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Elementary Gifted Curriculum Pacing Guide
Grade: 6 Quarters 1 & 2
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READING VOCABULARY WRITING MATH SOCIAL STUDIES SCIENCE/STEM
DOL Used daily Simple Solutions Grammar One lesson per day Quiz after every four lessons Junior Great Books Socratic Seminars Novels for Literature Circles: Q1 The Watson’s go to Birmingham The True Confessions of Charlotte Doyle SpringBoard Quarter 1
Previewing Unit 1 Preview the big ideas and vocabulary for the unit. Identify and summarize the knowledge and skills necessary to complete Embedded Assess- ment 1 successfully
Sadlier-Oxford Vocabulary Workshop Pretest Units 1-4 and Review Assessments after each unit Academic Vocabulary SpringBoard ELA effect, effective, consequences, coherence, internal coherence, external coherence, theme, metaphor, objective, subjective Word Walls Text Features Hypothesize Primary source Secondary source Search item Credibility Inference Valid Norm Consensus Claim Counterclaim
SpringBoard Timed Writing Writing a Personal Narrative Writing Groups: Collaborative discussions for feedback and revision Preparing for a Writing Prompt:
• Marking the text
• QHT (activate prior knowledge)
• Pacing • Planning
Responding to a Quote Revision:
• Beginning, Middle, End
• Looping • Adding
Sensory and Figurative Language
EMBEDDED ASSESSMENT 1 Revising a Personal Narrative about Choice
Multiplication and Division of Integers
• Multiply two or more integers
• Apply properties of operations to multiply integers
• Solve real-world problems by multiplying, adding, subtracting and dividing integers
Operations on Rational Numbers
• Given a rational number, determine whether the number is a whole number, an integer, or a rational number that is not an integer
Theme:
Regions and People of the Eastern Hemisphere
History : Historical thinking and skills
Content:
Events can be arranged in order of occurrence using the conventions of B.C. and A.D. ire B.C.E. and C.E.
Create a multi-tier time line
Early Civilizations
India
Egypt
China
Mesopotamia
Geography:
Essential Questions:
Order and Organization
Scientific Inquiry and Application:
• Identify questions that can be answered through scientific investigation
• Design and conduct a scientific investigation
• Use appropriate mathematics, tools, and techniques to gather data and information
• Analyze and interpret data
• Develop descriptions, models, explanations and predictions
• Think
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Unit 1 The Choices We Make
Essential Questions:
How do authors use narrative elements to create a story?
What are the elements of effective revision?
Academic Vocabulary:
effect, effective, consequences, coherence, internal coherence, external coherence, theme, metaphor, objective, subjective
Literary Terms:
genre, denotation, connotation, stanza, narrative, sensory details, figurative language, characterization, myth plot, symbol, symbolism, objective
Literature Club Literary Terms expository writing documentary film claim rhetoric
• First Reflection • Publication /
Use of Technology
Preview Embedded Assessment 2: Expanding Narrative Writing: Create an Original Myth
• Purpose of myths
• Narrative elements of Myths
Review Elements of a Short Story
• Plot • Character • Conflict • Setting • Theme
End of quarter 1
Unit 2
Language and Writer’s Craft/Activities
• Relationship between sets of rational numbers
• Multiply and Divide rational numbers
• Apply properties of operations to multiply and divide rational numbers
• Solve real-world problems involving the four operations with rational numbers
Math Terms:
Common Denominator
Check your Understanding
Lesson Practice
How have ideas and events from the past shaped the Eastern Hemisphere today?
How does where you live influence how you live?
How do we know what we know about the world today?
Spatial Thinking and Skills:
Globes and other geographic tools can be used to gather, process, and report information about people, places, and environments. Cartographers decide which information to include and how it is displayed.
Students will access, read, interpret, and create maps and other geographic
critically and logically to connect evidence and explanations.
• Recognize and analyze alternative explanations and predictions
• Communicate scientific procedures and explanations
Earth and Space Science
Topic: Rocks, Minerals, and Soil
• Study rocks, minerals and soil that make up the lithosphere
• Classify and identify different
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camera angle, subjective camera angle
Exploring the Concept of Choice
Paraphrase and analyze quotes related to choices
• Consider choices for independent reading.
Choices and Consequences: Paired Poetry
• Analyze the choices and consequences presented in a text
• Analyze and compare diction choices in two different texts on the same topic
Revising for cohesion
and clarity/2.4
Revising for precise language and format style/2.6
Sentence Variety/2.8
Sentence structures and transitions/2.13
Using rhetorical devices/2.14
Phrases and Clauses/2.15
Quickwrites
Embedded Assessment 1
Writing an Expository Essay
Writing Prompts
Analyzing Informational Text
Activity Practice
Embedded Assessment 2:
Rational Number Operations and Multiplying and Dividing Integers
END OF QUARTER 1
Unit 2
Expressions and Equations
Essential Questions:
Why is it important to understand how to solve linear equations and inequalities?
