Toil to Clean a Toy
Objective
Read and write words with the vowel combination spelled -oy or -oi and recognize that both spellings have the same pronunciation.
Lesson Plan
Target Words:
- toy
- joy
- toil
- coin
- soil
- ploy
- choice
Materials:
- Toy car or a picture of a car*
- Dirt
- Damp cloth
- Word-building cards*
- Will You Toil for Coins? target text*
- Toil to Clean a Toy target text*
*Items included below
State and Model the Objective
The children will toil to clean a toy and then read and write words spelled with -oi and -oy, such as soil, toil, avoid, choice, toy, joy, boy, and annoy.
Literacy Activities
Toil to clean soiled toys
- Ask the children if they ever played with a toy car in soil (dirt).
- Allow the children to drive a toy car or the picture of a car (found below) in a little bit of real or pretend soil.
- Tell the children that they will have to toil (work hard) or pay someone a coin to clean off the soil.
- Have the children write toil if their choice is to work to clean the car.
- Have the children write coin if their choice is to pay someone else to clean the toy.
- Say, “In the future, avoid getting soil on your toys. It’s annoying to get soil on your toys.”
- Make a list of -oi and -oy words (e.g., coin, soil, toy, avoid, annoy, choice).
- State that -oi and -oy have the same pronunciation but are spelled differently.
More Practice
Identify, blend, and manipulate sounds
With the word-building cards (found below), have the children make words by changing the beginning, middle, or end sounds:
- Change the beginning consonant: toil→ soil; toy→ joy; coin→ join
- Change the ending sounds: coil→ coin; soil→ soy; join→ joy
Read target words in texts
- Read the Will You Toil for Coins? target text (found below) to the children.
- Engage the children in reading the target text with you.
- Read the text again, fading support.
- Have the children underline words with -oy and -oi in the text.
- Repeat with the Toil to Clean a Toy target text (found below).
Write about the activity using target words and patterns
- Have the children help create a T-chart with one column for the -oi words and one for the -oy words.
- Display a word wall with -oi and -oy words and ask children to use some of the words as they create one or two sentences (e.g., “I enjoy my toy. I will toil for a coin.”).
SEEL Target Texts
Toil to Clean a Toy
Will You Toil for Coins?
SEEL At Home
Objective
Read and write words with the vowel combination spelled -oy and -oi and recognize that both spellings have the same pronunciation.
Materials
- Various toys
- Sponges or washcloths
- Coins (real or pretend)
- Container for coins
Activity: A Coin for a Toy Wash
- Invite your child to run a pretend toy wash (with pretend or real water) to clean people's soiled (dirty) toys.
- Set out a pile of toys, a small container for coins, and sponges/washcloths.
- Invite family members or friends to bring a coin and a toy to the toy wash.
- Take turns being the person who runs the pretend toy wash.
- Make comments like, "Only one coin for a toy wash!" and "What a joy to clean a soiled toy!"
- Ask your child to listen for the /oy/ sound in certain words and help him or her write the words (e.g., boy, toy, joy, toil, soil, oil).
- Take turns pretending that the toys are reading the words on the list, adding silly voices for even more fun!
Standards
SEEL lessons align with Common Core Standards. Please see the standards page for the code(s) associated with this lesson.
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Toil to Clean a Toy