1st Grade T/Th- Week 4- Aug 29-Sept 2

 
1st Grade Week 48/29/20228/30/20228/31/20229/1/20229/2/2022Co-Teacher Notes
DiscipleshipSincerity- "Let love be without hypocrisy. Abhor what is evil. Cling to what is good." -Romans 12:9
BibleGP Week 3, (Optional) Fun Day, pg 51GP Week 4, pg 54-57GP Week 4, pg 54 & 58-60GP Week 4, pg 61-63GP Week 4, pg 64-66Big Picture Question: What is sin? Sin is breaking God's law and sin separates people from God.
MathHIG pg 23 Reinforcement; Extra Practice pg 11 (sent home in your child's folder); Play Roll a Die Number Bonds game (see instructions below)HIG pg 24-26, TB pg 30-31, WB Ex 15 pg 31-33;
Introduce Rainbow Math Facts routine
Parent read HIG pg 24-25; HIG pg 27, TB pg 32, WB Ex 16 pg 34-35 & Ex 17 pg 36-37; Begin Rainbow Math Facts (white) cards; CCC (complete, check & correct) first 10 problems on Mental Math 1HIG pg 28-30, TB pg 33-35, WB Ex 18 pg 38-39Parent read HIG pg 28-29; HIG pg 31 Reinforcement game (not Mental Math 2-3); Continue Rainbow Facts; CCC last 10 problems on Mental Math 1CCC stands for Complete, Check, Correct; see description under Math heading below

Click here for some ideas to keep flashcard practice fun!
SpellingReview Sound Cards by dictating the sound and having your child write the corresponding letter or letters that represent the soundAAS Step 1, pg 18: Review Key Card 5; dictate "me," "met," "so," "sop" and "go back" (pg 19)AAS Step 1, pg 18-19: Review Key Card 5, New Teaching: Introduce Open and Closed Syllable Tags (Reinforcement section optional); Dictate first three sentences on pg 20 in Spelling JournalReview AAS pg 18-19: Open and Closed Syllable Types; dictate last three sentences on pg 20 in Spelling JournalComplete Open or Closed? worksheet page in Spelling Journal
GrammarFLL Lesson 9, pg 14-15: Picture Narration, "Children Playing on the Beach"FLL Lesson 10, pg 17: Proper nouns (Writing the student's proper name)FLL Lesson 11, pg 18: Proper nouns (Writing first names)FLL Lesson 12, pg 19-20: Story narration, "The Lion and the Mouse"
WritingNumeral formationCopybook pg 29- Copying (step 4)Numeral formation assessmentCopybook pg 29- Proof/Correct and Illustrate (steps 5 and 6)See important notes in Writing section below as we being using Copybook this week
ReadingReview phonogram cards A-Z, CK, NK, NG, SH, CH, TCH, TH;

SF Week 2, Day 5, pg 43-45;

Teach/Review OPG L61: The Digraphs WH and PH, pg 125-126; Dictation- when, whip, graph



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Phonogram Assessment #1: Administer using yellow phonogram cards. I will check completed assessments on Tuesday.
Review phonograms;

SF Week 3, Day 1, pg 46-49;

OPG L66: Words with the Long-A Vowel Sound, pg 132
Review phonogram cards A-Z, CK, NK, NG, SH, CH, TCH, TH, WH, & PH;

Parent read Important Note and Directions SF pg 47 for new Cut Off the Sound procedure; SF Week 3, Day 2, pg 50-52

Teach/Review OPG L67 & L68: Words with the Long-E Vowel Sound, pg 133-135; Dictation: Pete, me, we

'Birthday Soup' in "Little Bear"
Review phonograms;

SF Week 3, Day 3, pg 53-55;

OPG L69: Words with the Long-I Vowel Sound, pg 136-137
Review phonogram cards A-Z, CK, NK, NG, SH, CH, TCH, TH, WH, & PH;

SF Week 3, Day 4, pg 56-58;

Teach/Review OPG L71 & L73: Words with the Long-O Vowel Sound, pg 140-141 & 143; Dictation: note, slope, globe

"Birthday Soup' in "Little Bear"- continue or re-read
As we continue to review kindergarten phonograms this week, add SH, CH, & TCH, TH, WH, and PH to the Review tab in your card box if you have not filed them there already

