dogs, cow/cows
–es to form the plural of
nouns that end in ch, sh, s, ss, or
x.
 ranch/ranches, bush/bushes,
bus/buses, cross/crosses,
fox/foxes
Add
To form the plural of nouns that
end in a consonant followed by a
y, change the y to i and add –es.
family/families, party/parties,
pony/ponies

The students had a long bus ride
to school.

students
They squeezed together like
sardines in a can.

sardines
Several families from the area
rode the bus.

families
They lived on ranches and went
to the same school.

ranches
There were no big cities nearby.

cities
 chicken

chickens
 story

stories
 newspaper

newspapers
 box

boxes
 baby

babies
 recess

recesses
 teacher

teachers
 dish

dishes
 bench

benches
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videos
teeth
potatoes
themselves
lives
leaves
cliffs
roofs
halves
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moose
radios
sheep
cuffs
beliefs
patios
banjos
tornadoes
tomatoes
hoofs
• loaves
• portfolios
• embargoes
• handkerchiefs
• calves
• lassoes
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Question of the Day
What work must be done
on a ranch?
 Dictionary/Glossary
 Draw Conclusions
 Prior Knowledge
 Setting
 Vocabulary
 Fluency: Choral Reading
 Grammar: Regular Plural Nouns
 Spelling: Irregular Plurals
 Social Studies: U.S. Expansion
 Spanish Explorers
 Working Together
Turn to pages 164 - 165.
Turn to pages 166 - 175.
Turn to page 172, paragraphs 2-3.
As I read, notice how my pitch and
tone change to express Monchi’s
feelings about Victor and Miss
Byers.
Now we will practice together as a
class by doing three choral readings
of these paragraphs.
Regular Plural Nouns
 we saw cows horsies sheeps
chickens and pigs on the ranch
 We saw cows, horses, sheep,
chickens, and pigs on the ranch.
 there were to many cowes two
count
 There were too many cows to
count.
A plural noun names more than one
person, place, or thing.
–s to form the plural of most
nouns. Add –es to form the plural of
nouns ending in ch, sh, s, ss, or x.
Add
When a noun ends in a consonant
followed by y, form its plural by
changing the y to i and adding –es.
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•
videos
teeth
potatoes
themselves
lives
leaves
cliffs
roofs
halves
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
moose
radios
sheep
cuffs
beliefs
patios
banjos
tornadoes
tomatoes
hoofs
• loaves
• portfolios
• embargoes
• handkerchiefs
• calves
• lassoes
•
Question of the Day
How do all the children
contribute to Coyote
News?
Draw Conclusions
Prior Knowledge
Dictionary/Glossary
Vocabulary
Fluency: Model Emotion
Grammar: Regular Plural Nouns
Spelling: Irregular Plural Nouns
Social Studies: Hispanic Cowboys
Working Together
Turn to pages 176 - 184.
Turn to page 183, paragraphs 3-9
(begin with “The winner of…”)
As I read, notice how my voice
changes to express Monchi’s
surprise and then sense of pride.
Now we will practice together as a
class by doing three choral readings
of these paragraphs.
Regular Plural Nouns
 it was fun watching the horses
look after there babys
 It was fun watching the horses
look after their babies.
 the foals have long thin legs,
they run after their motheres
 The foals have long thin legs.
They run after their mothers.
A plural noun names more than one
person, place, or thing.
–s to form the plural of most
nouns. Add –es to form the plural of
nouns ending in ch, sh, s, ss, or x.
Add
When a noun ends in a consonant
followed by y, form its plural by
changing the y to i and adding –es.
Good writers are careful to spell
words correctly.
Review something you have written
to see if you can improve it by
correcting the spelling of plural
nouns.
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videos
teeth
potatoes
themselves
lives
leaves
cliffs
roofs
halves
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
moose
radios
sheep
cuffs
beliefs
patios
banjos
tornadoes
tomatoes
hoofs
• loaves
• portfolios
• embargoes
• handkerchiefs
• calves
• lassoes
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Question of the Day
How is teamwork
necessary in Monchi’s
life, both in and out of
the Coyote School?
