- Opening A: I can identify the name and sound for the letters "u," "q," and "x." (RF.K.3)
- I can say the sound that each consonant letter makes in words.
- I can identify the most common single graphemes (letters) for short vowels.
- Work Time A: I can identify and produce words that rhyme. (RF.K.2)
- I can listen to a list of words and identify which one does not rhyme.
- I can listen to a list of three rhyming words and create a new rhyming word with a different sound (provided by the teacher; example: "pat," "bat," "hat," /s/).
- I can listen to a line of text containing two rhyming words, and pick out and say the two words.
- When given a word, I can create a new rhyming word by changing the first sound in the word.
Daily Learning Targets
Ongoing Assessment
- Observe students during Work Time A.
- Determine whether they can identify the rhyming words in lines of the poem.
- Also determine whether they can produce a new word that rhymes when provided with a new initial sound.
- Record students' progress on the Snapshot Assessment.
Agenda
Agenda |
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1. Opening (5 minutes) A. Letter-Sound Chant: All Accumulated Letters 2. Work Time (10 minutes) A. Rhyme Time 3. Closing and Assessment (2 minutes) A. Reflecting on Learning 4. Differentiated Small Group Instruction and Rotations (40-45 minutes) |
In Advance
- Prepare:
- Enlarged poem: "A Fox and a Quail in the Rain" (handwrite on chart paper, display electronically, or enlarge a photocopy)
- A picture of a rose for use during Work Time A (see supporting materials)
- Snapshot Assessment (optional; one per student)
- Gather materials for differentiated small group instruction (see Differentiated Small Groups: Work with Teacher section).
Vocabulary
Key: Lesson-Specific Vocabulary (L); Text-Specific Vocabulary (T)
- rhyme, rhyming (L)
Materials
- Enlarged poem: "A Fox and a Quail in the Rain" (for teacher to display; from Lesson 47)
- Large pointer (optional; for teacher to point to words in poem as the class recites)
- Poetry notebooks (from Lesson 47)
- Work Time Picture Card: rose (one to display)
- Articulatory Gestures chart (from Lesson 46)
- Snapshot Assessment (optional; one per student)
Opening
Opening | Meeting Students' Needs |
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A. Letter-Sound Chant: All Accumulated Letters
"Now let's say the alphabet, letter by letter. Here is the letter, here is the sound. When we chant together, we sound great. Listen up to the sounds we make!"
1. Teacher says: "Today we will do a Letter-Sound Chant with ALL the letters we have learned so far." 2. Teacher models the Letter-Sound Chant for "u": "'u,' umbrella, /u/," and repeats. 3. Teacher asks students to join in the Letter-Sound Chant for "u": "'u,' umbrella, /u/," and repeats. 4. Repeat steps 2-3 with "q," "x," and letters accumulated to this point. 5. Teacher says: "Great job! Knowing the sounds for letters helps us become better readers." |
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Work Time
Work Time | Meeting Students' Needs |
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A. Rhyme Time
"Now it's rhyme time, now it's rhyme time. Hear the sounds, hear the sounds. Listen for the pattern, listen for the pattern. At the end, at the end."
1. Teacher says: "We're going to explore some sounds in words in the poem again today, but before we do that, we're going to play a game. This is how it goes: I'll say a word and then point to an object or picture. You'll say the name of the object or picture, and then we'll figure out if the two words rhyme or don't rhyme." 2. Teacher says: "rope," then points to his or her nose. 3. Students say: "nose." 4. Teacher invites the students to say both words. 5. Teacher asks: "Do these words rhyme?" (no) "How do you know?" (They don't sound exactly the same at the end.) "What part of the word helps us know that they rhyme? The beginning or the end?" (end) "What is the beginning sound in 'rope'?" (/r/) "What is the ending chunk in 'rope'?" (/ope/) "What is the beginning sound in 'nose'?" (/n/) "What is the ending chunk in 'nose'?" (/ose/) "Who can make a word that rhymes with 'rope' and begins with /h/?" ("hope") "Can anyone think of another word that rhymes with 'rope' and 'hope'?" ("soap," "nope," "cope," "slope") 6. Teacher says: "nose," then holds up Work Time Picture Card: rose. 7. Students say: "rose." 8. Teacher repeats steps 3-4. 9. Teacher says: "Now let's see if we can be detectives and find words that rhyme in our poem. Let's try it one part at a time. We'll jump if we hear a word that rhymes. Watch as I do the first line." 10. Teacher recites the first line of the poem aloud. Teacher jumps when saying the word: "box." 11. Teacher asks: "Why did I jump when I said 'box'?" (rhymes with "fox") 12. Teacher says: "That's right! /b/-ox rhymes with /f/-ox. The ending chunk is the same!" 13. Teacher invites students to stand and do this together using the first line of the poem, thinking about what word will signal their jump. 14. Teacher says: "Listen carefully to the second line: 'And a quiet little quail.'" 15. Teacher asks: "Are there any words that rhyme in that line?" (no) 16. Teacher and students recite the second line without jumping for any word. 17. Teacher continues to work through each line of the poem using the process described in steps 13-15.
