How do your read-alouds work? - The North Carolina New Teacher

How do your read-alouds work?
I read aloud to my class every.single.day. Yes, there are days when it feels
like a pain because we are pressed for time or the schedule has been
changed. But I refuse to shortchange my students when we are deep into a
novel! And if I ever feel like we truly don’t have time that day, my students
make sure that we make the time (usually by begging)!
I begin the school year with a read aloud on the first day of school. From
day one, my students see that I value reading and I value reading together
as a community. Those first days of school are always crazy- assemblies,
extended class periods, getting to know you time, learning the ropes, and all
that. Well, that usually makes for lots of downtime. Instead of doing silly
bulletin board activities or useless worksheets, we read together. It sets the
stage for a great year!
When I read to my students, it is usually at the end of our period
together. I set aside about 15 minutes (sometimes more, sometimes less)
to read each day. My students stay at their desks because we don’t have
the time or space to move around- 6th graders are pretty big. They just
close their binders, put down their pens, and settle in for a relaxing few
minutes. I read and every so often stop to think aloud. These think alouds
might model a reading strategy or share a response I have to the text. At
other times they will elicit responses from the kids. But I try not to spend
too much time talking because that takes away time we could spend
reading.
I usually read between 1-3 chapters per day (depending on the book and
chapter length, of course) and I try to leave my students at the end of a
chapter. If I can’t do that, I leave them hanging at a point when the
time/action moves forward in a chapter. This means I usually dedicate at
least an hour to the read-aloud each week. And honestly? That hour is
time that is usually lost otherwise because it’s “extra” or left-over time
when we transition or the schedule changes or we have an extra 5 minutes
here or there. Learn to use time to your advantage!
https://thereadingzone.wordpress.com/2009/04/05/nuts-and-bolts-of-the-read-aloud-in-my-middleschool-classroom/
Copyright © Raymond C. Jones, PhD
Permission Granted for Classroom Use / All Others Inquire at [email protected]
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ReadingQuest: Making Sense in Social Studies
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http://www.readingquest.org
THINGS YOU FOUND OUT:
INTERESTING THINGS
QUESTION YOU STILL HAVE
ReadingQuest: Making Sense in Social Studies
Copyright © Raymond C. Jones, PhD
http://www.readingquest.org
Permission Granted for Classroom Use / All Others Inquire at [email protected]
12/7/2015
Breaking Barriers, Building Bridges: Critical Discussion of Social Issues - ReadWriteThink
LESSON PLAN
Breaking Barriers, Building Bridges: Critical Discussion of Social Issues
Grades
6–8
Lesson Plan Type
Standard Lesson
Estimated Time
Six 45‐minute sessions, plus additional time for students to read a book
outside of class
Lesson Author
Joy F. Moss
Rochester, New
York
Publisher
Overview
From Theory to Practice
OVERVIEW
Students read and discuss a series of picture books that highlights social barriers and bridges of race, class, and
gender. Prior to a read‐aloud of each picture book, students participate in activities, such as research or
independent reading, that help lay the context for critical discussion of the read‐aloud. Throughout the series of
readings, students respond to each book in a writing journal. After all the picture books have been read, students
use their journal responses to help them synthesize the themes they encountered in the books. They discuss how they
can take action to break barriers they have identified in their own worlds and to build bridges from what is to what
could be. Finally, students read the novel Maniac Magee and discuss how the novel relates to the picture books they
have discussed.
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FROM THEORY TO PRACTICE
In their article "Critical Literacy," Leland and Harste argue that "teachers who want to reimagine [the read‐aloud] as
an opportunity to engage children in critical conversations about power and social justice can help them begin to
understand that every text is written from someone's perspective" (468). The use of picture books, which take little
time to read, allows students to explore multiple perspectives around the theme of social bridges and barriers.
Picture books can invite students to engage in critical discussion of complex issues of race, class, and gender. They
"show how people can begin to take action on important social issues . . . and help us question why certain groups
are positioned as 'others'" (Harste, 2000, p. 507). When they are read aloud, picture books enable students to engage
in dialogue as they consider the narratives in terms of historical contexts, the nature of the implied barriers, and
how individuals can take action to promote social justice and equity.
Further Reading
Leland, Christine H. and Jerome Harste. 2000. "Critical Literacy." In K. M. Pierce (Ed.) Adventuring with Books: A
Booklist for Pre‐K‐Grade 6 (pp. 465‐487). Urbana, IL: NCTE.
Harste, Jerome. 2000. "Supporting Critical Conversation in Classrooms." Adventuring with Books: A Booklist for Pre‐
K‐Grade 6. K. M. Pierce (Ed). Urbana, IL: NCTE.
Moss, Joy. 2002. Literary Discussion in the Elementary School. Urbana, IL: NCTE.
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© ILA/NCTE 2015. All rights reserved.
Technical Help | Legal | International Literacy Association | National Council of Teachers of English
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12/7/2015
Breaking Barriers, Building Bridges: Critical Discussion of Social Issues - ReadWriteThink
http://www.readwritethink.org/classroom-resources/lesson-plans/breaking-barriers-building-bridges-86.html
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12/7/2015
Catching the Bug for Reading Through Interactive Read-Alouds - ReadWriteThink
LESSON PLAN
Catching the Bug for Reading Through Interactive Read‐Alouds
Grades
K–1
Lesson Plan Type
Recurring Lesson
Estimated Time
Three 30‐minute sessions
Lesson Author
Cathy J.
Morton
Ogden, Utah
Publisher
Overview
From Theory to Practice
OVERVIEW
This lesson uses an interactive read‐aloud of Miss Bindergarten Stays Home From Kindergarten by Joseph Slate to
help kindergarten and first‐grade students learn reading strategies and how to prevent the spread of germs in their
classroom. Students discuss and build knowledge about how germs are spread, how to cope with having a substitute
teacher, and how to construct a caring classroom community, all while learning about story structure, new
vocabulary, and a variety of reading strategies.
back to top
FROM THEORY TO PRACTICE
Barrentine, S.J. (1996). Engaging with reading through interactive read‐alouds. The Reading Teacher, 50, 36‐43.
During interactive read‐alouds, teachers pose questions throughout the reading that enhance meaning construction
and also show how one makes sense of texts.
Dialogue during read‐aloud events supports students as they construct meaning based on the story and draw upon
their personal experiences to build story relevance.
These meaning‐centered interactions engage students with literacy information and demonstrate strategies that
they can adopt for use when reading independently.
Rog, L.J. (2001). Early literacy instruction in kindergarten. Newark, DE: International Reading Association.
Select high‐quality literature that extends children's knowledge of literature, language, and the world.
Allow students to discuss the text as it is being read to scaffold their construction of meaning.
back to top
© ILA/NCTE 2015. All rights reserved.
Technical Help | Legal | International Literacy Association | National Council of Teachers of English
http://www.readwritethink.org/classroom-resources/lesson-plans/catching-reading-through-interactive-241.html
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Create a Character Word Cloud
What’s a Word Cloud?
A word cloud is an artistic arrangement of words
of different sizes. The size of each word is related
to the number of times it appears in the text used
to create the word cloud. Frequent words appear
larger than words than words that are not used
as frequently. See the examples on right.
Part I - Complete Character Rating Scale
1. Choose a character for your Character Word Cloud. It could be a fictional
character from a book, a historical figure, or even yourself! Write your
character’s name on the line at the top of the Character Rating Scale.
2. List any 8 character traits below the name of the character. Be sure to choose
a variety of traits - some that describe the character very well and some that
do not describe the character very well.
3. Rate each character trait from 1 to 10 depending on how well it describes the
character. (1 = lowest and 10 = highest) Hint: This activity works best if the
scores range between 4 and 10.
Part 2 - Create Character Word Cloud
1. Use your scores on the rating scale to create a Character Word Cloud for the
character. Open a word processing document and type the first character trait.
Then copy and paste that word over and over the number of times equal to its
score. For example, if you wrote “persistent” and gave it a score of 9, copy
and paste the word “persistent” over 9 times. Do the same for the remaining
character traits. You’ll end up with one long list of words.
2. Visit a word cloud website such as Wordle.net, ABCya.com, or Tagxedo.com.
Look for the “create” or the “word cloud” link and click it to get started
creating your own.
3. Copy and paste your list of words into the text area and check to be sure there
are no spelling errors. Click Submit.
4. Play with the color, font, and layout options until the words are arranged in a
pleasing manner.
5. Check with your teacher before printing your word cloud.
6. If you want to save the word cloud as an image to use later, look for the Save
option. If you can’t find one, you may need to ask your teacher how to
capture it with a screen shot and same it as an image.
© 2011 ~ Created by Laura Candler ~ Teaching Resources ~ www.lauracandler.com
Character Clouds
Write the name of a character at the top of the character
rating scale box. Then list any 8 character traits on the
line below their name. Rate each trait from 1 (low) to 10
(high) according to how well it describes the character.
absent-minded
adventurous
ambitious
argumentative
belligerent
bold
bossy
brave
busy
carefree
caring
careless
cautious
cheerful
clumsy
conceited
confident
considerate
cooperative
courageous
cranky
creative
curious
dainty
daring
dedicated
defiant
demanding
determined
devious
disagreeable
dreamer
energetic
fighter
friendly
fun-loving
generous
gentle
gullible
handsome
happy
hard-working
helpful
honest
humble
humorous
imaginative
impatient
independent
intelligent
inventive
joyful
lazy
leader
logical
lovable
loving
loyal
messy
methodical
mischievous
obedient
observant
outgoing
optimistic
patient
Character Rating Scale
Name ____________________
1. _________________ ____
2. _________________ ____
3. _________________ ____
4. _________________ ____
5. _________________ ____
6. _________________ ____
7. _________________ ____
8. _________________ ____
patriotic
persistent
pessimistic
polite
proud
quiet
reckless
resourceful
respectful
rude
selfish
serious
shy
sly
stubborn
studious
successful
suspicious
thoughtful
timid
unruly
unselfish
witty
© 2011 ~ Created by Laura Candler ~ Teaching Resources ~ www.lauracandler.com
How to Fold Foldables
Table of Contents
Foldable
Page
The 3 Tab
………..……………………….
2
The Booklet
………..……………………….
3
The Tri-Fold
………..……………………….
4
The 4 Door
………..……………………….
5
The Diamond 4 Door
………..……………………….
6
Circle Inlay
………..……………………….
7
Diamond / Octagon
………..……………………….
8
Isosceles Triangle
………..……………………….
9
The Panorama
………..……………………….
10
The Six Door
………..……………………….
11
The Volcano Shape
………..……………………….
12
The 3 Tab
1. Fold a full sheet of paper in half and cut it so that
you have 2 pieces that are 8½ inches by 5½ inches.
2. Make a fold in one of the pieces 3½
inches away from one of the edges.
3. With the other piece, make a fold 4
inches away from one of the edges.
4. Insert the second piece inside the first so
that it looks like this.
5. Open the first page and place a small piece
of tape where the first page meets the
second.
The Booklet
1. Fold a full sheet of paper in half and cut it so that
you have 2 pieces that are 8½ inches by 5½ inches.
2. Fold one of the pieces in half and make a slit
that goes about ¾ of an inch away from either
edge of the paper.
3. Fold the other piece in half and cut notches
on the fold that are slightly more than ¾ of
an inch.
4. Roll (careful not to crease it) the notched
piece and slide it halfway into the slit in the other
piece.
5. Straighten out the notched piece so that the notches
fit into the slit in the other piece and fold it in half
so that you have an eight page booklet.
The Tri-Fold
1. Fold an 8 ½ by 11 piece of paper in half the long way.
2. Hold the long way and fold it in thirds by
making two folds 3 ¾ inches from the edges.
3. Cut down the two folds to the fold in the center
of the paper.
4. Fold the three flaps down.
5. Fold the two side flaps on to the center panel.
The 4 Door
1. Fold a full sheet of paper into quarters.
2. Make 2 folds along the short way of the paper so that it
is divided into 4 equal rows.
3. Cut slits into the folds at the top and bottom of the page.
4. Fold over the flaps so that there are four “doors”. Fold
that over one more time so that the “doors” hidden
inside.
The Diamond 4 Door
1. Fold the top edge of the paper so
that it is even with the side edge of the
paper. Fold the remaining flap of paper
even with the edge that you have folded
down.
2. Cut the small flap from the bottom
of the paper to make a square. Discard
the small flap.
3. Fold the square so that the opposite
corners touch. Unfold the paper to
reveal an “X”.
4. Fold all of the corners of the square
into the center of the X.
Circle Inlay
1. Cut the circles from the paper provided.
2. Fold all of the circles in half
3. Paste the lower half of the largest
circle to the center of a blank piece of
paper.
3. Paste the lower half of the next
largest circle to the lower half of the
largest circle. Continue to do so with
the smaller circles
Diamond / Octagon
1. Fold the top edge of the paper so
that it is even with the side edge of the
paper. Fold the remaining flap of paper
even with the edge that you have folded
down.
2. Cut the small flap from the bottom
of the paper to make a square. Discard
the small flap.
3. Fold the large square in
half twice to create a small
square.
4 loose
ends
2 loose
ends
4. With the paper folded into the
smaller square. Measure 4 cm from the
corners indicated. Draw a line and cut
across the line.
0 loose
ends
5. If the measurements and cuts were made
from the proper corners you will unfold an
octagon that looks like a diamond when
folded up.
Isosceles Triangle
1. Fold an 8 ½ by 11 piece of paper in half the long way.
2. With the paper folded in half, use a ruler to
draw a line to the opposite corners of the paper.
Cut along this line.
3. Keeping the paper folded in half, fold the
top corner down to the croner with the right
angle
4. Fold the other corner of the triangle over
to the right angle.
5. The end result should look like this
The Panorama
Fold a piece of 8 ½ by 11 inch paper in half the short
way then cut on the fold.
Fold each of the pieces in half.
TAPE
Join the two halves together end to
end with a piece of tape.
Fold the two end panels in toward the center, then fold that in half
again.
The Six Door
1. Fold an 8 ½ by 11 piece of paper in half the short way.
2. Now fold the paper into quarters like this.
3. Fold in thirds the long way.
4. Cut along the two folds at either ends of the paper.
5. Fold all of the cut flaps in toward the center.
6. Fold the two side flaps in toward the center.
The Volcano Shape
1. Fold an 8 ½ by 11 piece of paper in half the short way.
2. Fold the bottom flap up and cut the corners so
that they are even with the edges of the triangle.
3. Fold lower flap inside the two side
triangle flaps.
4. Fold the two side triangles into each other.
Dinah Zike's e-Group
Graphic Organizer of the Month
Intructions:
CHART
Click on your
instructional level to see
photographed examples
TABLE
1. Fold the
vertical
columns
needed to
make the table
or chart.
Elementary
Middle & High School
www.dinah.com
for information on
workshops and
conferences, books, and
upcoming events.
2. Fold the
horizontal rows
needed to
make the table
or chart.
3. Label the
rows and
columns.
Tables are organized along
vertical and horizontal axes,
while charts are organized
along one axis, either
horizontal or vertical.
Use the folds in the chart
or table as guides to
draw easy, straight
vertical and horizontal
lines.
Subscribe to DinahZike
enter email address
Powered by groups.yahoo.com
Manipulatives/Catalog/OrderOn-Line
Workshops&Seminars/Latest News/E-Group/Quotes/Home
Elementary
Click here to return to
the E-Group main
page!
Manipulatives/Catalog/Workshops&Seminars/
Latest News/E-Group/Quotes/Home
Click here to return to
the E-Group main
page
Middle & High School
Manipulatives/Catalog/Workshops&Seminars/
Latest News/E-Group/Quotes/Archives/Home
Dinah Zike's e-Group
Graphic Organizer of the Month
Instructions:
Click on your
instructional level to see
photographed examples
Focus Skill: Causes & Effects
1. Fold a sheet
of paper in half
horizontally
(hamburger) so
that one side
is one inch
longer than the
other side.
2. Cut the
shorter side in
half, up
towards the
fold (mountain
top) to create
two flaps.
Elementary
Middle & High School
www.dinah.com
for information on
workshops and
conferences, books, and
upcoming events.
Write a paragraph or
sentences summarizing a
specific cause and effect
Encourage students to add
personal opinions or
observations when
appropriate
Subscribe to DinahZike
enter email address
Powered by groups.yahoo.com
Manipulatives/Catalog/OrderOn-Line
Workshops&Seminars/Latest News/E-Group/Archives/Quotes/Home
Elementary
Click here to return to
the E-Group main
page!
Cause and Effect Ideas
for Elementary Levels:
leaf color change
human growth
night and day
wind
a growing community
extinction of the Dodo
bird or an animal