How-to Article/Text Features
Reading Across Texts
Content-Area Vocabulary
Fluency: Partner Reading
Grammar: Regular Plural Nouns
Spelling: Irregular Plural Nouns
Social Studied: History of
Newspapers
Turn to pages 186 - 187.
Turn to page 183, paragraphs 3-
9.
Read these paragraphs three
times with a partner. Read with
emotion, and offer each another
feedback.
Regular Plural Nouns
 if i get the chance. im going to
work on a ranch
 If I get the chance, I’m going
to work on a ranch.
 its hard work but i know id
enjoy it
 It’s hard work, but I know I’d
enjoy it.
A plural noun names more than one
person, place, or thing.
–s to form the plural of most
nouns. Add –es to form the plural of
nouns ending in ch, sh, s, ss, or x.
Add
When a noun ends in a consonant
followed by y, form its plural by
changing the y to i and adding –es.
Test Tip: Do not use apostrophes to
form plural nouns. Only contractions
and possessive nouns use
apostrophes.
The mother cow’s are feeding
their baby’s.
Yes: The mother cows are feeding
their babies.
No:
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•
videos
teeth
potatoes
themselves
lives
leaves
cliffs
roofs
halves
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
moose
radios
sheep
cuffs
beliefs
patios
banjos
tornadoes
tomatoes
hoofs
• loaves
• portfolios
• embargoes
• handkerchiefs
• calves
• lassoes
•
Question of the Day
How can we work
together to achieve a
goal?
Build Concept Vocabulary
Draw Conclusions
Narrative Writing
Dictionary/Glossary
Grammar: Regular Plural Nouns
Spelling: Irregular Plural Nouns
Newspaper/Newsletter
Working Together
Drawing a conclusion while you read
or after you read is forming an
opinion based on what you already
know or on the facts and details in a
text.
Check on author’s conclusions or your
own conclusion by asking: Is this the
only logical choice? Are the facts
accurate?
Narrative writing recalls an event or
series of events through the
storyteller, or narrator.
Narrative writing describes events in
detail as seen through the eyes of
the storyteller.
Think about the storyteller’s point of
view when reading narrative writing.
The dark, or bold, words defined
in a dictionary or glossary are
called entry words. When
looking up the meaning of an
unfamiliar word, its entry word
may not match exactly the word
in the selection.
Entry words are often base
words without endings, prefixes,
or suffixes.
Use a dictionary to define the
following words from “Coyote
School News.” List the entry
word and meaning for each word.
Word in Story
promoted
nagging
wrestled
branded
perfectly
Entry Word and Meaning
Name a newspaper and share what
you know about how it is organized.
A newspaper is a daily or weekly
publication containing world and local
news and other features.
Newspapers are divided into sections.
Each section focuses on a subject,
such as local news, arts, or sports.
A newspaper has an index on or near
the front page.
Newspapers include editorial pages
that express opinions on current
events.
A newsletter is a brief publication
from a group that contains news of
interest to the group’s members.
Newspapers and newsletter articles
are identified with headlines and may
also include illustrations or
photographs with captions.
Regular Plural Nouns
 what great rider those vaqueros
are
 What great riders those
vaqueros are!
 they can rode all day and never
get tired, id like to do that
 They can ride all day and never
get tired. I’d like to do that.
A plural noun names more than one
person, place, or thing.
–s to form the plural of most
nouns. Add –es to form the plural of
nouns ending in ch, sh, s, ss, or x.
Add
When a noun ends in a consonant
followed by y, form its plural by
changing the y to i and adding –es.
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
videos
teeth
potatoes
themselves
lives
leaves
cliffs
roofs
halves
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
moose
radios
sheep
cuffs
beliefs
patios
banjos
tornadoes
tomatoes
hoofs
• loaves
• portfolios
• embargoes
• handkerchiefs
• calves
• lassoes
•
 Story test
Classroom webpage,
 Reading Test

 AR
Other Reading Quizzes
 Quiz #
