Tāwhirimātea

Learning intentions:

Students will continue working on a range of comprehension strategies during whole class and small targets teaching groups.

Comprehension strategies: predicting, asking critical questions, making connections to text, self to text and text to world, critiquing and inferring.

Focus on maintaining expression, fluency and reading with the correct punctuation.

Since we didn't complete all the activities from the last week we need to carry on with it in week 4.

Term 4 Week 5

Reading

Term 4 Week 3/4

Reading

T4 Wk 1:

Students will continue working on a range of comprehension strategies during whole class and small targets teaching groups.

Comprehension strategies: predicting, asking critical questions, making connections to text, self to text and text to world, critiquing and inferring.

Focus on maintaining expression, fluency and reading with the correct punctuation.

Reading

T3 Wk 7/8 :

Students will continue working on a range of comprehension strategies during whole class and small targets teaching groups.

Comprehension strategies: predicting, asking critical questions, making connections to text, self to text and text to world, critiquing and inferring.

Focus on maintaining expression, fluency and reading with the correct punctuation.

Reading

T3 Wk 4 :

WALT ask and answer questions literal, inferred and applied questions.

  • Explore different types of open questions.

Sc: I can sort questions strips into 3 groups.

I can use the clues from the story and my prior knowledge to form up an idea or form an inference

Reading

T3 Wk 3 :

WALT sequence pictures to expand language and retell the story.

  • Infer and make predictions before/during reading

  • Develop understanding of unknown words by looking for clues in the text and using a dictionary.

Sc: I can put the picture in order and retell the story using my own words.

I can predict what the story might be about using clues or evident from a text

I can use the clues from the story and my prior knowledge to form up an idea or form an inference

Reading

T3 Wk 1 & 2 :

WALT Infer and make predictions before/during reading

  • Response to question with evidence from the text.

  • Develop understanding of unknown words by looking for clues in the text and using a dictionary.

Sc: I can read between the lines

I can predict what the story might be about using clues or evident from a text

I can use the clues from the story and my prior knowledge to form up an idea or form an inference

Reading

T2Wk 11:

WALT Infer and make predictions before/during reading

  • Response to question with evidence from the text.

  • Develop understanding of unknown words by looking for clues in the text and using a dictionary.

Sc: I can read between the lines

I can predict what the story might be about using clues or evident from a text

I can use the clues from the story and my prior knowledge to form up an idea or form an inference

Keep refer back to the video if you forget what inferencing is.

Making inferencing

Practice these question to gain further understanding about making inferences.

Reading

T2Wk 10:

WALT Infer and make predictions before/during reading

  • Response to question with evidence from the text.

  • Develop understanding of unknown words by looking for clues in the text and using a dictionary.

Sc: I can read between the lines

I can predict what the story might be about using clues or evident from a text

I can use the clues from the story and my prior knowledge to form up an idea or form an inference

Wk 10 - Reading activities

Follow up activities


Early finishers activity

Choose any activity that you haven't done before.

T2Wk 9:

WALT read for meaning and understanding. infer and make

  • Response to question with evidence from the text.

  • Develop understanding of unknown words by looking for clues in the text and using a dictionary.

Listen to the song attentively.

You can create a poster/comic or any other form of presenting the message that you have learnt from the song. Describe how you feel when you listen to the song.

Early finishers can choose several activities from the grid and complete it base on the text you read to show your understanding.

Wk 9

Choose a partner to work with.

Discuss the questions, read the text with the blank space then read it again with and try to fill in the missing words.


T2Wk 8:

WALT read for meaning and understanding.

  • Response to question with evidence from the text.

  • Develop understanding of unknown words by looking for clues in the text and using a dictionary.

Week 8 - Reading activities

Early finishers can choose as many activities that would like from the grid.

Further reading about Mana's dreaming job.

Week 8:

WALT summarise non-fiction text using a graphic organiser.

  • Develop understanding of unknown words by looking for clues in the text and using a dictionary.

Go on the url and click on the introduced predators.

Tawhirimatea

Term 1, Week 7: WALT summarise non-fiction text using a graphic organiser.

More reading about possum.

Pest and threats

The teina is going to choose a tuakana to work with.

Each group will choose a piece of reading to focus on.

Read the passage then summarise the main idea of the text using vivid and the calendar.

You are going to report back to the class.

Tawhirimatea

Term 1, Week 6: WALT response to questions using their own understanding and information from a text.

Skim through the reading and choose the new vocabulary then complete the vocabulary slides.

More reading about possum.

