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Curriculum and Programs

Year 3 Language Arts Curriculum

The Language Arts Curriculum is divided into Primary, Primary/Intermediate, and Intermediate/Upper categories. Children work at their own pace and abilities, regardless of grade level.

Primary Language Arts

Literature

Children apply reading skills to a variety of literature of different genres (picture books, poems, plays, audiotapes)

Resources include: trade books, leveled skills books, anthologies, magazines

The following is a sampling of reading selections used in class:

World of friends and school

Family

The World

Other

Little Bear

Frog and Toad series

“We Are Best Friends”

Henry and Mudge series

Freckle Juice

The Keeping Quilt

Something From Nothing

Aunt Flossie's Hats

Families

On the Go

Houses and Homes

Bread, Bread, Bread

Hats, Hats, Hats

Hill of Fire

Angel Child/Dragon Child

"Halmoni and the Picnic"

"My Painted House, My Friendly Chicken, and Me"

It Looks Like Spilt Milk

Folktales, myths, legends from around the world

Wright books

Rookie Readers

Reading

  • Developing Phonological Awareness:
    • Reciting rhymes & songs
    • Rhyming words & patterns
    • Letter sounds & blending
    • Beginning & ending sounds
    • Phonograms (at, op, ot, ill…)
  • Naming letters
  • Understanding concepts of print
  • High frequency words-Word wall
  • Using context clues to decode meaning
  • Read-alouds
  • Participating with patterned text
  • Recognizing parts of a book
  • Preview text-revise, confirm
  • Recognizing story patterns
  • Retelling a story
  • Using picture clues & punctuation marks
  • Story elements: setting, characters, problem-solution
  • Sequencing events
  • Listening/reading for information
  • Comparing/contrasting characters and stories
  • Distinguishing fantasy/reality
  • Making inferences
  • Drawing conclusions
  • Making connections to self, world, text
  • Expressing own opinion of text
  • Responding to literature in a variety of ways (project, art, drama)

Writing

  • Writing group stories, poems, letters, picture books
  • Reading/writing predictable charts
  • Using personal word lists for writing and spelling.
  • Writing manuscript: upper and lowercase letter formation, staying on line, finger spacing between words.
  • Practicing manuscript: formation, spacing and size.
  • Dictate/write labels, captions, experience statements.
  • Writing journal entries
  • Using graphic representations to record elements of story
  • Word order
  • Writing complete sentences
  • Capitalizing first word and names.
  • Punctuating end of sentence.
  • Creating stories with beginning, middle, and end using pictures, drawings, and some words
  • Writing pieces of 5 or more sentences that flow together in a logical sequence.

Grammar/Usage/Vocabulary

  • Generating word lists (weather words, plant words)
  • Using the Make-A--Word activity for developing awareness of word chunks and patterns.
  • Using the Uncover the Word activity to develop strategies for using context to decode words
  • Primary analogies
  • Subject verb agreement
  • Using correct verb tense
  • Pronoun recognition
  • Identifying and categorizing nouns
  • Compound words
  • Using spelling patterns: double final consonant, change y to i, adding ing, Making plurals by adding s, es)
  • Using prefixes: un, dis, re
  • Words Their Way: Word Study for Phonics, Vocabulary, and Spelling Instruction

Study Skills/Oral

  • Sharing personal experiences
  • Expressing and supporting personal opinions
  • Retelling a story in sequence
  • Following oral directions
  • Contributing relevant information to group discussions
  • Participating in group storytelling, singing, and finger play
  • Using informational texts to formulate questions and to gather data, facts, and ideas.
  • Alphabetizing by first letter
  • Exploring the library

Primary/Intermediate Language Arts

Literature

Children apply reading skills to a variety of literature of different genres (books, poems, articles, fairy tales, fables, fiction)

Resources include: trade books, reference books, anthologies, magazines

Children participate in guided, independent and group reading activities.