How can graphs be used to interpret solutions of real-world problems?
Academic Vocabulary:
representations as tools of analysis.
And longitude can be used to identify absolute location.
Places and regions:
Regions can be determined, classified and compared using various criteria such as landform, climate, population, cultural or economic.
Human Systems:
Variations among physical environments influence human activities. Human activities also alter the physical environment.
Political, environmental, social, and economic factors cause people, products, and ideas to
types of rocks, minerals, and soil to decide the past environment in which they formed.
Concepts:
Rocks and minerals form in specific types of environments.
The Rock Cycle provides a general explanation of conditions required for igneous, sedimentary, and metamorphic rocks to form.
Vocabulary:
magma, lava, sedimentary, igneous, metamorphic,
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Exploring the Personal Narrative
• Identify the components that provide the organizational structure of a personal narrative
Analyze Incident, Response, Reflection
• Analyze a narrative using incident, response, and reflection
• Analyze the organizational structure of a personal narrative
Analyzing Language
• Analyze the language of a personal narrative to
Preparing for Research
• Writing Questions
• Gathering Evidence
• Topic Sentence • Transitions • Supporting
information • Commentary • Concluding
statement
Analyzing Ads
Essential Questions:
What role does advertising play in the lives of youth?
What makes an effective argument?
• Note-taking • Completing
graphic organizers
Palindrome
Media
Math Terms: property, numerical statement, algebraic expression, coefficient, equation, numerical expression, variable, algebraic statement, constant
Getting Ready
Properties of Operations:
• Identify properties of Operations
• Apply properties of operations to simplify linear expressions
• Apply properties to factor and expand liner
move from place to place in the past and today.
Modern cultural practices and products show the influence of tradition and diffusion, including the impact of major world religions: Buddhism, Christianity, Hinduism, Islam, and Judaism.
Government:
Essential Question:
How does government authority affect citizens’ rights?
Civic Participation and Skills:
Different perspectives on a topic be obtained from a variety of historic and contemporary
topography, conservation, weathering, chemical, physical, rock cycle, geology, property, resource, lithosphere, texture, permeability, porosity, bedrock
Life Science
Cellular to Multicellular
Cells are the fundamental unit of life
Concepts:
The Modern Cell Theory states that all living things are made of cells.
Cell observation through the use of
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determine how language shapes character and events.
• Analyze for multiple incidents and responses to determine effect.
Determine a Theme:
• Analyze how theme is conveyed in a story based on a myth.
• Apply the conventions of dialogue paragraphing in a story.
Analyze how particular elements of a story or drama interact
• Compare and contrast character traits
Embedded Assessment 2
Writing an Argumentative Essay
Essential Questions:
Now that you have analyzed how advertising affects young people, would you change your answer to the first Essential Question on the role that advertising plays in young people’s lives?
If so, how would you change it?
Writing to Persuade
Writing a model argumentative text
Introductory and Concluding paragraphs
expressions • Rewrite
expressions to see how the problem and quantities are related
• Review order of operations
Writing and Solving Equations:
• Use variables to represent quantities in real-world problems
• Write two-step equations to represent real-world problems
Check your Under-standing
Lesson Practice
Activity Practice
EMBEDDED
sources. Sources can be examined for accuracy.
Roles and Systems of Government:
Governments can be characterized as monarchies, theocracies, dictatorships, or democracies. Categories may overlap and labels may not accurately represent how governments function. The extent of citizens’ liberties and responsibilities varies according to limits on governmental authority.
Economics: Essential Question:
Why can’t people have everything they want?
microscopes to compare and contrast similarities and differences.
Cell structure and function
All cells come from pre-existing cells.
Mitosis
Cells carry on specific functions that sustain life.
Living systems at all levels of organization demonstrate the complementary nature of structure and function.
Vocabulary:
Organelles, mitochondria, body tissues and organs,
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that lead to self-destruct- ion presented in Greek Myths
• Analyze the relationship between character and plot conflict and resolution.
• Determine the meaning of words and phrases as they are used in a text:
• Analyze and apply symbols used in mythology.
