How Night Came from the Sea

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
The people Look for some people. Write it down. By the water
Advertisements

How Night Came From the Sea
Yingtao’s New Friend Genre: Realistic Fiction
How Night Came to the Sea
Text and Photos by Richard Sobol
So You want to be President?
Author: Retold by Mary-Joan Gerson Genre: Pourquoi Tale
Genre: Expository Nonfiction Author’s Purpose: Inform
The Stranger Text and Art Text and Art by Chris Van Allsburg by Chris Van Allsburg Compiled by: Terry Sams PESTerry Sams.
GOOD MONDAY MORNING WELCOME TO ACADEMIC REVIEW Tuesday September 24th, 2014 WMDMS MORNING ANNOUNCMENTS Lunch menu Upcoming events at MDSM CHANNEL ONE NEWS.
Komodo Dragons Genre: Expository Nonfiction Author’s Purpose - Inform
Unit 1, Week 2 A Walk in the Desert
Thinking About How You Read
Reading Unit 2 Skills Review
Reading Unit 5 Skills Review Compiled by Terry SamsTerry Sams.
ESL Teaching and Reading Strategies
Thinking About How You Read
Letters Home from Yosemite
Comprehension Strategy Routine Cards
Comprehension Strategies
Lesson 22 Day 3 You will need your textbook, workbook, paper, and pencil.
Lesson 29 Day 3 You will need your textbook, workbook, paper, and pencil.
Letters Home from Yosemite Written and Illustrated by: Lisa Halvorsen Visit the Author.
A Train to Somewhere Genre: Historical Fiction Author’s Purpose: Inform, Express Skill: Sequence By: Eve Bunting Compiled by Terry Sams, PESTerry Sams.
Literary Term Notes Setting Where and when the story takes place: Time of day, place, season, time period, etc.
Encyclopedia Brown and the Case of the Slippery Salamander
I am ready to test!________ I am ready to test!________
Sight Words.
REVIEW FROM LAST WEEK »What is our unit theme? »What have we learned about city wildlife so far??
Into the Sea Genre: Narrative Nonfiction Author’s Purpose: Inform, Influence Skill: Author’s Purpose By: Brenda Z. Guiberson Illustrated by: Alix Berenzy.
How My Family Lives in America By: Susan Kuklin Genre: Narrative Nonfiction Skill: Fact and Opinion Author’s Purpose:
Written and Illustrated by: Charles R. Smith, Jr.
Text and Photos by Richard Sobol
Encantado: Pink Dolphin of the Amazon by by Sy Montgomery by In what ways are PINK DOLPHINS mysterious?
READING STRATEGIES Thinking About How You Read Metacognition: Thinking About How You Think Before you can truly improve your reading skills, you need.
“Think about It…” Answer the following questions HONESTLY… Do you ever read something but not remember what it says? What do you do if you catch yourself.
Generalizing Fourth Grade Unit 3 Week 3 By Kristi Waltke.
SFA Monday.
High Frequency Words August 31 - September 4 around be five help next
Lesson 3 Day 2 You will need a pencil, paper, and your reading book.
Story Elements Or Literary Elements Characters Characters are the people in a story. Characters can also be animals, birds, talking trees, sea creatures,
Reading – Unit 1 Skills Test Review Compiled by Terry Sams, Piedmont ElementaryTerry Sams, Piedmont Elementary.
High Frequency Words.
CHARACTER, SETTING, PLOT Characters: people or animals that appear in the story Setting: time and place in which the story happens Plot: action or events.
What is Informational Text?
Get Ready to Read What drives people to explore harsh climates and dangerous places? Why do you think an explorer’s life might be a solitary existence?
Ken likes to eat ground sirloin hamburgers that are broiled. Amy counted ten oysters and put them in the wooden box. The window of the downtown baked goods.
How Night Came from the Sea Retold by Mary-Joan Gerson Joan GersonJoan Gerson Illustrated by Carla Golembe Carla GolembeCarla Golembe.
Eye of the Storm By Stephen Kramer Illustrated by Warren Faidley Stephen KramerWarren FaidleyStephen KramerWarren Faidley.
Day 3. How have people explained the pattern of day and night?
LESSON ESSENTIAL QUESTION: WHAT KEY ELEMENTS ARE FOUND IN MOST TEXTBOOKS?
Because of Winn-Dixie By Kate DiCamillo Illustrated by Kevin Hawkes Visit the Author Compiled by Terry Sams PESTerry Sams.
Created By Sherri Desseau Click to begin TACOMA SCREENING INSTRUMENT FIRST GRADE.
2 minute edit Iemanjas daughter nows she has found piece on the land.
THE READING GAZETTE STUDENTS DISCOVER NEW STRATEGY TO INCREASE COMPREHENSION Students begin to share their secret to success By SHANNON SCHOELZEL Local.
2 minute edit The frist servant second servant and third servant whent to get knight for Ieamnjas daughter.
Grade 4.3 Reading Street Student Edition pgs
How Night Came from the Sea
Fry Word Test First 300 words in 25 word groups
Grade 4.3 Reading Street Student Edition pgs
Day 2.
A Symphony of Whales by: Steve Schuch
A Symphony of Whales by: Steve Schuch
The. the of and a to in is you that with.
Reading Unit: 2 Lesson:1 Module: B Objectives:
SFA Wednesday.
How Night Came From the Sea
Fourth Grade Unit 3 Week 3 By Kristi Waltke
Presentation transcript:

