When | Why |
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Mar-22-22 | More Learning Opportunities |
Task: Today , you are going to use all you have learned about maps and land features to create your own community map.
Provide visual vocabulary learned about community map making. (map key , compass rose, natural geographic features, man made features)
Discuss previous community map and point out the vocabulary above.
Provide Guide Questions and discuss: – Why is your community a good place to live?
Students are given a blank map template and begin to draw out their map.
Students are also provided with a community map checklist to make sure they included all components.
The community kids decide to put up signs saying “STOP THE LITTERING”
They continue by providing garbage cans . They also create clean up groups which take turns cleaning up
using a set schedule.
Task: Students will learn about an important person by researching them, taking notes using guided questions, and write a mini-report.
Students will choose a biography book , videos, interviews, etc. about an important person they find interesting by reading the summary on the back of the book and/or using the book cover to inspire them.
Reason: We wanted to open the assignment to other media.
To differentiate students will be given a graphic organizer to help organize their notes.
Task: Students will learn about an important person by researching them, taking notes using guided questions, and write a mini-report.
To differentiate students will be given a graphic organizer to help organize their notes.
Task: I can identify opinions in a text by using text evidence to support my ideas.
What if you expanded this so that they came up with facts and opinions about someone they felt was worthy of recognition (they could co-construct criteria).
They could then present their opinions with facts that support them.
SEL: Unit 3 Lessons 3.1 and 3.2 Listening and Responding to Others.
Task: Students discuss effective communication behaviors and practice listening, responding and taking turns while talking with peers. Students practice making appropriate comments and questions by using listening and speaking skills during a conversation.
📖 Model how good readers come up with a thesis or big idea by thinking about how characters feel, the troubles they face and how they respond to problems.
👀 Ask students to choose one character to focus on during an interactive read aloud of, The Big Red Lollipop.
🎨 Inspire students to design a note-taking sheet to write down their big ideas and thinking.
❤️ Prompt students to draw pictures and write words that show and track how the characters’ feelings change throughout the story.
👥 Ask students to work in a partnership or small group to::
☀️ Provide students with multiple opportunities to reflect on the way they felt at different parts of their learning today.
📝 This reading work connects with our writing work and will lead into lessons on how to write a baby literary essay.
Priority Learning Standard R.1
I can deepen my understanding of the text Pepita and the Bully by identifying real-life connections between vocabulary words and their use.
Repeat: Repeat the process for the words: frown, yanked, dragged, mumbled, nearby, excuses, hesitant.
HMH Module 4 – I can ask and answer questions to monitor my understanding of a text
1. Visual: Teacher presents the text that students will be reading. (2 min)
2. View and Discuss: Students look at the illustrations in the text and use Visual Thinking Strategy to discuss what they see with a partner. (4 min)
3. Stop & Jot: Students write in their MyBook to share what they notice and what they wonder about the story they will read, or to make connections to prior knowledge. (4 min)
3. Predict: Students use illustrations and prior knowledge to make predictions about the play Two Bear Cubs by speaking. (5 min)
4. Vocabulary Viewing: Teacher shows picture cards of 3 vocabulary words students will see in their reading today. Students share what they know about these words, or use photo clues to define these words. (5 min)
5. First Read: Students complete an interactive read-aloud of Scene 1 of the play Two Bears. (15 min)
6. Reflect and Discuss: Students reflect on what they read by reviewing their notes from before reading. Students discuss what they read about and ask questions to each other about the text (10 mins).
8. Ask and Answer: Students finish by answering an “I wonder” question from the first part of the lesson, and asking a question about the next scene of the play. (5 min)
Task: I can experiment with different structures by studying what other authors have done and then trying those structures in my own poems.
Task: After reading the book of the month, and watching the movie of the month, complete the extended response.
Is there an audience beyond the classroom? I wonder if one month you might make the task more authentic.
What are some ways that they could share perspectives and support each other in deepening their understanding of the stories and their messages? What are some choices you might give students in this work?
Link to scaffolded prompt and Task
I can answer a constructed response question by using RADDS.
I can determine the central message of a text by locating key details.
I can describe a character’s traits by locating key details in a text.
I can write an introduction with a hook.
Task: I can learn how New York City is the cultural capital.
After the students circle places they would like to visit, what are some ways you could engage them in a task that has a more authentic purpose and audience?
CHANGEMAKER UNIT: Civics, Culturally Responsive Sustaining Education
1) Introduce the changemaker unit by asking “What is change?” “What is a changemaker?”
