Green Eggs and Ham by Dr. Seuss is a terrific book for helping young learners develop phonemic awareness and for the teacher to help them decoding and encoding strategies. At the same time, it may be used in conformity with Common Core Standards so that students meet guidelines provided by the State.
As Ouellette and Haley point out, alphabetic knowledge and vocabulary can have a positive impact on phonemic awareness (29). When students better understand the letters of the alphabet and their common pairings, they are more likely to have a sense of how sounds (phenomes) are utilized in words that are spoken. Green Eggs and Ham can be a good tool for providing many different but easy to grasp phenomes that students can differentiate as they hear the sounds and see that pictures that reinforces the ideas that the sounds should convey. Segmenting (analyzing words for their sound components and breaking them down) is also a useful way for students to better develop their "oral vocabulary and alphabetic knowledge," which in turn assists them in boosting their phonemic awareness levels (Ouellette, Haley 29).
Reading Dr. Seuss' Green Eggs and Ham can be an effective way to help students segment sounds and come to a better understanding of how sounds go together to produce words and how words are used to convey complete thoughts. The sentences in the book are simple, with simple subjects followed by simple predicates. As the story unfolds, there is a great deal of repetition, which is helpful for allowing students to remember sounds, hear them over and over again, and enjoy the audible experience of rhyme and repetition in reading (Dahlin, Watkins).
According to Common Core Standards, print concepts that should be demonstrated by students in 1st grade are the "understanding of the organization and basic features of print," the ability to "follow words from left to right, top to bottom, and page by page," the ability to "recognize that spoken words are represented in written language by specific sequences of letters," the ability to comprehend that "words are separated by spaces in print," and the ability to "recognize and name all upper- and lowercase letters of the alphabet," and the ability to recognize the "distinguishing features of a sentence" -- such as capitalization, punctuation, etc. ("Core Standards"). Core Standards regarding phonological awareness include recognizing and producing rhyming words (of which there are many in Green Eggs and Ham -- fox, box, me, tree, house, mouse, am, Sam, ham, etc.) and blending sounds and segments of single-syllable words. They also include identifying short and long vowel sounds and being able to tell the difference between the two, practicing consonant blend sounds, and producing phonemes. This book can help the educator to touch on and reinforce all of these Standards.
For example, on the first page are the words "I am Sam," and on the second page are the words, "Sam I am." The third page has a the speaker of the story calling the name of the antagonist and identifying him as "Sam-I-am" and on the fourth page, Sam-I-am returns with the question, "Do you like green eggs and ham?" The teacher can read the book to the children, showing them the pages as the story unfolds, so that children understand that reading proceeds from left to right, and they can place the images of the story with the words that the teacher is speaking so that context is provided. By the last pages, the sentences become much longer and more complex and the students are challenged to follow the descriptions closely. The story uses a variety of sentences, too -- such as exclamatory sentences, interrogative sentences, and declarative sentences, and students can identify each one in keeping with 1st grade Core Standards. The images can act as signposts for the students and the narrative can provide clues about...
Common Core State Standards and Gifted Learners Education standards generally describe what should be known by students and their capability in every subject in every grade. Various states use state Board of Education to decide what standards should be followed by the entire students starting the kindergarten to high school. From 2010, most of the states have adopted similar standards for Mathematics and English. These came to be known Common Core
VI: YOUR PERSONAL DEBREIFING: (After lesson is implemented) + Praise - Polish ? Change Your Name ____ Grade 3-6 Topic: Prefix and Suffix Spelling Dice Game NG FLSSS CCSS Time (optional) Activity Strategy/Need/Rationale (Prep Work for Instructor) Reading -- Choose six suffixes (-ed, -ing, -est, -en) and six prefixes (-un, -dis, -re) that students have struggled with in class, and write them on the sides of large wooden cubes or six-sided dice. Students will satisfy the Common Core State Standard
Common Core Standards Documentary Notes Where did the idea originate for Common Core standards? Ever since 2008, Common Core standards (CCS) planning has been underway. It was kick-started by the chairperson of the NGA (National Governors Association) for the year 2006-07, ex-governor of Arizona, Janet Napolitano. Napolitano is currently leader of University of California's system. Her program concentrated strongly on both the workforce and scientific and mathematical education improvements (Bidwell, 2014). How were the
common core standards affect students with exceptionalities? Should we apply these standards to students with exceptionalities? Why or why not? A lot of teachers and parents have shown great concerns related to the system of education presented for the students with special needs with the implementation of the Common Core State Standards in different states (IDA, 2015 ). These Standards are challenging and tough for the general students alone and
common core standards and the effects of Low SAT scores. The first one is on the inability of the common core to positively influence students while the second one explores the common core as being a tactical advantage. The first article tries to give an explanation of how the common core standards which are English and Language arts lack the ability of career ready and college students' development. The
No Child Left Behind and Common Core, a set of required standards does not improve but rather limits education for ALL students in state schools (Kober, Rentner, 2011). The assumption inherent in the system of standardized education is that a one-size-fits-all method of education in which every student is expected to be at the same level. This type of assumption does not reflect the actuality of the situation (Haycock,
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