Lesson 143. Skills: Materials: Calendar: Language Arts/Social Studies:

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Lesson 143 Skills: Use word recogni1on skills and strategies to read and comprehend text. Complete and compose an analogy. Write compound words. Differen1ate between homophones and homonyms. Calculate the range, mode, median, and the mean of a set of data. Display informa1on on a graph. Read direc1ons and follow a recipe including frac1ons. Play an instrument to the rhythm of music. Materials: Flour Sugar Baking powder Baking soda BuGer Milk Cookie sheet Rolling pin Large mixing bowl Circular cookie cuger Alphabet Memory game Flashcards: addi1on, subtrac1on, mul1plica1on, division Rhythm boxes from prior music worksheets Instruments How Much Can a Bare Bear Bear? What Are Homonyms and Homophones? by Brian P. Cleary (I Am) Harriet Tubman, by Grace Norwich Worksheets 87a, 115b, 123b, 127b, 131b, 135b, 143, 143a Calendar: Con1nue rou1ne ac1vi1es. Read (I Am) Harriet Tubman, chapter 3. Have your child write about any topic he chooses in his journal. Language Arts/Social Studies: Tell the child, We have learned about homophones this year. Homonyms are words that are pronounced the same and spelled the same but have different meanings. Look at the 1tle of the book, How Much Can a Bare Bear Bear? Bare and bear are homophones. They are pronounced the same, but are spelled differently and have different meanings. Bear and bear are homonyms. They are pronounced and spelled exactly the same. In the 1tle, what does the first bear mean? (It is a furry animal.) What does the second bear mean? (put up with or carry) Read How Much Can a Bare Bear Bear? What Are Homonyms and Homophones? Have the child iden1fy the homophones and homonyms in the book. Have the child choose three pairs of homophones and homonyms and use them in sentences. Worksheet 143, part A: Have the child read the words. Lesson 143 - Page 1

Worksheet 143, part B: Have the child read about the Underground Railroad, then answer the ques1ons. Answers: 1. No, it was a way slaves escaped. It referred to the people, homes, and hideouts that slaves used to escape to freedom. 2. The conductors were people who led the slaves along the route. 3. Hideouts and homes where slaves hid along the way were called stagons or depots. 4. It was against the law to help escaped slaves. Slaves would sneak from one stagon to the next, hoping not to get caught. 5. Someone helping could be put to death by hanging. 6. to end 7. Pennsylvania was the first state to abolish slavery. Worksheet 143, part C: Have the child complete the analogies. Then write his own analogy. Ask him to tell you the rela1onship between the words. Answers: 1. right 2. touch 3. cold 4. orange 5. fruit 6. hospital 7. cut 8. sleep 9. flower 10. hard Worksheet 143, part D: Have the child write compound words using the words in the word box. Answers: moonbeams, horsefly, lifegme, nowhere, footprint Play Alphabet Go Fish. Use the Alphabet Memory game cards. This game can be played with two or more players. Each player begins with five cards, and holds them in his hand so the other players cannot see them. The remainder of the cards are placed face-down on the table. If any players have a match, a matching capital and lower case leger, he may put the pair face-up on the table. Player one asks any opponent, Do you have a? (He asks for a card that matches any of the cards in his hand.) If he receives the card he requested and a match is made, the pair is placed faceup on the table. He may play again. If the opponent does not have the requested card, he says, Go fish. The player who made the request draws a card from the pile and his turn is over. Players con1nue taking turns un1l all of the cards have been matched. The player with the most pairs is the winner. Math: Use the flashcards to have flashcard races. Use addi1on, subtrac1on, mul1plica1on, or division. Sit beside your child at the table or on the floor. Put the flashcards in one pile under the table or behind your back. Place one flashcard on the table, and race to say the answer. The first person to say the correct answer wins the card. Place it in a pile beside the person who won it. Play un1l the original stack of cards is gone. The player with the most cards wins. Lesson 143 - Page 2