• (Symbolic Thinking)
Analyzing Visual Techniques
• Identify and apply knowledge of visual film techniques to an illustration
Using the SOAPSTone Strategy
Writing groups
Independent Writing
Quickwrites
Debates
Writing claims and counterclaims
Sentence starters to prepare to debate
Assemble portfolios of completed work
END OF QUARTER 2
Unit 3
Writing a Literary Analysis Essay:
• Respond to a prompt with a
ASSESSMENT 1
Writing and Solving Equations:
Apply properties of operations
Model two-step equations
Write two-step equations
Solve two-step equations
Solving and Graphing Inequalities:
Represent quantities in a real- world problem
• Construct two-step inequalities to solve problems
EMBEDDED
How do we know what we know about the world today?
Economic Decision Making and Skills:
Economists compare data sets to draw conclusions about relationships among them.
The choices people make have both present and future consequences. The evaluation of choices is relative and may differ across individuals and societies.
Scarcity:
The fundamental questions of economics include what to produce, how to produce, and for whom to produce.
nucleus, cell wall, cell membrane, ribosome, plasma membrane, vacuole, lysosome xylem, phloem, photosynthesis, cellular respiration, cell division, binary fission, chromosomes, genetic material, parent cell, daughter cell, organs, organ systems
Physical Science
Matter and Motion
Concepts:
All matter is made up of small particles called atoms.
All substances are composed of one or more elements.
Compounds are composed of elements joined
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Comparing Informational text to fictional narratives
• Compare both genres
• Analyze and compare creation myths
EMBEDDED ASSESSMENT 2
End of Quarter 1
Quarter 2
Unit 2 Essential Questions: What roles does advertising play in the lives of youth? What makes an effective argument? Previewing the Unit
• Preview the big ideas and
multi-paragraph essay
• Summarize needed information
• Create a graphic organizer
• Use imagery for supporting detail
• Start with a topic sentence that uses figurative lan-guage
• Include personal commentary
Write and revise a literary analysis paragraph using textual evidence
• Understand Setting and Mood or Atmosphere
Use of Double-Entry Journals
ASSESSMENT 2
Solving Inequalities
• Model Two-Step Inequalities
• Write Two-Step Inequalities
• Solve Two-Step Inequalities
Unit 3 Ratio and Proportion
Essential Questions:
How are ratios, unit rates, and proportions used to describe and solve real-world problems?
How can representations, numbers, words, tables, and graphs be used to solve problems?
When regions and/or countries specialize, global trade occurs.
Markets
The interaction of supply and demand, influenced by competition, helps to determine price in a market. This interaction also determines the quantities of outputs produced and the quantities of inputs such as human resources, natural resources, and capital used.
Financial Literacy:
When selecting items to buy, individuals can compare the price and quality of available goods and services.
Vocabulary:
together chemically.
All particles of a pure substance have nearly identical mass. Particles of different substances usually have different masses, depending upon their atomic composition.
Matter has properties of mass and volume.
Changes of state are explained by a model of matter composed of atoms and/or molecules that are in motion.
There are two categories of energy: kinetic and potential.
An object’s motion can be described by its speed and the direction in which it is moving.
Vocabulary:
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vocabulary for the unit
• Identify and analyze the skills and knowledge needed to complete Embedded Assessment 1 successfully
What is the Issue?
• Identify text features in informational texts as a strategy to better comprehend ideas and information.
• Closely read an informa- tional text to identify issues and questions.
Analyzing Informational text
Identify factors that affect consumer choices and discuss
• Interact with the text by responding and reflecting as they read
• Assess double-entry journals for understanding
Complete a Graphic Organizer after viewing a film
• Conduct a close reading to determine the use of flashbacks
• Write evidence and inferences regarding foreshadow- ing in a graphic organizer
• Summarize character traits
• Write a prediction
• Describe how the use of
Academic Vocabulary:
Tip
Math Terms:
Ratio, rate, unit rate, proportion, cross products, conversion factor, constant of proportionality, constant ratio, constant rate of change, relative size, scale drawing, percent, percent equation, discount, markup, interest, percent error
Getting Ready
Ratio and proportion:
• Express relationships using ratios
• Find unit rates
Identifying and solving problems:
Chronological order, multiple-tier timeline, region, migration, democracy, dictatorship, monarchy, theocracy, imports, exports, natural resources, consumer
Activities and Resources:
Brainpop
Discovery Education
ODE Website
Projects
Research reports/ Keynote
atoms, matter, elements, substances, compounds, properties, mass, volume, atomic composition, thermal energy, kinetic energy, solid, liquid, gas. potential energy, motion,
Activities and Resources:
Brainpop
Discovery Education ODE Website Projects Experiments Investigates Research Reports/Keynote
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relevant facts with a partner.
Analyzing Ads:
• Identify advertis- ing tech- niques used in advertise-ments.
• Analyze advertis- ing for common- ly used products and identify their target buyers. Evaluate the impact of brands and celebrity endorse- ments on product purchases.
