Paul Bunyan by Steven Kellogg

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Anna Sewell’s Black Beauty adapted by Cathy East
Advertisements

The Hare and The Tortoise Originally told by Aesop.
Test Taking Tips How to help yourself with multiple choice and short answer questions for reading selections A. Caldwell.
Halfway Down by A. A. Milne
Androcles Unknown.
Arachne and Athena Unknown.
The North Wind and the Sun
The Man Who Walked Between the Towers by Mordicai Gerstein Included: A brief excerpt from the book and rigorous question set activities promoting higher.
Aseops fable. The Story Jacob’s Ladder Goals & Objectives Habits of Mind.
The Myth of Athena unknown.
Cradle Song by William Blake
The Four Friends by A. A. Milne
Owl Moon by Jane Yolen Included: A brief excerpt from the book and rigorous question set activities promoting higher level-thinking development.
Sarah Gets Dressed by Margaret Codos-Irvine Included: A brief excerpt from the book and rigorous question set activities promoting higher level-thinking.
Who Has Seen the Wind? By Christina Rossetti
If Rudyard Kipling By Rudyard Kipling.
The Tiny Seed by Eric Carle
The Dog and His Reflection
by Robert Louis Stevenson
Originally told by Aesop. The Story Jacob’s Ladder Goals & Objectives Habits of Mind.
Swing Song by A. A. Milne Included: A brief excerpt from the poem and rigorous question set activities promoting higher level-thinking development.
Little Things by Ebenezer Cobham Brewer
Ox-Cart Man by Donald Hall
Flotsam by David Wiesner Caldecott Winner Included: A brief excerpt from the book and rigorous question set activities promoting higher level-thinking.
Mummy Slept Late and Daddy Fixed Breakfast by John Ciardi
Math Curse by Jon Scieszka Included: A brief excerpt from the book and rigorous question set activities promoting higher level-thinking development.
Rosa by Nikki Giovanni (Author) Bryan Collier (Illustrator) Caldecott Honor Book Included: A brief excerpt from the book and rigorous question set activities.
How I Learned Geography by Uri Shulevitz Included: A brief excerpt from the book and rigorous question set activities promoting higher level-thinking development.
The Polar Express by Chris Van Allsburg
Jumanji by Chris Van Allsburg Caldecott Medal Winner
Snowflake Bentley by Jacqueline Briggs Martin (Author) Mary Azarian (Illustrator) Caldecott Medal Winner Included: A brief excerpt from the book and rigorous.
Untitled By Alyssa M. Argenzio. Poem Objectives Dancing in the wind there was a little seed who had nothing to give, or to want or to need. But she knew.
Sea Shell by Amy Lowell Included: The poem and rigorous question set activities promoting higher level-thinking development.
There’s a Nightmare in My Closet by Mercer Mayer
Noah’s Ark by Peter Spier Included: A brief excerpt from the book and rigorous question set activities promoting higher level-thinking development.
Owen by Kevin Henkes Caldecott Honor Book Included: A brief excerpt from the book and rigorous question set activities promoting higher level-thinking.
The Myth of Heracles unknown.
Whether the Weather by Anonymous
The Ant and the Dove Originally told by Aesop
The Ants and the Grasshopper originally told by Aesop Included: A brief excerpt from the book and rigorous question set activities promoting higher level-thinking.
Emily by Michael Bedard (Author) and Barbara Cooney (Illustrator) Included: A brief excerpt from the book and rigorous question set activities promoting.
The Stinky Cheese Man and Other Fairly Stupid Tales by Jon Scieszka Included: A brief excerpt from the book and rigorous question set activities promoting.
The Lost Wig Aesop's Fable.
Pocahontas by Ingri and Edgar Parin d’Aulaire Included: A brief excerpt from the book and rigorous question set activities promoting higher level-thinking.
The Crocodile by Lewis Carroll Included: A brief excerpt from the poem and rigorous question set activities promoting higher level-thinking development.
Puppy & I by A. A. Milne Included: A brief excerpt from the book and rigorous question set activities promoting higher level-thinking development.
Clay Marbles, Aleksei, and Me
Sylvester and the Magic Pebble by William Steig
The Girl Who Loved Wild Horses by Paul Gable
The Rusty Spigot by Eve Merriam
The Tap Dancer Author Unknown.
The Wolf in Sheep’s Clothing Originally told by Aesop Included: The story and rigorous question set activities promoting higher level-thinking development.
Anno’s Journey by Mitsumasa Anno Included: A brief excerpt from the book and rigorous question set activities promoting higher level-thinking development.
Come Away From the Water, Shirley by John Burningham
Fire in the Window by Mary Mapes Dodge
Doctor De Soto by William Steig Newbery Honor Book Included: A brief excerpt from the book and rigorous question set activities promoting higher level-thinking.
Daffodowndilly by A.A. Milne Included: A brief excerpt from the poem and rigorous question set activities promoting higher level-thinking development.
Kitten’s First Full Moon by Kevin Henkes
A Kitten By Eleanor Farjean Included: The poem and rigorous question set activities promoting higher level-thinking development.
Originally told by Aesop. The Story Jacob’s Ladder Goals & Objectives Habits of Mind.
The Microbe by Hilaire Belloc
A guide to help your students achieve deeper comprehension in order to align with the Common Core State Standards. Jacob’s Ladder Reading Comprehension.
The American Revolutionary War unknown. Tier 1 The Story Jacob’s Ladder Goals & Objectives Habits of Mind.
The City by Langston Hughes. Tier 1 The Story Jacob’s Ladder Goals and Objectives Habits of Mind.
BY ROBERT J. HIDY Why Own a House When You Can Own an R.V.?
COUSIN By Brooke A. Shormaker.
690 L 520L RI.2.9 Compare and contrast the most important points presented by two texts on the same topic.
Originally told by Aesop
Literature: Key Ideas and Details
Presentation transcript:

Paul Bunyan by Steven Kellogg Included: A brief excerpt from the book and rigorous question set activities promoting higher level-thinking development

Additional Resources Video attachment

Excerpt from book Jacob’s Ladder Goals & Objectives Habits of Mind Tier 1 Excerpt from book Jacob’s Ladder Goals & Objectives Habits of Mind

Excerpt As the largest baby ever born in Maine, lumberjack Paul Bunyan’s unusual size and strength bring him a life full of many fantastic adventures and lead to the creation of several of America’s most well-known geographic features. Obtain the book from a school library to read the story in its entirety and complete the ladder activities.

Students will be able: Ladder B B1 Details- To list specific details or recall facts related to the text or generate a list about a specific topic or character. B2 Classifications-To categorize different aspects of the text or identify categories from a list of topics or details. B3 Generalizations-To make general statements about the reading or an idea in the reading and use data to support statements. Ladder C C1 Literary Elements-To identify and explain specific story elements such as character, setting, or poetic-device. C2 Inference-To use textual clues to read between the lines and make judgments about specific textual events, ideas, or character analysis. C3 Theme/Concept-To identify a major idea or theme common in the text. Ladder D D1 Paraphrasing - Students will be able to restate lines read using their own words. D2 Summarizing - Students will be able to provide a synopsis of text sections. D3 Creative Synthesis - Students will create something new using what they have learned from reading and their synopses.

Habits of Mind Working Interdependently Thinking about Thinking (metacognition) Innovating, Creating, Imagining Refer to Jacob’s Ladder Story Table for Ladder B, C & D Thinking Questions.

(Discussion) High Level Strategies with Ladder B, C & D Questions Tier 2 Rigor (Discussion) High Level Strategies with Ladder B, C & D Questions

Discussion Strategies: Think-Pair-Share, Write-around, 3-4 Podcast slides (Pixie, Frames). Choose 2 of 3 questions below to complete. B1 — What factors of Paul’s early life contribute and help explain his activities and his later feats? B2 — After making a list of the projects he completes in the book explain how would you categorize the projects? What skill/s would you need to accomplish each of the task? C1 — Paul is considered a hero for making the wilderness more habitable. After defining “hero” and considering his achievements, illustrate what you consider his contributions are to our environment. C2— What statements from the story help infer that Babe was depressed towards the end? What would you do as Paul to help Babe overcome those feelings? D1 — In order of what you think are the most important, what do you think are Paul’s most important qualities?

(Discussion) High Level Strategies with Ladder B, C & D Questions Tier 3 Rigor (Discussion) High Level Strategies with Ladder B, C & D Questions

Discussion Strategies: Think-Pair-Share, Write-around, 3-4 Podcast slides (Pixie, Frames). Choose 2 of 3 questions below to complete. B3 — If you were first meeting Paul how would you generalize him? How would you generalize him after getting to know him and his work? Did you consider let first impressions control you generalizations? C3 — “building” is a concept or theme through out this story. Most would consider Paul a genius at getting things built. Would his ways and thinking work in today’s world? Why and Why not? Make a list of things that would be able the stay the same and a list of things that would either not work or have to be different today. D2 — Summarize the story in 3 to 5 sentences or illustrations. D3 — Using thoughts from C3, what would a “Paul Bunyan” look like today? How would you illustrate and describe a today’s Paul Bunyan?

Reflections/Relevance Tier 4 Reflections/Relevance

Choose one of the writing ideas to complete.  Be creative.  1. Read a book about another legend. Compare and contrast the 2 main characters using a graphic organizer (t-chart, venn diagram). Share your story and findings with others. 2. Write your own original legend story. Remember to include details about the character, the setting and events. Suggested project strategies:  Write a podcast script; create a puppet show; develop a PSA; a PowerPoint presentation; write and be an actor in a skit; write a persuasive speech and give before the class.