becoming endangered
water pollution
exploration
a character's actions
in a story
water cycle
Manipulatives/Catalog/Workshops&Seminars/
Latest News/E-Group/Quotes/Home
Click here to return to
the E-Group main
page
Middle & High School
Cause and Effect Idea
Joggers for Middle &
High School:
westward expansion
immigration
industrial revolution
Vietnam War
disease (could be a
specific one such as
malaria)
dominant traits
erosion
heat transfer or
molecular movement
and/or nuclear fusion
mechanical waves
literature based upon
social issues,
protests, or
propaganda
patriotic writings
Manipulatives/Catalog/Workshops&Seminars/
Latest News/E-Group/Quotes/Home
Engaging Students
With Foldables
US History to 1877
41st Annual Conference
Virginia Social Studies Educators
November 4, 2005
Presented by
Susie Orr, Elementary Social Studies Specialist
Fairfax County Public Schools
[email protected]
703-846-8703
This packet contains foldable templates that were modeled after the folding techniques of
Dinah Zike. These models correlate to specific Virginia SOL objectives and essential
knowledge for United States History to 1877. The CD in your folder contains templates
for every unit in US History to 1877, plus photos of foldable models. It is strongly
recommended that when sharing the templates with colleagues, you either demonstrate
the folding techniques or refer to Dinah’s book.
A reference book, Dinah Zike’s Big Book of United States History, or Dinah Zike’s Big
Book of Social Studies, includes clear technique directions on how to complete each of the
folds used in these templates.
Dinah Zike’s Big Book of Social Studies, Elementary K-6
ISBN # 1-882796-20-9 Stock Number: CCC103
Dinah Zike’s Big Book of United States History
ISBN 1-882796-24-1 Stock Number: CCC107
Dinah’s books can be ordered directly from:
www.dinah.com
1-800-99-DINAH
MAPS
Maps are often used with the foldables. The maps included in the templates are from
Mapmaker Toolkit and National Geographic. The Mapmaker Toolkit maps can only be
duplicated if your school has a site license for this program. Maps can also be downloaded
from other map sources such as:
www.eduplace.com/ss/maps
www.nationalgeographic.com/xpeditions/atlas
www.lib.utexas.edu/maps/
The Folding Techniques
Today, we will practice a variety of folds used in the templates on the CD. There
will not be time to make each template, but by practicing the different folds,
participants should be able to easily make all the templates on the CD.
1. Two-Tab Book – USI.4b Cultural Interaction
2. Three-tab with Venn diagram – USI.7c Emergence of Two Political Parties
3. Five-Tab Book- USI.3 Locating American Indians
4. Shutter Fold – USI.6b Key Philosophies in the Declaration of Independence
5. Four-Door – USI.5a Factors Leading to Colonization
6. Matchbooks – USI.2b Geographic Locations
7. Tiny Flip Ups- USI.2c Locate and Identify Water Features
8. Bound Book – USI.6c Key people of the Revolution
9. Pocket–Book – USI.9d Roles of Civil War Leaders
10. Accordion Fold – USI.4a Explorers
11. Layered Look Book USI.6c- Key Events of the Revolution
12. Pocket Book Extra - Tarry Lindquist style
General Tips:
¾ Use bright colorful paper, such as Wausau Paper Astrobrights, available at
office supply stores such as Office Depot, or Staples. Costco also offers a
pack of brightly colored paper at a reasonable price.
¾ Glue sticks make for less mess and less wrinkles. Wet glue makes for longer
lasting strength. Choose what works best for you and your students.
¾ Store foldables in a zipper lock bag. Write names, objective numbers, or
other information with a Sharpie, then place clear packing tape over the
writing to preserve. Clip corners to let air out and keep flat.
¾ Make models for yourself and store them by unit/objective #. Glue the
objective and objective number on the back of the teacher models. Some
teachers like to glue the direction sheet to the back.
Susie Orr, Fairfax County Public Schools
Instructional Support Services
Elementary Social Studies Team
2005
2
Sentence
Strips
| . Taketwo sheetso{'paper(8 l/2" x I l ") and
fold into hotnburecr.r.
Cut alongthe fbld
linesmakinsfour half sheets.(Useas ujany
hall'sheets
as necessafy
for additronalpages
to yoLrrbook.)
2 . F o l de a c hs h e e itn h a l i l i k e a / i o rr / o l .
3. Placethe foldssideby sideand staplethent
togetlreron the left side.
4. One inch fron the staplededgc.cut the I'r'ont
pageof eachlbldedsecrionLrpto the
nrountaintop.Tlresecutslbnrr flapsthat carr
be raisedand lowered.
NOTE: To rnukeu hulf t'ovcr.useu shcato.f'
(ott.\lrucliot1
pop(r on( inch lrntgcrthan the book.
Gluc tlrc buc'kol thc lostshcctto thc t'ort.structiotr
poper firip, leuvirtl4tute irtclton the le.fisicleto
lltc orii4irtol.stuplc.s.
Stuplc
.loltl ovcr urrl cot,t,r'
tlti,tltul.fun,cr in plucc.
o@
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-
.--
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40
1.
2.
3.
4.
Place a large piece of chart paper on table or desks with a passage/text/excerpt in the center
Have a student/students read the passage aloud.
Students then write reflections, questions or thoughts on the larger piece of paper.
Have a student/students read the responses.
Wallwork 1
The Hole Truth
A unit based on the novel Holes by Louis Sachar
Eve Wallwork
RE 5730
Wallwork 2
Table of Contents
1. Rationale p.3
2. Resource List p. 3-4
3. Reading outline p. 5-6
4. Vocabulary p. 7-16
5. Before activities p. 17-21
6. During activities p. 22-32
7. After activities p. 33-37
8. Rubric p. 38-39
9. NCSCOS alignment p. 40-41
10. References p. 42
Wallwork 3
Rationale
The book that I chose to do for the Integrated Unit is Holes, by Louis
Sachar. Holes is a fourth/fifth grade reading level book, though sometimes it can
be used in sixth grade. I chose Holes for this unit because it nicely integrates into
the North Carolina curriculum for fifth grade, students can relate to themes
throughout the book and I think it is important for students to read novels that
have been made into movies. Holes is a fun book to read and is challenging for
elementary school readers, but not too much so. The plot is interesting and there
is never really a dull moment in the book. The characters are also very relatable to
5th graders because the main character, Stanley, is around the same age as the
students, so, that connection will help to keep them engaged. The plot is complex
enough connecting the present and the past with flashbacks.
The characters in Holes struggle with issues that students at this age can
relate to such as, being in the wrong place at the wrong time and remaining hopeful,
even when things are bad. Students can also relate to themes of family customs
and values, whether to help others, or just look out for yourself. Holes has
multiple qualities of good young adult literature. Students can relate to the
themes, the plot is complex and exciting, the story is basically optimistic an deals
with emotions that are important to this aged reader.
This book is an example of a tall tale, one of the North Carolina Standard
Course of Study goals. Students have learned about tall tales in previous grades,
so I thought this book would be a good way to revisit classic tall tales, such as
John Henry and Johnny Appleseed, but also think of tall tales in a new way and how
Louis Sachar integrates aspects of a tall tale into the novel. I also decided to have
students research an inventor. The main character in Holes, Stanley, has a father
who is an inventor, so having students research an inventor is a great way to have
the students do some research in order to relate to the book.
Resource List
1. Sachar, Louis. (2003). Survival Guide to Camp Green Lake:
Yearling Books. – This book is by the same author of Holes and
was released after it. The book is about a “more pleasant” trip to
Camp Green Lake, the place where Holes took place.
Wallwork 4
2. Blair, Walter. (1987). Tall tale america : a legendary history of
our humorous history. Chicago : University of Chicago Press. –
This book is about legendary characters that we all know of, such
as Paul Bunyan and Davy Crockett, and is told as if the
characters were real. It covers most of the na tions history and
is humorous, hence the title of the book.
3. MacLeod, Elizabeth. (2007). Alexander graham bell. Toronto:
Kids Can Press.- This book is kid friendly and an easy read to
engage students in the lives of some of the greatest inventors in
history.
4. Carlson, Laurie. (2006). Thomas edison for kids. Chicago: Chicago
Review Press.- This book teaches students all about the life of
Thomas Edison. It is written to inspire students to become
scientists and inventors.
5. Time . (2005). Benjamin franklin: a man of many talents. New
York: Harper Collins. - This book tells all about the life of
Benjamin Franklin and about all the things he did for our history.
It also teaches students about the importance of biographies.
6. Time . (2005). Thomas edison: a brillian t inventor. New York:
Harper Collin.- This book is a fast-paced biography of Thomas Edison,
the scientist who perfected the light bulb and propelled America into the
twentieth century.
7. Great americans for children. (2003). Wynnewood: Schlessinger
Media. – This book also includes a video and audio cassette to
help enhance the experience for students. This book discusses
various important inventors in history and why they were so vital
to how our nation is today.
8. www.louissachar.com
9. http://www.scholastic.com/holes/index.htm
10.
http://ettcweb.lr.k12.nj.us/forms/Lament.htm
11. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_uoo-h6cnoQ
12. http://thinkexist.com/quotation/the_only_disability_in_life_is_a_bad_attit
ude/219108.html
Wallwork 5
Reading Outline
Week 1
Before reading
 Holes All Around Us (whole group)
 Making Predictions(individual)
 Tall Tale (small group)
Section 1: Chapters 1-5 (in school)
 “Wanted” poster Stanley (small group)
o Before reading: introduce activity
o During reading: pay attention to characteristics of Stanley
Section 2: Chapters 6-10 (at home)
Section 3: Chapters 11-15 (in school)
 Instant Lament (small group)
o Before reading: introduce activity and discuss what a lament is
o During reading: pay attention to how Stanley acts in these chapters
and connect to previous chapters
Section 4: Chapters 16-20 (at home)
 “I-poem” (individual)
o Before reading: introduce activity, try example as class
o During reading: pay close attention to Stanley’s character traits
Section 5: Chapters 21-25 (in school)
 ToonDo (individual)
o Before reading: introduce activity, try example as class
o During reading: pay attention to the plot and be able to summarize
what has happened thus far
Week 2
Section 6: Chapters 26-28 (in school)
Section 7: Chapters 30-35 (at home)
 Stanley vs. Zero (partners)
o Before reading: introduce activity, clarify rules of Venn Diagram
o During reading: pay attention to character traits of Stanley (how has
be progressed) and Zero
Section 8: Chapters 36-40 (in school)
 Parallel Lives (individual)
o Before reading: introduce activity
Wallwork 6
o During reading: pay close attention to how the plot develops and how
stories are beginning to relate
Section 9: Chapters 41-45 (at home)
 Theme Quote and song (small group)
o Before reading: introduce activity
o During reading: think about the themes of the novel
Section 10: Chapters 46-50 (in school)
 Internet Workshop (individual)
After reading
 Talk Show with Stanley and Zero (small groups)
 Research and inventor (individual)
 Make Spiced Peaches (whole group)
 Letter to the Author (individual)
Wallwork 7
Vocabulary
Week 1 Words
Tier 2
Perseverance p. 8
Juvenile p. 12
Preposterous p. 34
Excavated p. 34
Tier 3
Warden p. 3
DAY 1 - Introduce words and provide a student friendly definition:
Tier 2
Perseverance- continuing or repeating behavior, determination
Juvenile- young person, not grown up
Preposterous- very unlikely or unbelievable
Excavate- to dig up and remove material from the ground
Tier 3
Warden- a person who is responsible for or guards someone or something
Students will copy down words and definitions into their vocabulary notebooks.
Activity 1- “Never Have I Ever” The teacher will say a phrase that begins with
“never have I ever,” continue the phrase with one vocabulary word in context and
end with “because”. In groups of 4 or 5 students end the phrase with an
explanation and share with the entire class.
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
Never
Never
Never
Never
Never
have
have
have
have
have
I ever seen a Warden in action because…
I ever had to excavate dinosaur bones because…
I ever seen a juvenile doctor because…
I ever had the perseverance to run a marathon because…
I ever read a preposterous article in the newspaper because…
ANSWER KEY: Answers will vary.
Wallwork 8
DAY 2- Students will fill in the synonym/antonym chart
Synonym
Word
Antonym
Perseverance
Juvenile
Preposterous
Excavate
Warden
ANSWER KEY: Answers can vary but should be along with following lines:
1. Perseverance- synonym: determination, antonym: laziness
2. Juvenile- synonym: child, antonym: adult
3. Preposterous- synonym: absurd, antonym: reasonable
4. Excavate- synonym: uncover, antonym: fill
5. Warden- synonym: guard, antonym: inmate
DAY 3- In their vocabulary notebooks students will respond to the following
statements/answer the following questions:
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
Describe a time when you had to persevere.
What age person would likely have juvenile diabetes? Why?
Would humans living on Jupiter be preposterous? Why or why not?
Why is the term excavate often associated with time capsules?
Describe some of the duties of a warden.
ANSWER KEY: Answers will vary due to students’ experiences with words.
Speed Round 1- Students are given 60 seconds to answer 10 True/False questions:
1. You would see a warden fighting on a war battlefield.
True or false?
2. “Not quite! Try again.” is a message encouraging perseverance.
True or false?
Wallwork 9
3. A juvenile boy is allowed to stay up after midnight on a school night.
True or false?
4. It is preposterous to read a children’s book in one day.
True or false?
5. A bulldozer could excavate an area for the foundation of a new house.
True or false?
6. Men in prison are required to listen to the warden.
True or false?
7. An area just excavated would be full of dirt.
True or false?
8. Driving across the USA in one day is preposterous.
True or false?
9. Abraham Lincoln showed great perseverance when he tried many times to
get elected to office.
True or false?
10. An eight year old boy would be tried in juvenile court.
True or false?
ANSWER KEY:
1. FALSE
6. TRUE
2. TRUE
7. FALSE
3. FALSE
8. TRUE
4. FALSE
9. TRUE
5. TRUE
10. TRUE
DAY 4- Students will draw an image that represents/ depicts each vocabulary
word.
Speed Round 2- Chose the word that is most clearly associated with the vocabulary
word
1. Which word relates to warden?
(prison, school, hospital)
2. Which word relates to excavate?
(computer, bulldozer, television)
3. Which word relates to perseverance?
(happy, determination, characteristically)
4. Which word relates to juvenile?
(home, brother, childish)
5. Which word relates to preposterous?
(absurd, relative, telephone)
Wallwork 10
ANSWER KEY- 1. Prison 2. Bulldozer 3. Determination 4. Childish 5. Absurd
DAY 5- “Thumbs up or thumbs down” Students will give a thumbs if the statement
is an example or the word, or thumbs down if the statement is not an example
1. Is this an example of perseverance?
a. Training for a marathon. (up)
b. Campaigning to become president. (up)
c. Eating an ice cream sundae. (down)
2. Is this an example of juvenile?
a. An art professor at a University. (down)
b. A fourth grade student. (up)
c. My grandfather. (down)
3. Is this an example of preposterous?
a. Riding a horse through the hallways at school. (up)
b. Completing 5 math problems for homework. (down)
c. Justin Bieber performing at our school. (up)
4. Is this an example of excavate?
a. Covering up a hole dug in the sand. (down)
b. Uncovering a time capsule hidden underground. (up)
c. Digging up an artifact in the desert. (up)
5. Is this an example of a warden?
a. A soldier in the army. (down)
b. A soccer goalie. (down)
c. A guard at a prison. (up)
ANSWER KEY- 1. a-up, b-up, c-down 2. a-down, b-up, c-down 3. a-up, b-down, c-up
4. a-down, b-up, c-up 5. a-down, b-down, c-up
Final Assessment: Choose the best answer for the questions below:
1. If a person was described as having perseverance, you would expect that
person to:
a. have patience
b. give up easily
Wallwork 11
2.
3.
4.
5.
c. have no motivation
If a person is a juvenile, he or she is most likely:
a. an adult
b. an elderly person
c. a young person
If a person sees a warden every day, you would expect that person to:
a. work at a doctor’s office
b. be in some type of trouble
c. go to school
If a person sees a preposterous act, you could say that act:
a. happens on a daily basis
b. is kind-hearted
c. is unbelievable
If you saw a man excavate a dinosaur bone, you could say he:
a. dug up the bone
b. ran over the bone
c. carry the bone
ANSWER KEY- 1.A
2.C
3.B
4.C
5.A
Wallwork 12
Week 2 Words
Tier 2
Contritely p. 179
Inexplicable p. 190
Drenched p. 127
Incarcerated p. 222
Lurch(ed) p. 148
DAY 1 - Introduce words and provide a student friendly definition:
Tier 2
Contritely- feeling deep guilt for a wrongdoing and wanting to make it right
Inexplicable- cannot be explained
Drenched- soaked or completely wet
Incarcerated- to be kept in prison
Lurch- a sudden, unsteady movement
Students will copy down words and definitions into their vocabulary notebooks.
Activity 1- “Have You Ever” The teacher will say a question that begins with “Have
you ever,” and continue the phrase with one vocabulary word in context. In groups
of 4 or 5 students end the phrase with an explanation and share with the entire
class.
1. Have you ever felt contrite after doing something wrong?
2. Have you ever seen an inexplicable situation?
3. Have you ever been drenched?
4. Have you ever been incarcerated?
5. Have you ever been in a car when the car lurched?
ANSWER KEY: Answers will vary.
DAY 2- Word lines: Students place word phrases on a line that represents a
continuum and to explain their placements
How surprised would you be if:
 You found out your teacher was incarcerated?
 You felt a lurching movement on a roller coaster?
 You weren’t drenched after a thunderstorm?
 Your mom made you feel contrite after you lied to her?
Wallwork 13