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See below for instructions on giving Phonogram Assessment #1.
Read Aloud"What Will Little Bear Wear?" (finish or re-read to improve fluency)Aesop's Fables, pg 14: The Dog, The Cock, and The FoxAesop's Fables, pg 39: The Monkey & The Camel; encourage oral narrationAesop's Fables, pg 23: The Lion and the MouseAesop's Fables, pg 40: The Wild Boar and The Fox; Encourage oral narrationThese stories come from "Aesop's Fables for Children" with Read & Listen MP3 download, which you purchased as part of your required textbooks.
Encourage oral narration after anything you read together - history, science, fiction, etc
HistoryOld Kingdom of Egypt activities:
Read Magic Treehouse
Make pyramids
SotW Ch. 6: The Jewish People pg 35-45 revised/pg 49-57 older; lead your student in a comparison of why/how Terah moved to a new place and why/how Abram moved to a new place; Journal sentence: Jacob's sons became the twelve tribes of Israel.Ch. 5 is optional; read at your discretion. If you decide to cover it, read it before the Ch. 6 assignment
ScienceG&B/A "Insect Stations": Termites ONLY, Newer edition: Lesson 5, pg 14; Older edition: Lesson 4, pg 11 and Termite mini book pg 1-7 (do not need to cut pages); Journal sentence: Termites chew on wood.G&B/A Lesson 4 "Insect Stations": Silkworms; Read "Silkworms," by Donna Schaffer
GeographyContinents and Oceans - Due 9/8
Memory WorkSCRIPTURE: Philippians 2:1-11 KJV (ongoing)
MATH: Rainbow Facts cards (ongoing)
QUARTER 1 POEM: "Persevere," due 9/27
GEOGRAPHY: Continents and Oceans, due 9/8

* Note anything underlined in the table above or in the notes below is a clickable link for your convenience *

Key to Abbreviations:
GP- The Gospel Project- Home Edition
HIG- Singapore Math Home Instructor's Guide (click to print addition or subtraction cards)
TB- Singapore Math Textbook
WB- Singapore Math Workbook
MM- Mental Math (see appendix in HIG)
CCC- Complete, check, correct
AAS- All About Spelling (click here to print any missing phonogram cards)
FLL- First Language Lessons
SF- Sounds First Phonemic Awareness Program (click here and scroll down to Grade 1)
OPG- The Ordinary Parents' Guide to Teaching Reading (click here to print OPG sight words)
SotW- Story of the World
G&B/A- The Good and The Beautiful, Arthropods
G&B/MB- The Good and The Beautiful, Marine Biology


Coming Soon:


Tuesday, August 30- Grammar Play Date @ 3pm

Thursday, September 1- Spirit Day & Pizza Day & DOGS Day- Students may wear Fortis spirit shirts with jeans or jean shorts. DOGS (Dads of Great Students) will hold a special Morning Assembly!

Tuesday, September 6- No School- Labor Day Holiday

Thursday, September 8- Picture Day

** Hello Parents **
We are continuing to review in several areas, especially Reading and Spelling. Make sure your student is confident about the sounds they're reviewing (yellow Phonogram cards and red Sound cards) and when to use them (the rules on the blue Key Cards). You'll be adding math flashcards to the mix this week, so I've provided a link for some fun ways to keep flashcard time from becoming a bore. 
Your faithful partner,
Mrs. Kuhn

Math:
Roll a Die Number Bonds game instructions: Roll a die, then say the number that makes ten with the number rolled. For example, if a 6 was rolled on the die, your student would say "4." If a 2 was rolled, your student would say "8." 

You will be receiving an email this week detailing the process for Rainbow Math Facts. This will be a motivating way to encourage math fact mastery. 

Flashcard Fun (these games can be used for phonogram practice as well as math facts)

Hand in hand with math facts comes mental math. Mental Math exercises from the back of your HIG (appendix pg a1) will be assigned this week. I recommend making a copy of the page for your child to work on, but you may have them write in your book if you prefer. After your child completes the assigned problems each day, you will check them and then have your child correct any errors. This process is abbreviated CCC.  

Complete: finish the assigned problems
Check: mark facts that are incorrect
Correct: in a different color, student corrects any missed facts

Mental Math 1 (MM1) covers simple math facts. 

