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Enduring Understandings
- important ideas that students should carry with them years beyond the
instruction received this year.
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Different strategies and skills are required to
understand a variety of materials.
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People apply critical thinking skills when reading, writing,
speaking, listening, and viewing.
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Throughout history, humans have used literature as a record of their
experiences.
Essential Questions
- most important “big picture” questions students should be able to answer
after completing learning activities.
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Why do we need to understand what we read or hear?
How do we use strategies and skills to understand a variety of
materials?
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What is critical thinking? Why is critical thinking important? How
do we apply critical thinking skills?
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How and why do humans use literature to record their experiences?
How has history influenced literature and vice versa?
Standards
Must be Mastered by End of Year
Must
be Introduced
Other
Standards & E-skills
Fluency
By
the end of quarter three, students will be able to read 375 of these sight
words.
Adjust reading
pace to accommodate purpose and difficulty of text.
Read grade-level
material attending to phrasing, intonation, and punctuation.
Vocabulary
Other words will be learned from phonics, spelling and vocabulary programs
to total the expected 1000+ words.
Comprehension
1.b Summarize text
passages.
1.c Identify main
idea, and find information to support particular ideas.
1.d Draw
inferences using contextual clues.
1.g Use word recognition skills and resources (for example, phonics, context
clues, picture clues, reference guides, roots, prefixes and suffixes of
words) for comprehension.
1.e Find the sequence of
steps.
1.f Fit materials into an
organization pattern (for example, chronological order.
Writing: Writes for a Variety of Purposes
Write summaries
demonstrating understanding of main idea and supporting details.
When given a
prompt, use the writing process from prewriting through final editing.
Summarize a
variety of texts. (poetry, fiction, non-fiction)
Write short
constructed responses.
Write in a variety of modes such as personal narrative, friendly letters,
and expository pieces.
Conventions, Mechanics, and Grammar
3rd Grade Writing Rubric
Use
correct grammar.
Write
in complete sentences.
Write
legibly.
Resources
Sight Word Powerpoint:
Basic sight word recognition is essential for reading fluency and
comprehension. This PowerPoint Slides will be a quick way to practice 220
essential high-frequency words with your child. Sit down and challenge your
student by asking him/her how many words he/she knows. If they do not know
these words yet, it will be a fun way to start.
Sight Word Powerpoint with Sentences:
This presentation includes the 220 essential high-frequency words
and an example of those words used in context. This will be a great way for
children to practice sight word recognition within the context of a basic
sentence.
Audio
Sight
Word PowerPoint Slides Slides:
The following link
will allow your child to work with smaller amounts of the 220 sight words
children need to master by the end of third grade.
The links are divided into groups of 20 (11 lists in all). Start
with List 1 and work through List 11.
When you feel your
child has mastered all 220 words (with 90%) accuracy, try out the PowerPoint
Slides presentations found in slots 1 and 2.
The PowerPoint Slides Slides in slots 1 and 2, however, do not have audio
support.
Sight Words
Part
1
Sight
Words Part 2
Sight Words Part 3
Sight Words Part 4
Sight Words Part 5
Sight Words Part 6
Sight Words Part 7
Sight Words Part 8
Sight Words Part 9
Sight Words Part 10
Sight Words Part 11
The King of Soundsound:
This challenging reading activity provides access to all 44 phonemes
(sounds) that our language provides. By reading this story and practicing it
with your child, you will ensure that your child is exposed to the
multifaceted sounds our language makes. At the end of this story, you will
also find several phonogram poems that will improve your child's fluency.
Read these with your child and have a blast!
Phonogram Powerpoints:
A phonogram is a word part that contains a group of letters that are often
found together (ight, ell, ought, ook, oop, ump, uss). It is important for
children to recognize phonograms as part of their phonics training. These
powerpoints will provide easy access to over 200 different phonograms you
can practice with your child. The more phonograms they can pronounce, the
more words they will be prepared to read and sound out.
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