May 3-7, 2021

Dear Families,

The days are flying by so quickly! The flowers are blooming, the trees are getting lots of leaves, and your children are almost officially third graders! I can’t put into words how much I am going to miss them.

Thank you for all your support with reading, spelling, and all the other things you do at home for school! Your kids have grown so much and impress me with their skills every day. Keep up the good work and let’s  finish this year strong!

MRS. P. 🙂

UPCOMING DATES:
  • 5/5/21 ~ At-Home learning Day  (Use Canvas for assignments)
  • 5/7/21 ~ Cogat test 8:30-9:30
  • 5/11/21 ~Cogat test 8:30-9:30 and 12:00-1:00
  • 5/26/21~Last Day of School: 12:00 dismissal

LANGUAGE ARTS (CKLA SKILLS):

Unit 6 Reader: The War of 1812

The Reader for this unit is The War of 1812. The War of 1812 is important historically as it was the first foreign conflict that the United States faced as a young nation. Although students have been listening to nonfiction selections in Listening & Learning since Kindergarten, this is the first nonfiction Reader students read as part of the Core Knowledge Language Arts (CKLA) program in Grade 2.

SPELLING: (20 Words and Alphabetical Order)

FOCUS: At this point, students have learned at least one way to write nearly every sound in English, with the exception of the very rare /zh/ as in treasure.

Here are some patterns for you to be aware of:

  1. n’ and ‘kn’ > /n/
  2. ‘wr’ and ‘r’ > /r/
  3. ‘w’ and ‘wh’ > /w/
  4. ‘g’ and ‘j’ > /j/
  5. ‘f’ and ‘ff’ > /f/

SPELLING: Focus: Related to The War of 1812

  1. general
  2. mortar
  3. ragtag
  4. knotty
  5. fired
  6. peace
  7. treaty
  8. proud
  9. soldiers
  10. Mississippi
  11. traders
  12. streak
  13. defend
  14. river
  15. goods
  16. highways
  17. drains
  18. hickory
  19. orphan
  20. *New Orleans*

GRAMMAR:

In Unit 6, students will continue to review grammar skills introduced in previous units. In addition to the parts of speech that they already know— common and proper nouns; present/ past/future-tense verbs; and adjectives—students will learn to identify and use adverbs. The focus of the remaining grammar lessons is on the sentence as a unit. Building on their knowledge of subjects and predicates, students will learn to identify complete versus incomplete sentences. They will also learn to identify run-on sentences, as well as ways to correct these sentences. Finally, they will begin to work on writing increasingly detailed sentences.

WRITING:

In Grade 2 CKLA, students have thus far practiced writing personal narratives, as well as writing new story endings and story summaries. They have also practiced persuasive writing in the context of a friendly letter. At the end of this unit, they will be introduced to expository or report writing. This form of writing is well suited to the nonfiction text they are reading.

MATH: Review of skills

LISTENING AND LEARNING: Immigration

  • E Pluribus Unum
  • A Little Giant Comes to America
  • Life in the City
  • From Ireland to New York City
  • Gold Mountain
  • A Land of Opportunity
  • A Mosaic of Immigrants
  • Becoming a Citizen
  • We the People
  • Immigration and Citizenship

Core Vocabulary:

The following list contains all of the core vocabulary words in Immigration in the forms in which they appear in the read-alouds or,
in some instances, in the “Introducing the Read-Aloud” section at the beginning of the lesson. Boldfaced words in the list have an associated Word Work activity. The inclusion of the words on this list does not mean that students are immediately expected to be able to use all
of these words on their own. However, through repeated exposure throughout the lessons, they should acquire a good understanding of most of these words and begin to use some of them in conversation.

