Characteristics of the Text Genre Informational Text Text Structure

LESSON 22 TEACHER’S GUIDE Animal Homes by Rosalee Park Fountas-Pinnell Level E Informational Text Selection Summary A spider, bees, baby birds, duck...
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LESSON 22 TEACHER’S GUIDE

Animal Homes by Rosalee Park

Fountas-Pinnell Level E Informational Text Selection Summary A spider, bees, baby birds, ducks, a bear, a skunk, and a cheetah live in different kinds of homes. An animal’s home is close to food and water, is safe, and is the right size. Number of Words: 170

Characteristics of the Text Genre Text Structure

Content Themes and Ideas Language and Literary Features Sentence Complexity

Vocabulary

Words

Illustrations Book and Print Features

• Informational Text • Third-person exposition • Repeated introductory sentence addressed to reader: Look at the (animal name). • Question and answer on final pages • Various animals and their homes • Shared characteristics of animal homes • Animals live in many different kinds of homes. • Animals need places where they can find food, water, and safety. • Repetition of words and sentences • Text takes form of extended captions for photographs. • Sentences of eleven words or fewer • Repeated sentence pattern: Look at the ____. It lives in a____. • Statements, question, exclamation • Each page introduces animal name: spider, bees, birds, ducks, bear, skunk, cheetah • Each page introduces name of home: web, hive, nest, pond, cave, log, tree • Possibly unfamiliar word: cozy • Repeated high-frequency words • One- and two-syllable words; three-syllable word: animal • Plurals • Photos with labels support and extend text. • Photo above text on each of nine pages • Each sentence begins on a new line. • One- and two-line sentences

© 2006. Fountas, I.C. & Pinnell, G.S. Teaching for Comprehending and Fluency, Heinemann, Portsmouth, N.H. Copyright © by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company All rights reserved. No part of this work may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying or recording, or by any information storage or retrieval system, without the prior written permission of the copyright owner unless such copying is expressly permitted by federal copyright law. Permission is hereby granted to individual teachers using the corresponding (discipline) Leveled Readers to photocopy student worksheets from this publication in classroom quantities for instructional use and not for resale. Requests for information on other matters regarding duplication of this work should be addressed to Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company, Attn: Contracts, Copyrights, and Licensing, 9400 SouthPark Center Loop, Orlando, Florida 32819. Printed in the U.S.A. 978-0-547-30031-3 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 0940 15 14 13 12 11 10 09 If you have received these materials as examination copies free of charge, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company retains title to the materials and they may not be resold. Resale of examination copies is strictly prohibited. Possession of this publication in print format does not entitle users to convert this publication, or any portion of it, into electronic format.

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Animal Homes

by Rosalee Park

Build Background Read the title to children. Explain that the cover photograph shows a bald eagle and two baby eagles. Ask children what the eagles’ home is called. Anticipate the text with questions like these: Why is a big nest a good home for eagles? What are some other homes that animals live in?

Introduce the Text Guide children through the text, noting important ideas and helping with unfamiliar language and vocabulary so that they can read the text successfully. Point out the repeated sentence pattern, Look at the. Preview the photos to identify the animals. Here are some suggestions: Page 2: Tell children that this book gives information about different animals and the homes they live in. Suggested language: Turn to page 2. What animal is on this page? Where does it live? The sentences say: Look at the spider. It lives in a web. Say lives. Find the word lives and put your finger under it. Page 3: Now on page 3, what animal do you see? Look at the bees. What is the name of the home that bees live in? They live in a hive. Page 4: Remind children that they can use the information in the pictures to help them read. Look at the big eagle flying in the air. Then look at the baby birds. Where do the baby birds live? Page 7: Turn to page 7. The last sentence says: The log is cozy and warm. A cozy home is comfortable and just the right size. What are some cozy and warm places you have been? Now turn back to the beginning of the book to read about animals and their homes.

Words to Know baby

food

Grade 1

live

places 2

right

warm Lesson 22: Animal Homes

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Read

As children read, observe them carefully. Guide them as needed, using language that supports their problem solving ability.

Respond to the Text Personal Response

Invite children to share their personal responses to the book. Begin by asking what they liked best about the book, or what they found interesting. Suggested language: Which of the animals in this book have you seen in real life? Where did you see them?

Ways of Thinking As you discuss the text, make sure children understand these teaching points: Thinking Within the Text

Thinking Beyond the Text

Thinking About the Text

• Each animal lives in a different kind of home.

• Some animals make their own homes, and others live in homes made by nature.

• The photos show things that aren’t easy to see, like the inside of a beehive or a bear’s cave.

• Animals use their homes for different things, like sleeping, catching food, or taking care of babies.

• The writer uses the same sentence on more than one page.

• An animal’s home is close to food and water, safe, and the right size.

• When you see an animal, you could look for its home.

