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Table of Contents ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The Six Steps to Literacy Page 4 Sound Attack Pages 5 - 219 Alphabet Chants Pages 6 – 13 The First Ten Days of First Grade Pages 14 – 32
Let’s Dance! Pages 33 - 228 How do I teach the Hunks and Chunks? p. 33 - 37 How do I play Word Wall Games? p. 34 – 41 The Phonics Dance chants p. 42 – 48
The Hunks and Chunks and Extension Lessons Pages 49 - 146 sh, ch and combined Review p. 49 – 53
th and combined Review sh, th, ch p. 54 – 56
ing, all and combined Review p. 57 – 61
ace, ice and combined Review p. 62 – 66
ar, or and combined Review p. 67 – 71
ea, ee and combined Review p. 72 – 76
oo, ew, ui and combined Review p. 77 – 83
oo the sweeties and oo the bully brothers p. 84 – 86
ay, a _e, eigh, and combined Review p. 87 – 91
ou, ow and combined Review p. 92 – 96
ink, ank and combined Review p. 97 – 98
ir, ur, er, and combined Review p. 99 – 106
oi, oy and combined Review p. 107 – 111
igh and ight p. 112 – 113
wh ~ the Question Words p. 114 – 117
aw, au, aught, ought and combined Review p. 118 – 123
wr, kn and combined Review p. 124 – 127
oa and ow as long o p. 128 – 132
ph p. 133 – 134
ai and the ai, ay, eigh Review p. 135 – 137
tion, sion, and ion p. 138 – 141
ed at the end of a root word p. 142 – 146
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or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system without express written permission from the author/publisher.
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Extension Lessons Pages 147 - 228 old p. 148 – 149
The plurals s, es and Drop the y add i-e-s. p. 150 – 154
Soft c and Soft g p. 155 – 162
Silly Plurals p. 163 – 166
Consonant clusters versus ir, ur, and er p. 167 - 169
ea = a long vowel (eat) or a short vowel (bread) p. 170 – 173
ear = ear or er and combined Review p. 174 – 178
ing, ang, and ung p. 179 – 180
Drop the e. Add I-n-g. p. 181 – 184
Double the consonant at the end of a root word p. 185 – 188
Compound Words p. 189 – 190
Contractions p. 191 – 194
Prefixes and Suffixes p. 195 – 204
Verb Tenses p. 205 - 208
Adjective, Noun, Verb sort p. 209 – 210
ight and ite Sort p. 211 – 212
ack, eck, ick, ock, and uck p. 213
Super Silent e at the end of a word p. 214 – 216
Super Silent e breaking the rules p. 217 – 218
Mystical Magical y as e or I at the end of a word p. 219 – 220
ink, ank ,& unk p. 221 – 222
ell & ill p. 223 – 224 atch p. 225 – 226 itch p. 227 – 228
Monster Words and Worksheets p. 229 – 233
Spelling Tests (A New Way to Approach Spelling) p. 234 – 237
Step 3: Vocabulary (Becoming a Word Detective) p. 238 – 240
Supplemental Manuals ~ Continuing the Literacy Process p. 241
Word Lists for Lessons p. 242 – 256
Picture Links, Monster Word Cards, Posters p. 257
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Copyrighted Material.© 2012, VDowd ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. Contains material protected under International and Federal Copyright Laws and Treaties.
Any unauthorized reprint or use of this material is prohibited. No part of this material may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic
or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system without express written permission from the author/publisher.
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Beginning of the Year First Grade Alphabet Sound Review And Word Associations ~ revised 2006
To be chanted from the first day of school until the end September.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ “a” Make a big AHHHH sound with your mouth. Notice how wide open your mouth is. Chant, “A–a-a…..Abby is sad. A-a-a is A! (Show your muscles when you say the long A to reinforce that it is a long strong vowel sound.) Then have the class cry, “WAHHHHHHH!”
“b” - B – b - b. Baby wants a bottle! Now burp your baby.
“c” - C says “cah”. Cat, meow!
“d” - D – d - d. I’m a digging dog!
“e” – (Hands in motion like a train) chant, “e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-e” – pointing up in the air – “e – e – e – e – e. Eddy loves his teddy and Eddy loves E!” (Show your muscles when you say the long E to reinforce that it is a long strong vowel sound.)
“f” - F – f - f. Froggy loves flies!
“g” - G – g – g. Goat, Goat! (Sound like a goat when you say, “Goat!” and don’t forget to make your horns with your fingers by your head.)
