FWPS Kindergarten Module 3 Cycle 2–Learning Through Research This lesson map for Module 2 provides a snapshot of combined reading and writing lessons in a specific sequence. Please note that although we have numbered them 1, 2, 3 …some lessons could easily span more than one day or have days in between. The focus standards are suggestions which you will want to narrow for the day and the suggested book title may be replaced with a similar text if more appropriate for your purpose. Priority standards are highlighted in gray. Many of the lesson rationales have been pulled or adapted from Schoolwide Inc. units whom we purchased our Mentor Texts from. If you have the binders, you’ll notice that in some cases we have substituted titles from the original suggested texts for better flow. Schoolwide (SWI) units are available for purchase from Schoolwide Inc. Contact Lauren Buglione at 631-468-6732 or Lbuglione@schoolwide.com for more information. Another great resource is Portland Public School’s writing Curriculum that follows Lucy Calkins’ Writers Workshop. Here is the link: http://www.pps.k12.or.us/departments/curriculum/2071.htm. The Lesson Maps are designed primarily for your whole group instruction. As described in the FWPS Literacy Blueprint, whole group is only part of a balanced literacy program. It’s important to remember that during this “unit” you should also be doing small group instruction based on student need and instructional level and ensure students have time for independent practice reading and writing. Cycle one for this module is a Study on learning through research. Cycle two for this module centers on researching a topic and writing their own informational text. The following culturally conscious teaching strategies are important to keep in mind throughout your lessons1) Provide multiple opportunities for structured oral language practice, including turn and talk, small group, and whole group discussion. Developing the culture of your classroom learning community is a continuous process. During whole group, provide on-going opportunities for oral language. This language support can be done by “Turn and Talks” in partnerships or groups of three. Having targeted students share their thinking or sharing their partner’s thinking in whole group supports the development of language and the learning community. 2) Provide sentence frames as a starting point for discussion and written responses, e.g. “I believe_______________ because _______________.” Providing language supports such as sentence frames with the expectation of answering in complete sentences (Complete Answer Technique – CAT) supports the oral language development of all students especially ELL students and vulnerable students. 3) Deliberately teach academic vocabulary needed to be successful on the tasks. For example, if asking a student to compare, first define compare and provide examples of how to compare. 4) Give positive and specific affirmation of student effort and habits of mind, along with academic outcome. Federal Way Public Schools Updated June 2015 Starting with an Immersion Phase One way to set the stage for this cycle is to immerse students in the Mentor Texts prior to starting the following lessons. It is recommended that you spend 3-5 days reading all books or excerpts from longer texts in the cycle while students listen just for pleasure. This allows them to “marinate” in the genre, focus solely on listening, and gives them an opportunity to discuss patterns they see and hear. By doing this for the first read, teachers can keep their subsequent lessons focused on the strategy or craft by highlighting specific areas of the text, and allows students to shift from attending to the text with a “reader lens” to attending to the text with a “writer lens” depending on the focus of the lesson. Lesson 1-How do you learn new things? Reading: “Exploring Nonfiction!” Writing: “What is How-to Writing?” Rationale: Review of Lesson 1 from Cycle 1. Readers explore interesting topics, learn new things about their world, enhance their curiosity, and discover answers to their questions when they read nonfiction texts. Students will be introduced to a new genre study by examining the different types, looks, and structures of nonfiction texts. SWI Reading Nonfiction Unit- Lesson 1 Rationale: Review from Cycle 1 Students will be excited about a new type of writing— how-to texts. By listening to and discussing How to Be by Lisa Brown, students will collaboratively create an initial list of features of how-to writing. SWI Writing Nonfiction