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  • NC.ELA.RL.1.2 - Retell stories, including key details, and demonstrate understanding o...
Hey Diddle, Diddle! Generating Rhymes for Analogy-Based Phonics Instruction
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In this lesson, shared reading, guided reading, and small, cooperative-group instruction are used in a first-grade classroom to informally assess students' ability to demonstrate awareness of rhyme or other visual similarities in words. Students practice matching rhyming words using picture cards and apply phonological awareness—hearing rhyme—to analogy-based phonics (i.e., an ability to decode unknown words by identifying words with similar visual structure). Students use online resources to increase phonological awareness through rhyme.

Subject:
English Language Arts
Material Type:
Lesson Plan
Provider:
ReadWriteThink
Author:
Gigi Bohm
Date Added:
02/26/2019
Improving Fluency through Group Literary Performance
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In this lesson, the repetition, rhythm, and rhyme of Martin’s works provide opportunities for students to hear fluent reading modeled before participating in the readings through literary performance. The lesson provides students the chance to focus on their fluency and comprehension. The readers theater section of the lesson allows students to demonstrate these skills for an audience, while improving their literacy skills further.

Subject:
English Language Arts
Material Type:
Lesson Plan
Provider:
ReadWriteThink
Author:
Devon Hamner
Date Added:
02/26/2019
Integrating Language Arts: If You Give a Mouse a Cookie
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In this lesson, students will read Laura Joffe Numeroff's 'If You Give a Mouse a Cookie' to combine word-skill work with prediction and sequencing practice. Students learn about cause-effect relationships during a shared reading of the book and then complete a cloze exercise that uses context and initial consonant clues. Students then create story circles that display the events of the story and use these circles to retell the story to a peer. Finally, the students compose their own stories featuring themselves in the role of the mouse.

Subject:
English Language Arts
Material Type:
Lesson Plan
Provider:
ReadWriteThink
Author:
Lisa Bass
Date Added:
02/26/2019
It Doesn’t Have to End That Way: Using Prediction Strategies with Literature
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In this lesson, students will read part of a story and use details in the text, personal experience, and prior knowledge to predict the way the story will end. To support their predictions, the class discusses the plot elements of the book to the stopping point as well as experiences they have had with other books in the genre and in their own lives. Students individually create illustrations of the story’s ending that reflect their predictions and share these illustrations with the class before the entire book is read again. After the entire book has been read, students compare their endings to the ending in the original story.

Subject:
English Language Arts
Material Type:
Lesson Plan
Provider:
ReadWriteThink
Author:
LaDonna Helm
Date Added:
02/26/2019
A Journal for Corduroy: Responding to Literature
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Students listen to A Pocket for Corduroy and three other Corduroy stories and discuss the characters and plots. A letter to parents introduces a follow-up writing activity, in which a stuffed classroom "Corduroy" goes home with a different student each night. With parents' help, students write and illustrate a two- to three-sentence adventure story about Corduroy's stay with them, and share their stories with the class.

Subject:
English Language Arts
Material Type:
Lesson Plan
Provider:
International Literacy Association
Author:
Marilyn Cook
Date Added:
02/26/2019
A Journal for Corduroy: Responding to Literature
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Students listen to A Pocket for Corduroy and three other Corduroy stories and discuss the characters and plots. A letter to parents introduces a follow-up writing activity, in which a stuffed classroom "Corduroy" goes home with a different student each night. With parents' help, students write and illustrate a two- to three-sentence adventure story about Corduroy's stay with them, and share their stories with the class.

Subject:
English Language Arts
Material Type:
Lesson Plan
Provider:
International Reading Association/National Council of Teachers of English
Author:
Marilyn Cook
Date Added:
02/26/2019
Learning Centers: From Shared to Independent Practice
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In this lesson, students engage in independent literacy centers to become proficient in completing activities about the stories they read. Although this lesson uses Seven Blind Mice as an example, the framework is adaptable to almost any text.

Subject:
English Language Arts
Material Type:
Lesson Plan
Provider:
ReadWriteThink
Author:
Nancy Drew
Date Added:
02/26/2019
Learning Vocabulary Down By the Bay
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In this lesson, students will use a popular children's song that contains several high-frequency vocabulary words to assist in recognizing, reading, writing, and using the words in several contexts. Students sing the song repeatedly, while following along with a picture book that contains the lyrics and illustrations. They are then encouraged to participate in several hands-on activities to reinforce learning of the vocabulary words.

Subject:
English Language Arts
Material Type:
Lesson Plan
Provider:
ReadWriteThink
Author:
Melissa Weimer
Date Added:
02/26/2019
Let’s Build a Snowman
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In this lesson, students will learn that building a snowman is one way to provide food for birds and animals during the winter. Students begin by listening to a book about snow. Students are then introduced to a K-W-L chart and discuss what they know about how animals find food in the winter. As students listen to Henrietta Bancroft's Animals in Winter, they listen for details about how some animals survive during the winter and record those details in the last column of the chart. To continue to build students' knowledge of the topic, they listen to additional fiction and nonfiction books and view a website about animals in winter. As a culminating activity, students use their charts to write and illustrate a story.

