Details
Pages
25 Pages
Subject
Reading & Literacy, Reading Skills, Composition
Product
Digital
Grade
1st, 2nd
Resource Type
Assignments, Handouts, Literacy Centers
Description
20 riddles for the month of June for your students to read, think, write and solve. These riddles are a great writing activity for morning seat work. Students settle right in with reading and writing. It is motivating because the children love to guess what today's riddle answer might be. You can easily assign these riddles for distance learning and school-at-home work.
Each riddle is a June theme idea and contains many high frequency words. Your students read the riddle, think, and write a sentence that answers the question. Next, they illustrate the sentence that they wrote. This is a motivating writing-reading-thinking literacy activity that you may use for morning seat work, homework, for fast finishers or anytime. This resource includes teacher directions, bin labels and an answer key.
Also there are covers if you wish to make an 'June Riddle' booklet.
It is appropriate for grades 1 -2 and homeschoolers.
How to include a morning riddle in your daily routine:
When students arrive each morning, they ready themselves to start the day. Riddles are in a bin on a shelf.
Students bring their morning riddle to their table or desk.
Students start to read and it will warm your heart to see independent readers already reading, even before attendance has been taken.
Allow students to help each other with the reading.
Natural talk begins.
You will start to hear "I know what it is?"
Students begin drawing and writing to show the answer.
Sometime later, you can show the riddle with your document camera or whiteboard.
Read as a whole group.
Talk about the answers.
Underline any keywords that helped to solve the riddle.
Circle any key sight words you wish to teach and review.
Teach interactive writing. Writing skills to focus on might be:
complete sentences
adding details
capital letters
punctuation
spelling
On occasion, have your students complete daily word work or other focused reading skills on the back of the page. i.e. teaching a spelling or grammar rule
When these morning riddles become part of your morning routine, you will notice:
students focused on text
students readily and willing to read
students thinking
students helping students
writing improvement
June Morning Riddles Theme focus:
summer games
summer activities
at the Beach
Flag Day
Thank you for previewing this teacher resource.
Each riddle is a June theme idea and contains many high frequency words. Your students read the riddle, think, and write a sentence that answers the question. Next, they illustrate the sentence that they wrote. This is a motivating writing-reading-thinking literacy activity that you may use for morning seat work, homework, for fast finishers or anytime. This resource includes teacher directions, bin labels and an answer key.
Also there are covers if you wish to make an 'June Riddle' booklet.
It is appropriate for grades 1 -2 and homeschoolers.
How to include a morning riddle in your daily routine:
When students arrive each morning, they ready themselves to start the day. Riddles are in a bin on a shelf.
Students bring their morning riddle to their table or desk.
Students start to read and it will warm your heart to see independent readers already reading, even before attendance has been taken.
Allow students to help each other with the reading.
Natural talk begins.
You will start to hear "I know what it is?"
Students begin drawing and writing to show the answer.
Sometime later, you can show the riddle with your document camera or whiteboard.
Read as a whole group.
Talk about the answers.
Underline any keywords that helped to solve the riddle.
Circle any key sight words you wish to teach and review.
Teach interactive writing. Writing skills to focus on might be:
complete sentences
adding details
capital letters
punctuation
spelling
On occasion, have your students complete daily word work or other focused reading skills on the back of the page. i.e. teaching a spelling or grammar rule
When these morning riddles become part of your morning routine, you will notice:
students focused on text
students readily and willing to read
students thinking
students helping students
writing improvement
June Morning Riddles Theme focus:
summer games
summer activities
at the Beach
Flag Day
Thank you for previewing this teacher resource.
20 riddles for the month of June for your students to read, think, write and solve. These riddles are a great writing activity for morning seat work. Students settle right in with reading and writing. It is motivating because the... more