Evaluating Sources: • Evaluate
research
mental images helps to explain a character in writing
Identify and apply the organizing elements of a compare/contrast essay Respond to an Expository Writing Prompt Write a Character Analysis
• Examine active and passive voice
Follow an organizational pattern to complete an outline Complete a graphic organizer to explore Motif EMBEDDED ASSESSMENT 1 Writing a Literary Analysis Essay Preview Embedded
• Determine whether quantities are in a proportional relationship
• Solve problems involving proportional relationships
Converting Measurements:
• Convert between unit rates and Proportions for conversions
Proportional Reasoning:
• Given representa-tions of proportional relationships,
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sources for authority, accuracy, credibil-
• ity, timeli- ness, and purpose/ audience.
• Distin- guish between primary and secondary sources.
• Evaluate an internet website’s content and identity to determine appropri- ate Internet sources for research.
EMBEDDED ASSESSMENT 1 UNPACKING EMBEDDED ASSESSMENT 2
The Choices We Make
Assessment 2 Interpret quotations, make inferences, and generate research questions:
• Evaluate biographic-al informa-tion in response to research questions
• Compare the features of a biography and an autobio- graphy
• Make a KWHL chart
• Compare Text and Film
• Explore Speeches
EMBEDDED ASSESSMENT 2 Create a Biographical Presentation
represent constant rates of change with equations of the form y = kx
• Determine the meaning of points on a graph of a proportional relationship.
• Solve problems involving proportional relationships.
Equations representing proportional relationships:
Determine the constant of proportionality from a table, graph, equation, or verbal description of a proportional relationship
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• Analyze genres and their organizational structures
Explore personal narratives: Autobiography Biography Memoir Exploring the Concept of Choice Paired poetry analysis Point of View
• Analyzing quotes
• Paraphrasing • Brainstorming
Choices and Consequences: Paired Poetry
• Infer implicit and cite explicit textual evidence
• Determine, analyze, and summarize the
End of Quarter 3 Unit 4 Describe the use of Language in daily life; Using Language for Effect:
• Vocabulary • Punctuation • Diction • Literary
devices Analyze a Comedic Monologue:
• Audience • Purpose
Present a Dramatic Monologue:
• Marking the text to determine word emphasis and how punctuation affects meaning and tone
Analyzing and Responding to Narrative Poetry:
• Explain
Ratios, Proportions, and Proportional Reasoning
EMBEDDED ASSESSMENT 1
• Solve problems involving proportional relationships
• Convert between measurement systems using unit rates and using proportions
• Represent constant rates of change with equations of the form y = kx
• Determine the constant of proportion -ality from a table, graph,
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development of a theme or central idea of a text.
• Analyze incident, response, reflection
• Analyze how language shapes character and event
End of Quarter 2 Quarter 3 Unit 3 Previewing the Unit Essential Questions: What is the relationship between choices and consequences? What makes a great leader? Reading the Novel:
• Making predictions
• Inferring
purpose and effect
Transforming a Traditional Tale:
• Transform a traditional text into a monologue
Use Language to Develop Theme:
• Explain how a writer uses language for effect
EMBEDDED ASSESSMENT 1 Creating and Presenting a Monologue Interpreting Character in Performance:
• Explain in writing how to portray a character in performance
Comparing Film and Text:
• Compare and contrast the film version with the text
or equation
Ratio and Proportion:
• Represent proportional relationships by equations
• Determine the constant of proportional-ity from a table, graph, equation, or verbal description of a proportional relationship
• Solve problems using scale drawings
Using Maps:
• Given the scale of a map and a distance on a map, find the actual distance
• Convert scale
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• Citing textual evidence
• Questioning the text
Understanding Setting and Mood or Atmosphere
• Understand how textual details contribute to a novel’s mood or atmosphere
• Analyze textual evidence about choices and consequences
. News Articles:
• Compare a fictional account of an event with a nonfiction account of an event
• Evaluate author’s purpose in selecting a point of view
• Describe in writing how reading a text and viewing it in a different medium changes or enhances its perception
Stage Directions • Create a
performance plan that includes theatrical elements
EMBEDDED ASSESSMENT 2 Performing a Shakespearean Dialogue
• Reflect in writing the strengths and challenges of your performance
factors with units to scale factors without units.
Make Scale Drawings:
• Solve problems involving scale drawings of geometric figures, including computing actual lengths and areas from a scale drawing.
Reproduce a scale drawing at a different scale.
EMBEDDED ASSESSMENT 2
Proportional Relationships and Scale
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EMBEDDED ASSESSMENT 1 Previewing Embedded Assessment 2
• Evaluate biographical information in response to research questions
• Compare the features of a biography and an autobiography
Comparing Text and Film
• Infer connections between a poem’s theme and events in the life of a great leader.
