Wednesday, November 22, 2017

OCDaniel


A book by Weasly King
A boy named Daniel has “zaps”. Daniel feels like doing things over and over again, he starts flicking the lights on and off, he tries not to step on the cracks on the grounds, he doesn’t like writing a few kind of numbers and he also feels different kind of emotions at different times.
Daniel and his friend Sara have a murder mystery to solve. Throughout the story Daniel discovers he is special, he is a star child.   
 A book review   by Nimar.S J
 
 

1 comment:

ELA past targets

September:
Reading stamina is when students are able to read independently, with focus, for a sustained amount of time. This includes: choosing a "good fit" book, preparing to read by settling into a comfortable spot and staying there; always looking at the pages of the chosen book, and applying effective strategies to increase enjoyment and understanding. Specific strategies are being taught and modeled in class.

October:
Continue to work on reading stamina. Added focus on using comprehension strategies to deepen understanding and follow more difficult texts. Guided and independent practice of "Visualizing" and "Connecting". Please ask your child to explain them to you. Students should read every day at home.

November:
Explore different genres; identifying elements of Fairy Tales. Especially setting (where and when), characters (hero and villain) and plot elements (magical items or people, repeating numbers, good wins over evil, happily ever after . . .). Continue practicing strategies to improve understanding. Students should be able to apply to class read-aloud as well as independent reading. Word work focus on homonyms (words that sound the same but mean different)

December: Follow the writing process to create an original fairy tale for grade 1 / 2 buddies. (Pre-write ideas, draft, revise, edit, format and publish). Independent reading and identifying unfamiliar vocabulary. Use understanding of text and context clues to begin figuring out meanings. Retell a section of text using the 4 square method (Who, Where/When, What happened, How it ended)
including illustrations and written explanations.