Smack the Witch's Hat Flat

Lesson Plan
Target Words:
- Fat
- Hat
- Dash
- Cat
- Black
- Flat
Materials:
- Black construction paper
- Chalk
- Pictures* or toy bat, cat, and rat
- A Witch’s Flat Hat target text*
*Items included below.
State and Model the Objective
Tell the children that they will read and write stories about a witch that will use short-a words such as fat, hat, bat, cat, black, splat, and dash.
Literacy Activities
Introduce the target words
- Show the children words from the text.
- Point out that all the words have the short-a sound.
- Help the children read the words.
- Optional: show the children how a bat can flap in this video.
Read A Witch’s Flat Hat
- Read A Witch’s Flat Hat target text (see below) with children and fade support.
- Have the children find words in the poem that have the short-a sound.
- Show how the poem is in the shape of a hat and let the children draw a witch’s hat.
- Have the children write short-a words to dictation on the hats they draw (e.g., at, flap, bat, hat, black, rat, bat, cat).
Make a witch’s hat
- Have the children make witches’ hats out of black paper triangles stapled to headbands.
- Give the children use chalk to write hat on their hats.
- Use the hats as props for the next activity.
Re-enact the story
- Label the pictures of the bat, cat, and rat (see below) and assign them as roles for re-enacting the story.
- Have the bat, cat, and rat run and jump on the hat.
- Let a witch wave a pretend broom at the cat, rat, and bat, tell them to “scat,” and smack the hat flat.
Identify, blend, and manipulate sounds
- Have the children blend individual sounds into words by clapping once for each sound, and then a fourth time to say the whole word (e.g., /b/ /a/ /t/ = /bat/).
- Point out that all the words have the /a/ vowel sound.
Write about the activity using target words
- Have the children take turns passing the flat hat.
- As the children receive the hat, have them say a new word that ends in -at.
- Write each new word on the board.
- Repeat the game, this time having the children write each word on or around the paper hat.
- Allow the children to write a sentence about a hat using the words written on the hat (e.g., “I see a cat on a hat”).
SEEL Target Texts
A Witch's Flat Hat
I
see a
fat bat
flap up to
a black hat. I
see the bat land
on the hat. I see a fat,
black cat. I see the cat
jump on the black hat by the
bat. I see a big, fat rat in the trash!
I see it dash up onto the back of the
black cat. I see a witch! “Scat!” says the witch.
“Get off my hat!” Whack! Smack! “Oh no—my hat is flat!”
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/
1049156
Smack the Witch's Hat Flat