Wednesday, March 21, 2012

10 Reading Intervention Lesson Plans

EDUC 3423—Lesson Plans (#1-10)


Lesson Plan 1
Objectives:
1.      The student will be able to examine the title and the book cover to predict the story.
2.      The student will be able to question the text to identify the author’s meanings.
3.      The student will be able to refer to the text to answer questions related to the text.
Sunshine State Standards:
LA.2.1.6.3 – The student will use context clues to determine meanings of unfamiliar words.
LA.2.1.7.1 – The student will identify a texts features (e.g., title, subheadings, captions, illustrations), use them to make and confirm predictions, and establish a purpose for reading.
LA.2.1.7.8 – The student will use strategies to repair comprehension of grade-appropriate text when self-monitoring indicated confusion, including but not limited to rereading, checking context clues, predicting, summarizing, questioning, and clarifying by checking other sources.
Instructional Method:
Ask the student if he is familiar with a diary or journal (and explain the purpose of having a diary or journal is to record thoughts people like to keep for future reference). Introduce the book Diary of a Worm by Doreen Cronin and discuss/predict what the story is about based on the book’s title and illustration.
Read the book Diary of a Worm by Doreen Cronin, stopping at certain pages to question the author’s meaning.
o       Question for diary entry of April 4: Why do you think the family of worms dug deeper, guessing by the picture?
o       Question for diary entry of April 10: Why do you think hopscotch is a dangerous game to the little worm?
o       Question for diary entry of June 15: Supposing the little worm’s comment to his sister was not an insult, what do you think he meant when he told her that her face will always look just like her rear end?
Once the Read Aloud is done, give a book cover coloring worksheet (found at http://www.kidzone.ws/reading/bookcover.htm), and instruct the student to draw his own version of a book cover for the story (detailing his favorite scene from the book).
If time permits, allow the student to discuss some of his favorite parts of the story, going back to each page as he shares them.

Assessment:
Aside from the questions mentioned above (which are part of the read aloud strategy), no form of assessment is given for this lesson. The book cover assignment is solely meant as a fun learning activity.
Materials/Resources Needed:
1.      Book: Diary of a Worm by Doreen Cronin
2.      Book cover coloring sheet – found at http://www.kidzone.ws/reading/bookcover.htm
3.      Pencil/Crayons to color the book cover coloring sheet
Duration: 30 minutes.


Lesson Plan 2
Objectives:
4.      The student will be able to use written instruction(s) to complete survey worksheets.
5.      The student will be able to question the text to refer to text and illustrations to predict, summarize, and comprehend the main idea of the story.
Sunshine State Standards:
LA.2.1.7.1 – The student will identify a texts features (e.g., title, subheadings, captions, illustrations), use them to make and confirm predictions, and establish a purpose for reading.
LA.2.1.7.3 – The student will summarize information in text, including but not limited to main idea, supporting details, and connections between texts.
LA.2.6.1.1 – The student will read informational text (e.g., directions, graphs, charts, signs, captions) to follow multi-step instructions, answer literal questions, perform tasks, learn tasks, and sequentially carry out the steps of a procedure.
Instructional Method:                     
The Surveys: Hand out the Elementary Reading Attitude Survey worksheet (page 217-221) from Assessment for Reading Instruction, go over the instructions with the student, and have the student fill out the survey. Once the worksheet has been completed, pass out the Interest Inventory worksheet (“Tell Me What You Like”, page 213) from Assessment for Reading Instruction, go over the instructions with the student, and have the student fill out the survey.
The Read-Aloud: Ask the student if he has ever seen or ridden in a taxi. Ask him to suggest what the story might be about based on the illustrations of the book cover and title. Read the story to the student, pausing at certain parts to ask questions such as, “What does it mean to roam? (page 14)” “What’s a fare? (page 17)” “Why does the husband need to take his wife to the hospital (page 21)” and “What’s a tip? (page 26).” 
After the story is finished, first ask what was unique about how the story was written (some of the end-words rhymed with each other). Then, ask the student to tell reveal the summary of the main idea, based on the events of the story (the student can use the book to flip through the pages to do so).  
Assessment:
The two surveys are meant to be the assessments of the lesson (though the student is not to know that they are assessments, just fun worksheets to complete), but the read-aloud is simply a fun treat for completing the two surveys.
Materials/Resources Needed:
1.     Worksheet: Elementary Reading Attitude Survey (page 217-221) from Assessment for Reading Instruction (2nd Ed.) by Michael C. McKenna and Katherine A. Dougherty Stahl.
2.     Worksheet: Interest Inventory (“Tell Me What You Like,” page 213) from Assessment for Reading Instruction (2nd Ed.) by Michael C. McKenna and Katherine A. Dougherty Stahl.
3.     Book: The Adventures of Taxi Dog by Debra and Sal Barracca.
4.     Pencil(s).
Duration: 30 minutes.

