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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
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| 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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