Sunday, March 30, 2014

Newsletter for the Week of March 31 - April 4, 2014


Newsletter for the Week of March 31 - April 4_ 2014 -

April 2014 Calendar


April 2014 Calendar -

April Menu


Elem April 2014 -

Unit 5, Week 4 - Red Eyes or Blue Feathers / Chameleon, Chameleon

     This week our Focus Stories will help us to answer the essential question: How do animals' colors help them survive? Both of our stories fall into the genre of Informational Text.  Our first text will be Red Eyes or Blue Feathers, written by Patricia Stockland and illustrated by Todd Ouren.  This story describes how animals survive in the wild by adapting their colors to the environment that they live in. A few of the animals shown include a red-eyed tree frog, a polar bear, a red fox, a seahorse, a killer whale, a macaw, a black rhinoceros, a jewel beetle, and a chameleon.
     Our second text is entitled Chameleon, Chameleon and is written by Joy Cowley, photographed by Nic Bishop.  Through this story we will experience the many moods (and colors) of chameleons. One brave chameleon ventures from the safety of his tree in search of a new home. On his journey, he meets other rain forest animals, not all of them friendly! Alas, the new tree he chooses is already home to another chameleon. She dons her aggressive coloring until she's sure that the visitor is friend, not foe. Then they welcome each other with brilliant, happy colors
     Our Target Skills this week will be blending and segmenting phonemes, substituting phonemes, pausing for punctuation, classifying & categorizing, adjectives, drawing conclusions, identifying the author's purpose, and the capitalization & punctuation of questions.  We will also be working with the initial phonemes /h/ and /k/.  

Letters: Hh /h/ and Kk /k/

High-Frequency Words: he, no, away, by, must, there (Please continue to practice all of our High-Frequency Words at home!)

Oral Vocabulary (Red Eyes or Blue Feathers): communicate, mood, scent, sly, survive, temperature

Selection Vocabulary (Chameleon, Chameleon): danger, juicy, peaceful, poisonous



Thank you to www.amazon.com for the cover images and summaries!

Saturday, March 15, 2014

Newsletter for the Week of March 17 - 21, 2014


Newsletter for the Week of March 17-21_ 2014 -

Unit 5, Week 3 - Oscar and the Frog / Zinnia's Flower Garden

     This week our Focus Stories will help us
to answer the Essential Question: What steps can someone follow to plant and grow flowers? As such, both of our stories are Informational Texts this week.  Our first story will be Oscar and the Frog by Geoff Waring.  "Oscar is a curious kitten, and at the pond he is full of questions about growing things. Luckily, Frog can help with the answers — after all, he’s gone through some impressive changes himself! From butterflies to ducks, plants to kittens like him, Oscar finds out how living things begin, why they eat, and how they grow."
     Our second story will be Zinnia's Flower Garden by Monica Wellington.  "Springtime is here, and Zinnia can’t wait to plant her seeds and watch them grow. She carefully takes care of her garden, watering her plants, weeding, and waiting patiently for something to sprout. And soon enough, the first seedlings appear!"
     Our Target Skills will be blending and segmenting phonemes, substituting phonemes, pausing for punctuation, using context clues, identifying the sequence of events, utilizing text and graphic features, and visualizing. We will also be working on distinguishing between the long and short 'Ee' vowel sounds.  

Letter: Ee

High-Frequency Words: she, all, over, when, her, come

Oral Vocabulary (Oscar and the Frog): bank, gills, hatch, shrink, stared, tadpole

Selection Vocabulary (Zinnia's Flower Garden):  fragrant, inspects, pesky, sprinkles

Sunday, March 9, 2014

Newsletter for the Week of March 10 - 15, 2014


Newsletter for the Week of March 10-15_ 2014 -

Unit 5, Week 2 - A Tiger Grows Up / Leo the Late Bloomer

     This week's Focus Stories will help us to answer the essential question: How do things change when someone is growing up? Our first story is an informational text entitled A Tiger Grows Up, written by Anastasia Suen.  Through this book, we will follow the development of a tiger from infancy to adulthood, as she grows up in India.
     Our second story this week will be a Fantasy--Leo the Late Bloomer--written by Robert Kraus and illustrated by Jose Aruego.  Leo the tiger isn't reading, or writing, or drawing, or even speaking, and his father is concerned. But Leo's mother isn't. She knows her son will do all those things, and more, when he's ready.
      Our Target Skills this week will be blending and segmenting phonemes, substituting phonemes, reading rate, story structure, determining the sequence of events, analyzing and evaluating, and antonyms.  We will also work on isolating the the phonemes /x/ and /j/.

Phonemes: /x/ and /j/

High-Frequency Words: said, was, then, good, ate, could

Oral Vocabulary (A Tiger Grows Up): blend, cub, den, pounces, prey, and scraps

Selection Vocabulary (Leo the Late Bloomer): bloomer, patience, signs, and sloppy



Thank you to www.amazon.com for the cover images and summaries!

Sunday, March 2, 2014

Newsletter for the Week of March 3 - 7, 2014


Newsletter for the Week of March 3 - 7_ 2014 -

Unit 5, Week 1 - Simon and Molly Plus Hester / Zin! Zin! Zin! a Violin

     Our Focus Stories this week will help us to answer the question: How do musicians work together to make music?  Our first story will be Simon and Molly Plus Hester by Lisa Jahn-Clough, which falls under the genre of Realistic Fiction.  Simon and Molly were the best of friends, just the two of them. Until Hester moved in. Hester doesn’t want to ride the two-wheeler, like they always do; she wants to make paper airplanes instead. And the toast Simon makes for her is too boring; she wants to add cinnamon sugar. Molly happily goes along with all of her changes, but Simon liked things the way they were before Hester moved in. With Hester around, will Molly still want to be his friend?
     Our second story will be Zin! Zin! Zin! a Violin, written by Lloyd Moss and illustrated by Marjorie Priceman.  This book of poetry is "a masterpiece that is the perfect introduction to musical instruments and musical groups, and a counting book that redefines the genre."
     Our Target Skills this week will be blending phonemes, segmenting phonemes, reading with expression, determining key details, determining author's word choice, inferring/predicting, and multiple-meaning words.  We will also be working with the short and long vowel sounds of the letter Oo.  

Letter: Oo

High-Frequency Words: make, them, give, play, say, new

Oral Vocabulary (Simon and Molly Plus Hester): idea, just, plain, teach, together, until

Selection Vocabulary (Zin! Zin! Zin! a Violin): adore, eager, gleeful, hesitate


Thank you to www.amazon.com for the cover images and summaries!

March 2014 Menu


ELE March2014 -

March 2014 Calendar


March 2014 Calendar -