• Analyze and compare a film text and a nonfiction text on a similar subject.
Speeches by Great
• Solve problems using scale drawings
• Solve problems involving scale drawings of geometric figures, including computing actual lengths and areas from a scale drawing
• Reproduce a scale drawing at a different scale
Ratio and Proportion:
• Find a percent of a number
• Find the percent that one number is of another
• Given the
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Leaders • Analyze a
speech to identify how the speaker shows himself to be a great leader.
EMBEDDED ASSESSMENT 2 End of Quarter 3 Quarter 4 Unit 4 How we Choose to Act Essential Questions: How do writers and speakers use language for effect? How do performers communicate meaning to an audience? Previewing the Unit Academic Vocabulary: precise, structure, modify, romantic, realistic, improvise, diagram Literary Terms:
percent and the whole, find the part
Ratio and Proportion:
• Solve problems about percent increase, percent decrease, markups, an discounts
Markups and Discounts:
• Solve problems about percent increase, percent decrease, markups and discount
Interest:
• Solve problems about interest
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persona, oral interpretation, rhyme, rhyme scheme, alliteration, assonance, consonance, monologue, pantomime, syntax, poetic devices, internal rhyme, parody, vocal delivery, visual delivery, dialogue, stage directions Using Language for Effect
• Analyze a poem and demonstrate understanding of connotative diction to create tone.
Analyzing Comedic Monologue
• Identify the structure and features of a monologue and the related elements of performance.
Analyzing and Responding to
Percent Error:
• Solve problems about percent error
EMBEDEDED ASSESSMENT 3
Percents and Proportions
• Find the percent of a number
• Find the percent that one number is of another
• Given the percent and the whole, find the part
• Solve problems about sales tax, tips, and commissions
• Solve problems
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Narrative Poetry • Identify the
structures and features of narrative poetry
• Analyze a narrative poem and explain how the writer uses language and narrative elements for effect.
Prose vs. Poetry Transforming a Traditional Tale Using Language to Develop Theme EMBEDDED ASSESSMENT 1 Previewing Embedded Assessment 2 Essential Questions: How has your understanding of language changed over the course of this unit?
about percent increase, percent decrease, markups, and discounts
• Solve problems about interest and percent error
QUARTER 3
Geometry
Essential Questions:
Why is it important to understand properties of angles and figures to solve problems?
Why is it important to be able to relate two-dimensional drawings with three-dimensional figures?
Academic Vocabulary
Unique, orientation,
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What did you learn in the first half of the unit that has prepared you for the second Essential Question: How do performers communicate meaning to an audience? Performing Shakespeare Using the QHT and SIFT strategies Improvisation
• Explore plot through role playing
• Create a visual representation of key events or characters
Improvisation Analyze and Deliver a Monologue Acting for Understanding
• Annotate a dialogue by paraphrasing
decompose
Math Terms
Angle, complementary angles, complement, vertical angles, included angle, similar figures, corresponding parts, plane, circumference, radius, semicircle, prism, pyramid, lateral face, lateral area, slant height, complex solid, vertex, supplementary angles, supplement, conjecture, included side, congruent, circle, center, diameter, composite figure, inscribed figure, net, cross section, right prism, surface area, volume
Angle Pairs:
• Use facts about
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lines • Plan and
rehearse a performance that communicates meaning to an audience through vocal and visual delivery.
Interpreting Character in Performance
• Analyze and perform a dialogue
Comparing Film and Text Explore Theatrical Elements EMBEDDED ASSESSMENT 2
complementary, supplementary, and adjacent angles to write equations.
• Solve simple equations for an unknown angle in a figure.
Complementary, Supplementary, and Adjacent Angles
• Write and solve equations using geometry concepts.
• Solve problems involving the sum of the angles in a triangle.
• Solve equations
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involving angle relationships
Triangle Measurements:
• Decide if three side lengths deter-mine a triangle
• Draw a triangle given measures of sides
EMBEDDED ASSESSMENT 1
Angles and Triangles/ Focus on adjacent, vertical, complementary, and supplementary angles and angles of a triangle.
Similar Figures:
• Identify
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whether or not polygons are similar
• Find a common ratio for correspond- ing side lengths of similar polygons
Indirect Measurement:
• Apply properties of similar figures to determine missing lengths.
• Solve problems using similar figures.
Circles: Circumference and Area
• Investigate the ratio of
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the circumfer- ence of a circle to its diameter
• Apply the formula to find the circumfer-
• ence of a circle
Area of a Circle
• Approxi- mate the area of a cir-cle.
• Apply the formula to find the area of a circle.
Composite Area:
• Determine the area of geometric figures.
