District 11 Educational Support Services
Literacy & Language Arts


Grade 5, Overview of the Year

Overview
Fifth grade students meet the challenges of more sophisticated and challenging reading tasks. Students will demonstrate their ability to comprehend challenging readings by drawing inferences from texts, comparing and contrasting texts with similar themes or ideas, summarizing fiction and non-fiction texts, and using context clues and word recognition skills. As students read more content area texts, they will be engaged in higher level thinking, requiring them to differentiate fact from opinion, identify author's purpose, and use reading and writing skills to analyze problems and propose solutions. Students will also produce a variety of texts: narrative essays, persuasive letters, report writing, and responses to literature. These written pieces will range from single paragraphs to multi-paragraph writings.

For Teachers
Quarter 1  2
Quarter 3  4
Prior Grade
Next Grade

Semester 1
Quarter 1: August Unit
Quarter 1:
September Unit
Quarter 1:
October Unit  Continued in Quarter 2
Quarter 2: November Unit
Quarter 2: December Unit
Semester 2
Quarter 3: January Unit
Quarter 3: February Unit
Quarter 3: March Unit
Quarter 4: April - May Unit


Enduring Understandings
- important ideas that students should carry with them years beyond the instruction received this year.

  • Different strategies and skills are required to understand a variety of materials.

  • People apply critical thinking skills when reading, writing, speaking, listening, and viewing.

  • People access, read, evaluate, and use a variety of resources to gain information.

Essential Questions - most important “big picture” questions students should be able to answer after completing learning activities.

  • What does it mean to "understand"? Why do we need to understand what we read or hear?

  • How do we use strategies and skills to understand a variety of materials?

  • What is critical thinking? Why is critical thinking important? How do we apply critical thinking skills?

  • Why do I need a variety of resources? How do I access information and use it responsibly? How do I evaluate resources?

CSAP Tested Standards   Highest Frequency Standards, High Frequency Standards, Other Standards & E-skills

1.c  Locate and paraphrase the key/main ideas and supporting details in fiction and non-fiction.
1.g  Identify the meaning of unfamiliar words in context using word recognition skills and context clues.
4.c  Differentiate fact from opinion.
4.d  Make predictions and draw conclusions from text in various genre.
5.a  Use organizational features of printed text (for example: page numbering, alphabetizing, glossaries, chapter heading, changes in print, table of contents, indexes, captions) to locate information.
5.c  Summarize and organize information about a topic in a variety of ways (for example: graphic organizer, Venn diagram, outline, time line) from references, technical sources, and media.
6.b + 6.c  Identify characters, setting, problem/conflict, action/plot/events, resolution/solution, theme, and sequence in literature.
 

Colorado Basic Literacy Act Proficiencies
 

Standard 1 Comprehension Students read and understand a variety of materials.

a Compare and contrast different texts with similar themes or ideas.

b Summarize fiction and non-fiction (for example: tall tales, historical fiction, adventure, procedural text, and

informational text).

c Locate and paraphrase the key/main ideas and supporting details in fiction and non-fiction.

d Infer using contextual clues.

e Identify sequential order in fiction and non-fiction.

f Locate and recall information in text with different structures (for example: cause and effect, enumeration,

and time order).

g Identify the meaning or unfamiliar words in context using word recognition skills and context clues.
 

Standard 4 Thinking Skills Students apply thinking skills to their reading, speaking, listening, and viewing.

a Determine author’s purpose

b Use reading to define and solve problems and answer questions.

c Differentiate fact from opinion.

d Make predictions and draw conclusions from text in various genre.

e Recognize main idea.
 

Standard 5 Research Students read to locate, select, and make use of relevant information from a variety of media, references, and technological sources.

a Use organizational features of printed text (for example: page numbering, alphabetizing, glossaries,

chapter heading, changes in print, table of contents, indexes, and captions) to locate information.

b Use organizational features of electronic information (for example: keyword searches and icons) to locate

information.

c Summarize and organize information about a topic in a variety of ways (for example: graphic organizer,

Venn diagram, outline, time line) from references, technical sources, and media.

d Select information to support ideas and justify the selection.

e Locate others’ ideas, images or information in bibliography, works cited page, or text features (for example:

quotations, italics, parentheses, and footnotes).

f Select appropriate definitions from the dictionary, glossaries, and other sources.

g Give credit for borrowed information by listing sources.
 

Standard 6 Literature Students read and recognize literature as a record of human experience.

a Read and respond to a variety of literature (for example: novels, poetry, short stories, non-fiction, and plays)

that represents perspectives from places, people, and events that are familiar and unfamiliar.

b Identify characters, setting, problem/conflict, action/plot/events, resolution/solution, theme, and sequence in

literature.

c Use knowledge of literary techniques and terminology (for example: foreshadowing and figurative

language) to understand the text.

d Read and respond to literature as a way to explore the similarities and differences among stories and the ways in which those stories reflect the ethnic background of the author and the culture in which they were written.

Sample Units

District 11 Diamond Units/Lessons Overview - includes  information about the purpose, goals and structure of these sample instructional units:

McMillan McGraw Hill Reading Series Matrix - aligned with state standards

Organizers - Can be added to individual lessons. These organizers contain MCREL strategies, CSAP formatted questions, and elements of the Five Components of Reading.

Grade 5 McMillan McGraw Hill Organizers Grade 5 McMillan McGraw Hill Answer Keys
Black Cowboy Wild Horses:  Organizer
Carlos and the Skunk:  Organizer
Davy Crocket:  Organizer
Goin' Someplace Special:  Organizer
Hidden Worlds:  Organizer
Hurricanes:  Organizer
My Great-Grandmother's Gourd:  Organizer
Pipiolo and the Roof Dogs:  Organizer
Rattlers:  Organizer
Salsa Stories:  Organizer
Shiloh:  Organizer
Skunk Scout:  Organizer
Sleds on Boston Common:  Organizer
Spirit of Endurance:  Organizer
The Color of My Words:  Organizer
The Golden Mare:  Organizer
The Unbreakable Code:  Organizer
Ultimate Field Trip 5:  Organizer
Up in the Air:  Organizer
Weslandia:  Organizer
When Esther Morris Headed West:  Organizer
Zathura:  Organizer
Black Cowboy Wild Horses:  Answer Key
Carlos and the Skunk:  Answer Key
Davy Crocket:  Answer Key
Goin' Someplace Special:  Answer Key
Hidden Worlds:  Answer Key
Hurricanes:  Answer Key
My Great-Grandmother's Gourd:  Answer Key
Pipiolo and the Roof Dogs:  Answer Key
Rattlers:  Answer Key
Salsa Stories:  Answer Key
Shiloh:  Answer Key
Skunk Scout:  Answer Key
Sleds on Boston Common:  Answer Key
Spirit of Endurance:  Answer Key
The Color of My Words:  Answer Key

The Golden Mare:  Answer Key
The Unbreakable Code:  Answer Key
Ultimate Field Trip 5:  Answer Key
Up in the Air:  Answer Key
Weslandia:  Answer Key
When Esther Morris Headed West:  Answer Key
Zathura:  Answer Key

Parents

Many adults enjoy book clubs and the sharing of ideas they promote. Why not encourage a boys' or girls' book club around a favorite fiction series? Students at this age can extend their thinking and comprehension in this way. Writing can be encouraged in a variety of ways, too. Wiki's, blogs, and email pen pals can help get a reluctant writer writing. There are yearly poetry and other writing genre contests available through schools and local newspapers. Sometimes it just takes a little creativity to encourage a budding writer.

Teacher Resources

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