Name: Amy Davenport Date: June 2005 Age/Grade Level: 1/2
Subject: Language Arts # of Students: 9 # of IEP Students: 9
Major content: Color Sight Words Unit Title: The Big Green Monster
Overview: This lesson begins with a shared reading of the story, Go Away, Big Green Monster! by Ed Emberley. After the shared reading, students engage in a paired reading of the online version to build fluency and word recognition skills. They also examine onset/rime patterns by generating word families, review sight words in the story, and play a card game to reinforce high-frequency vocabulary. As a culminating activity, students draw their own big green monsters and write stories about the monsters to publish online. This writing exploration allows an integrated application of phonics where skills can be taught to students individually at the point of use.
ACTIONS:
(Described prior to observation)
Goals
and Objectives-
Students will
Connections-
RD-E 1.1.10 Connect the content of a passage to
students’ lives and/or real world issues.
RD-E 1.0.1 Use word recognition strategies (e.g.
phonetic principles, context clues, structural analysis) to determine
pronunciations and meaning of words in passages.
IRA/NCTE Standards
1 - Students
read a wide range of print and nonprint texts to
build an understanding of texts, of themselves, and of the cultures of the
3 - Students apply a wide range of strategies to comprehend,
interpret, evaluate, and appreciate texts. They draw on their prior experience,
their interactions with other readers and writers, their knowledge of word
meaning and of other texts, their word identification strategies, and their
understanding of textual features (e.g., sound-letter correspondence, sentence
structure, context, graphics).
5 - Students employ a wide range of strategies as they write and use
different writing process elements appropriately to communicate with different
audiences for a variety of purposes.
12 - Students use spoken, written, and visual language to accomplish
their own purposes (e.g., for learning, enjoyment, persuasion, and the exchange
of information).
Context- Student will learn to use word recognition
strategies to learn color words and basic sight words in text.
Resources-
Procedures-
Preparation
|
1. |
Write the text from Go Away, Big Green
Monster! on chart paper using colored markers or
crayons to match the color words found in the story. |
|
2. |
Gather index cards and markers for students
to make a memory card game during a literacy center activity. |
|
3. |
Copy each line of the story onto sentence
strips for students to use in a literacy center activity. |
|
4. |
Gather a class set of markers or crayons and
white construction paper for students to draw their monsters. |
|
5. |
Create a big green monster pointer from felt or construction
paper to use during the shared and paired readings activities (optional). |
Instruction and Activities
Session 1: Shared Reading (30 minutes)
|
1. |
Seat the students together in the shared
reading area. |
|
2. |
Display the text from Go Away, Big Green
Monster! on chart paper and introduce the story
to the whole class. |
|
3. |
Read the story with students chorally. Then
have students reread the story several times using other read-aloud formats,
such as boys and girls, left side and right side, popcorn reading (i.e.,
having students voluntarily "jump in" to read a line of the story),
and individual volunteers. Reading the story multiple times in alternative
formats builds fluency, adds interest, and speeds word recognition. |
|
4. |
Point out the colored words in the story,
asking if students recognize the color name from the print color. |
|
5. |
Review the sight words and point out the
known words in the story, connecting them to words already listed on the class
word wall. |
|
6. |
Explain the literacy center activities to follow. |
Note: A parent volunteer, classroom aide, or older student buddy may be
helpful when conducting center activities with kindergarten and first-grade
students.
Literacy centers can be organized and managed in a variety of ways. Typically,
teachers can create literacy centers that coincide with guided reading
instruction. While the teacher meets with one group of students for guided
reading, other groups rotate among various literacy centers set up around the
classroom. Centers can be created by simply setting out literacy activities on
a table or they can be separated into specifically designed areas of the
classroom. Teachers may want to assign particular students to certain centers
based on learning styles, needs, or strengths. Ideally, no more than four
students in this age group should work together in a literacy center. To ensure
that students work cooperatively in the centers, teachers can provide a Literacy Center
Checklist for students to complete.
|
1. |
Computer center. Have pairs of students
listen to the audio for the online version of Go Away, Big Green Monster! and read along with the text to practice fluency and word
recognition skills. |
|
2. |
Memory card game center. Have students work
in groups of three or four at this literacy center. Each student will need to
copy the color words from the story onto index cards to use for a memory
game. To play the game, students combine the individually made sets of color
cards into one deck. The deck is then laid out, face down, into a matrix.
Students take turns turning over pairs of cards to make a match of two color
words, reading each color word aloud as cards are turned over. |
|
3. |
Word family center. In this literacy
center, students choose words from the story Go Away, Big Green Monster!
to generate word family lists. Direct the students
to begin their word family lists by selecting words from the story that they
already know. Have them drop the beginning letter (onset) and create a list
of new words by substituting different beginning letters to the word ending
(rime). Students can then add these words to their personal dictionaries. |
|
4. |
Sentence strip center. Have student work cooperatively in pairs to
arrange sentence strips with the lines of the story in correct order. Include
the chart paper with the text of the story in this center for student
reference. This activity encourages rereading of the story in an alternative
format to build word recognition, oral reading fluency, and understanding of
story sequencing. The center provides an opportunity for self-assessment as
the pairs of students can compare their sequencing of the strips to the
actual story. |
Session 2: Art Workshop (30 minutes)
|
1. |
Read the story again with students, and
invite each student to imagine the big green monster and draw a picture of
what it looks like. Make sure that students match the color words in the
story to the body parts of the monster they draw (e.g., yellow eyes). |
|
2. |
Finished artwork can be washed with diluted black tempera paint
and matted or mounted for display. The tempura paint wash will give the
monster illustrations a darkened, spooky background. |
Session 3: Writing Workshop (45 minutes)
|
1. |
Read the story again with students to
introduce the writing workshop. |
|
2. |
Have students imagine their own big green
monsters. What do their monsters do? How do their monsters act? Students can use
their illustrations from Session 2 to visualize what their monsters look
like. |
|
3. |
Give students the opportunity to share their
big green monster ideas either with a partner, a small group, or with the
entire class. This sharing session enhances oral language skills. |
|
4. |
Invite students to begin writing stories
about their big green monsters, including details from what they imagined. |
|
5. |
Circulate around the classroom as students write,
conferencing with individual students as needed to teach and reteach phonics skills during the writing process. |
|
6. |
After students write the first draft of
their stories, direct them to reread their stories and self-edit for one
particular writing convention. For example, direct students to reread their
own stories, looking for a period at the end of each sentence. Then direct
students to read the story of a peer, and edit for one particular writing
convention. For example, direct children to peer-edit for descriptive word
choice. Continue to circulate among students to teach and reteach
punctuation and grammar skills at the point of use. |
|
7. |
Invite students to publish their stories
online at Kids on the Net by clicking the
"Submit Your Writing" link. You may need permission from the
students' caregivers before having them submit their stories for online
publication. Check with your school administrator for information on your school's
policy on this issue. |
|
8. |
Create a class book by binding printed stories and monster
illustrations into a book. Place the class book in the classroom library. A
photocopied version can be made for take-home reading. |
Student Assessment-