Discuss, record responses and add to the list after #2/3)
2) Introduce read aloud biography of (a changemaker). (Select a biography: ex. MLK Jr, Ruby Bridges, Sonia Sotomayor, Gandhi. Introduce genre/biography,) Model reading aloud, stopping at key points to identify problems the character faced and how the character responded to the problem. Give students opportunities to stop and jot to identify problems/character’s responses in changemaker response log.
3) Think, pair, write, share to jot and post in their response journals to prepare for small group Conversations.
What did you learn about __________?
Students participate in small group conversations using
4) Students choose a project to write, draw and act about the Changemaker. Teacher uses a choice board for project-based learning.
5) Students reflect on changes they would like to see in the world, explaining reasons for the need for change. “If I could change something about our world, I would change__________ because_____________________.” Teacher elicits student ideas for action plans and steps toward change. * Students discuss the benefit of working independently vs. Interdependently to affect change. (Students may choose a class project or individual project to pursue)
6) School/Home project. Look through books about changemakers and research changemakers who have made a difference in the world. Select a changemaker you admire. Read and write a report about the changemaker, following project directions and guidelines. Make a sculpture /statue, portrait, collage, video or other creative project about the changemaker. You may also write a poem or report of information. Prepare a class presentation to teach classmates about the changemaker and the changes he or she helped to create. Share your report and your sculpture at the class share fair following protocols for speaking and presenting.
7) Students present PBL at class share fair & listen to classmates’ presentations: Students reflect on their classmates’ presentations, jotting notes on post its about what they learned.
**Arts Connection/Collaboration/PS 228 Early Childhood School of the Arts Music/Art
“Lift Every Voice and Sing” (Hymn with lyrics by James Weldon Johnson 1900
Read together/shared reading
Science Learning Opportunities-Exploration of Class Pets and Informational Texts
Science: Students plan and carry out investigations to understand how animals and plants depend on each other. They learn about animal structures, defenses and behaviors in relation to what they need to survive. Students observe live animals (guinea pigs and bearded dragon) to understand how some survive by eating plants (guinea pigs), and other animals survive be eating meat or both plants and meat (bearded dragon). Student will learn how to put an All About informational writing book together to teach others about a topic of their own personal interest about what we are learning in Science.
1. Observe and draw structures of both animals while they are in each station. They draw diagrams with labels and captions to note what the body structure of that animal allows it to do to survive.
2. Explain verbally, then in writing, what are the characteristics of each animal to teach others what they have observed and learned about each animal.
3. Students observe and discuss behaviors of guinea pigs and bearded dragons noticing movements, how they communicate and interact in different settings.
4. Students create a Parking Lot of questions and what they noticed about each animal. They then investigate and research the answers with non-fiction books and laptops. We research food, habitat and animal adaptations.
5. Students learn and write about “How To” properly care for that animal as a class pet. We will practice describing in steps where it will live, what it will eat and how to make sure it is well cared for. Students will compare animals to humans noticing that animals have feelings and are part of a larger community of animals (SEL).
What are some audiences that could actually benefit from this work? Where might you take the final project to make it more authentic? What expert in the real world might give students input and feedback?
6. Students write and draw more chapters to be included in their “All About” informational book, using the class pets as an example. The class model will help them prepare to write their own informational Science book.
7. Students learn how good writers make their words exciting to read by adding a catchy phrase to begin their All About books. Sentence starters such as “Have you ever seen a guinea pig before? I have!” or “Do you know why I love bearded dragons? Let me show you!” these prompts will show students how they can capture the reader’s attention.
8. Students will present their final project orally to teach their classmates about their Scientific topic of choice following the informational text format. They will give each other feedback about what they learned during the presentation.
8. Students will present their final project orally to teach their classmates about their Scientific topic of choice following the informational text format. They will give each other feedback about what they learned during the presentation.
9. Share the final presented projects in the classroom library for students to refer back to and enjoy.
10. Share the final projects with community members like a local vet or if a family member of the classroom community happens to be a veterinarian.
11. Host a writing celebration in the classroom where family members can view the How to Books or post on google classroom/ flipgrid for others to see.
Reason: This is such a great project. My suggestions are ways to share it with the community, family members, and future students.
Poetry Anthology
Task: Students will create different types of poems about the weather. Poems should describe the weather or how it affects what you do and wear.
Task: Today, you will sort through pictures to differentiate between New York City then and how it has developed overtime.
Students will be split into groups. All groups will be sorting the same pictures. This task is ideal for 2-3 days so each group can sort each topic (transportation, buildings, technology and communities). All groups will be discussing the questions. The first group (below group) will be discussing more on what are the similarities and differences. The second group will be discussing and writing 1-2 sentences on the similarities and differences they see. The third group (above group) will discuss and write 2-4 sentences on the similarities and differences they see. Depending on the class size there will be four groups at once.
