A Kit to Make a Kite

A Kit to Make a Kite

A Kit to Make a Kite
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Target text

Objective

Read and write words that contrast long- and short-vowel words.

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Lesson Plan

Target Words:

  • kit, kite
  • mad, made
  • hop, hope
  • tap, tape
  • hid, hide
  • slid, slide

Materials:

  • Box or bag
  • Cardstock, plastic bag, or file folder cut into the shape of a kite
  • Two sticks of different lengths
  • String
  • Word-building cards*
  • Word cards*
  • How to Make a Kite from a Kit text*
  • Fly a Kite Made from a Kit text*

*Items included below

State and Model the Objective
Tell the children that they will make a kite from a kit as they read short- and long-vowel words, such as kit and kitetap and tape, and hop and hope.

Literacy Activities
Differentiate between short-vowel and long-vowel words

  • Write short- and long-vowel word pairs in a T-chart, and read the words with the children.
  • Point out that the long-vowel words have a silent e at the end.
  • Change short-vowel words into long-vowel words by adding silent e.

Make a kite using a kit

  • Show the children the items in the kite kit (e.g., paper, sticks, string, tape).
  • Have the children read the How to Make a Kite from a Kit target text (see below).
  • Help the children make a kite from the materials in the kit.

Make short- or long-vowel words

  • Let the children use the word-building cards to change short-vowel words into long-vowel words by placing a silent e at the end.
  • Turn the word kit to kite and mad→ made, tap tape, cap→ capepal pale, mat mate, cut cute, rip ripe, sit site, bit bite, hid hide, slid slide, dim dime, fin fine, gap gape, hop hope, and plan→ plane

Read and recognize short- and long-vowel words

  • Read the Fly a Kite Made from a Kit target text (see below) with the children.
  • Ask the children to sort short- from long-vowel word cards (see below).
  • Have the children write directions for making a kite from dictation or suggestions (e.g., cut or rip paper; cut paper in the shape of a kite; tape on a little stick; tape on a big stick; snip or cut a bit of string; tape the string on the stick).
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SEEL Target Texts

How to Make a Kite from a Kit

A kite kit lets us make a kite.
We can make a kite from a kit.


The kite kit has sticks, paper, tape, and string.
Tip the kit to dump out things to make a kite.
We hope to make a fine kite.
We hope the kite will fly like a plane!


Cut the paper in the shape of a kite.
Pick sticks that will fit on the kite.
Tape the sticks to the kite.
Cut a bit of string and tie it to the kite.


Tap the nice kite we made.
We made the kite with paper and a bit of string.
Hop if you think the kite will fly.
We hope the kite we made will fly!

Fly a Kite Made from a Kit

I have a plan!
We can make a kite from a kit.
Can we fly a kite made from a kit?
We hope it will fly like a plane.
Do not be mad if the kite does not fly.
The kite will still be nice and fine.


Hop with the kite made from a kit.
Wave the kite we made.
Run with the kite in your hand.
Grab a bit of string and pull the kite.
Let the kite fly in the wind.
We hope that the kite will fly.


Did the kite take a dip or do a flip?
Did the kite fly in the sky like a plane?


What a fine kite—a kite made from a kit!

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Printouts

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/