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Grade Level
& Subject: Grade 1 Reading |
Curriculum Map |
Year 2003-04 |
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Calendar |
April |
May |
June |
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Fourth Nine Weeks – April - June |
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Possible Resources |
Collections Grade 1, Harcourt (Anchor Text) Trade Books; Poetry; Songs; Weekly Reader; Fiction; Process Phonics; Alphabet Chart; Vocabulary Lists; Computer Software and Internet Websites |
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Nine Weeks Focus |
Collections Grade 1, Books 1-4 & 1-5, “Welcome Home” & “Set Sail” Increase skills and continue to increase vocabulary so as to become a Fluent Reader. |
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Skills/Standards (To teach and measure) |
Phonemic
Awareness, Word Recognition and Fluency 1. Identify and distinguish between letters, words and sentences. 2. Identify and say the beginning and ending sounds in words 3. Demonstrate an understanding of letter-sound correspondence by saying the sounds from all letters, and from a variety of letter patterns, such as consonant blends, and matching sounds to the corresponding letters. 4. Decode by using letter/sound matches. 5. Use knowledge of common word families to sound out unfamiliar words. 6. Blend 2-4 phonemes (sounds) into words. 7. Add, delete or change sounds in a word to create new or rhyming words. 8. Demonstrate a growing stock of sight words. 9. Read text using fluid and automatic decoding skills, including knowledge of patterns, onsets and rimes. 10.Read aloud with changes in emphasis, voice, timing and expression that show recognition of punctuation and understanding of meaning. Acquisition of Vocabulary 1. Use knowledge
of word order and in-sentence context clues to support word identification
and to define unknown words while reading. 2. Identify words that have similar meanings (synonyms) and words that have opposite meanings (antonyms). 3. Classify words into categories. 4. Recognize common sight words. 5. Recognize that words can sound alike but have different meanings (homophones). 6. Predict the meaning of compound words using knowledge of individual words. 7. Recognize contractions and common abbreviations 8. Read root words and their inflectional endings. 9. Determine the meaning of unknown words using a beginner’s dictionary. Reading
Process: Concepts of Print, Comprehension Strategies and Self-Monitoring
Strategies 1. Describe role of authors and illustrators. 2. Establish a purpose for reading. 3. Visualize the information in texts and demonstrate this by drawing pictures, discussing images in texts or writing simple descriptions. 4. Make predictions while reading and support predictions with information from the text or prior experience. 5. Compare information in texts with prior knowledge and experience. 6. Recall the important ideas in fictional and non-fictional texts. 7. Create and use graphic organizers such as Venn diagrams or webs, with teacher assistance, to demonstrate comprehension. 8. Answer literal, simple inferential and evaluative questions to demonstrate comprehension of grade-appropriate print texts and electronic and visual media. 9. Monitor comprehension of independently or group read texts and electronic and visual media. 10.Use criteria to choose independent reading materials. 11.Independently read books for various purposes.
Reading
Applications: Informational, Technical and Persuasive Text 1. Use title page, photographs, captions, and illustrations (text features) to develop comprehension of informational texts. 2. Identify the sequence of events in informational text. 3. Ask questions concerning essential elements of informational text (e.g., why, who, where, what, when and how). 4. Identify central ideas and supporting details of informational text with teacher assistance (Introduced in Harcourt Book 1 – 5) 5. Identify and discuss simple diagrams, charts, graphs and maps as characteristics of non-fiction. 6. Follow multiple
step directions. Reading Applications: Literary Text1. Provide own
interpretation of story, using information from text. 2. Identify
characters, setting and events in a story. 3. Retell the
beginning, middle and ending of a story, including its important events. 4. Identify
differences between stories, poems and plays. 5. Recognize
predictable patterns in stories and poems. |
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Assessment Choices |
Teacher-made tests; Observational surveys; Harcourt Practice book pages; DRA; IRI; Running Records; Teacher Observation; Harcourt Collections Reading and Language Skills Assessment (Book 1-4) Harcourt Collections Reading and Language Skills Assessment (Book 1-5, optional) |
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