Unit-Writing – Day 1 Lesson 2-What are the important parts of a book? Reading: Rationale: Readers use what they think they know along with titles, “ What We pictures, headings, and content to help them confirm Think We Know their understandings, clear up misconceptions, and learn . . . What We new information. They also develop questions about Want to Learn” topics as they learn. Students will use their background knowledge and questions they have in order to enhance their understanding of topics found in nonfiction texts. SWI Reading Nonfiction Unit- Lesson 2 Possible text: All of the mentor texts from the unit. Possible Texts: All of the mentor texts from the unit, particularly How to Be by Lisa Brown. Common Core State Standards: K.RI.5 K.RI.10 Notes: This lesson is just a review of nonfiction texts. Go as in-depth as you think your students need on the different types of nonfiction texts there are and how they are the same/different than fiction. If you have any anchor charts from cycle 1, this may be a good time to review some of them. Common Core State Standards: K.W.2 K.SL.1 Notes: Review with students the different writings they did in cycle 1. You may want to look back at some of the modeled writing lessons you did. This cycle will be about expanding their writing by adding more details/information and doing some editing/revising to improve their writing. Common Core State Standards: K.RI.1 K.SL.2 K.SL.3 Notes: This lesson reinforces using background knowledge to help with gaining meaning from text, but also allows students to confirm or find evidence that what they know is true. Before reading, could brainstorm what they think they know about soccer and then as you read confirm or prove if they were correct. Or student writings from cycle 1 Possible text: Soccer by Charlotte Guillain. Federal Way Public Schools Updated June 2015 Writing: “Talk Readers Through Your How-to” Rationale: Review from Cycle 1 Procedural writers speak directly to readers to instruct and advise them on the processes about which they write. Students will think about the specific audience to whom they wish to direct their own how-to pieces. Possible text: Common Core State Standards: K.W.2 K.W.5 Notes: When students write they want to think about who their audience is. You can brainstorm how their writing might look different if you are writing to different people. How might the author of “Walk On!” have changed their writing if they were writing to a mom about how a baby walks? Common Core State Standards: K.RI.1 K.SL.2 K.SL.3 Notes: The last section in the book What We Wear has headings and pictures that can support your students to ask questions and use these tools to help them think about what they are going to read and to bring in personal connections. Possible Texts: Building a House by Byron Barton. Common Core State Standards: K.W.2 K.SL.1 K.SL.4 Notes: Help students think about something they can do well or are an expert at. Can generate a list of things that they are experts at…this may help those that don’t see themselves at experts. What information do they know that they can teach others? Possible text: Common Core State Standards: K.RI.2 K.RI.8 K.SL.2 Notes: Model how you activate your background knowledge to help you make connections and deepen your understanding when reading new information. How Bees Make Honey has been used in numerous lessons. Recommend the Insects and Arachnids text as students may have some misconceptions and may learn new information. Walk On! A Guide for Babies by Marla Frazee. SWI Writing NF Mini-Lesson 3 – Generating Ideas Lesson 3-How do you develop questions about a text using prior knowledge? Reading: “ What We Think We Know . . . What We Want to Learn” Writing: “You’re the Expert” Rationale: Readers use what they think they know along with titles, pictures, headings, and content to help them confirm their understandings, clear up misconceptions, and learn new information. They also develop questions about topics as they learn. Students will use their background knowledge and questions they have in order to enhance their understanding of topics found in nonfiction texts. SWI Reading NF Lesson 2 Rationale: How-to writings are written to teach readers how to do some activity or understand some process about which the writer is an expert. To generate ideas for writing, students will explore the topics and activities on which they are experts and what topics they could supply some information about. SWI Writing NF Mini-Lesson 1 – Generating Ideas Possible text: What We Wear by Maya