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A Thing for a King

Have fun with decodable text.

By Meg Richardson | Designed by Marybeth Butler Rivera

Learning Objective: Students will decode words with a final digraph -ng and understand the sequence of events in a story.

Lexiles: 190L

Standards

Story Navigation

A Thing for a King


The king will not go to bed!


Ding, ding!
Ding, ding!


Did you ring, my king?


Yes, bring me a thing. 


A thing? OK. 


I got you a ring, King!


That is not the thing.

I have a lot of bling. 


I got you a swing,
my king.


I do not want a swing. Bring me a new thing.

It is for you, King.

Ping pong!

No! Not ping pong.

I want a song.


Will you get to bed then?

What song can I sing?


Sing a long song! You can wing it.


Stop! Do not sing that song.


La la la!

Hello, King.

I have the thing.

Yes! That is the thing! I can get to bed.


Good night, King!

Nosey Digs Phonics! Game 

Games (1)
Slideshows (1)
Activities (2)
Answer Key (1)
Games (1)
Slideshows (1)
Activities (2) Download All Quizzes and Activities
Answer Key (1)

More About the Article

English Language Arts Focus

Phonics and Phonological Awareness

Fluency

Phonics Focus

Final Digraph -ng

Word List

thing, king, ding, ring, bring, bling, swing, ping, pong, song, sing, long, wing

High Frequency Words

you, got, not

Challenge Words

new, night

Step-by-Step Lesson Plan

Implementation

  • Whole group: This fun phonics text is controlled for words with a final digraph -ng. Encourage students to use decoding strategies such as segmenting and continuous blending. Practice choral and echo reading to improve fluency and intonation
  • Technology Time: Students can listen to and read along with the read-aloud feature with the article. They can also play the accompanying online game for more practice.

Pairings and Text Connections

Before-Reading Resources

  • Word sounds slideshow (3 minutes) Warm up reading muscles by practicing words with a final digraph -ng.

Suggested Reading Focus

Phonics and Comprehension (20 minutes)

  • Tell students that a digraph is two letters that make one sound. In this story, they will read words that have the ending -ng digraph. Discuss mouth shape when making the -ng digraph sound.
  • Write the following onsets of words on an easel. Ask students to add the rime -ng to make words and state them aloud:
    • ra 
    • si 
    • po 
    • di 
    • fa 
    • lo
  • Review high-frequency words from the story. Students can practice reading words with a partner, as a class, and individually.
  • As children read, check comprehension: What is the problem at the beginning of the story? What things does the jester bring to help the king? What helps the king finally go to bed?
  • Have students annotate text by circling words with -ng digraphs.

After-Reading Skills Practice

  • Skills: final digraph -ng, phonological awareness (15 minutes)

Text-to-Speech