You saw an inexplicable alien at the park?
Most Surprised
Least Surprised
ANSWER KEY: Answers will vary due to students’ experiences.
DAY 3- Students will fill in the synonym/antonym chart
Synonym
Word
Antonym
Contritely
Inexplicable
Drenched
Incarcerated
Lurch
ANSWER KEY: Answers can vary but should be along with following lines:
1. Contritely- synonym: regretfully , antonym: indifferent
2. Inexplicable- synonym: unexplainable, antonym: explainable
3. Drenched- synonym: saturated, antonym: dry
4. Incarcerated- synonym: jailed, antonym: free
5. Lurch- synonym: stagger , antonym: smooth
Speed Round 1- Chose the word that is most clearly associated with the vocabulary
word
1. Which word relates to contritely?
(healthy, happy, guilty)
2. Which word relates to inexplicable?
(non-fiction, mysterious, helpful)
3. Which word relates to drenched?
(straw, water, stomach)
Wallwork 14
4. Which word relates to incarcerated?
(prisoner, engineer, teacher)
5. Which word relates to lurch?
(lunch, kick, wobble)
ANSWER KEY- 1. Guilty 2. Mysterious 3. Water 4. Prisoner 5. Wobble
DAY 4- “Thumbs up or thumbs down” Students will give a thumbs if the statement
is an example or the word, or thumbs down if the statement is not an example
1. Is this an example of contrite?
a. Wanting to confess after telling a lie. (up)
b. Explaining yourself when you are caught in a lie. (up)
c. Helping your mom clean the kitchen. (down)
2. Is this an example of inexplicable?
a. A shooting star. (down)
b. Aliens landing on Earth. (up)
c. Reading a book. (down)
3. Is this an example of drenched?
a. Running inside soaking wet from the rain. (up)
b. Riding on a boat. (down)
c. Standing under a waterfall. (up)
4. Is this an example of incarcerated?
a. Helping the mechanic fix your moms car. (down)
b. Staying in jail for 3 weeks. (up)
c. Living in prison for 16 years. (up)
5. Is this an example of a lurch?
a. A peanut butter and jelly sandwich. (down)
b. A smooth ride on a yacht. (down)
c. A sudden jerk to avoid a pothole. (up)
ANSWER KEY- 1. a-up, b-up, c-down 2. a-down, b-up, c-down 3. a-up, b-down, c-up
4. a-down, b-up, c-up 5. a-down, b-down, c-up
Speed Round 2- Students are given 60 seconds to answer 10 True/False questions:
1. You would feel contrite after helping an elderly woman cross the street.
True or false?
Wallwork 15
2. I would be incarcerated if I robbed a bank.
True or false?
3. After watching it rain from my living room I would be drenched.
True or false?
4. A smooth u-turn would be described as lurch.
True or false?
5. A newborn baby reading a speech would be inexplicable.
True or false?
6. Standing outside during a hurricane would cause me to be drenched.
True or false?
7. Going to school is inexplicable.
True or false?
8. A man who committed murder would be incarcerated.
True or false?
9. A sudden lurch of the boat would make the rower drop his oar.
True or false?
10. A nun should feel contrite if she stole money from the church.
True or false?
ANSWER KEY:
1. FALSE
6. TRUE
2. TRUE
7. FALSE
3. FALSE
8. TRUE
4. FALSE
9. TRUE
5. TRUE
10. TRUE
DAY 5- Students will write a response to the picture describing why the picture
represents a vocabulary word.
Contritely
Drenched
Wallwork 16
Incarcerated
Inexplicable
Lurch
ANSWER KEY: Answers will vary depending on students explanations.
Final Assessment: Write a response for the following:
-Describe how a person feeling contrite would act.
-List three reasons why a person might be incarcerated.
-How would a person who was drenched look?
-Why would a driver’s education teacher experience a lot of lurch
movements?
-Describe what makes a situation inexplicable.
ANSWER KEY- Answers will vary.
Wallwork 17
Before reading:
1. Introduction
2. Prediction chart
3. Tall Tales
Wallwork 18
Holes All Around Us
Introduce Holes by finding phrases or songs which contain the word holes/wholes.
Divide the class into 2 groups. Have each group brainstorm to see which group can
come up with the most phrases or song titles in a five minute time period that
contain either the word whole or hole. Examples: buttonholes, a hole in one,
"holesome/wholesome", "pigeon-holed" or songs such as "There's a Hole in the
Bucket, or "Whole lot of Shakin' Going On" or "He's Got the Whole World in his
Hands." It covers homophones in a fun way.
Song TitlesA Whole New World
He's Got the Whole World in His Hands
There's a Hole in the Bucket
Whole lot of Shakin' Going On
Phrases
a hole in one
"pigeon-holed"
an ace in the hole
ozone hole
dig yourself into a hole
The hole closed in on him.
black hole
Shut the hole in your head.
down a rat hole
Look in every hole and corner.
Pry into every hole.
Wallwork 19
I can't believe he ate the whole thing.
pothole
the whole nine yards
making sense as a whole
fun for the whole family
whole person - whole child
a whole lot easier
the whole story
Wallwork 20
Making Predictions
Use the words below and the title of the book to make
predictions about the following elements of story.
Vocabulary: camp, Stanley, warden, holes, campers,
innocent, nickname, Zero, desert, curse, punishment,
redemption, dig
Setting
What is the setting likely to be?
Characters
Who are possible characters in the
novel?
Problem
What might some problems be for
the characters?
Characters’ Goals
What are likely goals for some of the
characters?
Solution
What are possible solutions to the
problems?
Prediction/Questions
Any other predictions? Questions?
Wallwork 21
Tall Tales
Part of what makes Holes such a good read
is the way Sachar weaves together realism
and fantasy, by including elements from
fables and folktales in his story. Tall tales
are a popular form of folktale in the Unites
States. Find out about the characteristics
of this kind of narrative by reading some
tales. Pay attention to how the writers of
these tales use exaggeration to create
humor. Watch for repetition of phrases
and themes, and notice how animals often
function as helpers. Then, try writing a tall
tale of your own.
Some