Pest and threats

The teina is going to choose a tuakana to work with.

Each group will choose a piece of reading to focus on.

Read the passage then summarise the main idea of the text using vivid and the calendar.

You are going to report back to the class.

Answer these questions using the text being read.

  1. Who introduced the possum to Aotearoa?

  2. Why is this a problem?

  3. When did the possum become a problem?

  4. Why did they bring it here in the first place?

  5. When did the possum arrive in New Zealand?

  6. Can you defend the action of the people that introduced the possum to New Zealand?

  7. How fast does it grow?

Use the map in the story to describe how fast do these pest grow and spread out across New Zealand and why?

  1. How could this be so harmful?

  2. How could we solve this problem?

  3. Identify the several ways that has been identified in the text of how to get rid of this pest.


Possum

Create a fact sheet about possum using the information that you have learnt.

You can use google slide, google drawing, doc or calendar paper with vivid.

Week 5

WALT: Ask critical questions about the text.

  • Predict what the text might be about.

  • Develop deep understanding about new information or context.

  • Develop understanding of unknown words by looking for clues

  • Summarise the story using their own words


  1. Prediction activity

  • What do I know about the text?

  • Fill in what you know using the diagram below before reading the text provided.

  • Write the title of the story in the middle.

Answer the questions using the text provided.

  1. What is the author's purpose for writing this text?

  2. Name five facts from the text and justify how you know they are facts?

  3. Name the main idea of the text and three supporting details.

  4. Describe the word kaitiaki using your own understanding.

  5. What was the author's viewpoint in this text?

  6. Why is the stream important?

  7. What 's happen to the stream?

  8. In this text, how do you think the stream became so unhealthy? What clues did you use?

  9. • What could be done to fix it?

  10. What connections can you make between this text and other texts you have read or your own experience?

  11. What comparisons can you make between the text and where you get food/water?

Cause and effect

Fill in the blank spaces using information from text.

Identify the causes and effect using the information from the text.

Week 3/4

WALT: Ask critical questions about the text.

  • Develop deep understanding about new information or context.

  • Develop understanding of unknown words by looking for clues

  • Retell the story using your own words.

  • Summarise the story using their own words.


Early finishers

Answer these questions using a story that you read or you can choose any other story in the same school journals.

  1. How does the story begin?

  2. What happen at the end of the story?

  3. Who is telling the story?

  4. Which part of the story do you like the best? Explain why?

  5. Which part of the story describe the setting?

  6. What is the problem faced with the character?

  7. Have you ever had an experience like this?

  8. If you were do write your own opening, what ideas would you borrow from this story?

  9. How has the author used descriptions to show that the character is happy/angry/afraid?

  10. Why did the author choose these setting? Do you agree with the author's opinion?

  • List down the key words, identify the meaning using clues from the text then look it up in the dictionary.

  • As a group they will read the text then come up with an idea of what they are going to make.

  • Brainstorm their ideas on an A3 paper

  • Write down their plan step by step

  1. What are do going to make?

  2. How are they going to make it?

  3. What sort of materials are they going to use?

  4. Divide the jobs so everyone will have a part to complete.

  • As a group they need to find a way to complete their project.

The bullet

Summarise the story using their own words.

Create a booklet using these instructions below.

  • Grab an A3 white paper, fold it into three folds.

  • Outside at the cover page you can draw the title and identify the author of the story.

  • Inside the booklet you can include these story elements. You can draw pictures and write few words to describe it.

  • Setting : Where and when the story does the story take place?

  • Characters: Who are the main characters and what are they like?

  • Plot: What are the sequence of events?

  • Conflict: What is the conflict. How do you know that?

  • How does the conflict get resolved?

  • If you were the author would you change the ending of the story? Explain your reasoning.


T1W2

Prior to seeing the teacher

Student will choose their buddy and together they need to complete the prediction activity sheet.

Prediction

After reading

Respond to the questions using information and your understanding of the text.

What is the story about? How do you know?

Why did the author write this story? Why do you think that?

What were the main idea of what you read? What were the supporting details that told you more about the main idea?

What did you find interesting as you were reading today?

Did you find any interesting word while you were reading? What was it? Use a dictionary to find out it meaning and write a sentence of your own using the interesting word you found?

Complete the inferring reading activity.

Learning intentions

WALT reading for meaning

WALT develop deep understanding about about the text

WALT understand new vocabulary

WALT ask critical questions to get more understanding of the text

I can retell the story using my own words.


Early finishers

Complete the Waitangi day pukapuka mahi.