The following is a sampling of reading selections used in class:

  • Aldo Applesauce
  • Muggie Maggie
  • Flat Stanley
  • “My Grandfather and the Time Machine”
  • The Hundred Dresses
  • Molly’s Pilgrim
  • Lady and Ms. Liberty
  • Sophia’s Ellis Island Diary
  • Hannah’s Journal
  • Yang the Youngest and His  Terrible Ear
  • How My Parents Learned to Eat
  • The Lotus Seed
  • The Day of Ahmed’s Secret
  • Mr. Popper’s Penguins
  • Cloudy With a Chance of Meatballs
    Hurricane
  • Folktales, myths, legends from around the world
  • ROAR (independent reading) - Self-selected literature books

Reading

  • Making, confirming, revising predictions
  • Summarizing the story
  • Sequencing the story
  • Identifying literary elements of character, setting, plot, problem, resolution
  • Identifying main idea and supporting details.
  • Identifying cause and effect relationships
  • Identifying fact and opinion
  • Analyzing character traits
  • Drawing conclusions
  • Making inferences
  • Making connections to self-world, text
  • Identifying author’s purpose
  • Recognizing steps in a process
  • Comparing text between different sources
  • Identifying features of text: captions, capitals, italics
  • Using graphic organizers: T-chart, webbing, Venn diagram, etc. to compare/contrast and organize story elements.
  • Interpreting figurative language and quotations

Writing

  • Writing cursive: upper and lower case letter formation, joining letters together, size and spacing
  • Practicing cursive: formation, size, spacing
  • Writing journal entries and/or “quick-write” topics daily.
  • Using periods, exclamation points, and question marks to punctuate end of sentences.
  • Using commas in a series
  • Capitalizing proper nouns, titles, abbreviations.
  • Expanding sentences: compound subjects and predicates, transitional words
  • Paragraph development:
    • Writing sentences on one topic, indenting first word
    • Writing paragraphs with a topic sentence, supporting details, conclusion
  • Using the writing process:
    • Prewriting, drafting, conferencing, revising, editing, publishing
    • Using graphic organizers for pre-writing
    • Adding, deleting, reorganizing for clarity and impact.
  • Writing book reviews, personal narratives, essays, reports, poems, friendly letters, business letters, descriptive passages, fictional stories.
  • Writing to inform, entertain, persuade.

Grammar/Usage/ Vocabulary/Spelling

  • Keeping personal word lists
  • Writing, reading, using vocabulary words related to theme and appearing in literature selection.
  • Using Make-A-Word activity to develop awareness of word structure and patterns. Using Uncover-the-Word Activity to develop strategies for using the context
  • Creating word analogies
  • Using spelling patterns (ough)
  • Changing words to past tense
  • Recognizing sentence structure/parts: subject/predicate, statements, questions, commands, exclamations
  • Identifying nouns, verbs, adjectives, adverbs, articles
  • Singular and plural, common and proper nouns
  • Comparative and superlative adverbs, past tense verbs
  • Recognizing, using, and understanding:
    • Multi-meaning words
    • Homophones
    • Compound words
    • Synonyms and antonyms
    • Contractions
    • Singular possessives
  • Using syllabification
  • Using simple prefix/suffixes to decode and build new words
  • Identifying figurative language: alliteration, simile, idioms
  • Words Their Way: Word Study for Phonics, Vocabulary, and Spelling Instruction

Study Skills/Oral

  • Alphabetizing to second and third letters
  • Using dictionary to look up a word for spelling, meaning, usage
  • Identifying different sources for locating information: dictionary, thesaurus, encyclopedia, phone book, yellow pages
  • Using the library computer (card catalogue)
  • Locating and using the parts of a book: table of contents, glossary, index
  • Using graphic aids: charts, tables, diagrams, pictures, time lines
  • Using graphic organizers to collect information
  • Sorting and organizing information
  • Outlining information from text—main topics and sub topics
  • Taking notes from oral presentations.
  • Organizing information into a report
  • Participating in “oral shares” to school: reading chosen passage from book with attention to expression and delivery, reading original writing piece.

Intermediate/Upper Language Arts

Literature

Children apply reading skills to a variety of literature of different genres (books, poems, articles, fairy tales, fables, fiction, short stories)

Resources include: trade books, reference books, anthologies, magazines, computer resources.

Children participate in guided, independent, group, and literature circle reading activities.