famous tall tales include:
Paul Bunyan
John Henry
Johnny Appleseed
Read some tall tales from the following books then, research the elements of a tall
tale:
1. Tall Tale America: A Legendary History of Our Humorous Heroes by Walter
Blair
2. American Tall Tales by Mary Pope Osborne
Wallwork 22
During:
1. Wanted poster
2. Palindromes
3. “I-poem”
4. ToonDoo
5. Venn Diagram
6. Comparison Chart
7. Internet Workshop
Wallwork 23
Your job is to create a Wanted
Poster for Stanley
You will create an artistic representation of the suspect and then
complete the following information for the wanted poster:
Wanted:
Character name
Time and Place Last Seen
Physical Description
How he acts
Likes
Dislikes
Where he hangs out
Suspected Whereabouts
Reward amount
~Remember that this information, plus the artistic creation of the
suspect, must fit inside the white box in your wanted poster. If you
choose, you may use your own creative template instead of the one
given on the following page.
Wallwork 24
Wallwork 25
Instant Lament
A lament is a song, poem, or piece of music
expressing grief, regret or mourning. In this section
and in the book up to this point, Stanley has had a lot
of reasons to feel unhappy. Visit
http://ettcweb.lr.k12.nj.us/forms/Lament.htm and
write a lament that expresses some grief or
mourning that Stanley has felt. Feel free to write a
lament freestyle. Here is an example:
Stanley’s Lament
I am loneliness
The dark of night is my cloak
I vacation in the arms of solitude
Sadness and depression are the cousins I would joyfully
disinherit
At a welcoming smile.
by Nancy Polette
Wallwork 26
“I-Poem”
Write an “I-Poem” from the point of view of one of
the characters from Holes. Try to get inside your
character; help the reader identify with the
character’s thoughts, actions, emotions, and
personality. If possible, include personification and
similes in your poem.
FIRST STANZA
I am (two special characteristics you have)
I wonder (something you are actually curious about)
I hear (an imaginary sound)
I see (an imaginary sight)
I want (an actual desire)
I am (the first line of the poem repeated)
SECOND STANZA
I pretend (something you actually pretend to do)
I feel (a feeling about something imaginary)
I touch (an imaginary touch)
I worry (something that really bothers you)
I cry (something that makes you very sad)
I am (the first line of the poem repeated)
THIRD STANZA
I understand (something you know is true)
I say (something you believe in)
I dream (something you actually dream about)
I try (something you really make an effort to do)
I hope (something you actually hope for)
I am (the first line of the poem repeated)
Wallwork 27
ToonDoo
We are halfway through the book, create a ToonDoo
that summarizes what we have read so far and make a
prediction about what is going to come. Think about the
title of Part II “The Last Hole”
Go to www.toondoo.com and create!
Wallwork 28
Stanley vs. Zero
Complete the Venn Diagram comparing characteristics of Stanley
and Zero.
Wallwork 29
|| Parallel Lives ||
Answer the question by filling in the chart below: how do the events in Stanley's
and Zero's lives parallel those of Stanley's great-great-grandfather and Madame
Zeroni?
Stanley and Zero
Stanley’s great-great-grandfather
and Madame Zeroni
1. Stanley digs a 5-foot hole every
day and becomes strong
2.
1. Elya climbs a mountain every day
and becomes strong
2.
Wallwork 30
Relate This…
Throughout the book so far we have seen a theme of
hope. How does the following quote and song relate to
the whole book and this section particularly?
“The only disability in life is a bad attitude.” –Scott
Hamilton
“I Will Survive” by Stephanie Bentley
Done a lot of things that I'm not so proud of.
Took a lot of turns, turned out wrong.
That's a worn out song.
Day by day moment by moment.
Taking my chances, trusting my heart.
It wasn't to smart.
Lonely, as lost as I could be.
No way it's up to me.
I will survive
I will endure
When the going is rough
you can't be sure
i'll tough it out
I won't give in
If i'm knocked down I'll get up again
As long as my dreams alive I will survive
Letting go of my bad habits.
Hangin on the hope for better times.
I'll be fine.
Learning to sleep in the bed that I made.
Laying the blanket where it belongs.
I've gotta be strong.
Tear drops no one sees but me.
I won't stop, I'll always believe.
I will survive
Wallwork 31
I will endure
When the going is rough
You can't be sure
I'll tough it out
I won't give in
If I'm knocked down I'll get up again
As long as my dreams alive
I will survive, yeah!
As long as my dreams alive
I will survive
I will endure
When the going's rough
You can't be sure
I'll tough it out
I won't give in
If I'm knocked down i'll get up again
As long as my dreams alive
I will survive
I will survive
I will survive
I will survive!
Oh yeah!
No I will survive!
Yeah I will survive
I will survive
Write a one paragraph response to the quote and song and how they relate to the
book so far. You can listen to the song by visiting:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_uoo-h6cnoQ
Wallwork 32
Louissachar.com
Go to www.louissachar.com. Explore the author’s
website. Then complete the following tasks:
1.
Click on the book Holes. Read the Holes Q & A. Write down three
interesting facts you learned about Holes.
2.
Click on the tab “Holes- The Movie.” This will bring you to the Disney
Website. Read the plot summary. Write down any differences you see
between the movie and the book.
3.
Go back to www.louissachar.com. Click on the tab “Author Booklist.”
Choose two other books written by Louis Sachar and write why you want
to read these books.
Wallwork 33
After Reading
1. Talk Show with Stanley and Zero
2. Research an Inventor
3. Spiced Peaches
4. Letter to the Author
Wallwork 34
Talk Show with Stanley and Zero
Stage a talk show with Stanley and Zero
as the guests. Work in a small group.
Each member of the group must have a
role in this performance. Remember that
you even need to have questions to ask
the audience, so that means some people
will have to be audience members. Have
the other boys from Camp Green Lake
surprise them by coming on the show.
What would the boys say to Stanley and
Zero? What might Stanley, Zero, and
the others say about the closing of Camp
Green Lake? Ask Stanley to share what
he learned most from his experiences
there.
Wallwork 35
Research an Inventor
Stanley's father is an inventor. Although it is said that an inventor must have
intelligence, perseverance, and a lot of luck, Stanley's father never seems to have
such luck. You need to research inventors such as Benjamin Franklin, Alexander
Graham Bell, Thomas Edison, and the Wright brothers. How did luck play a role in
their inventions? Create a short speech to share with the rest of the class about
your findings.
Wallwork 36
Miss Katherine’s Spiced Peaches
Every summer Miss Katherine would pick bushels of
peaches and preserve them in jars with cinnamon,
cloves, nutmeg, and other spices. Zero calls the
sweet, muddy liquid he find in jars under the
rowboat “sploosh”, and it helps keep him alive in the
desert after he runs away from camp. Here’s the
recipe.
Ingredients:
1 can (29 ounces) peach halves, drained (save the syrup in a separate bowl)
2/3-cup apple cider vinegar
1-cup light brown sugar, packed
¼ teaspoon salt
8 whole cloves
1 cinnamon stick
¼ teaspoon ground nutmeg
Directions:
In a saucepan, combine 2/3 cup of the peach syrup with all the other ingredients
except the peaches. Simmer uncovered for 10 minutes.
Pour over peaches. Cool, then cover and chill for at least 24 hours (or 110 years!).
Bring to room temperature and eat. Any leftover peaches will keep in refrigerator
for a week.
Wallwork 37
Letter to the Author
Write a letter to Louis Sachar. Follow proper letter
writing format. Your letter could address some of the
following:





Response to the book
Questions to Louis Sachar
Favorite part
Favorite character
Ideas for a sequel
Wallwork 38
Rubric for Grading
Activity
Holes All Around Us discussion
 Participated in discussion
Prediction Chart




/5
/15
Explored internet site
Completely answered questions
Talk Show with Stanley and Zero



/15
Participated
Internet Workshop


/10
Wrote a paragraph that connected quote
and song to theme
Collaborated with group
Week II Vocabulary

/5
Summarized book thus far
Made a prediction
Relate This

/10
Participated
ToonDo


/5
Complete
From Stanley’s point of view
Week I Vocabulary

/10
Wrote a lament from the point of view
of Stanley
Collaborated with group
I-poem


/15
All elements are addressed
Drawing is appropriate
Instant Lament

/10
Research tall tales
Wrote tall tale about prediction of Holes
Participated in group
Wanted Poster


/5
Fully complete
Uses vocabulary provided to complete
chart
Tall Tales



Points
Group participation
Participated in talk show
Talk show information was relevant
/15
Wallwork 39
Research an Inventor


/15
Researched an inventor
Presented to class
Spiced Peaches

/5
Participated in making spiced peaches
Letter to Author


/10
Followed letter format
Addressed Louis Sachar
Vocabulary Assessments
 Week I vocab assessment (worth 25

/50
points)
Week II vocab assessment (worth 25
points)
Total:
/200
Wallwork 40
North Carolina Standard Course of Study and
Correlating Activities
Competency Goal 2
The learner will apply strategies and
skills to comprehend text that is
read, heard, and viewed.
2.03 Read a variety of texts, such
as:
fiction (tall tales, myths).
 nonfiction (books of true
experience, newspaper and
magazine articles, schedules).
 poetry (narrative, lyric, and
cinquains).
 drama (plays and skits).

Tall Tales
Competency Goal 3
The learner will make connections
through the use of oral language,
written language, and media and
technology.
3.01 Respond to fiction, nonfiction,
poetry, and drama using interpretive,
critical, and evaluative processes by:
 analyzing word choice and
content.
 examining reasons for a
character's actions, taking
into account the situation and
basic motivation of the
character.
 creating and presenting a
product that effectively
demonstrates a personal
response to a selection or
experience.
 examining alternative


Venn Diagram
“I” Poem from one character’s
point of view.
Instant lament

Wallwork 41
perspectives.
 evaluating the differences
among genres.
 examining relationships among
characters.
 making and evaluating
inferences and conclusions
about characters, events, and
themes.
3.06 Conduct research (with
assistance) from a variety of sources
for assigned or self-selected
projects (e.g., print and non-print
texts, artifacts, people, libraries,
databases, computer networks).
Competency Goal 4
The learner will apply strategies and
skills to create oral, written, and
visual texts.
4.05 Use a variety of preliminary
strategies to plan and organize the
writing and speaking task considering
purpose, audience, and timeline.

