Woodson,
J., & Ransome, J. (2013). This is the rope: A story from the Great
Migration. Nancy Paulsen Books.
A little African American girl skips rope “back home in
South Carolina” in the mid-twentieth century. When she is grown, with a husband
and a baby girl, she uses that rope to tie up their belongings as they move to
New York City. A few years later, it becomes a skipping rope for her little
girl. And when she grows up, her father uses it to tie up her belongings for
the drive to college. Later, she marries and has a little girl of her own, who
skips rope in Brooklyn. That child narrates this intergenerational family story,
which (in an author’s note) Woodson relates to the Great Migration.
Here a lesson I wrote for this book:
SAINT MARY’S COLLEGE
Lesson Plan
I used Summer in the South in this lesson
because my cooperating teacher wanted to teach it at some point in the school
year and had not gotten to it. I chose This Is The Rope because it has a
similar topic but a very different mood from the poem.
Overview:
· Grade
· Topic/Title
· Duration
|
5th
Exploring mood using a poem and connected piece of
children’s literature
|
Literacy and/or Interdisciplinary Connections:
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Reading, speaking, listening, writing, art
|
Standard/s:
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5.RL.2.1:
Quote accurately
from a text when explaining what a text says explicitly and when drawing
inferences from the text. |
Objective:
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Students will be able to write a summary of either the
poem or story accurately depicting the mood.
|
Technology and/or New Materials
|
This Is The Rope,
Summer in the South, white board, loose leaf paper
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Communication
|
See below.
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Instructional Sequence:
1. Introductory
Engagement
2. Instructional
Activities/Strategies
3. Assessment
· Formative
· Summative
· Progress
monitoring
· Reporting
|
1. Introductory
Engagement
Lately, I know you all have been studying poetry and mood,
and how mood affects the way we feel while reading something. Today we are
going to read two things, a poem and a story both about summertime in the
South, and we are going to talk a little more about the mood.
2. Instructional
Activities
Have three different
students read the poem three times.
What kind of mood does this poem have? What are some words
you would use to describe the mood? What are some words from the poem that
create that mood?
Write words on
board: happy, cheerful, easy-going, sunny, bright, “green,” “sunshine,“
“laughing creek,” etc.
Now I am going to read this story. While I’m reading focus,
on the language and the mood created.
Read This is the
Rope.
Does this story have a similar or different mood? What
words give that mood?
Write words on the
board: bittersweet, happy but sad, nostalgic, reminiscent, “back at home
in the south,” “flowers like the ones back at home,” etc.
3. Assessment
Now I want you to close your eyes and think about both the
poem and the story. Think about the words we wrote on the board. Now I am
going to give you each a piece of white paper. On one side of the paper, I
want you to write one or two sentences summarizing either the poem or the
story. The most important think about your summary is that is depicts the
mood we talked about.
Now on the other side, I want you to draw a visual representation
of the mood.
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Learning Environment
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Students are seated at tables.
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Accommodations and/or Modifications
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N/A
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Resources
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Cooperating teacher
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Reflection
|
Being able to teach this lesson to three
different classes was helpful and informative. I learned a lot about how to
scaffold and question differently. It was educational for me to see how
different groups of students need different things from me.
The first class I taught the lesson to
was the high ability group. They needed very little scaffolding and came up
with all the target words on their own. The lesson ran smoothly and the
students remained engaged the entire time.
The second
class was the lowest achieving group, so I knew my teaching needed to change.
My first challenge would be keeping them engaged. However, they were engaged
and involved in the lesson the entire time. They needed much more
scaffolding, and I had to lead them to find the target words. They knew the
general idea and the mood; they just needed help getting there. I was more
comfortable with the lesson this time, which was good because I was not as
nervous and more comfortable derailing form my lesson plan to help them get
to where they needed to be.
The third
time I taught the lesson to the middle ability group. This is the lesson Mrs.
Higgs watched me teach, which added an element of nervousness. However, the
lesson went smoothly and the students were extremely engaged and involved. It
was clear they liked the lesson. The needed a little help identifying the
target words, but mostly they got there on their own. They understood the
assessment, with only a few students needing one-on-one clarification.
Overall, I
was very happy with how the lesson went all three times I taught it. All
three class’ assessments show me that they understood the concept and have a
deeper understanding of how mood can affect our visualization of a story and
poem.
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