*Who Got the Dot?

Objective
Blend a beginning consonant or consonant blend with –ot to make rhyming words such as dot, spot, and got.
Lesson Plan
Target Words:
- dot
- got
- not
- pot
- lot
- spot
Materials:
- Drawing of a dot (example below)
- Who Can Spot the Dot? target text*
*Items included below
State the Objective
Tell the children that they will play a game to find a dot and a spot while they make -ot words such as dot, spot, got, and not.
Literacy Activities
Pass a dot
- Tell the children to listen for -ot words as they play Who Got the Dot?
- Choose a child to be “it” who closes or covers their eyes while the others stand around them in a circle.
- Let the children pass a dot around and chant "Dot, dot, who’s got the dot?"
- Say, "Stop!" and have the children hide their hands behind their backs.
- Have the child who is "it" ask each child in the circle, “Have you got the dot?”
- If the child doesn't have the dot, have them say, "No, I do not have the dot."
- If the child has the dot, have them say, "I’ve got the dot!"
- Let the child with the dot be "it" for the next round.
Spot the dot
- Write the words dot, lot, spot, got, and not in a list and read them with the children.
- Explain that spot can mean the same thing as see or notice.
- Place a few dots around the room when the children aren’t looking.
- Ask the children, “Spot, spot, can you spot a dot?”
- When the children find the dot, have them grab it and say, “I got the dot!”
Read target words in a text
- Read the Who Can Spot the Dot? target text (see below) with the children.
- Have the children underline the words that end in ot.
- Break -ot words into individual sounds (e.g., d + o + t, g + o + t, n + o + t).
- Have the children tell you the word you are sounding out.
Generate -ot words
- List -ot words: dot, got, spot, not.
- Read the words with the children, pointing out that they all end with ot.
- Ask if pot, lot, and hot end in ot, and add them to the list.
- Read the list with the children.
Identify, blend, and manipulate sounds
- Write -ot, then give the children pieces of paper with consonants written on them (e.g., d, g, h, l, n, p, r).
- Have the children put their consonants next to the -ot ending to create words.
- Help the children blend the word parts and read the words (e.g., hot)
Write about spots and dots
- Perform the actions in the chart below and describe what you are doing.
- Write what you say on the board, leaving blank spaces for the -ot words.
- Let the children supply or write the missing -ot words.
Teacher Does |
Teacher Says |
Teacher and Children Write |
Hold up a spot and a dot. |
I got a spot and a dot. |
I ___ a ___and a ___. |
Put a dot on the wall and find it. |
I spot a dot. |
I ___ a ____. |
Draw a spot with dots on it. |
The spot has a lot of dots. |
The ___has a ___ of ____. |
SEEL Target Texts
Who Can Spot the Dot?
Dot, dot, who can spot the dot?
Can you spot the dot in a pot?
No, the spot is not in the pot.
No dot in the pot.
Spot, spot, who can spot the dot?
I can not spot the dot.
But YOU can spot the dot.
You got the dot!
Spot, spot, who can spot the dot?
I can spot the dot!
I can spot the dot you got!
Standards
SEEL lessons align with Common Core Standards. Please see the standards page for the code(s) associated with this lesson.

http://education.byu.edu/seel/library/
1468828
*Who Got the Dot?