Lesson Plan 3

Objectives:
6.      The student will be able to read text paragraphs with little difficulty.
7.      The student will be able to recall the main idea and supporting details by referring to the text.
Sunshine State Standards:
LA.2.1.4.3 – The student will decode phonetically regular one-syllable and multi-syllable words in isolation and in context.
LA.2.1.7.3 – The student will summarize information in text, including but not limited to main idea, supporting details, and connections between texts.
LA.2.4.2.4 – The student write communications, including friendly letters and thank-you notes.
Instructional Method:                     
The Informal Reading Inventory (IRI): The IRI will be several stories given to test the student’s frustration level. Beforehand, because the original worksheet had “Test” written on it, cut out each paragraph and glue onto construction paper and made into a booklet (design it into a book of short stories or simply have them each on construction paper as individual handouts). Have the student begin with the shortest story paragraph (which will be the PP worksheet about Jan and her dog) and have the student orally read the paragraph and orally answer the comprehension questions afterwards. Based on the score of his comprehension and fluency, if he has not yet reached his frustration level, continue to the next paragraph/handout of the following passage.  The assignment will stop if the text becomes too hard for the student and/or it is evident from the scoring that he has reached his frustration level.
The Read-Aloud: Ask the student if he has ever been to the beach. Pass him a seashell and tell him to place it close to his ear and tell him that most people say that the sound heard is said to be the sound of the ocean. Read the story What the Sea Saw by Stephanie St. Pierre. During the read aloud, stop at certain pages to discuss what certain words mean in the context of the story:
“(Page 7) What does it mean when the story says the ‘sky saw soft, white-feathered wings dip into the foaming sea?’ For what purpose?”
“(Page 10) When the passage talks about the gull seeing ‘fish in the sea swimming in schools, scales shimmering silver,’ based on the context of the passage, and the illustration of the picture, could this mean the word ‘schools’ could refer to the group of fish traveling together in the same direction?”
“(Page 12) What does it mean when the passage says light on the waves were “weaving into the deep?’ What is ‘weaving?’”
“(Page 15) What do you think it means when the passage says ‘a lone shark on the move?’ What could ‘lone’ mean in this passage?”
“(Page 18) When the passage reads, ‘The sea crashed against giant rocks, splashing and foaming, leaving treasures behind in tiny pools that mirrored the sky,’ looking at the illustration, what could the treasures be? (seashells, starfish, sea weed, small fish)”
“(Page 24) When the passage reads, ‘Clouds gathered and burst, sending the sky falling over the rocks, into the sea and onto the hot, dry sand,’ what could this mean, based on the context of the sentence and also the illustration?”
“(Page 26) Have you ever seen beach plums on the beach before? Did you know they are only native to the upper Atlantic Coast, between Maine and Maryland? Looking at the illustration, what could the thistles be in the passage?”
Allowing the student to flip through the pages once more ask, “In whose perspective was the story from (the sky and the sea)?”
After the story is finished, hand out a copy of pages 28 and 29 from Now I’m Reading’s Animal Antics Beginning Reader Set activity pad. Have the student work on the worksheets (page 28 is asking him to write about a special gift, and page 29 is asking him to address a gift card to someone and draw a picture of what the gift is supposed to be).
Assessment:
The IRI will be assessed based on the assessment sheet that I work on while the student reads aloud to me and while I record his miscues (omissions, insertions, substitutions, reversals, teacher supplied words, repetitions [only if not read fluent in repeated pronunciations]) from the text.  (The student is not supposed to know that I am recording how he reads the text.) Then the student will be asked several comprehending questions about the passage he has read, and he is to give a response aloud. The IRI completion will depend on the overall resulting score from the amount of errors the student makes in miscues and how well he does answering the comprehending questions. If the score shows the student has reached his frustration level, then the level should be recorded and the assessing stopped.
The worksheets following the read aloud are for enjoyment only and are not to be graded.
Materials/Resources Needed:
5.     Worksheet: The student’s Informal Reading Inventory worksheet with passages of several stories (each a Kindergarten, First Grade, Second Grade, or a Third Grade level passage).
6.     Worksheet: The administrator’s Informal Reading Inventory worksheet of the stories the student attempts to read, includes the comprehension questions and scoring rubric to determine the frustration level.
7.     Worksheet: A copy of pages 28 and 29 from Now I’m Reading’s Animal Antics Beginning Reader Set: Level 1 activity pad.  
8.     Book: What the Sea Saw by Stephanie St. Pierre.
9.     Pencil(s),crayons, and seashell(s).
Duration: 30 minutes.


