Hard
Times on the Prairie
Author:Laura
Ingalls Wilder
Fifth
Grade (level 3 readers)
Pages
1 -19
LESSON EIGHT
As discussion director, your
job is to form questions about what you read in this section of the book.
You should evaluate the topics, or ideas, that you feel are important and
create questions that stress this importance to the rest of the group.
Be able to support your idea of why you feel it is important and encourage
your group to think openly as to why this topic may be important to them
as well. Remember to be creative and get students actively involved
in discussing what they read in this part of the book. In order to
get your group involved, you should create questions to include the following:
ü2
fact/opinion questions
ü2
multiple choice/ end of grade questions
ü1
problem solution question
üHave
group members predict what they think will happen in the next section of
the book.
üHave
group members discuss what they felt the significance of the creek was
in Laura’s life at this present times.
Passage
Picker
Your job is
to be passage picker for the day.You
are to choose passages that you feel are important to what you have read
in this portion of the book.You
should be able to support why you chose these passages and why they are
important to what you read.You will
introduce each passage to the group by explaining its importance and meaning
to the reader.Please remember to
write
down your passages as well as their page number and paragraph so you
can easily come back to them.It
will also help to record the first two words and last two words found in
the passage and write what type of passage it is so that other students
will find it easier to locate.Form
questions about you passages that encourages others to look deeper into
their meanings.For this book, you
should choose four passages that include at least four of the following
descriptions:
Word
Wizard
Your job is
to be word wizard for the day.You
will be given a list of words that are found in the text and may be unfamiliar
to other students in your group.You
may use all four of these words or use some of the words given to you and
choose other words in the text that you do not know.However,
you must have a total of four words.You
will read the word in the context it is written.You
should write down the page number and paragraph that the word is written
for future reference.Write the sentence
that the word appears in and think about the word as it appears in the
text.Write down what you think
the word means and the part of speech that it serves in the story.Look
up the word in the dictionary and write how it adds meaning to the story.Finally,
make the word wizard card that contains all you have done.Words
you should find for this book include:
Your job is
to be character sketcher for the day.You
are to find traits about your character and use these traits to introduce
your character to other students in your group.You
will find three words, or traits, about your character.For
each trait, or word, you will give proof that this trait fits your character
by citing the page number and paragraph that you found this trait.You
will then identify the characters goals, or what the character is planning
to do in this section of the book.You
will also identify one of the characters problems in the book and tell
the solution or possible solutions to the problem.Finally,
you will illustrate the character, or characters to others in your group
through a drawing.Remember that
these traits may not be directly stated, but are often implied so look
deep.
Your
character for today is:Laura
An example of events that you
might choose to draw include:
·The
fire surrounding Laura’s house
·Laura
lying on the bridge above the creek
·Ma and Pa digging the trench around the house to keep the fire away