Lesson 1

  • ancestors
  • freedom
  • immigrants
  • immigrate
  • push and pull factors

Lesson 2

  • center
  • interpreter
  • liberty
  • opportunity

Lesson 3

  • customs
  • ethnic
  • hostile
  • newcomers
  • traditional

Lesson 4

  • afford
  • blight
  • emigrated

Lesson 5

  • characters
  • exhausting
  • honor
  • responsibilities
  • wages

Lesson 6

  • homestead
  • legally
  • officially
  • support

Lesson 7

  • descendants
  • famine
  • settlers

Lesson 8

  • citizen
  • naturalized citizen
  • principles
  • rights

Lesson 9

  • amendments
  • the Bill of Rights
  • consent
  • the Constitution
  • disagreements

Lesson 10

  • guaranteed
  • jury
  • refugees

Students will: Expectations of Learning

Explain the term immigrant

Describe reasons immigrants leave their home countries to make a new home in the United States (e.g., push and pull factors)

Explain why the United States was and is called the “land of opportunity”

Identify the meaning of E Pluribus Unum

Explain the significance of Ellis Island and the Statue of Liberty

Describe how immigration has brought millions of newcomers to the United States

Describe why large populations of immigrants settled in major cities such as New York, Chicago, Philadelphia, Detroit, Cleveland, Boston, and San Francisco

Describe why some immigrants settled in the Midwest

Describe how their ancestors may have been immigrants who helped make America the country that it is today

Explain what it means to be a citizen of a country

Identify ways that a person becomes an American citizen

Identify that the government of the United States is based on the Constitution, the highest law of our land

Identify James Madison as the “Father of the Constitution”

 Explain that the United States is founded on the principle of consent of the governed, American citizens: “We the People”

Explain the basic functions of government (making and enforcing laws; settling disputes; protecting rights and liberties; etc.) by making analogies to familiar settings such as the family, the school, and the community

Identify the Bill of Rights as a document amending the Constitution

Describe the rights and responsibilities of an American citizen

Demonstrate familiarity with the songs “This Land Is Your Land”and “The Star-Spangled Banner”

 

 

April 26-30, 2021

DEAR FAMILIES,

THIS IS WHAT WE WILL BE DOING!

MRS. P. 🙂

UPCOMING DATES:
  • 4/26-4/30~MSES Book Fair
  • 5/5/21 ~ At-Home learning Day  (Use Canvas for assignments)
  • 5/7/21 ~ Cogat test 8:30-9:30
  • 5/11/21 ~Cogat test 8:30-9:30 and 12:00-1:00
  • 5/26/21~Last Day of School: 12:00 dismissal

LANGUAGE ARTS (CKLA SKILLS):

Unit 6 Reader: The War of 1812

The Reader for this unit is The War of 1812. The War of 1812 is important historically as it was the first foreign conflict that the United States faced as a young nation. Although students have been listening to nonfiction selections in Listening & Learning since Kindergarten, this is the first nonfiction Reader students read as part of the Core Knowledge Language Arts (CKLA) program in Grade 2.

SPELLING: (20 Words and Alphabetical Order)

FOCUS: At this point, students have learned at least one way to write nearly every sound in English, with the exception of the very rare /zh/ as in treasure.

Here are some patterns for you to be aware of:

  1. n’ and ‘kn’ > /n/
  2. ‘wr’ and ‘r’ > /r/
  3. ‘w’ and ‘wh’ > /w/
  4. ‘g’ and ‘j’ > /j/
  5. ‘f’ and ‘ff’ > /f/

SPELLING: Focus: Related to The War of 1812

  1. ransacked
  2. White House
  3. port
  4. harbor
  5. flag
  6. stripes
  7. ship
  8. construct
  9. commander
  10. rockets
  11. McHenry
  12. burned
  13. brave
  14. poem
  15. stitching
  16. anthem
  17. dawn
  18. fifteen
  19. giant
  20. *bomb*

GRAMMAR:

In Unit 6, students will continue to review grammar skills introduced in previous units. In addition to the parts of speech that they already know— common and proper nouns; present/ past/future-tense verbs; and adjectives—students will learn to identify and use adverbs. The focus of the remaining grammar lessons is on the sentence as a unit. Building on their knowledge of subjects and predicates, students will learn to identify complete versus incomplete sentences. They will also learn to identify run-on sentences, as well as ways to correct these sentences. Finally, they will begin to work on writing increasingly detailed sentences.

WRITING:

In Grade 2 CKLA, students have thus far practiced writing personal narratives, as well as writing new story endings and story summaries. They have also practiced persuasive writing in the context of a friendly letter. At the end of this unit, they will be introduced to expository or report writing. This form of writing is well suited to the nonfiction text they are reading.

