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Overview
The third grade Literacy and Language Arts lessons are
focused on helping students achieve a level of proficiency in phonics,
fluency, vocabulary, and comprehension that will allow them to shift from
learning to read to reading to learn. Third graders will explore more advanced
reading skills such as previewing text, making text connections, identifying
essential story elements, and learning text-specific vocabulary words to
enhance their understanding. Third graders will continue improving
their fluency by attending to their phrasing, intonation, and punctuation
within the text.
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Standards
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
At
the end of quarter two, students will be able to read 250 of D11 sight
words. Other words will be learned from phonics, spelling and vocabulary
programs to total the expected 1000+ words.
Adjust reading
pace to accommodate purpose and difficulty of text.
Read grade-level
material attending to phrasing, intonation, and punctuation.
Vocabulary
Understand and use
vocabulary essential to text.
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.
Writing: Conventions, Mechanics, and Grammar
3rd Grade Writing Rubric
Use correct grammar.
Write
in complete sentences.
Write
legibly.
During the 2007-2008 school year, Literacy Resource Teachers and
classroom teachers will be correlating textbook pages to the emphasized standards
for each month. Also, teachers will be developing District 11
Diamond Lessons for each quarter.
Reading Programs
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McMillan McGraw Hill |
Open Court |
Scholastic |
Scott Foresman |
Pearson |
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Writing Programs
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Writers Advantage |
Lucy Calkins |
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