• Determine the area of composite figures.
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EMBEDDED ASSESSMENT 2
Circumference and Area
Sketching Solids
• Draw different views of three-dimensional solids.
• Identify cross sections and other views of pyramids and prisms.
Lateral and Total Surface Area of Prisms
• Calculate the lateral and total surface area of prisms.
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Lateral and Total Surface Area of Pyramids
• Calculate the lateral and total surface area of pyramids.
Volume – Prisms and Pyramids
• Calculate the volume of prisms.
• Calculate the volume of pyramids
• Calculate the volume of complex solids
• Understand the relationship between the volume of a prism and the volume of a
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pyramid.
EMBEDDED ASSESMENT 3
Surface Area and Volume:
Draw and label a net
Find the surface area of a prism
Sketch and label the dimensions of a cross section of a solid
Unit 5- Probability
Essential Questions:
How is probability used to make decisions in everyday situations?
How can probability be estimated?
Academic Vocabulary:
Predict, simulation
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Math Terms:
Probability experiment, probability, equally likely outcomes, selected at random, event, complement, theoretical probability, estimated probability, sample space, tree diagram, random digits
Getting Ready
Exploring Probability:
• Reason about the likelihood of winning a game based on a probability experiment.
• Provide support for winning strategies of a game based on a
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probability experiment.
Investigate Chance Processes:
• Collect data about chance processes in frequency tables or lists.
• Determine probabilities for outcomes in a probability experiment.
• Describe the results of an investigation and support the conclusions
Estimating Probabilities:
• Interpret a probability as the fraction of the number of times that an
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outcome occurs when a probability experiment is repeated many times.
• Estimate probabilities of outcomes in probability experiments.
Making Decisions:
• Make a decision based on probabilities
• Expect variation in results from chance processes.
• Write about chance processes and justify conclusions based on probability experiments.
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Probability:
• Recognize when a probability experiment has outcomes that are equally likely.
• Calculate probabilities for a probability experiment with equally likely outcomes.
• Know what “selected at random” means.
Theoretical Probability:
• Calculate theoretical probabilities for a probability experiment.
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• Estimate probabilities by observing outcomes of a probability experiment.
Comparing Probabilities:
• Compare theoretical probabilities and estimated probabilities.
EMBEDDED ASSESSMENT 1
Finding Probabilities:
Anticipate outcomes based on a probability model.
Reason about plausible probability models given observed outcomes.
Calculate theoretical probabilities for a probability
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experiment that has equally likely outcomes.
Estimate probabilities.
Games and Probabilities
• Use observed outcomes to estimate probabilities.
• Use tables to represent the possible outcomes of a probability.
• Assign probabilities to outcomes in a sample space.
• Use probabilities assigned to outcomes in a sample space to compute event probabilities.
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Probability:
• Use artificial processes to simulate outcomes. Include compound events.
• Assign random digits to outcomes
• Design and carry out a simulation using random digits. Include compound events.
EMBEDDED ASSESSMENT 2
Probability and Simulation
Use tables and tree diagrams to represent outcomes.
Use a tree diagram to
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assign probabilities to outcomes in the sample space.
Reason about equally likely outcomes.
Plan a simulation for a given probability experiment.
Use simulation to estimate probabilities.
END OF QUARTER 3
Unit 6 Statistics
Essential Questions:
Why is it important to select at random when choosing a sample from a population?
How can sample data be used to learn about a population?
How can sample data be used to compare
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two populations?
Academic Vocabulary:
Population, sample, census
Math Terms:
Sampling variability, sample mean, random sample, population mean
Statistics
• Determine from what population data has been collected.
• Determine if a data collection is a census.
• Display and analyze data in circle graphs, bar charts, and dot plots.
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Sampling from a population:
• Understand that the way a sample is selected is important.
• Understand that random sampling is a fair method for selecting a sample.
• Use the random-number digit table to select a random sample.
Exploring Sampling Variability:
• Understand the difference between variability in a population and sampling variability.
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• Know that increasing the sample size decreases sampling variability.
Predictions and Conclusions :
• Use data from a ran- dom sample to estimate a population characteris- tic.
• Understand the implications of sampling variability when estimating a population characteris- tic.
• Use data from a random sample to draw a conclusion
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about a population.
EMBEDDED ASSESSMENT 1
Determine methods for selecting a random sample.
Identify sampling variability.
Use data from a sample to draw a conclusion about a population.
Comparative Statistics:
• Compare the means of two numerical samples.
• Understand that a meaningful difference between two sample means is one that is greater than
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would have been expected due to sampling variability alone.
• Use data from random samples to compare populations.
Difference in terms of MAD
• Compare the population means for populations with approximately the same amount of variability.