Subject:
English Language Arts
Material Type:
Lesson Plan
Provider:
ReadWriteThink
Author:
Rebecca L. Olness
Date Added:
02/26/2019
Literature Circles with Primary Students Using Self-Selected Reading
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In this lesson, students choose their own reading material, respond to reading in a journal, and talk about their books daily in small groups. The teacher guides the work through structured prompts and by rotating participation with the groups. Students read at their individual levels, while heterogeneous grouping provides peer support. This lesson is a structured guideline for helping students learn to think about the books they read, and to ask questions about books shared by other students.

Subject:
English Language Arts
Material Type:
Lesson Plan
Provider:
ReadWriteThink
Author:
Renee Goularte
Date Added:
02/26/2019
Mail Time! An Integrated Postcard and Geography Study
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In this lesson, students write to friends and family asking them to send postcards. This activity provides motivation for writing and reading and provides a wonderful opportunity to learn about maps as students discover where their family members and friends live.

Subject:
English Language Arts
Material Type:
Lesson Plan
Provider:
ReadWriteThink
Author:
Devon Hamner
Date Added:
02/26/2019
Marvin Makes Music - Storybook
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ABCya! presents its fifth children's storybook for the classroom. It's called Marvin Makes Music, an original work by Michelle Tocci. The story is about a frog that is sad because he cannot sing like his friends, until one day when he gets a new musical instrument. This is a great storybook to share with kids using an interactive whiteboard.

*This storybook has narration! Students can click the speaker button to have the story read to them.

Subject:
English Language Arts
Material Type:
Interactive
Provider:
ABCya
Date Added:
02/26/2019
The Most Magnificent Thing: Literacy, Robotics, and Makey Makey
Conditional Remix & Share Permitted
CC BY-NC-SA
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 Students will listen to the book The Most Magnificent Thing by Ashley Spires and then collaboratively work together to make a doll that talks using the Scratch program and a Makey Makey. (These two tools were introduced and taught prior to this lesson.)

Subject:
English Language Arts
Material Type:
Activity/Lab
Author:
Carrie Robledo
ANGIE MITCHELL
Date Added:
02/15/2021
Note Writing in the Primary Classroom
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In this lesson, the teacher will show a variety of activities related to note writing that can be incorporated into the classroom throughout the year to promote authentic writing among students. Model note writing in context by taking advantage of opportunities that come up in the classroom both to read actual notes and to think aloud while writing them. Read books featuring notes, discuss why the notes were written, and copy the notes for classroom display. Enlist families in the fun by asking students to collect notes from home to share with the class.

Subject:
English Language Arts
Material Type:
Lesson Plan
Provider:
ReadWriteThink
Author:
Jenifer Katahira
Date Added:
02/26/2019
The Paper Bag Princess
Restricted Use
Copyright Restricted
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In this lesson, students will be able to develop listening comprehension and inferencing skills through dramatic role plays and writing.

Subject:
English Language Arts
Material Type:
Lesson Plan
Provider:
Education.com
Author:
Education.com, Inc
Date Added:
04/23/2019
Peter Rabbit, Mr. McGreely, Bunnies, and Me
Conditional Remix & Share Permitted
CC BY-NC-SA
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Students can work collaboratively in small groups of 3-4 students for this engineering design unit that integrates literacy to explore forces and motion (pushes or pulls).  Students will design a way to safely keep bunnies out of a garden.

Subject:
English Language Arts
Science
Material Type:
Activity/Lab
Author:
Carrie Robledo
Tomika Altman
Date Added:
04/19/2021
Petite Rouge: A Cajun Red Riding Hood
Conditional Remix & Share Permitted
CC BY-NC-SA
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This is an activity to check for understanding of the concept of story elements. Do the students know and understand the terms? Can he or she determine the story elements of a particular story?

Subject:
English Language Arts
Reading Literature
Speaking and Listening
Material Type:
Lesson Plan
Author:
MARINA BONOMO
Date Added:
07/30/2019
Phonics In Context
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In this lesson, students become familiar with the short /u/ sound as they listen to Taro Yashima’s Caldecott Honor-winning book, Umbrella. Prereading activities build vocabulary and comprehension skills, a read-aloud introduces students to the sounds of the story, and concluding exercises allow students to apply their understanding of phonic elements in other contexts.

Subject:
English Language Arts
Material Type:
Lesson Plan
Provider:
ReadWriteThink
Author:
Nancy Drew
Date Added:
02/26/2019
Phonics Through Literature: Learning About the Letter M
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In this lesson, a combination of children's literature, learning centers, and activities focus on learning about the letter m. Students will learn about phonics by participating in an integrated array of activities, including reading, writing, mathematics, music, art, and technology.

Subject:
English Language Arts
Material Type:
Lesson Plan
Provider:
ReadWriteThink
Author:
Melissa Weimer
Date Added:
02/26/2019