Research an Inventor

Talk show with Stanley and
Zero
Wallwork 42
References
Sachar, Louis. (1998). Holes. New York: Scholastic Inc.
Sachar, Louis. (2003). Scholastic Bookfiles: A Reading Guide to Holes. New York:
Scholastic Inc.
http://www.mce.k12tn.net/reading39/holes.htm
http://www.randomhouse.com/teachers/catalog/display.pperl?isbn=978044022859
2&view=tg
Investigate a Book -
Fiction or Non – fiction
K.Torrisi
Remembering
Word
* Write an
Acrostic poem
using the main
aspect of the
book.
*Make an A to Z
list from your
book.
Logic and Maths
*Draw a pie graph
to illustrate facts
from the text.
* Construct a
timeline relating
to your text.
Space and Vision
* Make a visual
chart of things
from your book Write 5 words to
describe them.
*Do a drawing of
an interesting
part of the book.
*Use your white
hat and list
information about
your text.
Understanding
* Retell an
interesting part
of the book in
your own words.
* Recount own
experience in
relation to the
book.
*Make a
wordsearch from
the text.
* Write a set of
true or false
questions about
the book.
Body
* Basic mime –
happy, sad etc.
discuss and model
steps for miming.
Music
*Does music play
a part in this
text? Describe
how.
* Move like
something from
your text. Play
statues.
*Learn a new song
about this topic.
*Use your face to
create some
emotions you may
have felt when
reading your
book, or emotions
portrayed by
characters.
* Design a puzzle
or maze that
presents the main
setting / topic of
the text.
* Develop a “How
to ….. relating to
the text.
* Design a
bookmark
featuring the
title author and a
summary of your
book. Decorate
the bookmark
with pictures
about the book.
*To show what
you know about
the book make a
picture book/
mural/ poster/
collage.
* Illustrate the
main idea of the
book.
* Play charades
with names of
books you have
read on this topic.
*Look for song
about the text.
People
*Work with
others to make a
list of the “Top 5”
most important
parts of the text.
Self
* Write a learning
log – what you
have gained or
learnt from the
book.
*Tell a partner 10
things you know
about your book.
* Draw and write
about your
favourite part of
the book.
*Name sounds you
would hear in the
text- list them.
* Act out
movements from
your book.
* Choose a
passage from the
text. Read aloud
and make sound
effects with
different objects
to link with the
text.
* Do some mimes
relating to your
book.
* Describe the
sounds you would
hear in the text.
* Record sound
effects for your
book.
* Role play an
important part
from your book.
* In a group,
design 5 questions
that could be put
on a test about
your book.
* Do you already
know anything
about this book or
had any
experiences
relating to the
text. If so, write
about them.
-Draw a picture
about how the
text makes you
feel.
*Explain in a diary
entry how the
text makes you
feel.
Nature
* Are there any
animals or natural
settings in your
book?
If yes, draw and
describe them.
If no, could their
have been? Draw
and describe
them.
*Find
Photographs in
magazines which
could be included
in your book.
Under each
picture write why
and where they
would be included.
Applying
Word
Logic and Maths
Space and Vision
Body
Music
People
Self
Nature
*Write a radio
advertisement for
your book telling
people why they
should buy it.
Refer to title and
author.
* Make up a
number problem
relating to the
text.
* Make the
following relating
to your book so
students could
learn while they
are using them;
- a cartoon
- pop-up book
- mural
- jigsaw
- poster
- collage
- puppets
- maps
- diorama
- wanted poster
- mobile
* Use sign
language to teach
skills or
information from
your book to
others.
*Write words for
a radio jingle
about the book to
encourage people
to read it.
* Play celebrity
heads relating to
your book.
*What was good,
not so good and
interesting complete a PMI
relating to your
book.
* Could this book
help you in any
way with the
study of the
environment? If
yes how?
* Design a new
front cover for
the book you have
read. Make it
visually appealing
so it will attract
readers. Refer to
other book covers
to see what to
include.
* Write and
present a play or
a skit about your
book.
*Write a
postcard to
someone about
your book.
*Locate 5-10
words you found
difficult to read
or understand.
Use a dictionary
to find the
meaning of these
words. Write the
words and their
meanings.
Analysing
*Compare and
contrast Storylines,
characters,
attitudes using a
Venn Diagram.
*Draw a plan/map
to scale relating
to your book.
* Compile all the
information from
your text you
would need in
order to solve a
problem.
* Play 20
questions relating
to your text.
* Do a PMI ( Plus
Minus
Interesting)
relating to your
text.
* Design a survey
and graph the
results relating to
your book.
* Use a Venn
diagram or
semantic web to
display the main
concept of your
book.
*Do
Theatresports
relating to your
book.
*Share some of
your work with
the class.
* Sharing circle –
share your
thoughts/beliefs
and opinions about
the book with
others.
* Write a diary
entry from the
main character or
the authors point
of view about the
most interesting
part in the book.
* Are there any
problems in your
book? If so list
the problems and
write how you
would solve them.
* Physically
demonstrate a
“How to……”
realting to your
book.
* Create a
soundscape for
your favourite
part of the book.
Tape and play it
for the class/
group.
* Debate with a
friend–The
reasons not to
miss this book
- Why not to
read this book.
* Conduct an
interview with
another person
who has also read
your book. Take
notes and present
it to the class.
* Analyse a
problem from the
story from 2
different
perspectives.
* If you met the
author or a
character from
your book what 5
questions would
you most like to
ask them? List
them.
*
Evaluating
Word
*Review the book
from someone
else’s perspective.
* Write
recommendations
to…….
Creating
Logic and Maths
* Use your Black/
Yellow/ Red hats
to clarify your
perspectives on
the book.
* Give your book a
rank or rating.
Write why you
gave it this
rating, compared
to other books.
*Use the
information you
have gained from
the book to
create a debate.
Write pro’s and
con’s.
*Create a board
game about the
text. Give it a
name. Make the
board, rules etc.
Teach and play it
with a friend.
*Write a new
ending for the
book.
* Create a code
relating to your
book.
Space and Vision
* Do you think
this book needs
illustrations?
Write 3 reasons
why or why not by
referring to the
text. Explain and
draw some
illustrations you
would include.
*What changes
would you make to
the illustrations?
Draw some.
*Develop criteria
for evaluating
book covers.
Create a
checklist.
*Draw a new
ending for your
book. Write about
it.
*Design an all new
board game
relating to your
book.
Body
* Evaluate your
own performance,
write criteria and
give yourself an
overall comment
with
recommendations
for improvement.
Music
* Choose a sound
to represent each
of the characters
in the book. List
them.
* Create your own
sign language
which would help
others
understand the
book.
* Design a set of
* If the answer
test questions
is….. Write 5
*Design a rap,
that the teacher
questions for
dance or mime
might give to
each answer.
which displays
someone who has
your
*Create a
read this book.
understanding of
Include an answer crossword puzzle
the book.
sheet.
about your book.
Based on Bloom Taxonomy, Gardners Multiple Intelligences and De Bono’s Six hats
Self
* Explain your
feeling to a
particular part of
the book – why do
you think you feel
this way?
Nature
*Explain what you
are still confused
about/ don’t
understand from
the book. Create
a list of things
that could help
you to better
understand when
reading.
* Collect material
from nature to
create a picture/
scene to
compliment your
book. Write about
the process you
undertook and
why you chose the
picture. Also
write which part
of the book it
compliments and
why.
* Write a letter
to someone
recommending
they read your
book – give
reasons why.
*Evaluate
someone else’s
performance
using the criteria
above.
* Devise an
entertaining
puppet play
relating to your
book.
People
* Develop a set of
5 criteria to
decide if the book
will interest other
people. Survey
students.
* Create a sound
for each of your
six favourite
*Make up and
perform a TV.Ad
using your jingle.
*Write a song or
nursery rhyme
with the same
title as your book.
* With a partner
or in a group
conduct a debate
relating to the
book.
*Devise an
educational
campaign to
promote reading.
Mention your
book as an
example for
students to read..
* Make some
predictions about
what might
happen in the
future – relating
to the book.
Line Dancing: Reading Line Breaks on the Page and on the Stage
Developed by John S. O’Connor*
August 2014
CCSS.ELA-Literacy RL.9-10.1, 9-10.4, 9-10.10, 11-12.1, 11-12.4, 11-12.7, 11-12.10
NCTE Standards: 1-6; 11-12
(Two Periods)
Overview
Most poems at once look different on the page, a sure sign of their uniqueness, their immediate
claim to extra-ordinariness. This is because of the line unit and the line break; line breaks are
one of the super powers poets have at their disposal. Like a musical measure, a line and the way
a sentence may be broken over lines of poetry can create moments of surprise and delight. The
surprising arrangement of words, phrases, and clauses, and sentences into lines is one of the
richest sources of interpretation and pleasure in poetry, but it may also be one of the reasons that
many students see poetry as strange and confusing. This exercise will help students become
more comfortable with line breaks, to think about the ways in which they can inform not only the
meaning of a poem on the page and the reader’s experience of its language, but also how
understanding line breaks may aid in the performance of poetry out loud as well.
From Theory to Practice
In my book Wordplaygrounds, I wrote that ―
deciding where and how to create line breaks is one
of the most challenging aspects of writing poetry.‖ The same holds true for reading poetry. One
of the most confusing aspects of poetry to many readers is the lineation of words on the page,
because students have usually not had a lot of experience reading poems and considering lines.
Materials
Excerpt from Toni Morrison’s Jazz
Kay Ryan’s poem ―
Sharks’ Teeth‖
Excerpt from Walt Whitman’s poem ―
Song of Myself‖
Kevin Young’s poem ―
Negative‖ (Kevin Young uses line breaks to devastating effect in many
poems. You might also try ―
Ode to the Hotel Near the Children’s Hospital‖; and ―
I am trying to
break your heart‖).
* John S. O’Connor teaches at New Trier High School and in the School of Education and Social Policy at Northwestern University. He
is the author of Wordplaygrounds: Reading, Writing and Performing Poems in the English Classroom, and This Time It’s
Personal: Teaching Academic Writing through Creative Nonfiction. O’Connor’s poems have appeared in places such as The Cortland
Review, Rhino, and Poetry East.
Further Reading
Morrison, Toni. Jazz. (1992). New York: Alfred A. Knopf.
O’Connor, John, S. Wordplaygrounds: Writing, Reading and Performing Poetry in the English
Classroom. (2004). Urbana, Illinois: NCTE Press.
Rebecca Hazelton, ―
Learning the Poetic Line,‖ www.poetryfoundation.org
Objectives
Students will:

Explore the relationship between line length and the subject matter of the poem.

Practice close reading by considering the line as a unit of meaning.

Choose a favorite line from a poem they will read with the class and use it to inspire
an original poem of their own.