“h” – (Breathe hot air on the top of your hand.) H -- h – h. I am happy.
“i” – “i” dot it, “i” dot it, i – i – i. Iggy loves her wiggy and Iggy loves I! (Show your muscles when you say the long I to reinforce that it is a long strong vowel sound.)
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sound, have them write a lower case “i” next to the capital I. As they do, tell them not to forget to dot it! The last vowel you have them identify will be the Vowel of the Day. Ask them to color in the vowel of the day. Review its name and its sound. Tell the class that all of the words they will write on this day will have the same vowel sound. Have them thank you for telling them what the vowel in each word will be.
Step 6: Can your write the word I say? Call out simple CVC (consonant, vowel, consonant) words that contain the vowel sound and rime of the day. To begin say the word slowly so the class can hear each sound. Draw lines on the board to show the kids how many letters a word contains. Point to each line and say the sound. As you say each sound, the class writes the letter that coincides with it.
The idea is to have the kids write words using the letters and sounds from the alphabet review. For example: Never ask a class to spell a word like “chat” during this review because they don’t know the “ch” hunk and chunk yet. “Ch” is not part of our alphabet review. You COULD ask your class to spell a word with a consonant cluster (blend) because you can hear each of the sounds in the cluster during the alphabet review.
Once a word is written it is time to be a word detective. Have the class underline the phonogram of the day. For example: if you are writing the word sat, it would look like this: sat. We underline the common ending and then practice reading the word in two parts. First we get our mouth ready to say the initial sound and then we read the phonogram. Finally we read the whole word. It would sound like this: s ~ at ~ sat. *****If a word contains a consonant cluster we would get our mouth ready and read the blend and then the rime. For example: if you are writing the word flat, it would look like this: fl at We underline the consonant cluster and the phonogram. Then we get our mouth ready to read the first part of the word (fl) and then the second part of the word (at). Finally we read the whole word. It would sound like this: fl ~ at ~ flat.
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Any unauthorized reprint or use of this material is prohibited. No part of this material may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ When your class is ready to read and write, knowing
these rimes (phonograms) will help them. When a student does not know a word automatically, one decoding skill is to look for the onset and the rime. The goal is to look for letter combinations that make up sounds rather than
trying to sound out individual letters.
_ack ~ back, black, crack, lack, pack, quack, rack, sack, tack, shack, slack, smack, snack, stack, track _ail ~ bail, fail, frail, jail, mail, nail, pail, rail, sail, snail, tail, trail _ain ~ main, pain, rain, brain, chain, drain, gain, grain, plain, Spain, sprain, stain, train _ake ~ bake, brake, cake, flake, lake, make, wake, rake, shake, snake, stake take _ale ~ male, pale, sale, scale, stale, tale, whale _ame ~ came, frame, game, name, same, tame, flame, blame, shame _an ~ an, can, fan, man, pan, ran, tan, van, plan, span, than _ank ~ bank, blank, drank, prank, rank, sank, shrank, spank, tank, thank, yank
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or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system without express written permission from the author/publisher.
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Day 11 ~ Time to Dance! Once my class has done the Alphabet Review and Phonics Dance what comes next?
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Day One of a New Hunk and Chunk
These steps are the same for your Monday and Wednesday lessons. Those are the two days during the week that you
introduce your new hunks and chunks. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Step 1: Let’s Hunk and Chunk. Hand out the coordinating worksheet. Ask the class to look at the top of the page, circle and say the new hunk and chunk sound each time they see it. You will call this hunking and chunking (circling) the hunk and chunk. A hunk and chunk can be a noun when it is a letter combination. It is also a verb when you practice the art of circling the letter combination.
Step 2: Let’s Write. Now it’s time to write four words that contain the new hunk and chunk. These words should not be the same as the words the class will be asked to read. For example: You introduced “ing”. The first word you would ask your class to spell is the word ring. ***Once the students have written the word, they must circle all of the hunks and chunks in it! Be a word detective and show what you know about a word. Underline the consonant clusters and common rimes. If the word has a prefix or a suffix, bracket the root word. Ring is a single hunk and chunk word so only the ing would be circled. ***See the Word List Section for your selection of words.
Step 3: Ask the class to spell two more words that contain the new hunk and chunk. For example: You would ask your class to write sing and king. Don’t forget to have them hunk and chunk (circle) the hunks and chunks! Underline consonant clusters too! ***Only ask the class to spell words that contain the hunks and chunks you have reviewed. If you have not introduced the e-a hunk and chunk, you WOULD NOT ask the class to spell the word eating.
