WEEK OF FEB. 22,2010 4TH GRADE READING AND LANGUAGE ARTS

REMINDERS:

1. Please remember to cover all soft-covered books. Some children have not covered any and there are no extra copies if they rip.

2. Remember to read the purple assignment book and check the HW folder each night to know your child's homework for each day. Also, check your child’s notebooks to see what they are doing in class or if I have written you a note. Homework will not be accepted late. If the children are absent, they should get their notes and HW assignments from a friend or myself and complete them within 2 days of their return to school. Anything not handed in will be given a grade of 0 in the SIS system.

3. Your child needs to remember to bring all of their school supplies every day. Children do not have pens, pencils, or looseleaf for class. Being organized, prepared, and responsible is all part of good conduct.

4. The children were given the book Stuart Little to read. The notes were started in the back of the Reading NB. The children should complete the notes on their own. The Book Test will be Thursday, 2/25.

TESTS:

Spelling Test- Friday, 2/26

Vocabulary Test- Friday, 2/26

Book Test- Thursday, 2/25

Language Arts Test- Tuesday, 3/2 (Study pgs. 338-360 in the Voyages Text). Pronouns will not be included on this test.

VOCABULARY: definitions can be found in the Vocabulary NB (Test Friday, 2/26)

  1. kidnap- (v) to seize or hold a person by force, sometimes to get a ransom.
  2. legend- (n) a story or group of stories handed down for generations and believed to have some type of historical basis
  3. mauve- (adj.) any of several shades of pale or light purple
  4. navy- 1. (n) a nation’s entire sea force; 2. (adj) a very dark, purplish blue color (navy blue).
  5. pale-(adj) a whitish or colorless complexion

2. Reading Vocabulary Words from The Stranger: (definitions will be written in the Reading NB)

barren, crops, sprout, wilt, draft, etched, fascinated, frost, parlor, terror, timid, drab, hermit, hypnotized

SPELLING- Words with –ed and –ing (The Stranger)

watched, watching, danced, dancing, studied, studying, stopped, stopping, dried, drying, happened, happening, noticed, noticing, robbed, robbing, slipped, slipping, hurried, hurrying

Challenge Words:

answered, answering, magnified, magnifying, interfered, interfering.

LANGUAGE ARTS: Third Quarter Work

Composition:

The children will be working on writing descriptive paragraphs (Chapter 3 in Voyages).

Grammar and Mechanics: pgs. 338-373

Noun: is a word that names a person (girl), place (school), or a thing (ball).

Common noun: names any person, place, or thing.

Proper noun: names a particular person, place, or thing. Each proper noun begins with a capital letter.

eg. teacher is a common noun; Ms. Larios is a proper noun.

Singular noun: names one person (boy), place (school), or thing (ball).

Plural noun: names more than one person, place, or thing.

Add –s or –es to make most nouns plural. For nouns that end in a consonant and y, change y to I and add –es. Add –es to nouns that end in s, ss, x, ch, or sh.

eg. boy- boys, girl-girls, box-boxes, glass-glasses, lunch-lunches, dish-dishes, bus-buses, party-parties, candy-candies, holiday-holidays

Irregular plural noun- The plurals of some nouns are not formed by adding –s or –es to the singular noun. These are irregular plural nouns. These should be memorized because they do not follow any rules.

eg. ox- oxen, child-children, tooth-teeth, foot-feet, mouse-mice, woman-women, goose-geese, wolf-wolves, wife-wives, leaf-leaves, wife-wives.

Some nouns have the same singular and plural forms:

Singular Possessive Nouns- A possessive noun shows possession or ownership. A singular possessive noun shows that one person or thing owns something. To form the singular possessive, add an apostrophe and the letter s (-‘s) to a singular noun.

eg. Maria’s bookbag is heavy. (Maria’s bookbag means the bookbag belongs to Maria)

The car’s tire was flat. (Car’s tire means that the tire belongs to the car)

Plural Possessive Nouns- A plural possessive shows that more than one person or thing owns something. To form the plural possessive of regular nouns, add an apostrophe (‘) after the –s of the plural form. Remember to form the plural of a regular noun before adding the apostrophe.

eg. boy (singular), boys (plural), boy’s (singular possessive), boys’ (plural possessive)

baby (singular), babies (plural), baby’s (singular possessive), babies’ (plural possessive).

man (singular), men (plural), man’s (singular possessive), men’s (plural possessive)

ox (singular), oxen (plural), ox’s (singular possessive), oxen’s (plural possessive)

Nouns as Subjects- a noun may be used as a simple subject of a sentence. The subject tells what the sentence is about. It tells who or what is or does something.

eg. The sea can be rough. Sea is the noun that tells what can be rough (simple subject).

Nouns as Direct Objects- a noun may be used as the direct object of a sentence. The direct object tells who or what receives the action of the verb.

eg. The Egyptians built pyramids. The Egyptians built what? The noun pyramids is the direct object of the sentence. It tells what the Egyptians built.

Nouns as Subject Complements- a subject complement gives information about the subject. It follows a linking verb such as the verb be and its various forms (am, is, are, was, were).A noun used as a subject complement renames the subject.

eg. Stuart Little is a mouse. Mouse is used as a subject complement because it follows the linking verb is and renames the subject of the sentence (Stuart Little).

Pronouns- personal pronouns are words that take the place of a noun. They refer to the person speaking; the person spoken to; or the person, place, or thing spoken about. They are first person, second person, or third person.

List of personal pronouns:

I he she we it you

me her him us its yours

mine hers his ours

First Person (singular) I, me, mine (plural) we, us, ours

Second Person (singular) you, yours (plural) you, yours

Third Person (singular) he, him, his (plural) they, them, theirs

she, her, hers, it, its

Subject Pronoun-is a pronoun that is used as the subject of the sentence.

List of Subject Pronouns: Singular- I, you, he, she, it; Plural- we, you, they

eg. I dance. He dances. We dance.

Object Pronoun- is a pronoun that is used after an action verb in a sentence.

List of Object Pronouns: Singular- me, you, him, her, it; Plural- us, you, them

eg. The stars interest me. Me is the object of the sentence. It comes after the action verb interest. Therefore, me is an object pronoun.

HOMEWORK: Check the Purple Assignment Book every night for exact pages.

MONDAY: Spelling- write each spelling word 5x each in the Reading NB

TUESDAY: Spelling- write a sentence for words 1-13 in Reading NB.

WEDNESDAY: Spelling- write a sentence for words 14-25 on looseleaf. Review Stuart Little for the Book Test tomorrow. Remember to bring your notes and your book.

THURSDAY: Study for the Spelling and Vocabulary Tests

FRIDAY: Read for at least 30 minutes over the weekend. You can read any book or magazine. Remember to study for your Language Arts Test on Tuesday.

HAVE A GREAT WEEK!

Click the links below to review this week's Reading and ELA lesson plans:

http://docs.google.com/View?id=dgcvdkk2_140d9rs6cgf

http://docs.google.com/View?id=dgcvdkk2_141fw9ms5f4