How Night Came from the Sea Compiled by: Terry Sams PES Melissa Guinn PES Retold by Mary-Joan Gerson Illustrated by Carla Golembe

Study Skills Genre: Pourquoi Tale Comprehension Skill: Generalize Comprehension Strategy: Visualize Comprehension Review Skill: Cause and Effect Vocabulary: Context Clues

Summary Why do we have day and night? A Brazilian legend says there was always daylight on Earth until the African goddess Iemanja’s daughter left her ocean home to marry a land dweller. When Iemanja’s daughter became homesick for the cool, shadowy world under the sea, her mother sent some of the darkness up to her, and now we have night on land as well as day.

Genre: Pourquoi tales Pourquoi tales are stories that explain how things in nature came to be. It is a myth that explains how something in nature came to be. Pourpuoi is French for “why”. Learn more about folktales

Comprehension Skill Review Generalize TE 337b A generalization is a broad statement or rule that applies to many examples. Clue words: all, most, always, usually, generally

Comprehension Skill Review Generalize TE 337b Some generalizations are valid, which means that they are supported by facts or details. Some are faulty. Which means that they are not supported.

Comprehension Strategy Visualize TE 292 Good readers organize visualize as they read. Form mental pictures to help understand ideas and information. Visualizing can help you understand generalizations.

Comprehension Skill Review: Cause and Effect TE 323 As you read, look for cause and effect relationships. A cause is what made something happen. An effect is what happens. Sometimes a cause will have more than one effect. Words such as because, so, and since are clues to causes and effects.

Practice Generalization PB116 1. What is a generalization? They went during the summer because the weather was usually good. 2. What is another generalization? He and Jim usually hike an hour or two. 3. What is a clue word for number 2? Usually 4. What is another generalization? Campfire often burned late into the night. What is a clue word for number 4? Often

Sensory and Imagery Words Imagery, or sensory language, is the use of words that describe how things look, sound, smell, taste, or feel. Writers use imagery to help give readers a strong mental image. Imagery helps readers understand the setting, mood, characters, and action in a story. Note the words that help you see, smell, hear, taste, or feel what is happening in a story.

Research/Study Skills Textbook/Trade Book TE 337l A textbook is a book used in the study of a subject, like science or math. A trade book is any book that is not a textbook or reference book. Note: A non-fiction book may have many of the same features as a textbook. These books are usually organized into units or chapters. The text may be organized under headings and subheadings. Often, they include graphics such as charts, graphs, time lines, photographs, and maps that present information visually. Some books also include other features such as chapter previews and summaries, glossaries, prefaces, appendices, and indexes.

