 |
"How To" Help
The following is excerpted from Volume 1 of Five in
a Row. © 1994 - 1998 by Jane Claire
Lambert, all rights reserved.

Select a book to study with your student. There is no right or wrong
order for covering the material, although in the appendix, you'll find a
suggested semester reading calendar for the fall term which links several
stories to the appropriate seasons of the year.
Some teachers will choose to purchase each book as a valuable addition to
their permanent library. Of course, any public library should have (or be
able to request), each of the titles in this book.
Important Note: Please take the time to read
the book aloud to your student each day before covering the
lesson material. Five in a Row was designed and tested to
be read daily! The repetition is essential to your student's learning
process, and the time you spend reading together is just as important as the
lesson material itself.
In the appendix, you will find a sample planning work sheet for Who
Owns the Sun? You'll also find a blank work sheet which you can
reproduce and use. Or, feel free to design your own worksheet. The sample
sheet shows how to correlate the teacher's guide suggestions and plans to
the five days of the week you will study each particular book. Some
teachers don't use planning sheets at all, working directly from
Five in a Row. Do whatever works for you!
Notice the lesson plans are outlined briefly and give you a quick
reference for the week. Not every lesson suggested in the Teacher's Guide
under Who Owns the Sun? is listed. There are too many lessons for
one week. Choose the ones that are especially suited to your student. The
subjects Applied Math, Science, Art, etc. do not have to be used in the same
order every week. The plan is completely yours. Use only the subjects and
topics you wish. Remember when planning that this curriculum builds on
itself. Whatever you study on Monday will be recognied by the student when
you read the story again on Tuesday. When you read the story a third time
one Wednesday, the lessons you introduced on Monday and Tuesday will not
escape the student's notice as he hears or sees the examples again. So each
lesson, except the one for Friday, gets at least one review and some lessons
get four reviews. The topics you think are the most important therefore
should be scheduled toward the beginning of the week. It seems as though
Art often gets tagged in the Friday slot. Be encouraged to use this topic
earlier in the week, perhaps Wednesday, so the student can study the
pictures for several days as he hears the story read and reread.
Also in the appendix, you will find a sheet of story disks. These are
quick, symbolic representations of the nineteen titles included in
Five in a Row. They may be used to make a Literary Map.
First, color the disk and put the name of the book on the back of the large
map of the world (a laminated map is more durable) and by placing a velcro
dot on the disk and the other dot on the map where it goes, you can quickly
take it off and put it back on each day. Teacher's tacky putty will also
work, and you or the student can locate the disk and attach it daily.
Eventually you will be able to track the stories you have read all over the
world. Even young students will learn some map basics. Any stories with
fictious settings can be placed in the margins of the map as the "Land of
Make Believe".
There is also a blank page of disks in the appendix so that you can make
your own pictures for these stories, or replace a lost disk. You might also
like to make disks for other stories you read outside of Five in a
Row.
 |
 |