Grade 1: Module 4: Cycle 23 | EL Education Curriculum

In this Cycle

You are here:

Phonemes Introduced in This Cycle

Long vowel sounds: "oo," "ee," "y"

High-Frequency Words

"soon," "under," "little," "every," "really," "one," "anymore"

High-frequency words are words that occur most frequently in written material and do not follow phonetic rules or, as we say in the EL Education curriculum, "don't play fair." Due to this fact, it is important that students are able to navigate these words with ease to improve their reading fluency and comprehension.  While high-frequency words on their own don't carry much meaning, they are essential to sentences and help students gather meaning. Below you will find five activities for each day of the week that teachers can do with students or parents can do with their children at home as high-frequency words are being introduced cycle by cycle.

  • Read it, say it, write it, read it again
  • Use high-frequency words in sentences (oral and written)
  • Read a list of high-frequency words and time yourself on fluency (keep running list)
  • Search for high frequency words in sentences / poems and underline them
  • Fishing for high-frequency words (one person reads the word aloud, other students find the word in a stack of other high-frequency words)

Instructional Practices

The instructional practices listed below summarize the instruction that accompanies the skills that are being taught in this cycle for the respective grade level. Teachers should review these routines for guidance on how to teach the skills and patterns reflected in the microphase.

Lesson 116

  • Vowel Sounds: Students segment and blend words with short and long vowel sounds. They begin to identify the types of vowel sounds they hear by analyzing the spelling of the word as well as the syllable type.Chaining (Decoding): Students read words from left to right, making each sound and blending them to pronounce the word. Students analyze groups of words by figuring out the letter sounds that have changed and the letter sounds that have stayed the same of the group of words taught. 
  • Chaining (Decoding): Students read words from left to right, making each sound and blending them to pronounce the word. Students analyze groups of words by figuring out the letter sounds that have changed and the letter sounds that have stayed the same of the group of words taught. 
  • Chaining (Encoding): Students use their knowledge of letter-sound connections to spell written words. Students write letters using proper letter-formation guidelines that correspond to the correct spelling of the words they hear. They are encouraged to check their spelling against the teacher model.

Lesson 117

  • Engagement Text: Students use knowledge of phoneme segmentation to isolate and identify the initial, middle, and final sound in a word. As they identify each sound, they must connect it to its written representation (grapheme) and practice proper letter formation using a skywriting technique.
  • Comprehension Conversation (optional): Students answer suggested (or similar) text-based comprehension questions about the engagement text.
  • High-Frequency Words: Students are introduced to the high-frequency words of the cycle. The teacher explicitly teaches all high-frequency words students will see in the Decodable Student Reader. Students decode and analyze each word to determine if the word is "decodable" because it is regularly spelled, "doesn't play fair" because it hasn't been explicitly taught yet, or "irregular" because it is irregularly spelled.

  • Decodable Reader Partner Search and Read: Students read a short text that incorporates words using familiar phonemes (sounds) and high-frequency words from the cycle, which students search out in the text with a partner before reading the text. Students receive practice with concepts of print (e.g., one-to-one match and return sweep) and apply knowledge of taught graphemes and phonemes as they decode words.

Lesson 118

  • High-Frequency Word Fishing: Students apply decoding (reading) skills and growing knowledge of irregularly spelled words to review the high-frequency words. Students begin the process of committing such words to memory by using known letter-sound connections and context.
  • Spelling to Complement Reading: Students work through a series of scaffolded steps to successfully spell words from the current or past cycles. They first isolate and identify the individual phonemes (sounds) in the spoken word, then apply their growing knowledge of letter-sound connections to identify the grapheme (letter) that matches each individual phoneme (sound). Finally, they use that information to encode (spell) the word.

Lesson 119

  • Sort It Out: Students sort words into groups with the same sound and connect them to the letters that represent those sounds. Students analyze words by comparing and contrasting parts of words and sorting them into the correct category.
  • Interactive Editing: Students apply their growing knowledge of letter-sound connections to edit a shared sentence from the decodable text or content from the Integrated Literacy block. They apply the rules of spelling, capitalization, spacing, and punctuation to edit the sentence.

Lesson 120

  • Reading Silly Words: Students decode (read) nonsense words in isolation and articulate the decoding strategy they used.
  • Spelling with Style: Students spell words using patterns they have learned. They practice spelling words in a unique way, "with style" (e.g., like an opera singer or chicken), and then write them on their own whiteboard. 
  • Assessment and Goal Setting (during cycle assessments): Students take on-demand assessments at the end of each cycle. Teachers score immediately to track student progress and possibly revise their personal goals for the module accordingly.

Cycle Word List

In this cycle, students are introduced to the "oo" pattern as well as two spelling patterns that both produce the long "e" sound ("-y" at the end of a two-syllable word and the vowel team "ee"). They continue to practice decoding two-syllable words using combinations of known syllable types. For the full cycle overview with word list, Cycle-at-a-Glance, and teaching notes, download the cycle overview.

bee
cheek
deep
seed
street
tree
cool
food
noon
shoot
angry
party
plenty
puppy
cartoon

Engagement Text and Decodable Readers

The text listed below can be utilized to reinforce the skills taught in the cycle.  Teachers can use the text to have students apply their learning during small group work or teacher-led groups.  By focusing on the skills/patterns being taught, students can apply their learning to text.  A list of activities to consider with the text are listed in the activity section. 

Engagement Text: "A Little Seed"

See the little seed under the tree? It is so small that it is almost like nothing at all. But this little seed is about to take a big trip! It will find a new home.

It is a windy day. The wind sweeps the tiny seed all the way to the city. It lands on a roof. But that is not where the seed will stay, because the wind is angry today.

The seed speeds through the air, sailing on the breeze. It lands in a sunny park. The park is a perfect home for the little seed. 

The little seed goes deeper into the grass and begins to grow roots. It will need plenty of sun and rain. They are like food to the tiny seed.

It is a sunny day. The afternoon sun warms the seed. More roots grow into the ground. The next day is rainy. Every raindrop will help the seed grow. The next day is cool and misty. The tiny seed is now a shoot. It has even deeper roots now.

The seed grows and grows. Soon it has a stem and one leaf. Look again--now there are three green leaves! The days go by. The sun shines down, more raindrops fall to the ground, and the bees buzz all around.

See the pretty flower? It is not a weed. It came from that one tiny seed! The little seed took a big trip and found a new home in the park. The little seed is not really a seed anymore!

Get updates about our new K-5 curriculum as new materials and tools debut.

Sign Up