- I can read a new poem aloud fluently. (RF.4.3, RF.4.4)
- I can select visuals for my poetry presentation that will help the audience understand what I was inspired by. (SL.4.5)
These are the CCS Standards addressed in this lesson:
- RF.4.3: Know and apply grade-level phonics and word analysis skills in decoding words.
- RF.4.4: Read with sufficient accuracy and fluency to support comprehension.
- RF.4.4a: Read grade-level text with purpose and understanding.
- RF.4.4b: Read grade-level prose and poetry orally with accuracy, appropriate rate, and expression on successive readings.
- RF.4.4c: Use context to confirm or self-correct word recognition and understanding, rereading as necessary.
- SL.4.4: Report on a topic or text, tell a story, or recount an experience in an organized manner, using appropriate facts and relevant, descriptive details to support main ideas or themes; speak clearly at an understandable pace.
- SL.4.5: Add audio recordings and visual displays to presentations when appropriate to enhance the development of main ideas or themes.
Daily Learning Targets
Ongoing Assessment
- End of Unit 3 Assessment: Reading a New Poem Aloud for Fluency (RF.4.3, RF.4.4)
- Images for poetry presentation (SL.4.5)
Agenda
Agenda | Teaching Notes |
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1. Opening A. Reviewing Learning Targets (5 minutes) 2. Work Time A. Analyzing a Model: Images (10 minutes) B. End of Unit 3 Assessment: Reading Aloud a New Poem for Fluency (90 minutes) 3. Closing and Assessment A. Tracking Progress (15 minutes) 4. Homework A. Accountable Research Reading. Select a prompt and respond in the front of your independent reading journal. |
Purpose of lesson and alignment to standards:
How it builds on previous work:
Areas in which students may need additional support:
Assessment guidance:
Down the road:
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In Advance
- Prepare:
- Technology necessary for students to select photographs for their presentations (see Technology and Multimedia). Practice using the technology in preparation for modeling how to use it with the class.
- Technology for students who have brought in videos to use as their visuals.
- An End of Unit 3 Assessment excerpt for each student based on his or her reading ability (see Assessment Overview and Resources for original excerpt).
- List that details the order in which students will read aloud for their End of Unit 3 Assessment.
- Gather Tracking Progress folders.
- Post: Learning targets, Performance Task anchor chart, Working to Become Ethical People anchor chart, Working to Become Effective Learners anchor chart, and Fluent Readers Do These Things anchor chart.
Tech and Multimedia
- Work Time A: For students who will benefit from hearing the text read aloud multiple times, consider using a text to speech tool such as Natural Reader, SpeakIt! for Google Chrome or the Safari reader. Note that to use a web based text to speech to tool such as SpeakIt! or Safari reader, you will need to create an online doc--for example, a Google Doc, containing the text.
- Work Time A: Record students reading aloud for them to listen back to using audio or video recording software or apps such as Audacity or GarageBand. If available, consider using a microphone to ensure a good-quality recording.
- Work Time A: Prepare technology for students to select images to accompany their presentations. Free image sites such as Flickr are a good starting point. Depending on the technology you have available for the presentations, students may need to print these photographs, or download them somewhere to be printed out before the next lesson. If using printed copies of images, consider enlarging them for students to pin up, or printing multiple copies of each for students to hand out to the audience. If using technology for the presentation and students have brought in hard copies of photographs or images, scan them before the next lesson.
- Work Time A: Students revise their poetry presentations using word-processing software--for example, a Google Doc.
Supporting English Language Learners
Supports guided in part by CA ELD Standards 4.I.C.9, 4.I.C.11, 4.I.C.12, 4.II.A.1, 4.II.A.2, and 4.II.C.6
Important points in the lesson itself
- The basic design of this lesson supports ELLs with opportunities to formally assess their progress as fluent readers, drawing on the reading fluency practice they have had in Lessons 4-7. In addition, students are invited to infuse the curriculum and classroom with with visuals from home, creating an environment where students may feel a greater sense of belonging, success, growth, and value.
- ELLs may find it challenging to fluently read an unfamiliar text. Consider limiting the excerpt to the first stanza or two and providing ample thinking and processing time before the student begins reading aloud (see Meeting Students' Needs column).
Universal Design for Learning
- Multiple Means of Representation (MMR): In this lesson, students select and organize images to add to their poetry presentation. To help students in the selection process, consider varied ways to help them navigate the meanings of their presentation (e.g., explicitly discuss nonverbal forms of communication that can enhance the presentation of visuals, or provide sentence frames to help facilitate expressive language skills to discuss the images during the partner exercise).
- Multiple Means of Action and Expression (MMAE): Because the fluency portion of this lesson is an assessment, all students use the same poem. However, for students whose independent reading level is below the selected poem, consider conducting an additional assessment with a poem on their level. Then compare the data between the assessments to inform future fluency instruction.
- Multiple Means of Engagement (MME): To increase engagement, consider multiple ways for students to locate or create images for their poetry. The original structure in this lesson has them bringing them from home but allows students to identify images on the internet, cut out portions of magazines, or draw their own images. This will help stimulate increased creativity.
Vocabulary
Key: Lesson-Specific Vocabulary (L); Text-Specific Vocabulary (T); Vocabulary Used in Writing (W)
- visuals (L)
Materials
- Performance Task anchor chart (begun in Unit 1, Lesson 1)
- Affix List (from Unit 1, Lesson 11)
- Model presentation with images (one per student and one to display)
- Poetry presentations (begun in Lesson 4; one per student)
- Visuals (images, videos, objects brought from home)
- Working to Become Ethical People anchor chart (begun in Unit 1, Lesson 2)
- Paper (lined; one piece per student)
- Working to Become Effective Learners anchor chart (from Unit 2, Lesson 1)
- End of Unit 3 Assessment: Reading a New Poem Aloud for Fluency (one per student; see Assessment Overview and Resources)
- Fluent Readers Do These Things anchor chart (begun in Lesson 4)
- Reading Fluency Checklist (one per student)
- Tracking Progress folders (from Unit 1, Lesson 8; one per student)
- Tracking Progress: Reading Fluency (one per student and one to display)
Assessment
Each unit in the 3-5 Language Arts Curriculum has two standards-based assessments built in, one mid-unit assessment and one end of unit assessment. The module concludes with a performance task at the end of Unit 3 to synthesize their understanding of what they accomplished through supported, standards-based writing.
Opening
Opening | Meeting Students' Needs |
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A. Reviewing Learning Targets (5 minutes)
"I can read a new poem aloud fluently." "I can select visuals for my poetry presentation that will help the audience understand what I was inspired by."
"What are visuals? What clue does the root vis give us?" (The root vis means to see. So visuals are something to do with seeing. Visuals are something to look at--for example, a picture, a video, or an object.) "How does this learning target link to the performance task? What is the purpose of adding visuals to your presentation?" (In the performance task, we present with visuals that help the audience better understand what they are inspired by and why.)
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Work Time
Work Time | Meeting Students' Needs |
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A. Analyzing a Model: Images (10 minutes)
"What do the images help you to understand?" (what the horse looks like when it is doing the things the poet describes) "How do these visuals add to the presentation?" (They help the audience picture what the poet is saying rather than just imagining.) "How does the poet signal when to show the image in the presentation?" (He has written in parentheses--"(show picture 1)"--and he has directed the audience to look at specific things within his presentation.)
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Closing & Assessments
Closing | Meeting Students' Needs |
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A. Tracking Progress (15 minutes)
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Homework
Homework | Meeting Students' Needs |
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A. Accountable Research Reading. Select a prompt and respond in the front of your independent reading journal. |
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