Plants: Supplemental Guide 8B | George Washington Carver 175
Note: There may be variations in the sentences created by your class.
Allow for these variations and restate students’ sentences so that they
are grammatical. Repeat each sentence for the students. If necessary,
ask students to repeat your sentence.
Show image 11A-8: Collage of products
- Name one thing you see in this picture. (peanuts)
- I see peanuts.
Name something else you see in this picture (peanut butter) - I see peanut butter.
Now let’s put these two sentences together using and. We use and to
show that there is something more or to add more information. - I see peanuts, and I see peanut butter.
Show image 11A-3: Young George
- I see peanuts.
- What is George doing? (sitting next to a stream)
- George is sitting next to a stream.
What else is George doing? (holding a seedling in his hand) - George is holding a seedling in his hand.
What word can we use to put these two sentences together? - and
We use and to show that there is something more or to add more
information. - George is sitting next to a stream, and George is holding a seedling in
his hand.
- Using the word and, tell your partner two things that interest you. For
example, you could say, “I have an interest in animals, and I have an
interest in math.”
Vocabulary Instructional Activity
Word Work: Experiment
- In the read-aloud you heard that “[George Washington Carver] spent
the rest of his life continuing to study plants and experiment with ways
to make them grow better.” - Say the word experiment with me three times.
- When you do an experiment, you are testing something to see what
will happen or trying out different things to see what they are like.