Ajmera, Elise Hofer Destine and Cynthia Pon Lesson 4-How do you share new learning? Reading: Rationale: Readers of nonfiction stop, think, and react in order to “Stop . . . Think . remember and share new information. Students will . . React” activate their background knowledge in order to confirm the facts they already know and then identify and share the facts that are new. Opportunity to do a close reading with the text Insects and Arachnids SWI Reading NF Mini-Lesson 4 Insects and Arachnids, text from the Kindergarten Nonfiction Toolkit Texts Federal Way Public Schools Updated June 2015 Writing: “Do What Other How-To Writers Do” Rationale: How-to writers get ideas by gathering information through observing others, asking experts, practicing procedures themselves, and sketching or drawing. Students will consider how writers get inspired and will use one or more of these methods to generate ideas. Possible Texts: Road Builders by B. G. Hennessy and I Can Draw People by Ray Gibson. Common Core State Standards: K.W.2 K.W.5 K.SL.1 K.SL.5 Notes: Have students share where they get their ideas for writing. What are they interested in learning? They can get ideas from asking others who are experts at something, reading books, watching others, etc. Common Core State Standards: K.RI.4 K.L.4 Notes: This lesson is a review from cycle 1. You can revisit the strategy of using the picture or the text around the word(s) that one is trying to gain meaning from. Learning to Fish has a picture glossary that could be used to help students find the meaning of words. Common Core State Standards: K.W.2 K.W.5 K.SL.1 K.SL.5 Notes: Using a simple picture to define a word may be a great way to introduce the students to utilizing a glossary in their writing of nonfiction. If you use the Learning to Fish text in your reading lesson, you could easily have them incorporate this one in their own writing. Common Core State Standards: K.RI.2 K.RI.4 K.SL.2 K.SL.4 Notes: Recommend using the text Our Garden Helpers as the students would be able to activate their schema on a new text. They may have some misconceptions about worms, which would provide an opportunity to change their thinking. This text would be a bit challenging for a close reading. SWI Writing NF Mini-Lesson 4 – Generating Ideas Lesson 5-How do you figure out the meaning of a unknown word? Reading: “Features That Help Us Discover Meaning” Rationale: Readers figure out the meaning of content-specific vocabulary by using nonfiction text features to help them. Students will discover the meaning of new words found in their nonfiction books by using the pictures and the Glossary. Opportunity to do a close reading with Learning to Fish if you did not do so in cycle 1. Writing: “Using a Glossary to help the reader” SWI Reading NF Mini-Lesson 6 Rationale: Writers often add a glossary to help the reader learn the meaning of new words. Students will explore a couple/several different types of glossaries. Students will consider how they could incorporate a glossary in their nonfiction writing to help others understand what they wrote. Possible text: Soccer by Charlotte Guillain. Learning to Fish from the kindergarten Nonfiction toolkit texts Possible Texts: Learning to Fish from the kindergarten Nonfiction toolkit texts Not a SWI Lesson Lesson 6-What strategies do you use to clear up misconceptions when you are reading? Reading: “Oops! I Used to Think . . . But Now I Know …” Rationale: Readers revise their thinking about the topics they read about in order to enhance their schema and clear up any confusion or misconceptions. Students will read and discover new information that adds to what they already know and changes the way they think about a topic. SWI Reading NF Mini-Lesson 5 Possible text: Our Garden Helpers from the Kindergarten Nonfiction Toolkit Texts Federal Way Public Schools Updated June 2015 Writing: “How-to Writing: Teaching and Telling” Rationale: Writers draw on what they already know and use a plan to help them write their “how-to” books. Writers need a structure to help them plan and write their books. Together with your students develop an anchor chart with the steps for writing a “how-to” paper. (Opportunity to use Make a Flower Sandwich as a close reading during your reading block) Possible Texts: Make a Flower Sandwich from the kindergarten Nonfiction toolkit texts Common Core State Standards: K.W.2 K.W.5 K.SL.1 K.SL.5 Notes: Together as a class make an anchor chart on writing a “How-to” writing piece using numbers to show the steps in making/doing something. Make