• Express the difference in the sample means in terms of mean absolute deviation (MAD).
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• Draw conclusions about population differences based on sample size and the difference in sample means relative to the MAD.
Calculating MAD for a sample
• Calculate the mean absolute deviation (MAD).
• Use two random samples to compare population means.
• Draw conclusions about populations with similar amounts of
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variability based on the difference of two sample means.
EMBEDDED ASSESSMENT 2
Comparing Populations
Understand sampling variability.
Use data from random samples to compare populations.
Unit 7
Personal Financial Literacy
Essential Questions: How does being financially literate help you manage your money? How can you plan ahead for future
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financial goals? Academic Vocabulary: income tax, property tax, budget, variable expense, assets, compound interest, coupon, sales tax, take home pay, fixed expense, net worth, liabilities, monetary incentive, rebates Getting Ready Budgeting and Money Management
• Examine taxes on wages and on purchases
• Analyze a family budget and calculate percentages for each part of a budget
Understanding earnings and budgets Financial Planning
• Construct a
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statement of financial net worth.
• Calculate and compare simple and compound interest earnings.
• Analyze and compare sales taxes and various ways to save money on purchases.
Budgeting and Money Management
• Explain how using a monthly budget and calculating net worth are used to help plan for and meet long-term financial goals.
Activities and
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Resources:
Brainpop
Kahn Academy
ODE Website
Projects
Mental Math
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Elementary GT Curriculum Pacing Guide Grade: Quarters 1 & 2
Novel List
Title Author Lexile Score
Grd
The Secret Garden Frances Hodgson Burnett 460 2.5Tales of a Fourth Grade Nothing Judy Blume 470 2.5The Cage Ruth Minsky Sander 500 2.7Stone Fox John Reynolds Gardiner 550 3Sarah, Plain & Tall Patricia MacLachlan 560 3And Then There Were None Agatha Christie 570 3.1The Whipping Boy Sid Fleischman 570 3.1If You Lived in Colonial Times Ann McGovern 590 3.3Star Girl Jerry Spinelli 590 3.3Because of Winn Dixie Kate DiCamillo 610 3.3Circle of Gold Candy Dawson Boyd 610 3.3McHiggins the Great Virginia Hamilton 620 3.5Homecoming Cynthis Voight 630 3.5White Fang Jack London 650 3.7Holes Louis Sachar 660 3.7The Face on a Milk Carton Caroline B. Cooney 660 3.7Darkness Before Dawn Sharon Draper 670 3.9Number The Stars Lois Lowry 670 3.9The House of Dies Drear Virginia Hamilton 670 3.9Charlotte's Web E. B. White 680 4If You Grew Up with George Washington Ruth Below Gross 680 4A Day No Pigs Would Die Robert Newton Peck 690 4Wringer Jerry Spinelli 690 4Catwings Ursula K. Le Guin 700 4.1From the Mixed-‐Up Files of Mrs. Basil E. Frankweiler E. L Konigsburg 700 4.1Navajo Long Walk Nancy Armstrong 700 4.1Where the Red Fern Grows Wilson Rawls 700 4.1Who comes with Cannons Patricia Beatty 700 4.1The Story of the White House Kate Waters 710 4.1A Wrinkle in Time Madeleine L’Engle 740 4.4The True Confessions of Charlotte Doyle Avi 740 4.4
Novel List
Title Author Lexile Score
Grd
The Outsiders S. E, Hinton 750 4.5The Westing Game Ellen Raskin 750 4.5Sarah Bishop Scott O'Dell 760 4.6The Best Christmas Pageant Ever Barbara Robinson 760 4.6The Giver Lois Lowry 760 4.6Great Exploration David Neufield 770 4.7My Brother Sam is Dead James Lincoln Collier 770 4.7The Sign of the Beaver Elizabeth George Speare 770 4.7Tuck Everlasting Natalie Babbitt 770 4.7Indian in The Cupboard Lynn Reed Banks 780 4.8The Glory Field Walter Dean Myers 800 5Bridge to Terabithia Katherine Paterson 810 5Charlie and the Chocolate Factory Roald Dahl 810 5Goodbye Vietnam Gloria Whelan 810 5Maniac Magee Jerry Spinelli 820 5.2The City in the Lake Rachel Neumeier 840 5.5The Witch of Blackbird Pond Elizabeth George Speare 850 5.5If You Traveled West in a Covered Wagon Ellen Levine 860 5.6James and the Giant Peach Roald Dahl 870 5.8The Light in The Forest Conrad Ritcher 870 5.8The View From Saturday E. L. Konigsburg 870 5.8Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire J. K. Rowling 880 5.9Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Askaban J. K. Rowling 880 5.9Harry Potter and the Sorcerers Stone J. K. Rowling 880 5.9Caddie Woodland C. R. Brink 890 5.9Shiloh Phyllis Reynolds Naylor 890 5.9The Red Badge of Courage Stephen Crane 900 6Old Yeller Fred Gibson 910 6Roll of Thunder, Hear My Cry Mildred Taylor 920 6.3Our World of Mysteries Suzanne Lord 930 6.4