MATH:

CHAPTER 19: Shapes and Patterns

i-Ready Math Practice or Games

Money and Time Practice

(Pull out that extra change/bills. Tell the time on an analog clock whenever you are thinking about it! 🙂

Multiplying and Dividing Numbers 0,1,2,3,5, and 10

Word Problems regrouping in ones, tens, and hundreds place

LISTENING AND LEARNING: Insects

  • Insects Everywhere!
  • What Makes an Insect an Insect?
  • Life Cycles of Insects
  • Social Insects: Bees and Wasps
  • Social Insects: Ants and Termites
  • Insects That Glow and Sing
  • Armored Tanks of the Insect World
  • Friend or Foe?

Core Vocabulary:

The following list contains all of the core vocabulary words in Insects in the forms in which they appear in the domain. These words appear in the read-alouds or, in some instances, in the “Introducing the Read-Aloud” section at the beginning of the lesson. The inclusion of the words on this list does not mean that students are immediately expected to be able to use all of these words on their own. However, through repeated exposure throughout all lessons, they should acquire a good understanding of most of these words and begin to use some of them in conversation.

Lesson 1

  • habitats
  • host
  • insects
  • social
  • solitary

Lesson 2

  • abdomen
  • antennae
  • exoskeletons
  • microscopic
  • thorax

Lesson 3

  • larva
  • metamorphosis
  • molt
  • nymph
  • progression
  • pupa

Lesson 4

  • colonies
  • cooperate
  • drones
  • pollen
  • societies

Lesson 5

  • aggressive
  • chambers
  • destructive
  • emit
  • nurseries

Lesson 6

  • bioluminescence
  • forelegs
  • lanterns
  • transparent
  • tymbals

Lesson 7

  • adapt
  • armor
  • beetles
  • elytra
  • mimicry

Lesson 8

  • entomologist
  • extinction
  • foe
  • pesticides
  • pollinators

Students will: Expectations of Learning

Explain that insects are the largest group of animals on Earth

Explain that there are many different types of insects

Explain that most insects live solitary lives, but some, such as honeybees, paper wasps, ants, and termites are social

Explain that insects live in virtually every habitat on Earth, with the exception of the oceans

Classify and identify particular insects as small, six-legged animals with three main body parts

Identify and describe the three main body parts of insects: head, thorax, and abdomen

Identify the placement and/or purpose of an insect’s body parts

Describe an insect’s exoskeleton

Explain why spiders are not insects

Describe the life cycles and the processes of complete and incomplete metamorphosis

Describe how some insects look like miniature versions of adults when they are born from eggs

Explain why some insects molt

Describe how some insects go through four distinct stages of development, including egg, larva, pupa, and adult

Distinguish between social and solitary insects

Describe how all members of a social insect colony come from one queen

Describe the roles of honeybee workers, drones, and queens

Describe how honeybees communicate with one another through “dances”

Describe the social behavior of ants and ant colonies

Describe the roles of worker ants, males, and queens

Compare and contrast grasshoppers and crickets

Identify ways in which insects can be helpful to people

Identify ways in which insects can be harmful to people

April 19-23, 2021

DEAR FAMILIES,

THIS IS WHAT WE WILL BE DOING!

MRS. P. 🙂

UPCOMING DATES:
  • 4/22/21~ Earth Day
  • 4/23/21 ~ At-Home learning Day (Use Canvas for assignments)
  • 4/26-4/30~MSES Book Fair
  • 5/5/21 ~ At-Home learning Day  (Use Canvas for assignments)
  • 5/7/21 ~ Cogat test 8:30-9:30
  • 5/11/21 ~Cogat test 8:30-9:30 and 12:00-1:00
  • 5/26/21~Last Day of School: 12:00 dismissal

LANGUAGE ARTS (CKLA SKILLS):

Unit 6 Reader: The War of 1812

The Reader for this unit is The War of 1812. The War of 1812 is important historically as it was the first foreign conflict that the United States faced as a young nation. Although students have been listening to nonfiction selections in Listening & Learning since Kindergarten, this is the first nonfiction Reader students read as part of the Core Knowledge Language Arts (CKLA) program in Grade 2.