Lesson Plan 4
Objectives:
8.      The student will be able to identify a set of z-words with little or no difficulty.
9.      The student will be able to pronounce the first 25 Fry Sight Words with little or no difficulty.
10. The student will be able to identify and comprehend a selection of vocabulary words in the text that display a meaning of sounds in written form.
Sunshine State Standards:
LA.2.1.4.1—The Student will use knowledge of spelling patterns (e.g., vowel diphthongs, difficult word families. 
LA.2.1.5.1—The student will apply letter-sound knowledge to decode phonetically regular words quickly and accurately isolation and in context.
Instructional Method:                     
Z-Test: Provide the student with a list of Z-words (as shown below) and have the student pronounce them out loud.
The Z-Test words:
Zit, Zay, Zin, Zap, Zan, Zill, Zack, Zing, Zip, Zat, Zore, Zug, Zell, Zink, Zump, Zash, Zank, Zice, Zoke, Zick, Zock, Zunk, Zake, Zame, Zaw, Zide, Zeat, Zop, Zot, Zuck, Zight, Zale, Zest, Zail, Zain, Zate, Zine
Fry’s Sight Word Test: Pre-write the first 25 Fry Sight Words onto flash cards and place them face down and have the student turn them over and pronounce each card he turns over. For words he misses, have him turn the card over again for another try later. (Only go back to the missed words once, and make note of any changes. If the student misses the word again, go over the word with him, sounding it out slowly and then rapidly, and move on to the next activity.
The first 25 Fry Sight Words:
the, of, and, a, to, in, is, you, that, it, he, was, for, on, are, as, with, his, they, I, at, be, this, have, from  
The Read-Aloud: Introduce the student to several sound words such as, “Creak,” “Slurp,” “Crackle,” “Groan,” and “pitter-patter,” and ask him to share what comes to his mind when he hears each individual word.
Read the story Slop Goes the Soup: A Noisy Warthog Word Book by Pamela D. Edwards. Stop during certain passages to ask the student to describe or show what some of the words mean:
“Wobble,” “Whoosh,” “Giggle,” “Swish,” “Ding! Dong!” “Gulp”
After the story is finished, hand out a pre-written worksheet (included in this lesson plan) that asks the student to select a sound-word from the list provided and place it into the blank in the short passage below.
Assessment:
There should be an assessment checklist for both the Z-test and the Fry Sight Words, so check off each word as the student reads from the list or flash card, marking any he gets correct or incorrect.
The after-reading worksheet is not to be assessed. 
Materials/Resources Needed:
10. Worksheet: Provided below.
11. Assessment worksheet (for you) for both the Z-Test and Fry Sight Words
12. Flash cards: Z-Test and First 25 Fry Sight Words.
13. Book: Slop Goes the Soup: A Noisy Warthog Word Book by Pamela D. Edwards.
14. Pencil(s).
Duration: 30 minutes.


Name: _____________________________       Date: _________________________
Directions: Select a word from the list provided and place it into the passage where you think it is most appropriate. Choose only one word for each blank slot.

Tick-Tock     Click     Clank     Creak


_________________ goes the door and in came the warthog from work.
_________________ goes the keys as he laid them on the end table.
_________________ goes the switch as the warthog turns on the light.
_________________ goes the clock, showing that the warthog is on time to watch his favorite TV show.