Take a piece of recent writing (not necessarily poetry) and recast a section of that
piece with new line breaks.
Session One
1. Ask students to list the differences between poetry and prose on the board. This list will
highlight important differences in visual presentation (poems usually look different than
prose) and the list will offer an opportunity to highlight the focus of this lesson: reading
the line as a key unit of meaning in poetry.
2. Pass out copies of two poems: ―
Sharks’ Teeth‖ by Kay Ryan, and ―
Song of Myself‖ by
Walt Whitman.
3. Ask students to stand up, move away from their desks and form a circle.
4. Announce that we are going to play a variation of musical chairs. One student will read
―
Song of Myself‖ aloud. Everyone else in the class will walk in a circle as the reading
starts. At the end of each line the reader will say, ―
Stop,‖ and the walkers will stop
moving. The reader will start again, and the circle will move again as before. (The
Whitman poem is long, so we might just use its first section.)
5. Repeat the activity with a new reader for the poem ―
Sharks’ Teeth.‖
6. Ask students what they thought and felt as they walked. Here students are literally
thinking on their feet—and with their feet. Whitman covers a lot more ground with each
line (and there are more metrical feet, or stressed syllables, per line) in part because his
ambitions are huge. His is a poem about the limitless possibilities of the self and the
magnificent expanse of America. Some have even suggested his Leaves of Grass is a
paean to the American notion of manifest destiny as our nation continued to grow
westward and outward. Kay Ryan’s poem features very short lines (only 3-5 words per
line) that seem well suited to her topic: carving out small moments of quiet in our noisy
technological age.
7. As a follow up, ask students to portray a line in a dramatic tableau: a wordless ―f
rozen
picture‖ in which students ―
perform‖ the line for the class. (See the attached photograph
―
Tableau‖ from my classroom). This, again, reinforces the idea of reading individual
lines as carrying their own meaning within a poem.
8. For homework, invite students to write a response to a single line from one of the poems
they read today.
Session Two
1. Pass out the Excerpt from Toni Morrison’s novel Jazz. This is part of a large prose
paragraph, so there are no line breaks within the paragraph. Yet the words are striking,
beautiful, and ―
poetic.‖ Ask students to rewrite the passage in poetic lines. The length of
each line is up to each student, but they should have a rationale for the choices they have
made. Perhaps the ―
poem‖ will be tall and narrow like the cityscape she is describing;
perhaps students will decide to end lines on the most interesting words; perhaps the
words will be written in long, slack lines that imitate the narrative sentences of the
passage. There is no ―
right‖ answer. Instead, this exercise gives students the opportunity
to play around with language, the way poets do.
2. Having considered the line as the fundamental unit in poetry, ask students to read Kevin
Young’s poem, ―
Negative.‖ First have the class read the poem silently, then have the
class take turns reading one line at a time. The breaks in this poem are playful and
sometimes even comment ironically on the ―
narrative‖ of the poem. Reading the poem
line by line will help students hear the speaker’s voice more clearly.
3. Have a student (or two, or twenty!) read the poem aloud seeing if they can convey some
of that line-play in their reading. Encourage students, for example, to pause slightly at
the end of some lines so that the audience can hear what suggestions the lines contain in
addition to the meaning of the sentences in which they occur.
Excerpt from Toni Morrison’s novel Jazz (Alfred A. Knopf, 1992).
I’m crazy about this City.
Daylight slants like a razor cutting the buildings in half. In the top half I see looking faces and
it’s not easy to tell which are people, which the work of stonemasons. Below is shadow where
any blasé thing takes place: clarinets and lovemaking, fists and the voices of sorrowful women.
A city like this one makes me dream tall and feel in on things. Hep. It’s the bright steel rocking
above the shade below that does it. When I look over strips of green grass lining the river, at
church steeples and into the cream-and-copper halls of apartment buildings, I’m strong. Alone,
yes, but top-notch and indestructible – like the City in 1926 when all the wars are over and there
will never be another one. The people down there in the shadow are happy about that. At last, at
last, everything’s ahead. The smart ones say so and people listening to them and reading what
they write down agree. Here comes the new. Look out. There goes the sad stuff. The bad stuff.
The things-nobody-could-help stuff. The way everybody was then and there. Forget that.
History is over, you all, and everything’s ahead at last. In halls and offices people are sitting
around thinking future thoughts about projects and bridges and fast-clicking trains underneath (p.
7).
Classroom Tableau
Common Core State Standards
ELA-Literacy RL.9-10.1, 11-12.1: Cite Strong and thorough textual evidence to
support analysis of what the text says explicitly as well as inferences drawn from the text,
including determining where the text leaves matters uncertain.
ELA-Literacy RL.9-10.4: Determine the meaning of words and phrases as they are used
in the text, including figurative and connotative meanings; analyze the cumulative impact
of specific word choices on meaning and tone (e.g., how the language evokes a sense of
time and place; how it sets a formal or informal tone).
ELA-Literacy RL.9-10.10: By the end of grade 9, read and comprehend literature,
including stories, dramas, and poems, in the grades 9-10 text complexity band
proficiently, with scaffolding as needed at the high end of the range.
By the end of grade 10, read and comprehend literature, including stories, dramas, and
poems, at the high end of the grades 9-10 text complexity band independently and
proficiently.
By the end of grade 10, read and comprehend literature, including stories, dramas, and
poems, at the high end of the grades 9-10 text complexity band independently and
proficiently.
ELA-Literacy RL.11-12.4: Determine the meaning of words and phrases as they are
used in the text, including figurative and connotative meanings; analyze the impact of
specific word choices on meaning and tone, including words with multiple meanings or
language that is particularly fresh, engaging, or beautiful.
ELA-Literacy RL.11-12.7: Analyze multiple interpretations of a story, drama, or poem
(e.g., recorded or live production of a play or recorded novel or poetry), evaluating how
each version interprets the source text.
ELA-Literacy RL.11-12.10: By the end of grade 11, read and comprehend literature,
including stories, dramas, and poems, in the grades 11-CCR text complexity band
proficiently, with scaffolding as needed at the high end of the range.
By the end of grade 12, read and comprehend literature, including stories, dramas, and
poems, at the high end of the grades 11-CCR text complexity band independently and
proficiently.
By the end of grade 12, read and comprehend literature, including stories, dramas, and
poems, at the high end of the grades 11-CCR text complexity band independently and
proficiently.
NCTE Standards
1. Students read a wide range of print and non-print texts to build an understanding of
texts, of themselves, and of the cultures of the United States and the world; to acquire
new information; to respond to the needs and demands of society and the workplace;
and for personal fulfillment. Among these texts are fiction and nonfiction, classic and
contemporary works.
2. Students read a wide range of literature from many periods in many genres to build an
understanding of the many dimensions (e.g., philosophical, ethical, aesthetic) of
human experience.
3. Students apply a wide range of strategies to comprehend, interpret, evaluate, and
appreciate texts. They draw on their prior experience, their interactions with other
readers and writers, their knowledge of word meaning and of other texts, their word
identification strategies, and their understanding of textual features (e.g., sound-letter
correspondence, sentence structure, context, graphics).
4. Students adjust their use of spoken, written, and visual language (e.g., conventions,
style, vocabulary) to communicate effectively with a variety of audiences and for
different purposes.
5. Students employ a wide range of strategies as they write and use different writing
process elements appropriately to communicate with different audiences for a variety
of purposes.
6. Students apply knowledge of language structure, language conventions (e.g., spelling
and punctuation), media techniques, figurative language, and genre to create, critique,
and discuss print and non-print texts.
11. Students participate as knowledgeable, reflective, creative, and critical members of a
variety of literacy communities.
12. Students use spoken, written, and visual language to accomplish their own purposes
(e.g., for learning, enjoyment, persuasion, and the exchange of information).
12/7/2015
Poetry Out Loud : Teacher Preparation
Teacher Preparation
1. H ave studen ts bro w se th e po em s.
Allow time for the students to explore, either as homework or a classroom activity.
2. B egin class w ith a po em a day.
A good way to expose students to poetry is to have a poem read or recited at the start of each
class period. The h o m epage has a poet of the day feature, including poems and poet
biographies.
3. H ave studen ts select po em s to m em o rize.
Allow students to choose their own poems. Encourage them to build up range and complexity,
keeping in mind that long poems are not always the most difficult. By memorizing and reciting,
students internalize the author’s message and further explore phrases and lines they could not
master initially.
4. D iscuss th e po em s in class.
http://www.poetryoutloud.org/teaching-resources/teacher-preparation
1/2
12/7/2015
Poetry Out Loud : Teacher Preparation
Understanding the text is the most important preparation for reciting poetry. If a student
doesn’t understand the text, neither will the audience.
5. Sh are th ese m em o rizatio n tips w ith yo ur studen ts:
Rewrite your poem by hand several times. Each time, try to write more and more of it from
memory.
Read your poem aloud before going to sleep at night, and repeat it when you wake up.
Carry around a copy of your poem. You’ll find several moments throughout the day to
reread or recite it.
Practice your poem by saying it to family and friends.
6. Mo del recitatio n sk ills in th e classro o m .
With the class, develop a list of bad habits that take away from a performance, such as
inaudible volume, speaking too quickly, monotone, fidgeting, overacting, etc.
Then develop a list of elements of a successful recitation, such as sufficient volume, an
appropriate speed with the proper pauses, voice inflection, evidence of understanding, etc.
Play portions of the audio and the videos as further examples.
Recite poems yourself--this is a powerful way to show students it can be done.
7. P ractice th e po em s.
Allow class time for students to practice their poems. Have each student practice with a
different partner each session. Partners should offer constructive criticism, using the
contest evaluatio n sh eet and evaluatio n criteria as a guide.
8. In clude creative w ritin g exercises.
Creative writing is a natural complement to Poetry Out Loud. We offer a number of optional
writing exercises and lesso n plan s f o r teach ers.
http://www.poetryoutloud.org/teaching-resources/teacher-preparation
2/2
Read Aloud Snapshot
Selection Title
1
2
4
5
_____________________________________
_____________________________________
Author
_____________________________________
Student Name
_____________________________________
3
© 2012 ~ Created by Laura Candler ~ Teaching Resources ~ www.lauracandler.com
How to Ensure Rigorous Questioning for Higher Level Thinking
Question Stems from Revised Bloom’s Taxonomy
Level 1: REMEMBERING
What is…?
Where is…?
How did _______ happen?
Why did ….?
When did….?
How would you show?
Who were the main…?
Which one…?
How is…?
When did _____happen?
How would you explain…?
How would you describe…?
Can you recall…?
Can you select…?
Can you list the three…?
Who was…?
Level 2: UNDERSTANDING
How would you classify the type
of…?
How would you compare…?
Will you state or interpret in your
own words…?
How would you rephrase the meaning of…?
What facts or ideas show…?
What is the main idea of…?
Which statements support…?
Can you explain what is happening?
What is meant…?
What can you say about…?
Which is the best answer…?
How would you summarize…?
Level 3 APPLYING
How would you use…?
What examples can you find?
How would you solve___ using what
you’ve learned?
How would you organize ___ to
show…?
How would you show your understanding of…?
What approach would you use to…?
How would you apply what you learned to
develop…?
What other way would you plan to…?
What other way would you plan to…?
What would result if…?
What facts would you select to show…?
What questions would you ask in an
interview…?
Level 4 ANALYZING
What are the parts or features of…?
How is ___ related to …?
Why do you think…?
What is the theme of…?
What motive is there…?
Can you list the parts?
What can you infer…?
What conclusions can you draw…?
How would you classify…?
How would you categorize…?
Can you identify the different parts…?
What evidence can you find…?
What is the relationship between…?
Can you distinguish between…?
What is the function of …?
What ideas justify…?
Level 5: EVALUATING
Do you agree with the actions…?
What is your opinion of…?
How would you prove…? Disprove?
Can you assess the value or
importance of…?
Would it be better if…?
Why did they choose...?
How would you rate the …?
What would you cite to defend the actions of…?
How could you determine…?
What choice would you have made if…?
How would you prioritize…?
What judgment would you make about….?
Based on what you know, how would you
explain…?
What information would you use to support
the view…?
How would you justify…?
How would you compare…?
Level 6: CREATING
What change would you make to
solve…?
How would you improve…?
Can you elaborate on the reason…?
Can you propose an alternative…?
Can you invent…?
How would you adapt ___to create a
different…?
How could you change or modify the plot…?
What could be done to minimize (or
maximize)…?
Can you predict what ___if…?
What could be done to
improve(change)…?
Suppose you could ____what would you
do…?
How would you test…?
Can you formulate a theory?
Can you construct a model that would
change…?
12/7/2015
Teacher Read-Aloud That Models Reading for Deep Understanding - ReadWriteThink
STRATEGY GUIDE
Teacher Read‐Aloud That Models Reading for Deep Understanding
Grades
K – 12
Author
Jan Miller
Burkins
Publisher
Strategy Guide
Series
Teaching Literacy Across the Gradual Release of Responsibility
See All Strategy Guides in this series ABOUT THIS STRATEGY GUIDECOMMENTS
Research Basis
Strategy in Practice
Related Resources
Teacher read‐alouds demonstrate the power of stories. By showing students the ways that involvement with text
engages us, we give them energy for learning how reading works. By showing them how to search for meaning, we
introduce strategies of understanding we can reinforce in shared, guided, and independent reading.
RESEARCH BASIS
Marie Clay (1991) writes that when teachers read aloud to students “meanings can be negotiated in discussion before,
during, and after the story reading” (p.171). Reading aloud to students should include think‐aloud or interactive
elements and focus intentionally on the meaning “within the text,” “about the text,” and “beyond the text” (Fountas
& Pinnell, 2006, p.33). Read aloud, as part of the gradual release of responsibility, feeds naturally into shared,
guided, and independent reading as teachers demonstrate for students the ways the reading process works (Burkins &
Croft, 2010).
Among the many benefits of read aloud, Rog (2001) lists the following:
building vocabulary
developing understandings of story structures
supporting developing connections between print elements
encouraging high levels of understanding
teaching the reading process in a meaningful context
modeling fluency
motivating students to read
Burkins, J.M., & Croft, M.M. (2010). Preventing misguided reading: New strategies for guided reading teachers. Newark, DE: International
Reading Association.
Patterson, Nancy. "Becoming Literate in the Ways of the Web: Evaluating Internet Resources." Voices from the Middle 10.3 (March 2003):
58‐59.
Fountas, I.C., & Pinnell, G.S. (2006). Teaching for comprehending and fluency: Thinking, talking, and writing about reading, K‐8.
Portsmouth, NH: Heinemann.
Rog, L.J. (2001). Early literacy instruction in kindergarten. Newark, DE: International Reading Association.
STRATEGY IN PRACTICE
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Teacher Read-Aloud That Models Reading for Deep Understanding - ReadWriteThink
Part 1 : Before Reading Aloud
Consider the speaking vocabulary of the class. A read aloud text should engage students at the edge of their
speaking vocabulary, usually a grade or two above their grade‐level.
Among text options, select based on relevant criteria below:
Will students enjoy it?
Is there a big idea or theme to explore?
Are there opportunities for thinking deeply?
Do students have necessary background knowledge?
What are the vocabulary demands?
Are the illustrations compelling?
Do the story and the illustrations present cultural diversity?
Consider the deep understandings you want to support students in reaching through discussion. What is a “big idea”
you want students to explore?
Working backward from your big idea, write open‐ended questions on sticky notes or in the margins in the places
you want students to discuss them. Develop questions that will support student discussion and depth of thought as
they move in the direction of this big idea. This isn’t a search for “right answers,” nor does it eliminate the
possibility of other ideas surfacing during discussion. This guiding idea is simply a plan for supporting thoughtful
discussion.
Examine the vocabulary in the text. Are there words that students must know in order to arrive at understandings
around the “big idea”? Develop a plan for introducing words quickly before or during reading.
Practice reading the text aloud.
Part 2 : During & After Reading (four parts)
Introduce preliminary vocabulary. Don’t spend too much time on this.
Read the text aloud fluently, stopping to ask the questions you wrote during planning. Allow students to discuss
them with partners and then share out with the group. Continue this process until you reach the end of the story.
After reading, support deeper conversation in the direction of the big idea. Support students as they mine for
connections and push for deep thought, particularly around the big idea.
Make the text available for shared, guided, and independent reading opportunities. Locate related texts for sharing
with students.
For further reading:
Anderson, N.P. (2007). What should I read aloud? A guide to 200 best‐selling picture books. Newark, DE: International
Reading Association.
Burkins, J.M., & Croft, M.M. (2010). Preventing misguided reading: New strategies for guided reading teachers.