18. Teacher and students recite the poem together once more, jumping for the rhyming words. 19. Teacher invites students to listen to the words "crown" and "down." 20. Teacher invites students to think of a word that rhymes with "those" and starts with the sound /fr/. (frown) |
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Closing & Assessments
Closing | Meeting Students' Needs |
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Reflecting on Learning
"How do we know that 'crown' and 'down' are words that rhyme?" (have the same ending sound) "How might knowing rhyming words help us with reading and writing?" (Responses will vary.) |
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Differentiated Small Groups: Work with Teacher
Suggested Plan: Teacher works with the Pre-Alphabetic and Early Partial Alphabetic groups. Teacher may meet briefly with the Late Partial and Early Full Alphabetic groups to get them started on independent work.
Note: Groups not working with the teacher at a given time should be engaged in purposeful independent rotation work. Refer to the Independent and Small Group Work guidance document (see K-2 Skills Resource Manual) for more details.
Pre-Alphabetic:
- Practice activity: Where Do I Belong?
- Students work with the teacher to find a picture of a word that rhymes with a set of words. There are four sets of words and four single words that need to find out where they belong:
- Set 1: "rain," "train," "crane"
- Set 2: "box," "fox," "rocks"
- Set 3: "down," "frown," "gown"
- Set 4: "wall," "fall," "ball"
- Single words: "tall," "brain," "socks," "crown"
- Teacher cuts apart the "single" words ahead of time for one set of cards (teacher set).
- Starting with the first set, the teacher supports the students as they say the name of each picture ("rain," "train," "crane").
- The teacher then supports the students as they say the name of each "single" word ("brain," "socks," "crown," "tall")
- Together, teacher and students say each word in the set, followed by one of the "single" words, to listen for whether or not the new word rhymes. Once they have found which of the "new" words belongs, the process continues with the next set of words and the remaining "single" cards.
- If time allows, students can then repeat this activity with their own cards and sheets.
- Additional Supporting Materials:
- Where Do I Belong? Cards and sheet (one for teacher)
- Scissors (one for teacher)
- Optional:
- Glue sticks (one per student)
- Where Do I Belong? Cards and sheet (one per student or partners)
Early Partial Alphabetic:
- Practice activity: Where Do I Belong?
- Teacher supports students as they find a picture of a word that rhymes with a set of words. There are four sets of words and four single words that need to find out where they belong:
- Set 1: "rain," "train," "crane"
- Set 2: "box," "fox," "rocks"
- Set 3: "down," "frown," "gown"
- Set 4: "wall," "fall," "ball"
- Single words: "tall," "brain," "socks," "crown"
- Students cut the single words or teacher cuts them apart ahead of time.
- Teacher spreads all of the cards out and supports students as they say the name of each picture.
- Students match the "single" pictures to the set with which they belong.
- Additional Supporting Materials:
- Where Do I Belong? Cards and sheet (one for teacher)
- Optional:
- Scissors and glue sticks (one of each per student)
- Where Do I Belong? Cards and sheet (one per student or partners)
Late Partial and Early Full Alphabetic:
- Independent practice activity: Where Do I Belong?
- Students work independently to find a picture of a word that rhymes with a set of words. There are four sets of words and four single words that need to find out where they belong:
- Set 1: "rain," "train," "crane"
- Set 2: "box," "fox," "rocks"
- Set 3: "down," "frown," "gown"
- Set 4: "wall," "fall," "ball"
- Single words: "tall," "brain," "socks," "crown"
- Students cut apart the cards.
- Students spread all of the cards out and say the name of each picture.
- Students match the pictures to the set of words with which they rhyme.
- Each student glues matches onto the end of the set.
- Additional Supporting Materials:
- Where Do I Belong? Cards and sheet (one for teacher)
- Optional:
- Scissors and glue sticks (one of each per student)
- Where Do I Belong? Cards and sheet (one per student or partners)
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