Novel List
Title Author Lexile Score
Grd
The Golden Compass Philip Pullman 930 6.4Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets J. K. Rowling 940 6.5One Upon a Time in the North Phillip Paulman 940 6.5The Lion, Witch and Wardrobe C. S. Lewis 940 6.5Bud, Not Buddy Christopher Paul Curtis 950 6.7The Pigman Paul Zindel 950 6.7Mr. Blue Jeans Maryann N. Weidt 960 6.7Eragon Christoher Paloni 970 6.9Island of the Blue Dolphins Scott O'Dell 1000 7.4The Phantom Tollbooth Norton Juster 1000 7.4The Watsons Go to Birmingham Christopher Paul Curtis 1000 7.4The Wizard of Oz L. Frank Baum 1000 7.4The Eygpt Game Zilpha Keatley Snyder 1010 7.5Hatchet Gary Paulsen 1020 7.7Harry Potter and the Half Blooded Prince J. K. Rowling 1030 7.9April Morning Howard Fast 1050 8.2Tales of Real Escape Paul Dowswell 1060 8.5Anne Frank: Beyond the Diary Ruud van der Rot and Rian Verhoeven 1070 8.6D'Aulaires Book of Greek Myths Edgar Parin d'Aulaire 1070 8.6Blizzard Jim Murphy 1080 8.8The Diary of Anne Frank Anne Frank 1080 8.8Amos Fortune Free Man Elizabeth Yates 1090 8.8Across Five Aprils Irene Hunt 1100 8.9Castle David MacCaulay 1180 10.3Where the River Runs Nancy P. Graff 1340 13.7Animal Farm George Orwell 1370 13.9The Death of Lincoln: A Picture History of the Assassination Leroy Hayman Not Assigned 4.5Nothing But the Truth Avi Not Assigned 6.9
Novel List
SubjectFriendship
Colonial DaysMidieval TimesMysteryNF-‐Colonial Times
Missing Child**Adult Content**
HolocaustUnderground Railroad
Great Depression
Underground Railroad/Civil War
Science Fiction
Novel List
Subject1950'sMysteryRevolutionary War
Science Fiction/Government/CommunitiesNFRevolutionary War
Grief/Relationships
NF-‐Westward ExpansionFantasy/Insects
Witchcraft and WizardryWitchcraft and WizardryWitchcraft and WizardryNative Americans (1864-‐65)Internal Struggle/Animal Abuse
Racism/Civil Rights
Novel List
Subject
Witchcraft and Wizardry
Fantasy Englan WW II
NF-‐Levi Strauss
Scince FictionRacism/Civil Rights
Witchcraft and Wizardry
NFNF-‐HolocaustMythology
NF Diary/Holocaust
Civil WarNF-‐CastlesNF-‐Cambodian Refugees
NF-‐BiographyBill of Rights/Point of View/Freedom of Speech
Vocabulary Workshop – Grade 6
Strand: Language
Topic: Vocabulary Acquisition and Use
Standard Statements
4. Determine or clarify the meaning of unknown and multiple-‐ meaning words and phrases based on grade 6 reading and content, choosing flexibly from a range of strategies.
a. Use context (e.g., the overall meaning of a sentence or paragraph; a word’s position or function in a sentence) as a clue to the meaning of a word or phrase.
b. Use common, grade-‐appropriate Greek or Latin affixes and roots as clues to the meaning of a word (e.g., audience, auditory, audible).
c. Consult reference materials (e.g., dictionaries, glossaries, thesauruses), both print and digital, to find the pronunciation of a word or determine or clarify its precise meaning or its part of speech.
d. Verify the preliminary determination of the meaning of a word or phrase (e.g., by checking the inferred meaning in context or in a dictionary).
5. Demonstrate understanding of figurative language, word relationships, and nuances in word meanings.
a. Interpret figures of speech (e.g., personification) in context.
b. Use the relationship between particular words (e.g., cause/effect, part/whole, item/category) to better understand each of the words.
c. Distinguish among the connotations (associations) of words with similar denotations (definitions) (e.g., stingy, scrimping, economical, unwasteful, thrifty).
6. Acquire and use accurately grade-‐appropriate general academic and domain-‐specific words and phrases; gather vocabulary knowledge when considering a word or phrase important to comprehension or expression.