SPELLING: (20 Words and Alphabetical Order)

FOCUS: At this point, students have learned at least one way to write nearly every sound in English, with the exception of the very rare /zh/ as in treasure.

Here are some patterns for you to be aware of:

  1. n’ and ‘kn’ > /n/
  2. ‘wr’ and ‘r’ > /r/
  3. ‘w’ and ‘wh’ > /w/
  4. ‘g’ and ‘j’ > /j/
  5. ‘f’ and ‘ff’ > /f/

SPELLING: Focus: Related to The War of 1812

  1. battle
  2. British
  3. cannon
  4. Congress
  5. death
  6. Dolley
  7. hawks
  8. impressment
  9. Ironsides
  10. Madison
  11. march
  12. merchants
  13. monarchy
  14. navy
  15. painting
  16. paved
  17. president
  18. support
  19. troops
  20. Washington

GRAMMAR:

In Unit 6, students will continue to review grammar skills introduced in previous units. In addition to the parts of speech that they already know— common and proper nouns; present/ past/future-tense verbs; and adjectives—students will learn to identify and use adverbs. The focus of the remaining grammar lessons is on the sentence as a unit. Building on their knowledge of subjects and predicates, students will learn to identify complete versus incomplete sentences. They will also learn to identify run-on sentences, as well as ways to correct these sentences. Finally, they will begin to work on writing increasingly detailed sentences.

WRITING:

In Grade 2 CKLA, students have thus far practiced writing personal narratives, as well as writing new story endings and story summaries. They have also practiced persuasive writing in the context of a friendly letter. At the end of this unit, they will be introduced to expository or report writing. This form of writing is well suited to the nonfiction text they are reading.

MATH:

CHAPTER 19: Shapes and Patterns

i-Ready Math Practice or Games

Money and Time Practice

(Pull out that extra change/bills. Tell the time on an analog clock whenever you are thinking about it! 🙂

Multiplying and Dividing Numbers 0,1,2,3,5, and 10

Word Problems regrouping in ones, tens, and hundreds place

LISTENING AND LEARNING: Insects

  • Insects Everywhere!
  • What Makes an Insect an Insect?
  • Life Cycles of Insects
  • Social Insects: Bees and Wasps
  • Social Insects: Ants and Termites
  • Insects That Glow and Sing
  • Armored Tanks of the Insect World
  • Friend or Foe?

Core Vocabulary:

The following list contains all of the core vocabulary words in Insects in the forms in which they appear in the domain. These words appear in the read-alouds or, in some instances, in the “Introducing the Read-Aloud” section at the beginning of the lesson. The inclusion of the words on this list does not mean that students are immediately expected to be able to use all of these words on their own. However, through repeated exposure throughout all lessons, they should acquire a good understanding of most of these words and begin to use some of them in conversation.

Lesson 1

  • habitats
  • host
  • insects
  • social
  • solitary

Lesson 2

  • abdomen
  • antennae
  • exoskeletons
  • microscopic
  • thorax

Lesson 3

  • larva
  • metamorphosis
  • molt
  • nymph
  • progression
  • pupa

Lesson 4

  • colonies
  • cooperate
  • drones
  • pollen
  • societies

Lesson 5

  • aggressive
  • chambers
  • destructive
  • emit
  • nurseries

Lesson 6

  • bioluminescence
  • forelegs
  • lanterns
  • transparent
  • tymbals

Lesson 7

  • adapt
  • armor
  • beetles
  • elytra
  • mimicry

Lesson 8

  • entomologist
  • extinction
  • foe
  • pesticides
  • pollinators

Students will: Expectations of Learning

Explain that insects are the largest group of animals on Earth

Explain that there are many different types of insects

Explain that most insects live solitary lives, but some, such as honeybees, paper wasps, ants, and termites are social

Explain that insects live in virtually every habitat on Earth, with the exception of the oceans

Classify and identify particular insects as small, six-legged animals with three main body parts

Identify and describe the three main body parts of insects: head, thorax, and abdomen

