Subject-Verb Agreement

According to our Journey's Kindergarten Curriculum, I am supposed to be teaching subject-verb agreement this week, however, we do not have any of the resources that go along with the plans, so I had to get a little creative!

I made my own little subject-verb agreement unit which includes posters, whole-group pocket chart activities, and independent practice worksheets and I used them with my class before sharing on TPT. The kids really seemed to get it by the end of the week & I had fun teaching because I love testing my own products with them and I love interactive learning!


We started out with a lesson on what the subject and verb are in a sentence by looking at some posters from the unit and discussing the example sentences. Then we worked together to find and circle the subjects and underline the verbs in a few different sentences that I projected up on the screen (these are included in the packet & can be used as a pocket chart activity as well).



And of course wrapped it all up with a worksheet for independent practice:


In our next lesson we looked at another poster and discussed the fact that the subject and verb need to agree with each other. I told them that they have a "meeting" and agree on who is going to carry the letter S. If the subject is plural then the subject agrees to carry the S and the verb doesn't have to worry about a thing. If the subject is singular, however, then the verb agrees to carry the S and gives the subject a break. Then we read the example sentences on the poster and I made sure to very clearly point out and emphasize the fact that when the sentence was talking about more than one WHO or WHAT (A.K.A. a plural SUBJECT) then the subject got the s!!!!! (I hope you can sense the overdramatic articulation and repetition that I used in this discussion from my italicizing, bolding, and underlining☺️ ).

Feel free to take this freebie for your class!
Once I felt like they sort of got it, I whipped out a pocket chart activity and told them that I would read the sentences out loud and that they would help me choose the correct words to put in the blanks. For the first few sentences I pointed out whether or not the subject had an S at the end to help them choose the verb that did or did not have it's own S. After that I let them do it all by themselves.

https://www.teacherspayteachers.com/Product/Subject-Verb-Agreement-Unit-1824388


When we finished completing the pocket chart sentences, we headed back to our tables and did a "Do the Subject and Verb agree?" worksheet. (They were all laughing a little too hard when I read the sentences aloud that didn't make sense).


If you want to try this unit it out with your class, you can click on the picture below and purchase it from my TPT store. Have a great weekend! 



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