The following is a sampling of literature selections used in class:

  • Strudel Stories
  • Hello My Name is Scrambled Eggs
  • Yang and the Terrible Ear
  • Immigrant Kids
  • How Many Days to America?
  • A Special Day
  • In The Year of the Boar and Jackie Robinson
  • How My Family Lives In America
  • The Great Kapok Tree
  • All the Way There-Matthew Hensen
  • Amazon
  • Folktales, myths, legends from around the world
  • Short Stories
    • “Rikki Tikki Tavi”
    • Just So Stories
  • ROAR (independent reading) - Self-selected literature

Reading

  • Making, confirming, revising predictions
  • Summarizing the story
  • Sequencing the story
  • Identifying literary elements of character, setting, plot, problem, resolution
  • Identifying main idea and supporting details.
  • Identifying cause and effect relationships
  • Analyzing character traits
  • Drawing conclusions
  • Making inferences
  • Distinguishing between fact and opinion
  • Making connections to self-world, text
  • Identifying author’s purpose
  • Analyzing author’s and illustrator’s style
  • Identifying point of view
  • Making judgements with references to the text
  • Identifying theme and comparing pieces with similar themes
  • Comparing different versions of the same story
  • Identifying elements of theme, imagery, irony, mood flashback, foreshadowing, symbolism, rising action, conflict, falling action, climax, resolution, metaphor, simile
  • Comparing text between different sources
  • Identifying elements of newspaper and news articles
  • Using graphic organizers (T-chart, webs, flow charts, Venn diagram) to compare/contrast and organize story elements
  • Interpreting figurative language and quotations

Writing

  • Practicing cursive: formation, size, spacing
  • Writing journal entries and/or “quick-write” topics daily
  • Using quotation marks and writing dialogue
  • Using colons and semi-colons
  • Using conventions of capitalization and punctuation and spelling
  • Using appropriate paragraph structure and writing several related paragraphs
  • Develop topic with details, examples, facts, explanations.
  • Using the writing process:
    • Prewriting, drafting, conferencing, revising, editing, publishing
    • Using graphic organizers for pre-writing
    • Adding, deleting, reorganiz-ing for clarity and impact.
    • Using varied and descriptive writing style
    • Evaluating own and others’ pieces
  • Paraphrasing given text
  • Using signal words to provide clues to the organizational format (for example, in addition, finally, as a result)
  • Using the appropriate “writer’s voice” for different situations.
  • Writing book reviews, essays personal narratives, poems, research reports, news articles, friendly letters, business letters, fictional stories, biographies. Writing to inform, entertain, persuade.

Grammar/Usage/Vocabulary/Spelling

  • Creating word lists within different criteria
  • Writing, reading, using vocabulary words related to theme and appearing in literature selection.
  • Using Make-A-Word activity to develop awareness of word structure and patterns.
  • Creating word trees from Greek and Latin roots (vocabulary and spelling).
  • Using phonetic, structural, and contextual analysis to construct meaning from print.
  • Interpreting and creating word analogies
  • Using figurative language:
    • alliteration
    • onomatopoeia
    • simile
    • metaphor
    • personification
    • proverbs
    • idioms
  • Recognizing cliches, colloquialisms, jargon, and cultural expressions.
  • Identifying nouns, verbs, adjectives, adverbs, articles, pronouns, prepositions, interjections
  • Recognizing, using, and understanding:
    • Multi-meaning words
    • Homophones
    • Compound words
    • Synonyms and antonyms
    • Contractions
    • Singular and plural possessive
  • Using syllabification
  • Words Their Way: Word Study for Phonics, Vocabulary, and Spelling Instruction

Study Skills/Oral

  • Using dictionary to look up a word for spelling, meaning, syllabification, usage, pronunciation, part of speech, etymology
  • Using a variety of sources for obtaining information: dictionary, encyclopedia, atlas, thesaurus, electronic media, internet, oral interviews, newspaper, magazine.
  • Using graphic aids: charts, tables, diagrams, pictures, time lines, maps, photos, graphs
  • Using graphic organizers to collect and organize information
  • Sorting/organizing information from several sources
  • Taking notes from oral presentations.
  • Combining information from several sources into an outline
  • Organizing information from several sources into a report
  • Using/creating footnotes and bibliography
  • Participating in “oral shares” to school: reading chosen passage from book with attention to expression and delivery, reading original writing piece.
  • Presenting information through an oral presentation
  • Evaluating own and others’ presentations

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