What might be some ways to extend this task so that students work at a higher level of authenticity?
I think some ways students can work at a higher level of authenticity is by asking their family members such as parents and/or grandparents and ask them how NYC has changed overtime for them or what is the difference between technology, communities, buildings and transportation similar and different from their native country to NYC.
Provide vocabulary that students learned about NYC Overtime. (Settler, Skyscraper, Communities, Population, Timeline, Tourism, Trade, Spices, Change, Invention, Transportation and Natural Resources)
We will discuss how New York City has changed and review vocabulary that is listed above.
Provide Guided Questions and discuss:- How has New York City changed overtime?
Students are given pictures of New York City then, such as old transportation systems, old community pictures, old buildings and old technology. Students are also given pictures of how current NYC looks like, such as transportations, skyscrapers, and technology.
Students will sort these pictures and compare the changes.
Task: Students will solve word problems by using a bar model and writing number sentences
Student Learning Opportunities
1. Read and mark up (circling and underlining) relevant information in the word problem.
2. Create a mental image. Sketch it out. Be sure to include the character, setting, and what they are counting.
3. Take notes of the important information in an I Know/I need to find T chart.
4. Solve the problem using equations
5. Check your solutions by modeling with manipulatives.
6. Explain the steps you took to solve the problem using math words (from our math word wall or the problem itself) and linking words (First, next last, etc)
7. Talk to a partner about how the problem solving steps helped you solve the problem, and which if any were the most useful steps for you.
8. Make a connection to another problem or notice something more about the numbers in the problem. You might respond to questions such as: How can other problems you have solved help you to understand and solve this one? How does your understanding of the numbers in the problem help you solve and check?
Ted picks 6 flowers with 4 petals on each flower. Bill picks 3 flowers with 8 petals on each flower. Ted says they both have the same amount of petals. Is Ted correct? Show all of your mathematical thinking.
Ted picks 6 flowers with 4 petals on each flower. Bill picks 3 flowers with 8 petals on each flower. Jon picks 2 flowers with 12 petals on each flower. Ted says they all have the same amount of petals. Is Ted correct? Show all of your mathematical thinking.
Ted picks 6 flowers with 4 petals on each flower. Bill picks 3 flowers with 8 petals on each flower. Jon picks 2 flowers with 12 petals on each flower. Mark picks 4 flowers with 6 petals on each flower. Who has the most petals? How many petals does each boy have? Show all of your mathematical thinking.
Task: I can research an African American changemaker and write a biography on their life.
Before beginning the project students are exposed to various biographies of change makers
Guiding Questions:
Project Resources (graphic organizers, checklist draft paper)
TASK: T.P. Students use informational texts to communicate key ideas and understandings about the Silk Road by writing a narrative.
What might help students to understand how quality in a narrative might look?
–Students explore how trade along the Silk Road led to the exchange of goods and ideas with maps, texts
-Describe how human activities affect the environment of a world community;
– Describe how the environment of a specific world community affects the human activities in that community
-Students work together with a partner and use the Image Protocol to make connections and predictions based on the images displayed.
-Students read Selections from Stories of the Silk Road to learn more about the topic.
– What were some of the problems or dangers of the Silk Road? How do you know? – What did travelers on the Silk Road encounter that was probably different than what they were used to seeing at home? What makes you think that?
-Students use what they learned in the previous days’ lessons to write a narrative piece about a traveler’s experience on the Silk Road
-Students provide feedback on what they enjoyed doing and what they found challenging.
Added March 22, 2022 at 2:14pm
by Liz Locatelli
Title: More Learning Opportunities
Task: “My Cup of Feelings” Social Emotional Learning Activity
Students will communicate their feelings and emotions by evaluating, measuring, and communicating their feelings/emotions.
Task Directions:
Students were asked to write specific experiences that they have endured and a specific emotion that their experience brought about within them. Students were asked to color their cup based on how “strong” the emotion felt internally. The level of each emotion felt was determined by the students themselves. They were asked to write specific examples of these emotions, while still adhering to the rules of writing. The students were then asked to assess their “feelings cups” and see and identify which emotion they would like to increase (sustain), and which emotion they would like to decrease. Students were informed that their was no right or wrong answer, but rather encouraged to be open and honest with their feelings.
Emotions: happiness, sadness, loneliness, anger, kindness, anxiety, hope, hurt, and fear.
Vocabulary Taught:
endure, sustain, self-care, assess, evaluate, greatest, least, and impermanence
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