Making Connections Sequencing Lessons - Fiction
Making Connections Sequencing Lessons - Fiction
Making Connections Sequencing Lessons - Fiction
First Two Weeks Focus on what the strategy is and why great readers need it.
Start with fiction. Specific terms taught: schema, t-s, t-t, leave tracks of your
thinking. First couple weeks think aloud with short texts.
Vocabulary Instruction)
OWL as a class (www.readinglady.com)
ERT (GRTFBW p. 169)
Write or draw before, during, or after reading
(GRTFBW p. 131)
Me Purposes (GRTFBW p. 116)
Partner Reading (GRTFBW p. 174)
Reading conferences should focus on use of
strategy in different genres.
Think Aloud:
Knee Thoughts
Texts:
T-S
T-T:
T-W:
Dreaming of America, When Jesse Came Across the Sea, The Long way to a New Land
recent news articles
Building Schema:
author schema:
No David!, David Goes to School, other David Shannon books, A Bad Case of the stripes
All Alone by Kevin Henkes (to show contrast with most of his other books)
Gail Gibbons: The Seasons of Arnolds Apple Tree, From Seed to Plant, The Pumpkin Book
Judith Viorst: Rosie and Michael, Earrings!, The Tenth Good Thing About Barney, Alexander and
the Terrible, Horrible, No Good, Very Bad Day (connect with Corduroy and Bedhead), Ill Fix
Anthony, Alexander Who Used to Be Rich Last Sunday
Patricia Polacco: Mrs. Katz and Tush, Welcome Comfort (add Polar Express), Thank You, Mr. Falker,
Luba and the Wren, Chicken Sunday
Text Structure:
The Ugly Duckling, Sleeping Ugly, The True Story of the Three Little Pigs, The Three Little Pigs, The
Stinky Cheese Man, Chinese Cinderella, Dinorella
Mathematicians sue current understandings as first steps in the problem solving process.
Mathematicians use their number sense to understand a problem.
Mathematicians add to schema by trying more challenging problems and hearing from others about
different problem solving methods.
Mathematicians build understanding based on prior knowledge of math concepts.
Mathematicians develop purpose based on prior knowledge.
Mathematicians use their prior knowledge to generalize about similar problems and to choose problem
solving strategies.
Mathematicians develop their own problems.