Lesson Plan 5
Objectives:
11. The student will be able to pronounce the second 25 row of Fry’s First 100 Sight Words with little or no difficulty.
12. The student will be able to identify and comprehend a selection of short /e/ vowel words.
Sunshine State Standards:
LA.1.1.3.1 – The student will identify individual phonemes (sounds) in words.
LA.2.1.4.5—The Student will recognize high frequency words. 
LA.2.1.5.1—The student will apply letter-sound knowledge to decode phonetically regular words quickly and accurately isolation and in context.
Instructional Method:                     
Short Vowel /e/: Inform the student about the short /e/ vowel sound by using the word “egg” as an example. Show him a picture of an egg and have him pronounce the word.  Inform him that the short /e/ sounds like “eh” like in “egg.”
Next, inform him that he will be given a few words to hear, and when he hears a word with the short vowel /e/ he will clap at the word.
Words to say: orange, exit, book, end, extra, globe, bag, edge, ride, empty, five.
The Read Aloud: The story is titled Get the Pets by Wayne Miller. Have two copies, one for you and for the student. Have him look at the title and cover and have him predict what the story could be about based on the title and the illustration on the cover. Ask him if he has ever had pets. Since the story is short, and it is full of short /e/ vowel words, have him read the book aloud and follow along with your copy. Stop and correct any mispronunciations he may make.
On page four, stop him to ask what pet Tam has.
On page five, stop him to ask what pet(s) do Tom have, and how many.
After the story, ask him what did Tom use to get his pets back into the pen. Ask him what was near the pen that was not a pet.
Next, give him the phonemic awareness worksheet for /e/ and have him circle all of the pictures that have the short /e/ sound in them.
Fry’s Sight Word Test: Pre-write the second 25 row of Fry’s First 100 Sight Words onto flash cards and place them face down and have the student turn them over and pronounce each card he turns over. Words he misses, have him turn the card over again for another try later. (Only go back to the missed words once, and make note of any changes. If the student misses the word again, go over the word with him, sounding it out slowly and then rapidly.
The second  25 row of Fry’s First 100 Sight Words:
Or, One, Had, By, Word, But, Not, What, All, Were, We, When, Your, Can, Said, There, Use, An, Each, Which, She, Do, How, Their, If
Assessment: The phonemic worksheet, read aloud, and the Fry Sight words are not meant to be assessments.
Materials/Resources Needed:
15. Book: Get the Pets by Wayne Miller (two copies) found on http://www.readinga-z.com). 
16. Flash cards: Second 25row of Fry’s First 100 Sight Words.
17. Phonemic Awareness worksheet for /e/ (found in the PDF lesson plan for the story Get the Pets by Wayne Miller on http://www.readinga-z.com).
18. Phonics Sound/Symbol ”egg” photo for short vowel /e/(found in the PDF lesson plan for the story Get the Pets by Wayne Miller on http://www.readinga-z.com).
19. Pencil(s).
Duration: 30 minutes.


Lesson Plan 6
Objectives:
13. The student will be able to pronounce the third 25 row of Fry’s First 100 Sight Words with little or no difficulty.
14. The student will be able to identify and/or sort the digraphs “Sh,” “Ch,” “Ck,” and “Th.”
Sunshine State Standards:
LA.1.1.4.2—The student will identify the sounds of vowels and consonant digraphs in printed words.
LA.2.1.4.5—The Student will recognize high frequency words. 
LA.2.1.5.1—The student will apply letter-sound knowledge to decode phonetically regular words quickly and accurately isolation and in context.
Instructional Method:                     
The Digraphs: The student will be shown Readinga-z.com’s “Sound/Symbol” books for “Ch,” “Sh,” and “Th.” For each one, for pages 1-4, read the top line and have the student read the bottom line (for example, for “Th” on page 3, read “Think” and then have the student read “think.” Then, have the student continue reading the rest of the books, but make sure he knows to read the digraphs like how they sound, not how they are spelt (for example, for “Th,” he would read page 6 as “Th is for thorn” and saying the “Th” phonemically).
Afterwards, the student will do a word sort where he will have to sort the words that have digraphs “Ch,” “Ck,” and “Sh” into categories (in either the “Starts with” or “Ends with”). Then, he will read each one and give me their phonemic sounds. The word sorts are from www.readinga-z.com.
Fry’s Sight Word Test: Pre-write the third 25 row of Fry’s First 100 Sight Words into a PowerPoint presentation and have the student view each word on an individual slide. For words he misses, go over them again later. (If the student misses the word again, go over the word with him, decoding it out slowly and then rapidly.)
The third  25 row of Fry’s First 100 Sight Words:
Will, up, other, about, out, many, then, them, these, so, some, her, would, make, like, him, into, time, has, look, two, more, write, go, see