• The writer wants to show readers that animals’ homes are interesting.

© 2006. Fountas, I.C. & Pinnell, G.S. Teaching for Comprehending and Fluency, Heinemann, Portsmouth, N.H.

Choices for Support Fluency Invite children to prepare to read pages 9 and 10 aloud. Encourage them to read like a teacher who is showing and explaining interesting information. Remind them that a question ends with a slightly higher voice.

Phonemic Awareness and Word Work Provide practice as needed with words and sounds, using one of the following activities: • Vowel Sounds Have children listen as you say these words from Animal Homes and raise their hands each time they hear a word with a long e sound: tree, web, food, bees, honey, nest, swim, sleeps, log, cheetah, safe. • Word Hunt On a page from Animal Homes, have children find a word with a sound you say. Examples: Find a word on page 5 that ends with /m/. Find a word on page 6 that begins with /w/.

Grade 1

3

Lesson 22: Animal Homes

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Writing About Reading Critical Thinking Read the directions for children on BLM 22.7 and guide them in answering the questions.

Responding Read aloud the questions at the back of the book and help children complete the activities.

Target Comprehension Skill Conclusions Tell children that when they read a book with facts, they can put the facts together to think of new ideas. Model drawing a conclusion: Think Aloud

In Animal Homes, I read that a bird’s nest is high in a tree, that a skunk can use a log as a home, and that a cheetah sleeps in a tree. I can put those facts together to come up with a new idea: Many different animals use trees for homes.

Practice the Skill Ask children to reread the information about bees on page 3 and tell a new idea about it.

Writing Prompt Read aloud the following prompt. Have children draw and write their response, using the writing prompt on page 6. Choose an animal from Animal Homes. Draw a picture to show something else about the animal. Write about the animal.

Grade 1

4

Lesson 22: Animal Homes

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English Language Learners Front-Load Vocabulary Preview the book by showing children the photographs on pages 2–8, saying the words in the labels, and having children repeat the words. Oral Language Development Check the children’s comprehension, using a dialogue that best matches their English proficiency level. Speaker 1 is the teacher, Speaker 2 is the child. Beginning/ Early Intermediate

Intermediate

Early Advanced/ Advanced

Speaker 1: Where do ducks live?

Speaker 1: What does a spider use to catch food?

Speaker 1: What animal homes does this book show?

Speaker 2: It uses its web to catch food.

Speaker 2: The book shows a web, a hive, a nest, a pond, a cave, a log, and a tree.

Speaker 2: near a pond Speaker 1: Where do bees live? Speaker 2: They live in a hive. Speaker 1: What lives in the log? Speaker 2: a skunk

Speaker 1: Where does the bear sleep in winter?

Speaker 1: What does this sentence mean: “A good home is safe.”

Speaker 2: It sleeps in a cave. Speaker 1: Where do eagles live? Speaker 2: They live in a nest in a tree.

Speaker 2: The animal won’t get hurt in its home.

Lesson 22 BLACKLINE MASTER 22.7

Name

Think About It

Animal Homes Think About It

Write an answer to the question.

Responses may vary.

1. What is important about the size of an animal’s home?

An animal’s home needs to be the right size for the size of the animal.

Making Connections Think about another animal’s home. Write some sentences about the animal and its home.

Read directions to children. Think About It

9

Grade 1, Unit 5: Watch us Grow

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Grade 1

5

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Lesson 22: Animal Homes

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Name

Date

Animal Homes Choose an animal from Animal Homes. Draw a picture to show something else about the animal.

Write about the animal.

Grade 1

6

Lesson 22: Animal Homes

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Lesson 22 BLACKLINE MASTER 22.7

Name

Think About It

Animal Homes Think About It

Write an answer to the question. 1. What is important about the size of an animal’s home?

Making Connections Think about another animal’s home. Write some sentences about the animal and its home.

Grade 1

7

Lesson 22: Animal Homes

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Student

Lesson 22

Date

BLACKLINE MASTER 22.12

Animal Homes • LEVEL E page

6

Animal Homes Running Record Form

Selection Text

Errors

Self-Corrections

Accuracy Rate

Self-Correction Rate

Look at the bear. It sleeps in a cave in the winter.

7

Look at the skunk. This skunk lives in a log. The log is cozy and warm!

8

Look at the cheetah. It hunts on the ground. Then it sleeps in a tree.

Comments:

(# words read correctly/43 × 100)

(# errors + # Self-Corrections/ Self-Corrections)

% 1:

Read word correctly

Code ✓

cat

Repeated word, sentence, or phrase

®

Omission

— cat

cat

Grade 1

Behavior

Error 0 0 1

8

Substitution

Code cut cat

1

Self-corrects

cut sc cat

0

Insertion

the

1

Word told

T cat

cat



Error

1413326

Behavior

1

Lesson 22: Animal Homes

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