Identify the placement and/or purpose of an insect’s body parts

Describe an insect’s exoskeleton

Explain why spiders are not insects

Describe the life cycles and the processes of complete and incomplete metamorphosis

Describe how some insects look like miniature versions of adults when they are born from eggs

Explain why some insects molt

Describe how some insects go through four distinct stages of development, including egg, larva, pupa, and adult

Distinguish between social and solitary insects

Describe how all members of a social insect colony come from one queen

Describe the roles of honeybee workers, drones, and queens

Describe how honeybees communicate with one another through “dances”

Describe the social behavior of ants and ant colonies

Describe the roles of worker ants, males, and queens

Compare and contrast grasshoppers and crickets

Identify ways in which insects can be helpful to people

Identify ways in which insects can be harmful to people

April 12-16, 2021

DEAR FAMILIES,

THIS IS WHAT WE WILL BE DOING!

MRS. P. 🙂

UPCOMING DATES:
  • 4/23/21 ~ At-Home learning Day (Use Canvas for assignments)
  • 4/26-4/30~MSES Book Fair
  • 5/5/21 ~ At-Home learning Day  (Use Canvas for assignments)
  • 5/7/21 ~ Cogat test 8:30-9:30
  • 5/11/21 ~Cogat test 8:30-9:30 and 12:00-1:00
  • 5/26/21~Last Day of School: 12:00 dismissal

LANGUAGE ARTS (CKLA SKILLS):

Unit 6 Reader: The War of 1812

The Reader for this unit is The War of 1812. The War of 1812 is important historically as it was the first foreign conflict that the United States faced as a young nation. Although students have been listening to nonfiction selections in Listening & Learning since Kindergarten, this is the first nonfiction Reader students read as part of the Core Knowledge Language Arts (CKLA) program in Grade 2.

SPELLING: (20 Words and Alphabetical Order)

FOCUS: At this point, students have learned at least one way to write nearly every sound in English, with the exception of the very rare /zh/ as in treasure.

Here are some patterns for you to be aware of:

  1. n’ and ‘kn’ > /n/
  2. ‘wr’ and ‘r’ > /r/
  3. ‘w’ and ‘wh’ > /w/
  4. ‘g’ and ‘j’ > /j/
  5. ‘f’ and ‘ff’ > /f/

SPELLING: Focus: Pattern: -ge/-dge/-tion

  1. revenge
  2. large
  3. judge
  4. fudge
  5. nudge
  6. huge
  7. nation
  8. attention
  9. direction
  10. fraction
  11. locomotion
  12. stations
  13. option
  14. action
  15. change
  16. range
  17. cottage
  18. addition
  19. caption
  20. Europe (tricky word)

GRAMMAR:

In Unit 6, students will continue to review grammar skills introduced in previous units. In addition to the parts of speech that they already know— common and proper nouns; present/ past/future-tense verbs; and adjectives—students will learn to identify and use adverbs. The focus of the remaining grammar lessons is on the sentence as a unit. Building on their knowledge of subjects and predicates, students will learn to identify complete versus incomplete sentences. They will also learn to identify run-on sentences, as well as ways to correct these sentences. Finally, they will begin to work on writing increasingly detailed sentences.

WRITING:

In Grade 2 CKLA, students have thus far practiced writing personal narratives, as well as writing new story endings and story summaries. They have also practiced persuasive writing in the context of a friendly letter. At the end of this unit, they will be introduced to expository or report writing. This form of writing is well suited to the nonfiction text they are reading.

MATH:

CHAPTER 17: Picture Graphs/Data

i-Ready Math Practice or Games

Money and Time Practice

(Pull out that extra change/bills. Tell the time on an analog clock whenever you are thinking about it! 🙂

Multiplying and Dividing Numbers 0,1,2,3,5, and 10

Word Problems regrouping in ones, tens, and hundreds place

Spiral Assessments : addition with/without regrouping and subtraction with/without regrouping

Basic Facts: Dice/Cards                                          

Focus: Coins/Bills to $20/values/real world problems

Listening and Learning Domain: The U.S. Civil War

  • Harriet Tubman, Part I
  • Harriet Tubman, Part II
  • The Controversy Over Slavery
  • Abraham Lincoln
  • The Division of the United States
  • The War Begins
  • Robert E. Lee
  • Clara Barton
  • The Emancipation Proclamation
  • Ulysses S. Grant
  • The End of the War

