1st Grade T/Th- Week 7- September 19-25

1st Grade Week 7Tue, Sep 19Wed, Sep 20Thu, Sep 21Fri, Sep 22Mon, Sep 25Co-Teacher Notes
VirtueConfidence- "The person who trusts in the Lord, whose confidence indeed is the Lord, is blessed." - Jer. 17:7
BibleGP Week 7, pg 102-105GP Week 7, pg 102 & 106-108GP Week 7, pg 109-111GP Week 7, pg 112-114GP Week 7, Optional Fun Day, pg 115Big Picture Question: What can stop God's plan? Nothing can stop God's perfect plan.
MathReview HIG pg 45; TB pg 48-49; MM 7HIG pg 47; TB pg 50 tasks 9-11; WB Ex 28 pg 58; Rainbow FactsReview HIG pg 47; TB N/A; WB Ex 29 pg 59Choose a game from HIG pg 48 Reinforcement or pg 49 Reinforcement to play; TB pg 51; WB N/A; Rainbow Facts; MM 8 for 10 min, then check and correctHIG pg 50-51, TB N/A; WB Ex 30 pg 60-62, WB Ex 31 pg 63-65; Rainbow FactsYour child should be regularly practicing math facts, and they should be lightning-fast with the parts of 10. If not, add a few more minutes of flashcard practice to your math lessons. Remember, it is essential for fluency that your child has an understanding of how the numbers work together. If they are struggling with certain facts, go back to the 10 frame and build the numbers again.
SpellingReview Key Card 6 / Rule Card 9- English words don't end in...i; review ai, ay, ei, ey

Dictate Step/Lesson 3, sentences 4-6

Review/correct dictation from Tuesday

Make sure your child is ready for the spelling test covering Step/Lesson 3

Optional: use "More Words" for extra practice with this concept
Step/Lesson 3 Spelling Test/Written AssessmentAAS B&W version: Teach Step 4- Two Closed Syllables; spell words with tiles first, then in journal

AAS Color version: Teach Lesson 5- Words with Two Closed Syllables; spell words with tiles first, then in journal (we did skip Lesson 4 for now; we will cover it next week)
AAS B&W version: Review Step 4; dictate sentences 1-3 in journal

AAS Color version: Review Lesson 5; dictate sentences 1-3 in journal
Check test from Thurs & add missed words to Review portion of card box;

Note: Important procedure in Step 4 / Lesson 5 for spelling multisyllable words!

B&W version add Key Card 7 to review box;

Color version add Rule Card 10 to review box
GrammarFLL Lesson 19, pg 27: Proper Nouns (Places)FLL Lesson 21, pg 30: Proper Nouns (Address)FLL Lesson 20, pg 28-29: Proper Nouns (States)FLL Lesson 22, pg 31-32: Story Narration: The Little Girl Who Wanted to be Dirty
WritingPoetry or Scripture CopyworkCopybook pg 35- Copying (step 4); Write neatly and accurately.Poetry or Scripture CopyworkCopybook pg 35 - Proof/Correct and Illustrate (steps 5 and 6)
ReadingReview phonograms;

SF Week 6, Day 1, pg 92-96;

Introduce Vowel Pairs EA, EI, and EY as /ā/ (OPG L87)
Review phonograms (add EA, EI, EY);

SF Week 6, Day 2, pg 97-99;

OPG Lesson 87: The Vowel Pairs EA, EI, and EY as /ā/, pg 163; Dictation (explicitly tell your student which phonogram to use for the /ā/ sound in these words; For example, "In this word, I want you to spell /ā/ with EA: great."): great, vein, they
Review phonograms;

SF Week 6, Day 3, pg 100-102;

Introduce Vowel Pair EE as /ē/ (OPG L89)
Review phonograms (add EE);

SF Week 6, Day 4, pg 103-105;

OPG Lesson 89: The Vowel Pair EE as /ē/, pg 165; Dictation (remind students that they are using EE to spell /ē/ in these words): tree, queen, sweet, peep
Review phonograms;

SF Week 6, Day 5, pg 106-108;

OPG Lesson 88: Review of the Long-A Vowel Pairs, pg 164

Phonogram Assessment #1 and #2: Mark assessments, and return both to class on Tues behind Language Arts tab
Add phonogram cards EA (all three sounds), EI (both sounds), EY (both sounds), and EE to your Review tab and include them in your regular phonogram review
Read AloudThe Cat of Bubastes, pg 102-106The Cat of Bubastes, pg 107-112The Cat of Bubastes, pg 113-117The Cat of Bubastes, pg 118-122
HistoryIsrealites in slavery: make "bricks" with claySotW Ch. 9: The First Cities of India, pg 71-75; See below for questions to discuss with your student;

Journal sentence: People left the Indus Valley for reasons unknown.
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ScienceStart preparing oral presentation (due next week); see Science section below for detailsSpecial guest presentation about bees!
GeographyNorthern Central Africa and Northern Africa - Due 10/12
Memory WorkSCRIPTURE: Psalm 23 KJV (ongoing)
MATH: Rainbow Fact cards (ongoing)
QUARTER 1 POEM: "Persevere," due 9/26
GEOGRAPHY: Northern Central Africa & Northern Africa, due 10/12

 

* 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:

Thursday, September 28- Spirit/Pizza/DOGS Day

Tuesday, October 10- Parent/Teacher Conferences (no class for students)

Friday, October 27- Fall Festival (more info to come!)
 