Step 4: The last word your class will write will be the Word Wall Word of the Day. It MUST contain the hunk and chunk you just introduced. For example: If you have chanted “ing”, your Word Wall word of the day could be thing. Don’t forget to have your class hunk and chunk both the th and the ing.
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introduce or review with your class. You can choose to concentrate on one specific concept or three different concepts. **The possibilities for these games are endless. Here are ideas to get you started.
Step 5: Let’s read! Now it is time for your class to try to read words containing the hunk and chunk of the day. Begin this step by having the class hunk and chunk the words listed underneath the words they have written. Don’t forget to underline consonant clusters and common rimes. Once they have hunked and chunked each word they will start reading, placing a checkmark above each word that has been read. Your job is to monitor the reading being done by each student.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Word Wall and Word Wall Games
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1. Synonyms 12. Categorizing 2. Antonyms 13. Rhyming 3. Homophones 14. Vowel Hunt 4. Compound Words 15. A, B, C Order 5. Contractions 16. Plural Game 6. Nouns 17. Syllables 7. Proper Nouns 18. Fill in the Blank 8. Pronouns 19. Root Words 9. Verbs 20. Suffixes 10. Adjectives 21. Prefixes 11. Sentence Structure 22. Chunk Hunt
**** Bingo or Magical Words are fun ways to incorporate games into the learning process.
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ The Phonics Dance
VDowd©1999 Revised August 2008. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Sh – Say, “S-h, sh, sh, sh. S-h, sh, sh, sh.” (Put your finger to your lips and make the sh sound as you say the sh sound three times.)
Ch – (It’s time to do the chicken cha cha dance!) Say, “C-h, ch, ch, ch. (Flap your arms to resemble chicken wings.) C-h, ch, ch, ch.” (Cha Cha down.)
Th – Point to the linking card and say, “This is a thorn and that is a thistle.” Chant the hard “th” first, “T- h, th, th, th.” (As you say the hard th, think this and that.) Repeat saying the soft “th”. “T-h, th, th, th.” (As you say the soft th, think thorn and thistle.)
Ow – Make the letters o and w with your fingers. Hit them together and say, “O - w, ow. There’s a cow going down, d – o – w – n! That’s the way to get down!” (Pretend to slide your arms down the slide as you say d-o-w-n.)
Ou - Make the letters o and u with your fingers. Hit them together and say, “O - u, ou. O-u-t. o-u-t. Get out of here you bumble bee. O – u – t. Out, out, out!”
Ing – (This is the King of ING’s dance.) Say, “I-n-g, ing, ing, ing. I-n-g, ing, ing, ing.” (Jump up and down and turn in a circle three times as you chant ing, ing, ing.)
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Extension Lessons
~~~~~~~~~~~ Now that we
know the hunks and chunks, what
do we do?
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Name ______________________________ With a noun…… S or e-s means more than one!
S or e-s means more than one!
1. ____________________ 2.___________________ 3._____________________ 4.____________________ bush bushes girl girls box boxes flower flowers
Word Wall Fun!
1. ___________ 2. _____________ 3. ___________ -------------------------------------------------------------------------- Name ______________________________
With a noun…… S or e-s means more than one! S or e-s means more than one!
1. ____________________ 2.___________________ 3._____________________ 4.____________________ bush bushes girl girls box boxes flower flowers
Word Wall Fun!
1. ___________ 2. _____________ 3. ___________
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Name ___________________________________ Silly, silly i and e. How will you say the letter c?
Smarty, smarty a, o, u. When you see c what will you do?
1. ____________________ 2.___________________ 3._____________________ 4.____________________ cat car cry circle city center centimeter
Does the word I say have a smarty c or a silly c? 1. ___________ 2. _____________ 3. ___________ -------------------------------------------------------------------------- Name ___________________________________
Silly, silly i and e. How will you say the letter c? Smarty, smarty a, o, u. When you see c what will
you do?
1. ____________________ 2.___________________ 3._____________________ 4.____________________ cat car cry circle city center centimeter
Does the word I say have a smarty c or a silly c? 1. ___________ 2. _____________ 3. ___________
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Any unauthorized reprint or use of this material is prohibited. No part of this material may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic
or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system without express written permission from the author/publisher.