Reading:
You'll be giving the first phonogram assessment this week. You'll find the Phonogram Assessment Sheet inside a page protector in the Language Arts section of the binder. Complete Assessment #1: 26 Single Letter Phonograms on Friday. To give this assessment, show your student the yellow phonogram card corresponding to each of the phonograms on the assessment. Check a box for each correct sound your student recalls. Count the sound correct if the student self-corrects, but no hints or coaching should be given to the student by the co-teacher. Leave the marks on the page protector and leave the page protector behind the Langauge Arts tab so I can check the assessment at school on Tuesday. Stay on top of your phonogram practice and these assessments should always be easy peasy for your student!

As we review long vowel sounds this week, you will see that OPG does not use the term open syllable. Instead they say "if the vowel is the last letter and the only vowel in a very short word..." I'd like you to go ahead and speak of these words as having open syllables (and thus, long vowels), since that is the standard terminology and we are reviewing it in AAS (Key Card 5) as well. Open and closed syllables are foundational for reading and spelling!

I'd like to highlight an important difference between dictation done for reading and dictation done for spelling. When we dictate sentences for spelling, we will have taught the spelling rule for each word we dictate, and so we will expect the students to be able to spell each word on their own.

However, there are many graphemes (written letters) used to spell long vowel phonemes (sounds). The students are learning how to read many more sounds than they are learning how to spell at this point. For example, the long A sound can be spelled with the graphemes a (in an open syllable), ai, ay, eigh, or a_e (vowel, consonant, silent e), and they will learn to read all of those. But we are not going to expect our first graders to know which spelling to use when we haven't yet explicitly taught them the spelling rules for those.

When we do dictation in reading, then, it's absolutely fine to remind your child, "We are using tch to spell the /ch/ sound today," "We are using a silent e to make the O say it's long sound today," "We are using ai to spell the long A sound today," etc. This dictation is an exercise to solidify the sound to print connection and is important for orthrographcially mapping those sounds. 

Read, read, read! Share any great read-alouds that your child just loves on our Facebook page. Just one of the MANY benefits of reading aloud is that your child will learn proper inflection from your example.  

Writing:
When it comes to the invaluable skills of reading and writing, you are your child's Head Coach. Skilled habits in these areas can only be formed through regular practice under supervision by a coach who corrects wrong moves and requires the right ones be made.  It is tedious work, but you must watch diligently and make sure your child is using proper letter formation in order to make their writing more efficient. Identify the letters that your child has already developed incorrect habits with, and use this link to make individualized practice sheets to break those bad habits and create correct, efficient writing. If your child has trouble correctly holding and directing the pencil do what they want it to, fine motor exercises will be helpful. I have many fun ideas if you need some!


We will begin using Copybook- Book Two this week. Browse Teaching Guidelines on pg 5-6 of Copybook, taking note of steps 4-6. Also browse Line and Letter Practice on pg 9. Review pg 8 with your student. Each week your child will complete steps 4-6 (see Teaching Guidelines on pg 6) for the appropriate page at home in their Copybook. Copy work at school will be completed on provided paper; there is no need to send Copybook to school. 

Spelling:
This week we will introduce the Open and Closed syllable types. The closed syllable is the most common spelling unit in English, accounting for 50% of all syllables. Syllable types and syllable division rules are covered briefly in AAS, but they are even more important for understanding how to decode multisyllabic words when reading. Your student binder contains a page of syllable types in the Langauage Arts tab, which will be helpful for you to reference. I will be supplementing OPG and AAS with more robust syllable work, so your child will be completing some assignments that I will send home that are not in either curriculum. The first two of these will be glued into your student's Spelling Journal on Thursday for them to complete on Friday and Monday.

Grammar:
Any copy work or writing (such as first names for proper noun practice) for FLL can be written in the back half of the Spelling & Grammar journal after the sticky tab. Remember, all names- including the student's- should be written with the first letter capitalized and the rest lowercase.

History: 
This week we encounter our first familiar biblical character, Abram. See if your child can detect the difference between Terah's and Abram's motivations for moving to a new land. Journal sentence: Jacob's sons became the twelve tribes of Israel. 

Science:
We are discovering so many wonderful things about God's amazing insects!  The vast array of insects God designed- even just the few we've studied so far- wordlessly speak to the infinite creativity and exquisite attention to detail of our loving Creator. How can we help but praise Him? Journal sentence: Termites chew on wood.

Geography:  
Map & Song and Game to help learn all the continents and oceans. Due 9/8

Memory Work: 
Persevere, due 9/27