The Read-Aloud: Green Eggs and Ham by Dr. Seuss. Have him look at the title and cover and have him predict what the story could be about based on the title and the illustration on the cover. Ask him if there’s ever been a kind of food that he thought he didn’t like until he actually ate it and liked it.
During the read-aloud, cover up some words and have the student guess what the word could be based on the context of the sentence and the illustration. For example, on page 19, cover up “mouse” and read the page: “Would you like them in a house? Would you like them with a _________?” and have the student guess by the context and picture of a mouse. Other example are on page 22, 28,44. On page 56-57, pause and have him guess if the main character is going to like the green eggs and ham.
After the story, ask him what changed the character’s mind about the food. Ask him what was unique about some of the words in the book (rhyming/having similar endings).
Assessment: The digraph exercises, the Fry Sight words, and the read-aloud, are not meant to be assessments.
Materials/Resources Needed:
20. Book: Green Eggs and Ham by Dr. Seuss.
21. Word Sorts: Digraphs “Ch,” “Sh,” “Ck” found on http://www.readinga-z.com.
22. Digraph booklets of “Ch,” “Sh,” and “Th” found on http://www.readinga-z.com).
23. The third 25 row of Fry’s First 100 Sight Words in a PowerPoint presentation format.
24. Computer/laptop for the Fry Sight word slides.
Duration: 30 minutes.
 
Lesson Plan 7

Objectives:
15. The student will be able to pronounce the fourth 25 row of Fry’s First 100 Sight Words with little or no difficulty.
16. The student will be able to the text with little or no difficulty.
Sunshine State Standards:
LA.2.1.4.3—The student will decode phonetically regular one-syllable and multi-syllable words in isolation and in context.
LA.2.1.4.5—The Student will recognize high frequency words. 
LA.2.1.5.1—The student will apply letter-sound knowledge to decode phonetically regular words quickly and accurately isolation and in context.
Instructional Method:                     
The Running Record: The student will read the story The Wheel by Cheryl Ryan as I perform a running record of his reading proficiency.
Before reading, he will be asked to predict what the story is about by observing the title and picture. During the reading, on page 3, he will be asked to guess what could have made the wheel come off, by using the picture to use as a clue. On page 7, he will predict what will happen next after reading that the wheel rolls over a bridge. After the story, he will be asked to name the two kinds of animals the wheel rolls past by, and who was it that fixed the wheel back on the truck. Then he will be asked to guess what could have happened if the wheel hadn’t rolled into the garage (where would it have gone, or would it have stopped).

Fry’s Sight Word Test: Pre-write the fourth 25 row of Fry’s First 100 Sight Words onto flash cards and place them face down and have the student turn them over and pronounce each card he turns over. Words he misses, have him turn the card over again for another try later. (Only go back to the missed words once and go over the word with him, decoding it out slowly and then rapidly.
The fourth 25 row of Fry’s First 100 Sight Words:
number, no, way, could, people, my, than, first, water, been, call, who, oil, now, find, long, down, day, did, get, come, made, may, part, over
More Fry Sight Word Practice:
With the time remaining, the student will go over the missed Fry Sight Words he has missed since we started this practice. Using a small white board, a word will be written and he will have the chance to fluently say the word. If he has hesitation, then we will go over that word and decode it slowly and rapidly.
Assessment: The running record is an assessment to record his accuracy rate, error rate, and self-correction rate. As the student reads his copy of the story, I will have my own copy and:
o       Check the words he says correctly.
o       Write the words the student says incorrectly underneath the correct word in the text.
o       Put a dash over omitted words.
o       Put a dash underneath words from the text the student inserts new words for (and write the inserted word over the word from the text).
o       Put a SC for words he self-corrected in under 3 seconds, and
o       Put a TA for words I assisted with.
The Fry Sight Word practice is not meant to be an assessment.
Materials/Resources Needed:
25. Book (two copies): The Wheel by Cheryl Ryan (found at www. Readinga-z.com).
26. The running record checklist (for recording the results later).
27. The fourth 25 row of Fry’s First 100 Sight Words on flashcards.
28. The First 100 Sight Word checklist (it has the words that he has missed).
29. A small white board with dry erase markers and eraser.
Duration: 30 minutes.


