1 / 83

Author: Jackie Mims Hopkins Genre: Modern Fairy Tale

Author: Jackie Mims Hopkins Genre: Modern Fairy Tale. Big Question: What is unique about the landscape of the Southwest?. Vocabulary Words. Vocabulary Words. More Words to Know. sassy suspiciously twang corral frontier rodeo . bargain favor lassoed offended prairie

tiva
Download Presentation

Author: Jackie Mims Hopkins Genre: Modern Fairy Tale

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Author: Jackie Mims Hopkins Genre: Modern Fairy Tale Big Question: What is unique about the landscape of the Southwest?

  2. Vocabulary Words Vocabulary Words More Words to Know sassy suspiciously twang corral frontier rodeo • bargain • favor • lassoed • offended • prairie • riverbed • shrieked

  3. Big Question: What is unique about the landscape of the Southwest? • Monday • Tuesday • Wednesday • Thursday • Friday

  4. Monday

  5. Today we will learn about: • Build Concepts • Author’s Purpose • Story Structure • Build Background • Vocabulary • Fluency: Model Volume • Grammar: Compound Sentences • The Southwest

  6. FluencyModelVolume

  7. Fluency: Volume • Listen as I read “Growing Up in the Old West.” • As I read, notice how I use a volume suited to the size of the room and the distance of the farthest listener. • Be ready to answer questions after I finish.

  8. Fluency: Volume • What was the author’s purpose for writing “Growing Up in the Old West?” • What does the author think about the life of frontier children in the Old West?

  9. Concept Vocabulary • corral– pen for horses and cattle • frontier– the farthest part of a settled country, where the wilds begin • rodeo– a contest or exhibition of skill in roping cattle and riding horses and bulls • Next Slide

  10. corral

  11. frontier

  12. rodeo

  13. Author’s Purpose & Story StructureTurn to page 88-89.

  14. Prior KnowledgeThink of as many things are you can about typical settings, characters, story events, or lessons learned from familiar fairy tales.

  15. Vocabulary Words

  16. Vocabulary Words • bargain – an agreement to trade or exchange; deal • favor – act of kindness • lassoed – roped; caught with a long rope with a loop on the end • offended – hurt the feelings of someone; made angry

  17. Vocabulary Words • prairie – large area of level or rolling land with grass but few or no trees • riverbed – channel in which a river flows or used to flow • shrieked – made a loud, sharp, shrill sound

  18. More Words to Know • sassy – rude; lively; spirited • suspiciously – without trust; doubtfully • twang – to make a sharp, ringing sound • (Next Slide)

  19. lassoed

  20. prairie

  21. riverbed

  22. bargain

  23. favor

  24. lassoed

  25. offended

  26. prairie

  27. riverbed

  28. shrieked

  29. sassy

  30. suspiciously

  31. twang

  32. Grammar • Compound Sentences

  33. she wanted to explore the vally but her father had warned her to be carefull • She wanted to explore the valley, but her father had warned her to be careful. • yesterday she rodes at a steady pace for haf a hour • Yesterday she rode at a steady pace for half an hour.

  34. Compound Sentences • Reba Jo made a promise, but she tried to break it. • This is a compound sentence. When two simple sentences are joined by a comma and a connecting word such as and, but, or or, or when they are connected with a semicolon and no connecting words, they make a compound sentence.

  35. Compound Sentences • A compound sentence is made up of two simple sentences joined by a comma and a connecting word such as and, but, or or. • The two sentences in a compound sentence must have ideas that make sense together.

  36. Compound Sentences • Simple Sentences: The horned toad looks like a toad. It is really a lizard. • Compound Sentence: The horned toad looks like a toad, but it is really a lizard.

  37. Compound SentencesIs the sentence a simple or compound sentence? • Reba Jo loved to ride and play her guitar. • simple sentence • The wind blew her hat away, and she rode after it. • compound sentence

  38. Compound SentencesIs the sentence a simple or compound sentence? • Reba Jo wanted her hat, but she was frightened. • compound sentence • The horned toad spoke to her and found her hat. • simple sentence

  39. Compound SentencesIs the sentence a simple or compound sentence? • Give me some chili, or I will tell your father. • compound sentence

  40. Compound SentencesJoin each pair of simple sentences to make a compound sentence. Use the word and, but, or or. • The horned toad knocked on the door. Reba Jo’s father let him in. • The horned toad knocked on the door, and Reba Jo’s father let him in.

  41. Compound SentencesJoin each pair of simple sentences to make a compound sentence. Use the word and, but, or or. • Reba Jo had made a promise. She did not want to keep it. • Reba Jo had made a promise, but she did not want to keep it. • She gave the horned toad some chili. He gobbled it up. • She gave the horned toad some chili, and he gobbled it up.

  42. Compound SentencesJoin each pair of simple sentences to make a compound sentence. Use the word and, but, or or. • The toad asked Reba Jo to kiss him. At first she refused. • The toad asked Reba Jo to kiss him, but at first she refused.

  43. Compound SentencesJoin each pair of simple sentences to make a compound sentence. Use the word and, but, or or. • A cowgirl had to kiss the horned toad. He would never become a prince. • A cowgirl had to kiss the horned toad, or he would never become a prince.

  44. Tuesday

  45. Today we will learn about: • Context Clues • Author’s Purpose • Story Structure • Sequence • Vocabulary • Fluency: Echo Reading • Grammar: Compound Sentences • Social Studies: Geography of the Southwest • The Southwest

  46. Vocabulary Strategy: Synonyms Turn to pages 90-93.

  47. The Horned Toad Prince Turn to pages 92 - 99.

  48. FluencyModelVolume

  49. Fluency: Volume • Turn to page 96. • As I read, notice how I lower my volume to show how the toad speaks in a “small voice.” • Now we will practice together as a class by doing three echo readings of this page. Use story cues to adjust your volume.

  50. Grammar • Compound Sentences

More Related