a Flower Sandwich show and tells how to make a special sandwich using pictures and numbered steps to show the sequence. How-to Writing 1. Tells what to do, in steps 2. Numbers the steps 3. Has a picture for each step Not an SWI Lesson Lesson 7-How can you use additional information to further your reading? Reading: “Learning as Much as We Can” Writing: “Labels & Captions” Rationale: Readers of nonfiction use additional information found in the back of their nonfiction books to further explore the topic(s) they are reading about. Students will discover how maps, references, and additional resources help guide readers as they continue to learn about a topic. SWI Reading NF Mini-Lesson 8 Rationale: How-to writers use labels, captions, and other environmental print to enhance readers’ understanding and to create visual interest. Students will identify how labels and captions are used in the unit literature and will then create an illustration for their own how-to piece that Uses labels and captions. SWI Writing NF Revising I Possible text: I See a Kookaburra! Discovering Animal Habitats Around the World by Jenkins and Page, Healthy Habits by Weber, and What We Wear: Dressing Up Around the World by Ajmera, Hofer Derstine, and Pon. Possible Texts: Growing Vegetable Soup by Lois Ehlert, I Can Draw People by Ray Gibson, and students’ drafts. From the Primary Comprehension Toolkit Texts: The 3 Goats and/or Kids at Play Common Core State Standards: K.RI.1 K.RI.5 Notes: For this lesson you may want to use several books which have text features such as glossary, added information at the end of the book, maps, etc. You will focus on just those pages, vs. reading the entire book. Common Core State Standards: K.W.2 K.W.5 K.SL.5 Notes: Most of your students are probably proficient at adding labels to their pictures and may have moved beyond this to writing about their picture in a more formal way. Students may want to try adding “captions” which describe in a condensed phrase or sentence. Attached: Writing paper w/picture and caption Federal Way Public Schools Updated June 2015 Lesson 8-What fun facts can you use when reading different topics? Reading: “The “Fun” in Fun Facts” Rationale: Readers use fun facts in order to expand their knowledge and understanding about different topics. Students will explore the different ways nonfiction writers provide fun facts and how these facts help them better understand the topics they read about. SWI Reading NF Mini-Lesson 9 Writing: “The “Fun” in Fun Facts” Possible text: Healthy Habits by Rebecca Weber, How Bees Make Honey by Louise Spilsbury, I See a Kookaburra! Discovering Animal Habitats, “Insects and Arachnids” and “A Mexican Market” from the Kindergarten Nonfiction Toolkit Texts Rationale: Possible Texts: Writing and reading nonfiction can be “fun”. We want Utilize the text from to encourage our young writers to write things that the reading lesson others may find interesting. above. This is an extension to the reading lesson listed above. Lesson 9: Performance Task Reading and See Performance Task Writing The performance task will give the directions, time frame and passages for this module. “ELA It will take 2-3 days depending on how you break culminating up the tasks. performance task for nonfiction standards” Possible text: “At the Seashore” Common Core State Standards: K.RI.2 K.RI.8 Notes: Share the fun of writing and especially with interesting tidbits of information. Use any of the text listed or one of the other short passages in the toolkit. There are some other passages that may inspire the students, but will need to be read by you. You probably have students that know fun facts…have them share. Common Core State Standards: K.W.2 K.W.5 K.SL.5 Notes: Encourage students to write about interesting facts that they know. They may choose something from the texts that were shared in the whole group reading lesson. Common Core State Standards: K.RI.1 K.RI.10 K.W.2 Notes: See attached Performance task for Nonfiction ELA standards. Celebration: Be sure to include a day for celebrating students’ hard work on their narratives at the end of this cycle. This may be another lesson, or at another time of the day, with your reading buddies, or whatever way works best for you and your students. Federal Way Public Schools Updated June 2015 Resources: Module 3 Mentor Texts PreK-1st Grade Nonfiction Texts *Primary Comprehension Toolkit – if available at your school Writing Paper with Caption Picture Kindergarten Performance Task for Nonfiction Federal Way Public Schools Updated June 2015