                                                         ** Faithful Parents **
Our classroom rhythym is settling in and the kids are growing so much already. I hope you're seeing that at home as well! I'm blessed to be a part of what God is doing in 1st grade this year. Keep up the great work!      
                                                          With love, Mrs. Kuhn
Math: 
Last week we introduced the subtraction strategy of Counting Back. This is an effective strategy for subtracting 1, 2, and 3 from a number (ex. 8-1, 7-3). However, if the numbers are close together (ex. 9-8, 7-5), counting back is less effective and prone to errors. In those cases, we want the students to use the Counting Up strategy where they will start with the smaller number and count up to the larger number to find the difference. 
On Friday, MM8 is assigned. See if your student can distinguish when to Count Back (when subtracting 1, 2, or 3 from a number) or when to Count Up (when the numbers are close together, ie. 9-8, 7-5). This will give you a good idea of whether they are catching on to these strategies and the proper times to use them. MM8 also includes a couple of problems that review math facts within 10 (10-5, 10-10), but the main idea of MM8 is to reinforce Count Back and especially Count Up strategies. 
Toward the end of the week the students will work on interpreting whether addition or subtraction is the correct operation in different scenarios.
I believe by now you are probably noticing the need for the math facts to be right on the tip of their tongues and ready to use in a math problem. Keep working really hard with those flashcards! 

Reading: 
It's phonogram assessment time again!  The assessment is found in the binder behind the Language Arts tab in a page protector. First, erase old marker or use a different color.  Then re-administer assessment #1 and also administer assessment #2 by writing on the plastic page protector with a wet/dry erase marker. Please leave the completed assessment in the page protector behind the Language Arts tab. I will check for completion and progress on Tuesday (September 26). 

Speaking of phonograms... With OPG L87, we will now introduce graphemes (written letters) that spell more than one phoneme (sound). EA, EI, and EY can all spell the /ā/ and /ē/ sounds. EA can also spell a third sound, /ĕ/. While only one sound is taught at a time in OPG, we will still teach the students from the outset to recite all sounds for each phonogram when they see the phonogram card. For example, when your child sees the EA phonogram, they should remember that the sounds are /ē/ , /ĕ/ , /ā/. The order of the sounds is also important, as they are listed in order they are most frequently found in English words. Thus, when your child comes across EA in a word, they would first try the /ē/ sound. If that sound makes it a word that they recognize, then that is the one they use for that word. If not, they would go on to try the next sound, /ĕ/, and so forth. Sometimes two sounds for the same phonogram could work in a word, and in that case your student may need to choose one and read the rest of the sentence to determine if it works in context. If not, they would go back and choose the other sound(s) for that phonogram.  

Spelling: 
A note when checking dictation for Step / Lesson 3- The sentences I will dictate in class on Tuesday are slightly different from those in your teacher manual. They are as follows: The dry frog hops in the bathtub. A sly fox hid by the stump. Pry off the lid. 

Help your child find their dictation sentences quickly in class by placing a sticky tab on that page for them.  

History: 
On Tuesday, we'll enjoy a fun, hands-on project where we will "build bricks" out of clay as the Isrealites did for Pharoah when they were enslaved in Egypt. The activity wasn't nearly as fun for the Isrealites! At home, you'll read with your child about the First Cities of India and compare those to cities in other areas we have learned about. There is a bit of mystery and intrigue involved in wondering what happened to these ancient Indian inhabitants. The students will have fun working those imagination muscles to think about their theory! 

Questions for discussion: Compare and contrast the cities and farm life of the Indus Valley vs Mesopotamia; Would you have chosen to live near the Indus River? Why do you think the people stopped living in the citadel cities of India?

Science: 
Look over the insects we've studied so far this quarter: termites, fireflies, mosquitoes, silkworms, bees, and wasps. Help your child prepare a short oral narration to share with us in class next week answering 3 questions: which insect they found most interesting, what about that insect intrigued them, and why they think God chose to make that insect that way. This can be as short as two sentences! For example: "I think the firefly is the most interesting insect because it makes cold light. God made them light up so they can send messages to each other." Students should memorize their presentation and speak in complete sentences when presenting. Reading the presentation is not allowed. 
Oral presentation due date: Thursday, September 28

Geography:  
If the Northern Central Africa song hasn't gotten stuck in your head yet, I envy you! This catchy tune has been running through my head for weeks now; I can only assume the tune- and the names of the countries- are going to be stuck in mine and the students' heads forever! These two maps will be due 10/12.
Map & Songs and Northern Africa Game and Central Africa Game

Memory Work:
"Persevere" due 9/26