Cause and Effect PowerPoint Figurative Language Fun Stuff and Practice Cause and Effect PowerPoint Figurative Language More Figurative Language Verbs and more Verbs and Linking Verbs on Line

Weekly Fluency Check Rhythmic Patterns of Language TE 337a Just like in a conversation, good readers need to pay attention to the word groupings of the text and have a rise and fall in your voice as your read aloud. Read p. 292m to model for students.

Question of the Week TE 314m How have people explained the pattern of day and night?

Day 2 - Question of the Day How would you describe nighttime to someone who has never experienced it?

Day 3 – Question of the Day How might How Night Came from the Sea be different if it took place in the cold Artic?

Day 4 – Question of the Day What evidence does the narrator of The Ant and the Bear give to “prove” that the story is true?

Review Questions What did Iemanja and the husband have in common? How did the husband show his love for his wife? What is the theme of the story? Why did Iemanja call the servants foolish? When the creatures were placed in the bag, why were they so loud?

Review Questions 6. What made the bag the servants were carrying so large? If the daughter had not been present when the creatures were released, what might have happened? What did the daughter give three gifts in celebration of her new home? How does the daughter think of night?

Review Questions What supports that nighttime occurs quickly in Brazil? What is a generalization you can make, based on the story, about leaving home?

Vocabulary - Say It brilliant gleamed shimmering chorus coward

More Words to Know dwells reigns creatures darkness prowl

brilliant shining brightly; sparkling

anything spoken or sung all at the same time chorus anything spoken or sung all at the same time

coward person who lack courage or is easily made afraid; person who runs from danger, trouble, etc.

flashed or beamed with light gleamed flashed or beamed with light

shimmering gleaming or shining faintly

dwells makes your home; lives

reigns rules, as over a kingdom

creatures any living things

night; state of being without light or with very little light darkness night; state of being without light or with very little light

prowl go about slowly and secretly like an animal hunting for something to eat or a thief looking for something to steal

He dwells in a white house with a flower garden and a pale fence around the yard.

He dwells in a white house with a flower garden and a pale fence around the yard.

The city was plunged into darkness by the power outage.

The city was plunged into darkness by the power outage.

There was a fox on the prowl earlier.

There was a fox on the prowl earlier.

They burst into a chorus of Happy Birthday.

They burst into a chorus of Happy Birthday.

Queen Victoria reigned over Britain from 1837 to 1901.

Queen Victoria reigned over Britain from 1837 to 1901.

In the winter, some creatures hibernate in a cave.

In the winter, some creatures hibernate in a cave.

The sky was a brilliant, cloudless blue.

The sky was a brilliant, cloudless blue.

She could see her reflection in the water, shimmering in the moonlight.

She could see her reflection in the water, shimmering in the moonlight.

People who explore Antarctica are not cowards.

People who explore Antarctica are not cowards.

Early this morning, sunlight gleamed through my window.

Early this morning, sunlight gleamed through my window.

Writing Assignment Comparisons TE 337h Think about something that interests you in nature. Write a comparison explaining how two things you like are alike. Include several ways the things are similar. Remember to use specific nouns and strong verbs while writing your comparison.

Spelling Words Vowel sound in shout however mountain mound scout shout couch towel ounce coward outdoors

Spelling Words Vowel sound in shout trout drowsy grouch eyebrow boundary flowerpot scowl browse announce hound

CHALLENGE califlower foundation surround allowance counselor

This Week’s Word Wall Words Click and type your own words for this week:

Let’s review our Spelling words Let’s review our Spelling words. Watch carefully because they will flash on the screen for just a moment. We can clap as we spell the word, or we might just practice reading the words.

however

mountain

mound

scout

couch

towel

ounce

coward

outdoors

flowerpot

scowl

browse

announce

hound

trout

drowsy

grouch

eyebrow

boundary

shout