Lesson Plan 8
Objectives:
17. The student will be able to pronounce a selection of Fry’s First 100 Sight Words with little or no difficulty.
18. The student will be able to read the text with little or no difficulty.
Sunshine State Standards:
LA.2.1.4.3—The student will decode phonetically regular one-syllable and multi-syllable words in isolation and in context.
LA.2.1.4.5—The Student will recognize high frequency words. 
LA.2.1.5.1—The student will apply letter-sound knowledge to decode phonetically regular words quickly and accurately isolation and in context.
Instructional Method:                     
The Running Record: The student will read the story The Sandwich by Cheryl Ryan as I perform a running record of his reading proficiency.
Before reading, he will be asked to name one of his favorite foods and tell me how he makes it at home. Then we will do a picture walk of the story (a copy of the story that has no text in it). During reading, on page 4, when it says, “Get some bread,” he will be asked to predict what might be the next step in making the sandwich (or what might be the next ingredient to include). On page 9, when it says, “Put some bread on the meat,” he will be asked to predict what the boy will do next with the sandwich. After the reading, he will be asked to recall some of the steps the boy followed to make the sandwich, and share an alternate way he would use if he made a sandwich.

Fry’s Sight Word Test:
With the time remaining, the student will go over the missed Fry Sight Words he has missed since we started this practice. Using flash cards, he will try to flip over the cards to match words. If he comes to two cards that match each other, he will have to say the word correctly in order to keep them. If he says them incorrectly, I will go over the word with him and have him turn them over for a later turn—he must choose another set of cards, not those same cards he just turned over.
Assessment: The running record is an assessment to record his accuracy rate, error rate. As the student reads his copy of the story, I will have my own copy and:
o       Check the words he says correctly.
o       Write the words the student says incorrectly underneath the correct word in the text.
o       Put a dash over omitted words.
o       Put a dash underneath words from the text the student inserts new words for (and write the inserted word over the word from the text).
o       Put a SC for words he self-corrected in under 3 seconds, and
o       Put a TA for words I assisted with.
The Fry Sight Word practice is not meant to be an assessment.
Materials/Resources Needed:
30. Book (three copies): The Sandwich by Cheryl Ryan (found at www. Readinga-z.com), the first two copies contain text, the third copy is for a picture walk and contains no text.
31. The running record checklist (for recording the results later), found on www.readinga-z.com).
32. Specific Fry’s First 100 Sight Words on flashcards (the ones he’s been having trouble with), doubled for a game.
33. The First 100 Sight Word checklist (it has the words that he has missed).
Duration: 30 minutes.


Lesson Plan 9

Objectives:
19.  The student will be able to pronounce a selection of Fry’s First 100 Sight Words with little or no difficulty.
20. The student will be able to examine the title and the book cover to predict the story.
Sunshine State Standards:
LA.2.1.4.5—The Student will recognize high frequency words. 
LA.2.1.5.1—The student will apply letter-sound knowledge to decode phonetically regular words quickly and accurately isolation and in context.
LA.2.1.7.1 – The student will identify a texts features (e.g., title, subheadings, captions, illustrations), use them to make and confirm predictions, and establish a purpose for reading.
Instructional Method:                     
The Read Aloud: The student will have the choice to choose Franklin’s Soapbox Derby by Sharon Jennings or Kitten for a Day by Ezra Jack Keats for the read aloud.
If he chooses Franklin’s Soapbox Derby à Before reading, he will be asked if he knows what the word “Soapbox Derby” may mean based on looking at the cover of the book. During reading, stop on page 8 to review the explanation of what a soapbox derby is and see if the student was close in predicting what it was. On page 15, ask the student to explain the reason why the cart was wobbly on its sides (it had different sizes of wheels). On page 17, ask the student if Bear’s sister, Beatrice, was happy about Bear and Franklin taking her bicycle wheel for a steering wheel (the answer is in the illustration). On page 21, stop to ask the student to guess why Bear and Franklin decided to continue working on their car (the answer is that they wanted more chances of winning prizes by having a big and fancy car). After reading, discuss what Franklin and Bear could have done to make their car win the race—ask what thing(s) on the car made it hard to drive (it was the different sizes of wheels). Ask the student to predict what would have happened if the story had continued.
If he chooses Kitten for a Day by Ezra Jack Keats à Before reading, ask the student if he has ever had kittens for pets. During reading, on page 6, stop to ask him why does the puppy think he’s a kitten. On page 16, ask the student to guess why the puppy fell from the chair while the kittens walked over them fine. After reading, go back over pages 9-16 and discuss the contrasts between the puppy’s habits and the kittens’ habits as they all do the same things.
Word Point Strategy with Fry’s Sight Words:
With the Fry Sight Words that the student has been struggling with, separate the flash cards into several small groups. Choose any group to start. With any group of cards, read/flash them to the student and have him repeat the words too. Next, lay the cards down with the words facing up and read the cards to the student while pointing at the cards. Next, ask the student to point to a specific word (say “Could you point to [insert word]” and he is to point to the correct word). Go over each word several times, then collect them up and flash them at the student to see if the student has learned them effectively. Continue the same strategy with the other group of cards too, depending on the time.
Assessment:
The read aloud and Fry Sight Word practice is not meant to be an assessment.
Materials/Resources Needed:
34. Book(s): Franklin’s Soapbox Derby by Sharon Jennings and Kitten for a Day by Ezra Jack Keats.
35. Specific Fry’s First 100 Sight Words on flashcards (the ones he’s been having trouble with).
Duration: 30 minutes.