Worksheet 143a: Have the child use the chart in part A to complete worksheet 143a independently. Have him show his work on the problems that require calcula1ons. Allow him to use a calculator on part C. Worksheet 143a, part B: Have the child round each of the numbers in the chart. Answers: 52 48 61 52 59 87 75 50 50 60 50 60 90 80 Use the rounded numbers to es1mate how many slaves Harriet Tubman helped to escape. (The child should add ver1cally.) 50+50+60+50+60+90+80= 440 slaves Add to determine how many slaves Harriet Tubman actually helped to escape. (The child should add ver1cally.) 52+48+61+52+59+87+75= 434 slaves Worksheet 143a, part C: Have the child find the range, mode, median, and the mean of the set of numbers using a calculator. range: 87-48= 39 mode: 52 (it is listed twice) median: 59 (Put the numbers in order: 48, 52, 52, 59, 61, 75, 87. The number in the middle is 59.) mean: 62 (The sum of the numbers is 434. 434 7=62) Worksheet 143a, part D: Have the child make a bar or line graph to display the informa1on in the chart. Then answer the ques1ons. Answers: 1. 27 slaves: 75-48=27 2. October 3. February 4. Answers will vary. Runaway slaves carried biscuits in their pockets so they wouldn t get too hungry while traveling. Make biscuits. Ingredients: 2 cups flour 1 tablespoon sugar 2 1/2 teaspoons baking powder 1/2 teaspoon baking soda 1/4 cup buger 3/4 cup milk Direc1ons: Preheat the oven to 375 degrees. Mix flour, sugar, baking powder, and baking soda in a large bowl. Use a fork to cut the buger into the flour mixture un1l it looks coarse. Slowly s1r in the milk to make a s1ff dough. Knead the dough lightly. Use a rolling pin, and roll the dough to a two-inch thickness. Use a circular cookie cuger or turn a glass upside down and cut biscuits. Place them on a cookie sheet, and bake at 375 degrees for 20-25 minutes. Lesson 143 - Page 3

Music: Use all of the rhythm boxes and worksheets to create a song. (worksheets 87a, 115b, 123b, 127b, 131b, 135b) Have the child choose one of the instruments he made and play the song. Turn on the child s favorite song and let him play his instruments to the rhythm of the music. Lesson 143 - Page 4

name Part A: Read the words. threat spray complain shiver concentrate bother protect produce smuggle torch snatching stranger Part B: Read about the Underground Railroad. The Underground Railroad wasn't really a railroad. It was a name given to the way that slaves escaped. The Underground Railroad ran from l8l0 to the l860s. The Underground Railroad referred to the people, homes, and hideouts that slaves used to escape to freedom. The "underground" part of the name comes from its secrecy and the "railroad" part of the name comes from the way it was used to transport people. The Underground Railroad used railroad terms. People who led the slaves along the route were called conductors. Hideouts and homes where slaves hid along the way were called stations or depots. Many people from various backgrounds worked as conductors and provided safe places for the slaves to stay along the route. Some of the conductors were former slaves such as Harriet Tubman. She escaped using the Underground Railroad and then returned to help more slaves escape. Many white people who felt that slavery was wrong also helped. They often provided hideouts in their homes, food and other supplies. Traveling on the Underground Railroad was difficult and dangerous. Slaves would often travel by foot at night. They would sneak from one station to the next, hoping not to get caught. Stations were usually around ten to twenty miles apart. Sometimes the slaves would have to wait at one station until they knew the next station was safe. Harriet Tubman It was very dangerous for the slaves who were trying to escape, and also for those helping them. It was against the law to help escaped slaves. In many southern states, conductors could be put to death by hanging. Since the slaves escaped and lived in secrecy, no one is quite sure how many escaped. The state of Pennsylvania was the first state to abolish, or end, slavery in l780. l. Was the Underground Railroad a railroad with trains? 2. Who were the conductors on the Underground Railroad? 3. What were the hideouts on the Underground Railroad called? Worksheet 143 - Page 1

4. Why was the railroad underground and secret? 5. What could be someone s punishment for helping a slave escape? 6. What does abolish mean? 7. Which was the first state to abolish slavery? Part C: Complete the analogies. Use the words in the Word Box. touch cut right cold hospital sleep orange hard flower fruit l. Up is to down as left is to. 2. Eye is to see as finger is to. 3. Summer is to hot as winter is to. 4. Banana is to yellow as carrot is to. 5. Chicken is to meat as strawberry is to. 6. Teacher is to school as nurse is to. 7. Pencil is to write as knife is to. 8. Hungry is to eat as tired is to. 9. Hammer is to tool as rose is to. l0. Ice is to cold as concrete is to. Write an analogy. Part D: Write compound words. Use the words in the word box. Worksheet 143 - Page 2 Word Box moon fly time print where beams horse foot no life

name Part A: We don t know how many slaves escaped on the Underground Railroad, but pretend that the chart below tells how many slaves escaped from September through March. Months of the Year September October November December January February March Number of Escaped Slaves 52 48 61 52 59 87 75 Part B: Round each of the numbers in the chart. Number of 52 48 61 52 59 87 75 Escaped Slaves Rounded Number Use the rounded numbers to estimate how many slaves escaped. Add to determine how many slaves actually escaped. Part C: Find the range, mode, median, and the mean of the set of numbers. Use a calculator. range mode median mean Worksheet 143a - page 1

Part D: Make a bar or line graph to display the information in the chart. Months of the Year September October November December January February March Number of 52 48 61 52 59 87 75 Escaped Slaves Answer the questions. l. How many more slaves escaped in March than in October? 2. In which month did the least number of slaves escape? 3. In which month did the most number of slaves escape? 4. Write a question about your graph. Ask someone to answer it. Worksheet 143a - Page 2