Students will be able to:

Demonstrate familiarity with slavery and the controversy over slavery in the United States

Describe the life and contributions of Harriet Tubman

Identify the Underground Railroad as a system of escape for enslaved Africans in the United States

Demonstrate familiarity with the poems “Harriet Tubman” and “Lincoln”

Demonstrate familiarity with the song “Follow the Drinking Gourd”

Differentiate between the North and the South

Describe the adult life and contributions of Abraham Lincoln

Differentiate between the Union and the Confederacy and the states associated with each

Describe why the southern states seceded from the United States

Identify the U.S. Civil War, or the War Between the States, as a war waged because of differences between the North and the South

Identify the people of the North as “Yankees” and those of the South as “Rebels”

Define the differences between the Union and the Confederacy

Explain Abraham Lincoln’s role in keeping the Union together during the U.S. Civil War

Identify Robert E. Lee as the commander of the Confederate Army

Explain why Lee was reluctant to command either the Union or Confederate Army

Identify Clara Barton as the “Angel of the Battlefield” and the founder of the American Red Cross

Describe the work of the American Red Cross

Identify Abraham Lincoln as the author of the EmancipationProclamation

Explain the significance of the Emancipation Proclamation

Identify Ulysses S. Grant as the commander of the Union Army

Explain that the North’s victory re-united the North and the South as one country and ended slavery

Vocabulary: Bolded are words to master

Lesson 1: plantations, slavery, survival, value, wages

Lesson 2: conductor, contributions, gourd, passengers, rebellious

Lesson 3: abolitionists, cotton, agriculture, economy, factories

Lesson 4: candidates, debates, expand, government, politicians

Lesson 5: Confederacy, deleted, heritage, seceded, Union

Lesson 6: civilians, Civil War, clash, devastated, flee, Rebels

Lesson 7: advisors, frail, generals, oath, wastelands

Lesson 8: compassionate, countless, disasters, wounded

Lesson 9: abolished, Cabinet, emancipation, proclamation, scroll

Lesson 10: ammunition, defeat, rations, surrendered, Yankees

Lesson 11: equality, monument, prosperity, ransacked, rival, United

April 5-9, 2021

DEAR FAMILIES,

THIS IS WHAT WE WILL BE DOING!

MRS. P. 🙂

UPCOMING DATES:
  • 4/7/21 ~ At-Home learning Day (Use Canvas for assignments)
  • 4/8/21~Class Pictures Outdoors
  • 4/23/21 ~ At-Home learning Day (Use Canvas for assignments)
  • 4/26-4/30~MSES Book Fair
  • 5/5/21 ~ At-Home learning Day  (Use Canvas for assignments)
  • 5/7/21 ~ Cogat test 8:30-9:30
  • 5/11/21 ~Cogat test 8:30-9:30 and 12:00-1:00
  • 5/26/21~Last Day of School: 12:00 dismissal

LANGUAGE ARTS (CKLA SKILLS):

Unit 6 Reader: The War of 1812

The Reader for this unit is The War of 1812. The War of 1812 is important historically as it was the first foreign conflict that the United States faced as a young nation. Although students have been listening to nonfiction selections in Listening & Learning since Kindergarten, this is the first nonfiction Reader students read as part of the Core Knowledge Language Arts (CKLA) program in Grade 2.

SPELLING: (20 Words and Alphabetical Order)

FOCUS: At this point, students have learned at least one way to write nearly every sound in English, with the exception of the very rare /zh/ as in treasure.

