
Making Words Fourth Grade: 50 Hands-On Lessons for Teaching Prefixes, Suffixes, and Roots, 1st edition
- Patricia M. Cunningham |
- Dorothy P. Hall |
Title overview
- Features 50 fun and interactive lessons for building decoding and spelling skills.
- Presents a concise method for involving students in the process of identifying common contractions and compound words and more complex vowel patterns within words.
- Promotes student awareness of similarities in words that helps develop writing skills.
- Includes reproducible letter tiles, record sheets for each lesson, and take-home sheets to copy, cut, and/or laminate.
- Highlights a list of useful children's books to extend the Making Words lesson.
Table of contents
Introduction 1
Lesson 1 l fireplaces 000
Lesson Focus: rhyming patterns ape, ace, ice
re, meaning back or again
Lesson 2 l treasures 000
Lesson Focus: rhyming patterns at, eat, ate, ue
er/est, meaning more/most
re, meaning back or again
Lesson 3 l rattlesnake 000
Lesson Focus: rhyming patterns eat, east, ake
er/est, meaning more/most
Lesson 4 l teachers/cheaters (2 secret words)
Lesson Focus: rhyming patterns eat, each
er, meaning person or thing
re, meaning back or again
Lesson 5 l fireworks
Lesson Focus: rhyming patterns ir, ire, ise, isk
er, meaning more
er, meaning person or thing
re, meaning back or again
Lesson 6 l workbench
Lesson Focus: rhyming patterns oke, eck, ench
er, meaning person or thing
en, changing part of speech
Lesson 7 l repainted 000
Lesson Focus: rhyming patterns aid, ied, ain
er, meaning person or thing
re, meaning back or again
Lesson 8 l unpleasant 000
Lesson Focus: rhyming patterns at, ast, ent, est, eal
un, meaning not or opposite
Lesson 9 l friendly 000
Lesson Focus: rhyming patterns y, ine, ield
er, meaning person or thing
ly, changing part of speech
Lesson 10 l perfectly 000
Lesson Focus: rhyming patterns y, ee, eel
re, meaning back or again
ly, changing part of speech
y, changing part of speech
Lesson 11 l playground 000
Lesson Focus: rhyming patterns ay, oad, oud, ound
un, meaning not or opposite
ly, changing part of speech
Lesson 12 l &n
Author bios
Patricia M. Cunningham
The day I entered first grade, I decided I wanted to teach first grade. In 1965, I graduated from the University of Rhode Island and began my teaching career teaching first grade in Key West, Florida. For the next several years, I taught a variety of grades and worked as a curriculum coordinator and special reading teacher in Florida and Indiana.
From the very beginning, I worried about children who struggled learning to read and devised a variety of alternative strategies to teach them to read. In 1974, I received my Ph. D. in Reading Education from the University of Georgia. I developed the Making Words activity while working with Title One teachers in North Carolina where I was the Director of Reading for Alamance County Schools. I have been the Director of Elementary Education at Wake Forest University in Winston Salem, North Carolina since 1980 and have worked with numerous teachers to develop hands-on engaging ways to teach phonics and spelling. In 1991, I published Phonics they Use: Words for Reading and Writing, which is currently available in its fourth edition. Along with Richard Allington, I published Classrooms that Work and Schools that Work.
Dottie Hall and I have worked together on many projects. In 1989, we began developing the Four Blocks Framework, a comprehensive approach to literacy which is used in many schools in the United States and Canada. Dottie Hall and I have worked together to produce many books, including the first Making Words books and the Month by Month Phonics Books. These Making Words by Grade Level books are in response to requests by teachers across the years to have making words lessons with a scope and sequence tailored to their grade level. We hope you and your students will enjoy these making words lessons and we would love to hear your comments and suggestions.
Dorothy P. Hall
I always wanted to teach young children too! After graduating from Worcester State College in Massachusetts I taught first and second grade. After two years, I moved to North Carolina where I continued teaching in the primary grades. Many children I worked with struggled to learn to read in the newly integrated schools. I wanted to learn more and received my M ED and Ed D in Reading from the University of North Carolina at Greensboro.
I also worked at Wake Forest University where I met and began to work with Pat Cunningham. After three years teaching at the college level I returned to the public schools and taught third and fourth grade as well being a reading and curriculum coordinator for my school district. At this time Pat Cunningham and I began to collaborate on a number of projects. In 1989, we developed the Four Blocks Framework, a comprehensive approach to literacy in grades one, two, and three which we later expanded to kindergarten, calling it Building Blocks, and the upper grades, calling it Big Blocks. By 1999 Pat and I had written four Making Words books, a series of Month by Month Phonics Books, and The Teacher’s Guided to Four Blocks and I retired from the school system to devote more time to consulting and writing. I also went back to work at Wake Forest University where I taught courses in Reading, Children’s Literature, and Language Arts Instruction for elementary education students. I am now Director of the Four Blocks Center at Wake Forest University and enjoy working with teachers a