What to Expect in 1st Grade English Language Arts (ELA) - By Lumos Learning
00:09 | Hi . My name is Cristina Diverse line , and | |
00:11 | I teach first grade at Brooke for Elementary in Brookville | |
00:14 | , Ohio . In kindergarten , the students spend a | |
00:17 | lot of time learning their letters and their sounds not | |
00:26 | only being able to pick out the letters but also | |
00:29 | to write the letters . It's a big difference , | |
00:31 | you know , from kindergarten to first . Not that | |
00:34 | they don't work hard in kindergarten , but now they | |
00:36 | have to take those foundational skills and kind of use | |
00:39 | those to build upon and apply them in first grade | |
00:42 | . We do start the year off with reviewing our | |
00:45 | letters and their sounds , uh , obvious . Then | |
00:54 | we'll start teaching them some of those long vowel teams | |
00:57 | like E and E A . I G h . | |
01:00 | Just all the different combinations that a chunk can make | |
01:03 | . And the students are going to move from CVC | |
01:06 | words or constant Val constant words like Cat . And | |
01:11 | then they'll work their way up to more complex words | |
01:14 | . We want them to be able to put the | |
01:17 | words together . Um , but we also want them | |
01:19 | to be able to , um , break words apart | |
01:22 | . We've been doing some work where they have the | |
01:25 | word cat , and I might ask them to change | |
01:27 | the last sound to make a new word . So | |
01:29 | if we change the last sound from A to A | |
01:33 | well , what would that word make ? So we're | |
01:35 | gonna do a lot of work with using what we | |
01:37 | know about words and how we can build upon that | |
01:40 | to help us with other words as far as reading | |
01:44 | goes that are going to go from simple stories that | |
01:46 | have repetitive text where they're gonna rely heavily on the | |
01:49 | pictures . Come and they're gonna move to more complex | |
01:51 | texts where they're going to have to use some strategies | |
01:54 | to figure out unknown words and then being able to | |
01:58 | recall what they've read , not just who was in | |
02:00 | the story or what was the setting , but maybe | |
02:02 | answering some higher level questions that might involve influencing or | |
02:06 | drawing conclusions . And first grade , you're going to | |
02:09 | see a big shift in their writing . They have | |
02:12 | to know three different kinds of writing . The first | |
02:14 | kind of writing is a narrative where the students write | |
02:17 | about things that have happened to them . Students are | |
02:20 | expected also to write opinion pieces , so they need | |
02:23 | to be able to state their opinion and then give | |
02:25 | us reasons why they feel that way . And then | |
02:29 | they need to be able to close their writing in | |
02:31 | regards to their opinion . And then the last type | |
02:34 | of writing is to be able to write an informational | |
02:36 | piece where they might give me information about a topic | |
02:40 | . So to be able to state the topic , | |
02:42 | give me some details or teach me about that topic | |
02:45 | and then again have some kind of closing to wrap | |
02:48 | everything up in regards to speaking and listening . Um | |
02:51 | , the students are expected to be able to sit | |
02:54 | in a group and listen to either a speaker or | |
02:58 | to a story . So if someone is talking , | |
03:01 | knowing okay , I have to wait my turn If | |
03:03 | I want to say something , you know , I | |
03:04 | raised my hand and making sure that one person is | |
03:07 | talking at a time so everyone can share their ideas | |
03:10 | in general language knowledge . We'll start talking about adjectives | |
03:13 | . We also talk about common downs now is that | |
03:16 | our people and places things were able to talk about | |
03:20 | synonyms and antonym When we learn a new word , | |
03:23 | if you are being funneled , something confuses . So | |
03:27 | listen to it and listen . When two bells rang | |
03:31 | at the beginning of the school day , it befuddled | |
03:34 | . The new students were able to use it in | |
03:37 | a sentence , and I can hear . Okay , | |
03:38 | Do they really understand what that word means ? One | |
03:41 | and two . Are they using it correctly ? So | |
03:44 | that was the first word for the week . There | |
03:45 | were three more . There's a lot that goes on | |
03:48 | with language arts . The thing I like most about | |
03:51 | teaching language arts is that language arts is not just | |
03:53 | during language arts time . I can incorporate a lot | |
03:57 | of the other subjects , like with science and social | |
03:59 | studies . So you're learning about plants and we read | |
04:03 | a fiction story in reading and then in science , | |
04:06 | were able to read a nonfiction book , and it's | |
04:08 | just a really nice way to tie in language arts | |
04:12 | standards when I can bring in social studies and I | |
04:14 | can bring in science so the kids are learning that | |
04:16 | content . But then we're also talking about those language | |
04:19 | arts standards as well . So from the beginning of | |
04:22 | the year , I think the difference that parents would | |
04:25 | see is just their independence and their comfort level . | |
04:30 | As the year goes on , you're going to see | |
04:32 | them really just be more confident in themselves and their | |
04:35 | ability to write things down . And their ability to | |
04:38 | figure out those unknown words something that parents can do | |
04:42 | to support their learners in first grade is reading to | |
04:44 | them . You reading to them helps them here what | |
04:48 | a fluent reader sounds like . You can ask them | |
04:50 | questions from the book to see if they can recall | |
04:53 | and answer key details from the text . And even | |
04:56 | if you're reading higher level text , that's good , | |
04:58 | too , because the students are going to be exposed | |
05:00 | to new vocabulary words . You can get books that | |
05:03 | are at their level . You'll want your child to | |
05:05 | be reading that book to you . So then your | |
05:08 | child can practice the strategies they learned in class to | |
05:11 | attack a word they may not know . My key | |
05:14 | advice for the parents would be to know that your | |
05:18 | child can do it . All learners are different . | |
05:21 | Talk with the teacher and ask if there's anything else | |
05:24 | you could do at home to support their learning . | |
05:26 | But just know that your child is going to learn | |
05:29 | lots of great things in first grade , and they're | |
05:31 | going to be a totally different person from when they | |
05:33 | came in to the end . Mm |
DESCRIPTION:
Watch first grade in action. Learn from Mrs. Dobberstein to nurture basic reading and student skills using narratives, opinions, and factual texts. Parents can learn from teachers what to expect in their childâs English Language Arts (ELA) and math classrooms and how to support their childâs
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What to Expect in 1st Grade English Language Arts (ELA) is a free educational video by Lumos Learning.
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