
This parent guide supports parents in helping their child at home with the 3rd grade English Language Arts content.
- Subject:
- English Language Arts
- Material Type:
- Curriculum
- Reference Material
- Vocabulary
- Author:
- AMBER GARVEY
- Date Added:
- 12/30/2022
This parent guide supports parents in helping their child at home with the 3rd grade English Language Arts content.
In this lesson, students compare and contrast sections of two texts about the poison dart frog.
In this lesson, students continue to compare and contrast sections of two texts about the poison dart frog.
In this lesson, students compare and contrast two sections of text about the poison dart frog.
In this lesson, students continue to compare and contrast sections of two texts about the poison dart frog.
This lesson is the first of three in a series in which students compare and contrast sections of two texts about the poison dart frog.
In this lesson, students compare and contrast sections of two texts about the poison dart frog.
This article discusses how creating Readers Theater scripts from informational text can improve fluency and build comprehension.
Awareness and true understanding of other cultures can create the desire to take action. In this lesson, students learn about Palestinian Arabs. After exploring the culture in a book and online, students identify a current social issue that concerns them. In a formal letter written to an appropriate official, students identify these issues and discuss suggestions of ways the problems might be addressed.
In this lesson, students learn cause-and-effect relationships by using of a variety of picture books by Laura Joffe Numeroff. They use online tools or a printed template to create an original comic strip for a given writing prompt.
In this lesson, students learn to identify and analyze the compare and contrast text structure within expository texts.
(This lesson for AIG learners follows a close reading of The Great Kapok Tree by Lynne Cherry. The classroom lesson should include independent reading of the book as well as teacher read-aloud. Students should learn vocabulary from the book and should be able to demonstrate understanding of key details in the text and their central theme or lesson (interdependence, environmental awareness.) This lesson could be part of a larger science unit encompassing the important role the rainforest plays in our environment. In this lesson, the learner will find evidence in the text that shows cause and effect relationships, reasons in the text explicitly given to support a point and will produce a written work through a RAFT assignment. In this lesson extension, he or she can choose a specific role or voice to support a point or opinion. The RAFT assignment allows the learner to apply the text to the real world and a real audience. This lesson was developed by NCDPI as part of the Academically and/or Intellectually Gifted Instructional Resources Project. This lesson plan has been vetted at the state level for standards alignment, AIG focus, and content accuracy.
This inquiry is an exploration into the concepts of time, continuity, and change in a community with the dual purpose of establishing students' understandings of the passage of time and explaining why the past matters today. One way to explore present circumstances is through an examination of the short- and long- term effects of the past. Through identifying the relationship of cause and effect, students learn to recognize how continuity and change over time help us understand historical developments in our present communities.
Students look at the objects given and notice where the sun is positioned. Students draw a shadow that would be cast by the object according to the sun's position.
For this activity, students place pieces of information in an order that makes sense and write a paragraph in their own words.
This resource contains resources that will help students understand that writers use different structures to organize nonfiction texts and that readers need to know a variety of reading strategies appropriate for the text and their purpose for reading such text. Reading strategies to use before, during, and after reading are shared as well as graphic organizers.
This lesson, "Skim, Scan, and Scroll," taken from a research skills unit, is a step towards students completing a written research report. Here, students learn to read informational text, looking for supporting details. After the skills of skimming and scanning printed and electronic texts are modeled by the teacher, students practice the skills on their own.
This course was created by the Rethink Education Content Development Team. This course is aligned to the NC Standards for 3rd Grade ELA.
This course was created by the Rethink Education Content Development Team. This course is aligned to the NC Standards for 3rd Grade English Language Arts.
Students match the cause to its effect.