WEEK OF MARCH 15, 2010 3RD GRADE LESSON PLANS FOR READING AND LANG. ARTS

REMINDERS:

1. Please remember to cover all soft-covered books. Some children have still not covered any of their books.

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, look through your child’s Reading and Language Arts NBs to see how they are doing on their classwork and homework. Remember that the children are responsible for all homework and classwork when they are absent. Please check the blog to hand in any missing assignments. Also make sure they get any missing notes or vocabulary and spelling words.

3. Gym on Mondays. Wear gym shirt, gym pants, and sneakers.

4. The children have switched books. The girls are reading The Fantastic Mr. Fox and the boys are reading Charlotte’s Web. The notes were started in school in the back of the Reading NB. They should finish the notes on their own jotting down details about the characters, settings, and plot of the story. The Book Test will be on Weds. March 24th.

5. Dismissal on Friday, 3/19 will be at 2:30.

6. Lenten Folders were sent home with the children THREE weeks ago. Fr. Almonte has asked the children to donate whatever possible during the forty days of Lent.

7. The children are only allowed to wear blue cardigan sweaters in class. They will not be allowed to leave on any hoodies or different colored sweaters. Part of the weekly conduct grade is wearing the proper uniform.

8. In honor of St. Patrick’s Day, the children will be able to wear something green on Weds. 3/17. No jeans are permitted!

9. REMEMBER TO REREGISTER YOUR CHILD THIS WEEK!

TESTS:

  1. Spelling Test- Friday, 3/19. Words from The Talent Show
  2. Book Test- Weds., 3/24 on Charlotte’s Web and the Fantastic Mr. Fox

VOCABULARY: no

2. Reading Vocabulary Words from The Talent Show:

gym, perform, prefer, recite, enjoying, billions, roam

Check the Reading NB for these words and their definitions.

SPELLING: words with the /aw/ sound

song, law, because, soft, dawn, crawl, lost, taught, long, pause, frost, lawn, hawk, laundry, author

Challenge Words:

sausage, cafeteria, mustard, tablecloth, service

LANGUAGE ARTS: Third Quarter Work

The children will be working on Descriptive Paragraphs in Composition (Chapter 3 in Voyages Book starting on p. 82)

Grammar: Starting on pg. 338 in the Voyages Text

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, place, or thing.

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 Nouns: The plurals of some nouns look a little different from their singular forms. These are called irregular plurals because they are not formed by adding an –s or –es. They should be memorized.

ox-oxen, child-children, tooth-teeth, foot-feet, mouse-mice, woman-women, goose-geese, sheep-sheep, deer-deer, fish-fish, Chinese- Chinese

Singular Possessive Nouns- the possessive form of a noun shows possession, or ownership. To form a singular possessive, which means something is owned by one person or thing, add an apostrophe and the letter (s) to a singular noun. (friend- friend’s)

eg. I walked to my neighbor’s house.

Do you like Isabella’s coat?

Neighbor’s house means the house belongs to a neighbor. Isabella’s coat means that the coat belongs to Isabella.

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)

Pronoun: is a word that takes the place of a noun.

Personal Pronoun- refers to a person who is speaking or to the person or thing that is spoken to or about.

eg. I, me, mine, we, us, ours, she, her, hers, they, them, theirs, he, him, his, you, 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 in the Reading NB 5x each.

TUESDAY: Spelling- write a sentence for spelling words 1-10 on looseleaf. Remember your heading.

WEDNESDAY: Spelling- write a sentence for words 11-20 in the Reading NB.

THURSDAY: Language Arts (Voyages) pg.365 Exercise 2 (1-8) on looseleaf. Rewrite the sentence with the correct subject pronoun. Remember your heading. Study for the Spelling Test.

FRIDAY: Read for at least 30 minutes over the weekend. You can read any book or magazine.

HAVE A GREAT WEEKEND!

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

http://docs.google.com/View?id=dgcvdkk2_156cv9x8fch

http://docs.google.com/View?id=dgcvdkk2_157f72266dp