Newark, DE: International Reading Association.
Hickman, P., & Pollard‐Durodola, S.D. (2009). Dynamic read‐aloud strategies for English learners: Building language
and literacy in the primary grades. Newark, DE: International Reading Association.
RELATED RESOURCES
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Grades 6 – 8 | Lesson Plan | Standard Lesson
Breaking Barriers, Building Bridges: Critical Discussion of Social Issues
Through a series of picture book read‐alouds, students engage in critical discussion of complex issues of race,
class, and gender.
Grades 3 – 5 | Lesson Plan | Standard Lesson
Literature as a Catalyst for Social Action: Breaking Barriers, Building Bridges
Students are invited to confront and discuss issues of injustice and intolerance in response to reading a variety
of fiction and nonfiction texts.
Grades 2 – 5 | Lesson Plan | Standard Lesson
Writing Acrostic Poems with Thematically Related Texts in the Content Areas
Students read thematically related texts, scaffolded from simple to complex, to help them gather necessary
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Teacher Read-Aloud That Models Reading for Deep Understanding - ReadWriteThink
concept vocabulary and background knowledge in a content area. They then write acrostic poems to organize
and present their learning in a creative way.
Grades 3 – 5 | Lesson Plan | Standard Lesson
Thundering Tall Tales: Using Read‐Aloud as a Springboard to Writing
Imagination and application are key to this tall tale lesson in which students take what they know about tall
tales to spin a yarn of their own.
Grades K – 4 | Lesson Plan | Standard Lesson
Digging Deeper: Developing Comprehension Using T hank Y ou, Mr. Fa lker
A read‐aloud of Patricia Polacco’s Thank You, Mr. Falker helps promote deeper comprehension through
questioning to achieve personal connections and discussions of character and theme.
Grades K – 1 | Lesson Plan | Recurring Lesson
Catching the Bug for Reading Through Interactive Read‐Alouds
Students learn about story structure, new vocabulary, and a variety of reading strategies by participating in an
interactive read‐aloud of Miss Bindergarten Stays Home From Kindergarten by Joseph Slate.
Grades K – 2 | Lesson Plan | Standard Lesson
Shhh! Bear's Sleeping: Learning About Nonfiction and Fiction Using Read‐Alouds
Students explore the distinction between the fiction story Bear Snores On and the nonfiction book Every Autumn
Comes the Bear.
© ILA/NCTE 2015. All rights reserved.
Technical Help | Legal | International Literacy Association | National Council of Teachers of English
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Literary Elements and Devices
POINT OF VIEW
The Outsiders
S. E. Hinton
FOCUS THE LEARNING
Introduction: Our point of view is the way we look at situations, in our reading, in our writing, and in our daily lives.
Have you ever looked at something differently from your parents? Your point of view about bedtime, for example,
could be very different from your parents’ point of view. When we read, we need to think carefully about the point
of view. Who is telling the story? How does the storyteller’s point of view affect the information that we receive as
readers? As we read excerpts from The Outsiders by S.E. Hinton, we’ll consider point of view.
INTERACTIVE READ-ALOUD
Model and Guide Practice
READ CHAPTER 1 THROUGH “THAT’S JUST THE WAY THINGS ARE.”
One thing I notice right away is the word I. The narrator,
Ponyboy, is telling the story himself. This is called the firstperson point of view. This point of view has good points and
bad: it’s interesting to know the thoughts of one of the characters, but it can also be limiting. I won’t know other characters’ thoughts unless they share them with the narrator. I can
already tell a lot about this narrator, his family, his situation,
and how he feels about other people. I would characterize
this narrator as matter-of-fact, realistic, and independent. His
point of view seems to be that there are differences between
people, and we can just accept them for what they are.
Think about the narrator and his point of view. Evaluate
my statements based on evidence in the story.
IN CHAPTER 3, READ FROM “SODA HAD THIS BUCKSKIN HORSE . . .”
TO “. . .THE SAME SUNSET.” At first, Ponyboy talked about the
differences between Socs and Greasers. But now that he has
had time to talk with a Soc, I am wondering if his point of
view is changing a little bit.
What might be changing in Ponyboy’s point of view?
What causes his point of view to change? Mine the
text for evidence.
IN CHAPTER 3, READ FROM “‘BIG-TIME SOCS’ . . .” TO “IN THE COUNTRY. . .” Now I am seeing points of view of other characters. We
can’t hear Johnny’s inner thoughts, but we can hear his point
of view though his dialogue and Ponyboy’s reactions.
Explain what you can figure out about Johnny’s point
of view in this part of the text. Compare and contrast
his point of view with Ponyboy’s point of view.
MINE THE TEXT FOR MORE EXAMPLES. Read more examples and
discuss points of view. Chapter 6 and Chapter 7 show outsiders’
points of view. Chapter 7 and Chapter 11 include conversations
between Ponyboy and Randy that show their points of view.
Johnny’s letter in Chapter 12 reveals his point of view.
END OF STORY REFLECTION
This story makes me think deeply about point of view. What
makes point of view a bit challenging here is that we have a
window into the thoughts of only one character. I wonder, for
example, how the story might be different if Cherry or Randy
were telling it, or a parent of one of the children Johnny saves.
When authors carefully craft point of view in a text, they can
deliver a message, perhaps in a way we didn’t think of before.
The points of view in The Outsiders challenge my thinking
about how different groups of people might get along—or not.
Evaluate the author’s choice of point of view. Why do you
think she chose Ponyboy to tell the story? How would the
story be different if another character were telling it?
LITERARY ELEMENTS AND DEVICES • 207
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SHARE THE LEARNING
Focus on Point of View
Tip for Share the Reading
Tip for Readers Theater Script
Explain that “Points
Read the first paragraph. Ask students if they
can figure out from whose
point of view “One Simple
Device?” is told. Read on to
check students’ predictions.
What details in the text
helped them determine
how the speaker feels?
One Simple Device?
of View” contains three
I’m getting very tired of how you
take me for granted. I keep your
pants closed and where they belong.
“episodes,” each with sev-
All those mosquitoes buzzing around
your tent? I keep them out!
Remember when you dropped your
backpack? None of your books fell
eral voices that have dif-
out, all because of me.
People call me a simple device,
but I rely on physics. I’m smarter than
I look! My inventor called me a clasp
Points of View
ferent points of view. Ask
locker when he created me in the
late 1800s. The B. F. Goodrich
Company gave me the snappier
name, zipper, when they used me on
Voice 1:
Voice 2:
students if they can iden-
alternated with a hollow space. My zipper pull has wedges. When
someone zips me up, the wedges exert the force that moves the teeth
together. It sounds easy, but believe me, this takes precision. The teeth and
hollow spots have to be the same size. The wedge and the teeth have to
be at the right angle to properly apply the force. But if all of this works, I’m
very strong when I’m zipped up.
See how impressive I am? Show me some respect!
tify the various speakers.
Research has shown that the only way gum would stay inside your stomach
that long would be if it were so large, it got trapped in your intestines. It would
have to be larger around than a quarter.
Voice 4:
What clues in the text sug-
Gum is pretty immune to the digestive process. It usually just leaves the body
looking the same as when it came in.
Voice 5:
gest the various points of
So it won’t harm you to swallow gum, but it’s probably a good idea not to.
Voice 1:
Don’t cross your eyes! You know if they do that, they’ll stay that way.
Voice 2:
But it looks funny. And I don’t keep them crossed that long. I’ll be okay.
view? Remind students to
© 2009 by Linda Hoyt and Lynnette Brent Sandvold from Interactive Read-Alouds, 6–7 (Portsmouth, NH: Heinemann). This page may be reproduced for classroom use only.
LITERARY ELEMENTS AND DEVICES • 209
I don’t see how that’s possible. Seriously! I’ve swallowed it before, and if it took
that long, I’d have huge gobs in my stomach. I’d be sick. It can’t be true.
Voice 3:
some rubber boots in the early 1900s.
I actually have something in common with a doorstop. A doorstop is a
wedge that holds a door open by exerting an upward force to the base of
the door. I have teeth on either side of me, and each tooth has a hook on it,
I’ve told you before, you shouldn’t do that! It will take seven years to digest.
© 2009 by Linda Hoyt and Lynnette Brent Sandvold from Interactive Read-Alouds, 6–7 (Portsmouth, NH: Heinemann). This page may be reproduced for classroom use only.
use their voices to convey
210
•
LITERARY ELEMENTS AND DEVICES
the viewpoints.
EXTEND THE LEARNING
Work point of view into a content-area lesson. In a health
lesson, for example, students can analyze media messages
for points of view on issues such as nutrition and exercise.
In social studies, students can read texts that offer varying
points of view on historical events.
Invite students to retell a story they have read in class,
telling it from a different point of view.
Have students do a survey of selected Internet sources by
examining them for instances of bias. They can determine
the usefulness of certain websites by looking for evidence
of slanted points of view.
Students will enjoy reading The True Story of the Three Little
Pigs by Jon Scieszka and comparing it to the traditional tale.
How do the two stories vary in their points of view?
Students can write editorials for their school newspaper
on a topic of interest. Reflect on their points of view and
the best ways that they could support those points of view.
ASSESS THE LEARNING
Have students identify point of view in independent reading selections. Assess their ability to identify the speaker as
well as their ability to determine how that speaker affects
the delivery of the message.
Ask students to write about a content-area topic from two
points of view. In science, for example, they might write
from the point of view of both predator and prey. Assess
their understanding of point of view based on their writing.
INFUSION OF FORMAL LANGUAGE
Test-style language
The point of view offered in
The Outsiders is that of
Ponyboy’s viewpoint is
A. greasers deserve the
A. Johnny.
lives they have.
B. Cherry.
B. he could never be a
C. Ponyboy.
D. an outside narrator.
friend with a Soc.
C. it is easier to live
without parents than
with them.
D. the sunset looks the
same, no matter where
you see it.
208
•
LITERARY ELEMENTS AND DEVICES
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Page 209
One Simple Device?
I’m getting very tired of how you
take me for granted. I keep your
pants closed and where they belong.
All those mosquitoes buzzing around
your tent? I keep them out!
Remember when you dropped your
backpack? None of your books fell
out, all because of me.
People call me a simple device,
but I rely on physics. I’m smarter than
I look! My inventor called me a clasp
locker when he created me in the
late 1800s. The B. F. Goodrich
Company gave me the snappier
name, zipper, when they used me on
some rubber boots in the early 1900s.
I actually have something in common with a doorstop. A doorstop is a
wedge that holds a door open by exerting an upward force to the base of
the door. I have teeth on either side of me, and each tooth has a hook on it,
alternated with a hollow space. My zipper pull has wedges. When
someone zips me up, the wedges exert the force that moves the teeth
together. It sounds easy, but believe me, this takes precision. The teeth and
hollow spots have to be the same size. The wedge and the teeth have to
be at the right angle to properly apply the force. But if all of this works, I’m
very strong when I’m zipped up.
See how impressive I am? Show me some respect!
© 2009 by Linda Hoyt and Lynnette Brent Sandvold from Interactive Read-Alouds, 6–7 (Portsmouth, NH: Heinemann). This page may be reproduced for classroom use only.
LITERARY ELEMENTS AND DEVICES • 209
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Points of View
Voice 1:
I’ve told you before, you shouldn’t do that! It will take seven years to digest.
Voice 2:
I don’t see how that’s possible. Seriously! I’ve swallowed it before, and if it took
that long, I’d have huge gobs in my stomach. I’d be sick. It can’t be true.
Voice 3:
Research has shown that the only way gum would stay inside your stomach
that long would be if it were so large, it got trapped in your intestines. It would
have to be larger around than a quarter.
Voice 4:
Gum is pretty immune to the digestive process. It usually just leaves the body
looking the same as when it came in.
Voice 5:
So it won’t harm you to swallow gum, but it’s probably a good idea not to.
Voice 1:
Don’t cross your eyes! You know if they do that, they’ll stay that way.
Voice 2:
But it looks funny. And I don’t keep them crossed that long. I’ll be okay.
© 2009 by Linda Hoyt and Lynnette Brent Sandvold from Interactive Read-Alouds, 6–7 (Portsmouth, NH: Heinemann). This page may be reproduced for classroom use only.
210
•
LITERARY ELEMENTS AND DEVICES
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Voice 3:
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Page 211
Your eyeballs are controlled by six muscles. If you look up, down, or sideways,
the muscles move. Crossing your eyes makes those muscles move that way.
If something comes really close to your face, your eyes cross naturally.
Voice 4:
Crossing your eyes may very well strain those eye muscles. You could have
spasms or twitches, and your eyes could feel very tired. But no evidence
suggests they would stick that way for more than a short time.
Voice 5:
So your eyes would feel normal after an hour or so. But do you really want to
have tired eyes? Besides, it’s not nice to torment your little brother.
Voice 1:
Those little silica packets say “Do not eat” for a reason. They’re in that bottle to
keep the contents dry, not to eat.
Voice 2:
I heard that if you eat those, you can dry out your entire body. They probably
don’t taste very good, but I wonder what would happen if you ate them.
Voice 3:
Silica is nearly harmless. Silica absorbs and holds moisture. If you happened to
put some in your mouth, you would have a very bad case of dry mouth.
Voice 4:
Ingesting silica could have a few irritating side effects, such as dry eyes and
throat and an itchy nose. But a 210-pound man would have to consume 58,800
packets of silica gel to soak up all the water in his body!
Voice 5:
I think we agree on this one. Not harmful, but not fun! Let’s just throw those
packets away.
© 2009 by Linda Hoyt and Lynnette Brent Sandvold from Interactive Read-Alouds, 6–7 (Portsmouth, NH: Heinemann). This page may be reproduced for classroom use only.
LITERARY ELEMENTS AND DEVICES • 211
ReadingQuest.org
Making Sense in Social Studies
THESIS
Thesis
-
PROOF
Proof
SUMMARY PARAGRAPH
ReadingQuest.org
Permission Granted for Classroom Use Only. All Others Inquire at [email protected].
http://www.readingquest.org
Copyright ©Raymond C. Jones. All Rights Reserved.
ReadingQuest.org
Making Sense in Social Studies
THESIS
-
PROOF
Thesis:
Evidence Supporting
Evidence Refuting
CONCLUSION
ReadingQuest.org
Permission Granted for Classroom Use Only. All Others Inquire at [email protected].
http://www.readingquest.org
Copyright ©Raymond C. Jones. All Rights Reserved.
Acknowledgements
This resource has been made possible through the generous donations of private individuals,
foundations and corporations who support The Curriculum Foundation, the charitable arm of
Curriculum Services Canada. For more details please see www.curricululm.org and click on
“Grants for Teachers.”
Word Walls: A Support for Literacy in Secondary School
Classrooms
Introduction
Each year students must learn and use thousands of new words in their various subject
discipline studies. They are required to perform complex tasks using new vocabulary. The use
of a word wall in a classroom can be a highly effective teaching strategy to improve literacy
skills. Word wall activities encourage active student participation. Gestures, such as pointing to
key words during a lesson, offer visual reinforcement which can be very helpful for students.
Word wall activities engage students while they learn key vocabulary, whether it be learning to
explain a word, to compare it to other key concepts, or to spell it.
A word wall is a group of words that are displayed on a wall, bulletin board, chalkboard, or
whiteboard in a classroom. The words are printed in a large font so that they are easily visible
from all student seating areas. These words are referred to continually throughout a unit or term
by the teacher and students during a variety of activities.
Word walls:
•
provide an approach to meaningful teaching of vocabulary
with an emphasis on student engagement and higher level
thinking skills;
•
build vocabulary, thereby improving reading comprehension
and writing style;
•
reinforce understanding of subject-specific terminology with a
focus on students internalizing key concepts;
•
help students improve spelling and awareness of spelling
patterns;
•
provide visual cues for students;
•
encourage increased student independence when reading
and writing.
© Jennifer Cronsberry, 2004
page 3
Curriculum Connections
Word wall activities can be used to improve literacy in all curriculum areas by helping students
build vocabulary, improve spelling in written work, and explain ideas through oral
communication.
Examples
In English curriculum
students:
In Science curriculum
students:
In Geography curriculum
students:
• use specialized literary
terms in analysis and
explanations of reading
materials;
• communicate scientific
ideas, procedures,
results, and conclusions
using appropriate
language and formats;
• demonstrate
understanding of terms
and concepts;
• comprehend new
vocabulary encountered
in reading materials;
• increase effectiveness in
writing style through
increased awareness of
diction and a broader
vocabulary.
In Arts curriculum students:
• use appropriately
language specific to each
of the arts when doing
critical analysis;
• describe dance works,
using the language of
dance criticism.
© Jennifer Cronsberry, 2004
• recognize and describe
the major components of
the universe using
scientific terminology and
units.
• demonstrate a knowledge
of geographic terms.
In Business curriculum
students:
In Mathematics curriculum
students:
• define key information
technology terms;
• communicate the findings
of investigations, using
appropriate language and
mathematical forms.
• use current information
technology terminology
appropriately.
page 4
Basic Organizational Principles
How Many Words and How Often?
Vocabulary instruction using a word wall focuses on a small number of targeted vocabulary
words that are key to student success in a unit and the course overall. Teachers decide whether
to introduce new words weekly or to begin the unit by introducing all new vocabulary as an