Here are some patterns for you to be aware of:

  1. n’ and ‘kn’ > /n/
  2. ‘wr’ and ‘r’ > /r/
  3. ‘w’ and ‘wh’ > /w/
  4. ‘g’ and ‘j’ > /j/
  5. ‘f’ and ‘ff’ > /f/

SPELLING: Focus: Bossy R (ar/er/ir/ur/or)

    1. after
    2. barber
    3. camera
    4. difference
    5. birthday
    6. swirling
    7. thirteen
    8. chirping
    9. burden
    10. furnace
    11. hamburger
    12. turtle
    13. marker
    14. parcel
    15. ramparts
    16. safari
    17. informer
    18. organize
    19. perform
    20. war

GRAMMAR:

In Unit 6, students will continue to review grammar skills introduced in previous units. In addition to the parts of speech that they already know— common and proper nouns; present/ past/future-tense verbs; and adjectives—students will learn to identify and use adverbs. The focus of the remaining grammar lessons is on the sentence as a unit. Building on their knowledge of subjects and predicates, students will learn to identify complete versus incomplete sentences. They will also learn to identify run-on sentences, as well as ways to correct these sentences. Finally, they will begin to work on writing increasingly detailed sentences.

WRITING:

In Grade 2 CKLA, students have thus far practiced writing personal narratives, as well as writing new story endings and story summaries. They have also practiced persuasive writing in the context of a friendly letter. At the end of this unit, they will be introduced to expository or report writing. This form of writing is well suited to the nonfiction text they are reading.

MATH:

CHAPTER 17: Picture Graphs/Data

i-Ready Math Practice or Games

Money and Time Practice

(Pull out that extra change/bills. Tell the time on an analog clock whenever you are thinking about it! 🙂

Multiplying and Dividing Numbers 0,1,2,3,5, and 10

Word Problems regrouping in ones, tens, and hundreds place

Spiral Assessments : addition with/without regrouping and subtraction with/without regrouping

Basic Facts: Dice/Cards                                          

Focus: Coins/Bills to $20/values/real world problems

CKLA DOMAIN: THE U.S. CIVIL WAR

  • Harriet Tubman, Part I
  • Harriet Tubman, Part II
  • The Controversy Over Slavery
  • Abraham Lincoln
  • The Division of the United States
  • The War Begins
  • Robert E. Lee
  • Clara Barton
  • The Emancipation Proclamation
  • Ulysses S. Grant
  • The End of the War

Students will be able to:

Demonstrate familiarity with slavery and the controversy over slavery in the United States

Describe the life and contributions of Harriet Tubman

Identify the Underground Railroad as a system of escape for enslaved Africans in the United States

Demonstrate familiarity with the poems “Harriet Tubman” and “Lincoln”

Demonstrate familiarity with the song “Follow the Drinking Gourd”

Differentiate between the North and the South

Describe the adult life and contributions of Abraham Lincoln

Differentiate between the Union and the Confederacy and the states associated with each

Describe why the southern states seceded from the United States

Identify the U.S. Civil War, or the War Between the States, as a war waged because of differences between the North and the South

Identify the people of the North as “Yankees” and those of the South as “Rebels”

Define the differences between the Union and the Confederacy

Explain Abraham Lincoln’s role in keeping the Union together during the U.S. Civil War

Identify Robert E. Lee as the commander of the Confederate Army

Explain why Lee was reluctant to command either the Union or Confederate Army

Identify Clara Barton as the “Angel of the Battlefield” and the founder of the American Red Cross

Describe the work of the American Red Cross

Identify Abraham Lincoln as the author of the Emancipation Proclamation

Explain the significance of the Emancipation Proclamation

Identify Ulysses S. Grant as the commander of the Union Army

Explain that the North’s victory re-united the North and the South as one country and ended slavery

Vocabulary: Bolded are words to master

Lesson 1: plantations, slavery, survival, value, wages

Lesson 2: conductor, contributions, gourd, passengers, rebellious

Lesson 3: abolitionists, cotton, agriculture, economy, factories

Lesson 4: candidates, debates, expand, government, politicians

Lesson 5: Confederacy, deleted, heritage, seceded, Union

Lesson 6: civilians, Civil War, clash, devastated, flee, Rebels

Lesson 7: advisors, frail, generals, oath, wastelands

Lesson 8: compassionate, countless, disasters, wounded

Lesson 9: abolished, Cabinet, emancipation, proclamation, scroll

Lesson 10: ammunition, defeat, rations, surrendered, Yankees

Lesson 11: equality, monument, prosperity, ransacked, rival, United