Students examine the relationship between images and text, focusing on how photos, captions, and diagrams provide supplementary information.
A targeted reading intervention lesson focused on identifying the main idea and supporting details using high-interest, low-readability texts. Designed for students who decode well but struggle with comprehension.
Cumulative review of all consonant-le patterns through mixed word lists, sentence reading, and a final fluency passage.
Practice decoding and encoding consonant-le words that include r-controlled or magic e syllables, such as 'purple' and 'beetle'.
Explore how the first syllable (open or closed) determines the vowel sound in consonant-le words, contrasting pairs like 'apple' and 'maple'.
Introduce the consonant-le syllable type and the 'count back 3' rule for dividing words. Focus on words with closed first syllables like 'bubble' and 'candle'.
Synthesizes fiction and non-fiction by comparing the architectural impossibility of a 30-story sideways school with real skyscraper engineering and the laws of gravity.
Connects the absurdity of Wayside School to real-world concepts of probability and logic through informational texts about unusual events and 'impossible' occurrences.
Introduces the unique episodic structure and quirky characters of Wayside School, focusing on identifying perspective and interpreting absurd humor.
An introductory lesson exploring various types of figurative language through clear examples and integrated practice questions.
Integrates fiction and non-fiction by comparing Ivan's fictional life at the Exit 8 Big Top Mall with real-world gorilla habitats and behaviors.
Explores non-fiction texts about gorillas to identify main ideas, key details, and domain-specific vocabulary.
Focuses on identifying Ivan's perspective, recounting key story elements, and understanding character-specific vocabulary in the early chapters of 'The One and Only Ivan'.
Foundational literacy support for the Nature's Balance unit, focusing on CVC/CVCe blending, unit vocabulary, and sentence frames.