overview. The approach would depend on the focus of the word wall and the unit with which it
coincides.
The words selected for a word wall are addressed continually, using a wide variety of engaging
activities.
Creating the Word Wall
In secondary schools, where different teachers, different courses, and different grade levels
often share the same classroom, finding sufficient space for a word wall may prove to be a
challenge. In the Resources section of this document there are references to sources of ideas
from teachers who have found ways to display word walls in limited space. When space is
limited, the word wall may need to be changed for each unit rather than keeping key terms up all
year. Ideally, key terms from a previous unit could be moved to another space in the room to
remain available for visual reference throughout the course.
Ideas
•
Mount the words on construction paper or card stock and
laminate them.
•
Colour code the words, either using coloured markers for
lettering or coloured paper for mounting. Colour coding can be
used in numerous ways, e.g., same colours can be used to
highlight homonyms, synonyms, parts of speech, frequently
misspelled words, or categories.
•
Use a wall area that is visible to all students. If the word wall is
to be used effectively, students need to be able to glance at the
word wall from their desks while they are working.
•
Mount words on the wall in alphabetical order. Using
alphabetical order makes it easier for students to skim the list
and find words.
•
Make access to the words easy, e.g., use tape or tacks to
mount the words so students can move individual words.
© Jennifer Cronsberry, 2004
page 5
Types of Words
All courses have subject-specific terminology that can be used for a word wall.
Suggestions
Geography
French
Mathematics
• terms and concepts
associated with
geographical regions
• verbs conjugated with
“etre” for passé compose
• vocabulary for math
concepts and terms
course topics, e.g.,
integers, polynomials,
equations, analytic
geometry, measurement,
coefficient, slope
• vocabulary for forms and
characteristics of systems,
e.g., social services,
transportation, resource
management, political
structures, energy
networks
• reflexive verbs
• unit vocabulary
Science
Arts
English
• terminology to describe
major concepts
• elements common to all
arts, e.g., space, time,
form, contrast, unity,
variety, movement,
balance
• literary terms or media
terms, e.g., camera
techniques
• biological reproduction
processes, e.g., mitosis,
prophase, metaphase,
anaphase and telophase
• types of asexual
reproduction in plant
species
• historical periods with
stylistic links in the arts,
e.g., baroque, preRaphaelite
• terms used in
photography, sculpture,
etc.
• theme words or transition
words
• graphic text features
• synonyms or homonyms
• mood/atmosphere words
• vivid verbs
• prefixes, suffixes, roots
• easily confused words,
e.g., accept/except
• parts of speech
• commonly misspelled
words
© Jennifer Cronsberry, 2004
page 6
Classroom Activities Using Word Walls
•
There are many creative ways to use word walls to engage students in learning. The
activities may be full lessons, or brief exercises that encourage students to refer to the
word wall and review key terms. Shorter activities encourage students to ‘play with’
language and can be beneficial for reinforcement of basic skills.
•
Where possible, students should interact with the word wall words whether it be to affix a
prefix, or a plural ‘s,’ or to move words so they are intrinsically engaged by the active,
creative, and participatory nature of word wall activities.
•
Some classroom activities suggest the use of word cards. These activities require at least
one set of the words on cards such as recipe cards. The words could be generated from
a computer and glued to recipe cards when multiple sets are needed.
•
Students should maintain a personal word wall. To make the word wall list stand out,
provide an organizational handout that students glue to three-holed construction paper.
The construction paper fits into a binder, but sticks out a little more than regular binder
paper, thus making the word wall list easily accessible.
•
The suggested activities are organized as whole class, small groups/partners, or
individual activities. Unless specifically indicated, the activities are done with all the words
posted on the word wall. Some of the activities could be completed with just the new
word(s) introduced on a given day.
•
The word wall activities are suggestions only and can be adapted or modified for use
within different grade levels and subject disciplines.
•
In presenting word wall activities, teachers must be sensitive to students who may be
uncomfortable with completing a task in front of their peers, e.g., spelling exercises are
suggested as individual or partner activities.
Whole Class Activities
Mystery Word
Introduce a new word by writing the letters in a scrambled order. To assist students in
unscrambling the word, give clues, either about the word’s meaning or about how it is spelled.
Students apply their knowledge of spelling patterns, as well as activate their prior knowledge,
depending on the clues given.
Visiting Word
After students have worked on a word wall for a substantial period of time, add a “visiting”
word. This encourages students to do a review of the word wall as they hunt for the new
word. Present the visiting word as the new word for the day.
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Missing Word
Take one of the words off the word wall and rearrange the remaining words. Students scan
the word wall and figure out which word is missing. Give clues to help to determine the
missing word.
Quick Definitions
Provide a definition (orally and/or written on the board) of one of the word wall words.
Students choose and write the word to match the definition. Repeat the process encouraging
students to review all the words as they select the answer.
Looking at Spelling
Students use masking tape to ‘underline’ the part of the word that is typically difficult to spell
(e.g., because it is an exception to a rule, a homonym, hard to hear phonetically).
Using coloured strips of masking tape, students underline common spelling patterns in the
words such as ‘i’ before ‘e,’ double consonants, or ‘qu.’
Small Group Activities
Word Pictures
Working in teams, students select one of the words from the word wall and illustrate it on the
board or on chart paper. The opposing team gets a point for a correct guess and illustrates
another word.
Word Relationships
Each student shares the word on their word card with a partner, and together, they decide on
a way that their two words are related or have something in common. A time limit could be
imposed after which students rotate to a new partner and repeat the process. After doing this
a few times, the pair could join with another pair, and see if they can find a relationship
between the four words. Discussing similarities and differences helps students to master new
vocabulary meanings.
Word Cards Partner Game
Pairs of students take turns choosing a word card and offering a definition for the word. The
partner guesses and spells the word.
Parts of Speech
Each small group is given a part of speech and must decide which words on the word wall fall
into the category. If more than one group is looking for the same part of speech, they
compare lists and discuss any discrepancies.
Small cards can be affixed adjacent to the words on the word wall to identify the part of
speech for each word.
Drama
Students choose a word from the word wall and improvise a situation that portrays the word.
Peers guess the word.
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Plurals
Small groups are assigned a group of words to pluralize. Students identify the nouns and
tape the plural ending of the word on the word wall. Discuss each group’s work as a class.
Word Ad
Each group chooses a word, and brainstorms all the possible uses of the word. They create a
radio or television ad to ‘sell’ one of the words from the word wall and present it to the class.
As a variation, students think of a product for which they create a radio advertisement, using
as many words as possible from the word wall. The group avoids making direct reference to
the product and asks the class to guess what it is that the ad is trying to sell.
Categories
Students create categories and group the words from the word wall to fit those categories.
Set the number of words that are allowed in a “miscellaneous” category and create a
maximum and minimum number of categories that can be used. This activity could be done
individually first; then students share and compare their categories with a partner. They share
their groups of words with the class who guess the principle behind the sorting.
Musical Words
In groups of five or six, with each group member having one word card, students circulate the
cards within their groups, while music is playing. When the music stops, the group members
take turns giving the meaning of the word they have. Group members can challenge the
correctness of the definition offered by their peer. If a group member cannot provide a
definition, the group members discuss the meaning, asking the teacher for assistance,
if necessary.
Prefixes and Suffixes
Each small group is given a set of the suffix and prefix cards and decides to which words on
the word wall they can add them.
As a variation, assign each group a set of words from the word wall for which they must
decide the appropriate suffixes and prefixes.
Contextualization
Students write about a situation in which a word wall word would be commonly used. The
student reads the situation to the class, who then guess the relevant word.
As a variation, students portray multiple contextual situations, if applicable, e.g., brackets are
something that could be spoken about in both writing and construction contexts.
Word Origins and Root Words
Each group finds the word origin and root words of a set of word wall words and presents its
findings to the class.
As a variation, groups give the origin of a word and the class guesses the corresponding
word wall word.
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Names for Musical Groups
Students brainstorm creative names used by musical groups from both the past and present.
After looking at the unique and varied nature of the names, students use one to three words
from the word wall to create a name for a musical group.
As an extension, students could write a description of the fictitious group and its style of
music.
Individual Activities
Definition Bingo
Students fill in a bingo-type grid with word wall words. As definitions are read out, students
cross out the corresponding word on their grid. The first person to get a complete line of
words wins.
As a variation: give synonyms or antonyms for appropriate word wall words.
Reading Bingo
Students fill in a bingo card with new words for a unit. As students complete the unit’s
reading, they fill in the page numbers where the unit’s words appear. Acknowledge the first
person who gets a straight line completed, then assign completion of the entire grid for
everyone in the class.
As a variation: Students skim text to find words they have listed on their card.
Word of the Day
Choose a “Word of the Day.” Encourage students to use the “Word of the Day” meaningfully
during the class and highlight appropriate use. Add the word to the word wall.
Words in Writing
Encourage students to use the word wall words in their daily classroom writing. When work is
collected or read in class, highlight the words from the word wall that are used appropriately.
Memory Association
Encourage students to make connections and increase comprehension by selecting a word
wall word that connects to a positive personal memory. Students explain the connection in
writing and share their writing with a partner. Volunteers read their writing aloud to the class.
Maximum Words in a Story
Students write a story involving as many words from the word wall as possible within a given
time frame. Students underline all the word wall words they used and share their stories in
small groups. Each group decides which to read aloud, e.g., the story with the most words or
the most creative story.
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Unfolding Five Words in a Story
Students are given a word wall word every two-minutes for ten minutes (five words in total) to
incorporate into a story they are writing on a topic of their choice. When a new word is given,
students work that word into their story immediately. Encourage students to write
continuously and quickly during the ten minutes. Students share their stories in small groups
and each group chooses one story to be read aloud to the class.
Words within Words
Students make a list of as many words as possible by reorganizing some of the letters of a
word wall word. Students could write the word on a piece of paper and then cut the letters
apart so that they can move them around and try different combinations.
Note: Limits can be set such as that the words must have at least three letters and names do
not count.
Poetry
Students write a poem related to the topic under study using as many words as possible from
the word wall. As a variation, students choose just one word from the word wall and write a
poem about that word. Students share their poetry.
Making Connections
Students give an example of someone from history or the present for each of the traits on the
character traits word wall. For a shorter version, students choose ten of the traits for which
they could give one example.
Note: This activity could be adapted to suit other word wall topics.
Word Connotation
Students indicate words with positive or negative connotations from their personal word wall
list, using a set of plus (+) and minus (–) cards. Student volunteers indicate which words have
positive connotation and which words have negative connotation by placing the appropriate
card beside the word wall word.
Word Search
Students use the words from the word wall to create a word search puzzle. Students
exchange word searches with a partner and find the word wall words.
Concept Ladder
Students place a word wall word at either the top or the bottom of a ladder image. In each
successive part of the ladder, students fill in information about a different aspect of the word,
e.g., what is it like, what is it opposite of, where is it found, how is it used.
Concept Map
Students create a concept map for words that define complex concepts. They place the word
in a circle or box on the centre of a page and then draw other circles/boxes branching off the
centre to contain subtopics which can then be further broken down.
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Media Re-naming
Ask students to re-name a television show or movie using at least one of the appropriate
word wall words. Students write the new name on a piece of paper, along with the original
name. Use the papers periodically at the end of class by reading out the new title and asking
students to guess the original name of the show or movie.
Rankings
Students individually list the word wall words, in writing, from most difficult to easiest for them
to understand or to spell. If this activity is done at the beginning, middle, and end of a unit,
students can note how their rankings have changed.
Visual Representation
Students choose one word from the word wall to convey its meaning visually. Encourage
students to not just add illustrations around the word, but to use the letters of the word to
convey meaning appropriately. Post the visual representations around the room and/or the
word wall.
Rhyme Time
Students select three to five word wall words with which they can rhyme words. Students list
as many rhymes for each word as they can in a given time limit.
Metaphors and Similes
Students practise their abstract thinking skills by choosing five words from the word wall and
creating either a simile or metaphor for each of the words. Students can share their similes
and metaphors with others in the class.
As an extension, each student chooses one simile or metaphor and writes the comparison on
construction paper, which is displayed around the classroom. The teacher reads a few
comparisons each day to reinforce the concept of similes and metaphors.
Links to Assessment
Assess student learning through their use of the targeted vocabulary in the larger scope of their
classroom activities and assessments.
Depending on how the words are introduced – whether daily, at the beginning of the week, or at
the beginning of a unit – diagnostic assessment should be brief. Vocabulary assessment could
also be incorporated into larger diagnostic assessments done for a unit.
If students already have some familiarity with the words, the activities that focus on higher-level
thinking skills and extending meaning are suitable. If students have little initial understanding of
a group of words, start with something like a concept map or concept ladder to scaffold
meaning.
Student understanding of the words from the word wall should not be assessed through isolated
vocabulary tests that assess only rote memorization of words rather than genuine
understanding of their meaning.
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An observation checklist could be created to assess student mastery of the word wall words:
Volunteers accurate answers in whole class word wall activities
Completes word wall activities with ease
Uses word wall vocabulary appropriately in class and peer discussions
Demonstrates use of words in a variety of contexts, during independent work
Uses words in class work appropriately
Spells word wall words correctly in written work
Glances to the word wall during class
Refers to personal word wall list
Students should be assessed for their increased knowledge of and skills with the word wall
words as part of larger performance tasks at the end of a unit/study.
Examples
•
Assess students’ ability to spell the word wall vocabulary accurately, in completing a
major assignment.
•
Assess students’ increased vocabulary by looking at their ability to use word wall words
effectively in a writing piece at the end of a unit.
•
Assess students’ understanding of key concepts inherent in the words by their ability to
answer terminology-based questions on a test.
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Resources
Allen, Janet. Words, Words, Words. Portland: Stenhouse Publishers, 1999.
1-57110-085-7
Beers, Kylene. When Kids Can’t Read: What Teachers Can Do. Portsmouth: Heinemann, 2003.
0-86709-519-9-90000
Callella, Trisha. Making Your Word Wall More Interactive. Huntington Beach: Creative Teaching
Press, 2001. 1-57471-773-1
Cunningham, Patricia C. and Richard L. Allington. Classrooms That Work: They Can All Read
and Write. Boston: Allyn and Bacon, 1994. 0-205-35541-2
Interactive Word Wall
http://www.teachnet.com/lesson/langarts/wordwall062599.html
Ontario Ministry of Education. Think Literacy: Cross Curricular Approaches Grade 7-12,
2003. Ontario: Queen’s Printer For Ontario, 2003. 0-7794-5426-X
Peel District School Board. Reaching Higher: Supporting student achievement in literacy.
Ontario: 2000.
Word Walls
http://www.theteacherscorner.net/writing/wordwall/index.htm
Working with Words
http://www.wfu.edu/~cunningh/fourblocks/block4.html
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