Warm-Up: Choose your slogan. Write it on the ¼ sheet.

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Warm-Up: Choose your slogan. Write it on the ¼ sheet.
Warm-Up: Take a ¼ sheet from the tan bin.
Warm-Up: Take a ¼ sheet from the tan bin.
Warm-Up: Take a ¼ sheet from the tan bin.
Warm-Up: Take a ¼ sheet from the tan bin.
Warm-Up: Take a ¼ sheet from the tan bin.
Warm-Up: Take a ¼ sheet from the tan bin.
D Self-Perception The way a person sees him/herself.
Copy the following list of words and write their definitions: Obstruct
Warm-Up: Take a ¼ sheet from the tan bin.
Warm-Up: Take a ¼ sheet from the tan bin.
F Grievance Complaint, criticism, protest
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E Delegate Assign something to a group of people to do.
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B Prosecution Taking someone to court for committing a crime.
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A Obstruct To interrupt or block.
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Warm-Up: Take a ¼ sheet from the tan bin.
C Indescribable So strange you can’t explain it.
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C Restriction Being limited or controlled.
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Choose one of the following activities to complete:
A Summoning Calling upon someone to do something.
Warm-Up: Take a ¼ sheet from the tan bin.
Warm-Up: Take a ¼ sheet from the tan bin.
Warm-Up: Take a ¼ sheet from the tan bin.
Warm-Up: Take a ¼ sheet from the tan bin.
Warm-Up: Choose your slogan. Write it on the ¼ sheet.
Warm-Up: Choose your slogan. Write it on the ¼ sheet.
Warm-Up: Choose your slogan. Write it on the ¼ sheet.
Warm-Up: Choose your slogan. Write it on the ¼ sheet.
Warm-Up: Choose your slogan. Write it on the ¼ sheet.
Warm-Up: Take a ¼ sheet from the tan bin.
Warm-Up: Take a ¼ sheet from the tan bin.
Warm-Up: Take a ¼ sheet. Place your homework on your desk.
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Warm-Up: Take a ¼ sheet from the tan bin.
C Assent Acceptance, agreement, approval.
Warm-Up: Take a ¼ sheet from the tan bin.
Presentation transcript:

Warm-Up: Choose your slogan. Write it on the ¼ sheet. Place homework on your desk. I am not scared. I am prepared. I am a machine. I am focused. Today is MY day. No one will get in my way to be the very best I can be. 3. No one has a stronger heart than me. No one has a stronger mind than me. I have no limits.

Objective: Today’s objectives are: -to practice and check fluency; -to practice inferring; -and, to use the reading strategies to comprehend Chapter 5 and 6 of On the Record. What is your MEASURABLE goal?

Agenda: Slogan Collect homework/ late work Pass back graded papers/ discuss Word Study: detached Fluency Check Multiple Choice Question: Inferences made from the text Chapter 5 and 6: Adding Inference and answering the Essential Question: Central Idea. Closing: Did you meet your goal? What word did you learn?

Copy the following word and slash it apart: Word Study (/Cle) Copy the following word and slash it apart: D E T A C H A B L E

Word Study Read the following selection. Write at least two words or phrases that could be used as context clues for the word “detached.” The thought kept him up some nights, envisioning babies with wings running around with his detached arm. The sights he could conjure were not pretty, and he was left to deal with them on his own, because his father could have cared less about how having only three limbs made him feel.

Word Study Write a definition for the word “detached.” The thought kept him up some nights, envisioning babies with wings running around with his detached arm. The sights he could conjure were not pretty, and he was left to deal with them on his own, because his father could have cared less about how having only three limbs made him feel.

Fluency Billy Weadle pulled his cap down over his ears and stumbled through the kitchen door. It wouldn’t be long before his dad got home, and he knew he’d better have the drive shoveled by then. Problem was, the snow continued to pour. Huge flakes. Huge, heavy, wet flakes, making his job even tougher. It was not easy for someone of Billy’s build, much less when one was missing an arm as Billy was. He’d lost it in a car accident when he was young. Worse than his arm, he’d lost his mother. He’d never gotten the full story from his father, only that they had been in a wreck and the guardrail or a tree, or something like that had come through the window. Billy had just never questioned it, only accepted the fact that he only had one arm, one parent and one miserable life. When he was young, his grandmother had filled him full of stories about how the angels needed his mother and his arm in Heaven, but at fourteen years of age, he was much too wise to believe them now. Even then, he could see how the angels would need his mother, but he could never quite understand what they would do with his arm. The thought kept him up some nights, envisioning babies with wings running around with his detached arm. The sights he could conjure were not pretty, and he was left to deal with them on his own, because his father could have cared less about how having only three limbs made him feel.

Inferring (I) (Inference): Billy’s dad is taking the death of his wife out on his son, Billy. This is an inference because we see that: (Text detail) Billy’s dad treats Billy poorly (makes him shovel the driveway even though he only has one arm for example) (Text detail) The text says “his father could have cared less about how having only three limbs made him (Billy) feel.” (Background knowledge) I have seen people get angry at others when someone close to them dies. Billy Weadle pulled his cap down over his ears and stumbled through the kitchen door. It wouldn’t be long before his dad got home, and he knew he’d better have the drive shoveled by then. Problem was, the snow continued to pour. Huge flakes. Huge, heavy, wet flakes, making his job even tougher. It was not easy for someone of Billy’s build, much less when one was missing an arm as Billy was. He’d lost it in a car accident when he was young. Worse than his arm, he’d lost his mother. He’d never gotten the full story from his father, only that they had been in a wreck and the guardrail or a tree, or something like that had come through the window. Billy had just never questioned it, only accepted the fact that he only had one arm, one parent and one miserable life. When he was young, his grandmother had filled him full of stories about how the angels needed his mother and his arm in Heaven, but at fourteen years of age, he was much too wise to believe them now. Even then, he could see how the angels would need his mother, but he could never quite understand what they would do with his arm. The thought kept him up some nights, envisioning babies with wings running around with his detached arm. The sights he could conjure were not pretty, and he was left to deal with them on his own, because his father could have cared less about how having only three limbs made him feel.

Inferring Reread the excerpt and determine answers to the following questions. 1. What mood is established by the excerpt so far? 2. Who are the main characters established in the excerpt? 3. What are the boy’s feelings towards his father? (This is an inference.) 4. What are the father’s feelings towards the boy? (This is an inference.)

A. The father might be fairly demanding of the boy. Key Ideas and Details: CCSS.ELA-LITERACY.CCRA.R.1 Read closely to determine what the text says explicitly and to make logical inferences from it; cite specific textual evidence when writing or speaking to support conclusions drawn from the text. 6. What does the author imply about the relationship between the boy and father? A. The father might be fairly demanding of the boy. B. The father looked out for the boy’s feelings. C. The boy and his father were close due to the tragedy they’d been through together. D. The boy worked hard at strengthening the relationship between him and his father.

Chapter 5 and Chapter 6 Read chapter 5 and 6 of your On the Record book. Fill in the pink “Cornell Notes Sheet” as you read the chapter. TRY, TRY, TRY to make at least two inferences as you read.

Closing Did you meet your goal? What is at least one word that you learned today?