Lesson Plan 10
Objectives:
21. The student will be able to examine the title and the book covers to predict the story.
22. The student will be able to recall information from the text by giving a summary of the texts.
Sunshine State Standards:
LA.2.1.6.2 - The student will listen to, read, and discuss familiar and conceptually challenging text.
LA.2.1.7.1 - The student will identify a texts features (e.g., title, subheadings, captions, illustrations), use them to make and confirm predictions, and establish a purpose for reading.
LA.2.1.7.3 - The student will summarize information in text, including but not limited to main idea, supporting details, and connections between texts.
LA.2.4.2.1 - The student will write in a variety of informational/expository forms (e.g., rules, summaries, procedures, recipes, notes/messages, labels, instructions, graphs/tables).
Instructional Method:                     
Read Aloud/Partner Reading: For the last meeting, the lesson consists of read-alouds and partner reading, and even writing a summary (if there will be time).
For the main read-aloud, the student will listen to Dr. Seuss’ Oh, the Places You’ll Go. For pre-reading, the student will be asked to guess what the story will be about based on the title of the book and the illustration of the book. He will also have to guess what kind(s) of things we might encounter throughout the story, guessing based on previous styles and works by the author. During reading, he’ll be asked what the author might have meant when he wrote, “you’re too smart to go down any not-so-good street” (response can be anything about not doing what is wrong, etc.) He’ll also be asked to explain what it means to be in a “slump.” He’ll be asked to guess what it might feel like to wait in the “Waiting Place, “and guess what that place might look like. When it says, “And will you succeed?” this will actually be a question for him to answer based on himself. After reading, he will be asked to give a short oral summary about what the book could be about, or what was the author’s purpose in writing this inspiring book.
For the partner reading, there will be three copies of Yummy, Yummy by Brian Roberts (two will have text while the third will only have the pictures). For pre-reading, he will be asked to predict what the book might be about based on the title of the book and the cover illustration. Then we will take a picture walk through the copy of the book that has no text and he will make predictions about what is happening throughout the book. During reading, with the copies that have text, we will take turns reading the story, and I will ask him questions throughout. On page 5, I will have covered part of the text that mentions the food the character is eating, and I will ask him to guess what type of sandwich the boy is eating. Once he has predicted, I will ask him to lift the slip of paper off the text to see if he was correct. The same thing will be done on page 8 too. On page 10, when it says, “I don’t like lima beans,” I will ask him to guess what the next words will be (each page usually ended with “yummy, yummy” when the boy liked particular foods but the story ends with him disliking lima beans) because the texts are covered up (the words are “yucky, yucky”).  After reading, I will ask him to summarize the story, telling me what the book is about, what types of food can he remember from the text, and if there were moments in the text where he agreed or disagreed with the boy from the story.
If there is time left, he can write a short summary about what he wants to do this summer.
Assessment:
The read aloud and partner readings, and the short summary (if we have time) are not meant to be assessments.
Materials/Resources Needed:
36. Book: Oh, the Places You’ll Go!  by Dr. Seuss
37. Two copies of Yummy, Yummy by Brian Roberts, found on www.readinga-z.com.
38. 1 copy of Yummy, Yummy by Brian Roberts without the text inside, found on www.readinga-z.com.
39. Pencil.
40. “What I Want to Do This Summer” worksheet (found below).
Duration: 30 minutes.



Name: _____________________________  Date: ________________________


What I Want To Do This Summer
Directions: Write a short summary about what you want to do this summer!
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