you - Goldfieldsliteracy
Transcription
you - Goldfieldsliteracy
Narrative 1 KEVIN LAMARQUE/REUTERS/ARCHIVE PHOTOS Flipper’s family was there when President Clinton signed the pardon. Narrative On February 19, 1999, President Bill Clinton pardoned, or excused, Henry O. Flipper for a crime that took place more than 100 years ago! Henry Flipper was born a slave in 1856. He worked very hard to become the first black graduate of the U.S. Army College in West Point, New York. In 1881 Flipper’s commander, who was white, said that Flipper stole $2,500. Flipper was found not guilty. But he had to leave the Army anyway because people said he had not acted the way a soldier should. The real crime was that white soldiers did not want Flipper in the army because he was black. Level 2 U.S.ARMY/REUTES/ARCHIVE PHOTOS 1 Honor at Last ©TIME Inc. Reader’s Response 1 Did Henry Flipper steal $2,500? How do you know? 2 Why do you think President Clinton pardoned Flipper? 3 Is Flipper’s story a sad one or a happy one? Why? Writer’s Response 1 Why do you think the author wrote this story? 2 How do you think the author got the pictures for this story? The important news about this story was what President Clinton BEGINNING AND ENDING did. So I started the story by telling about that. But of course that was really the end of the story! After I told the end, I had to tell the beginning. I know that seems backwards, but I think the story makes sense anyway. Most of the time when you tell a story, you start with what happened first. Then you tell what happened next. Finally, you tell how the story ended. But sometimes it’s okay to start with the ending and then tell the beginning. Write a story about a ✏ special person. Tell why he ” or she is special. Decide whether to put the beginning of the story at the beginning or the end! Pretend Henry O. ✏ Flipper is still alive. What would you like to say to him? Write him a letter. What if you were a member of Henry O. ✏ Flipper’s family who was there with President Clinton? Write a letter to a friend telling how you felt that day. Level 2 © Teacher Created Materials, Inc. Narrative 2 MARIAM AGRON/ANIMALS ANIMALS Narrative 2 Don’t Ever Kiss a Peacock! I went to my friend Jaime’s birthday party. It was at the zoo. We saw a baby giraffe. It could run and it was only five days old. A monkey was in the next habitat. His name was Bonzo. I wanted to feed Bonzo cotton candy. My friend Jaime said, “No. That will make him sick.” Level 2 Then we walked to a big cage. Five beautiful peacocks were inside. I wanted to see them better. I put my face very close to the cage. A peacock bit my nose! I jumped back. My nose hurt. After a second, I was okay. Jaime’s mom smiled. She said, “Don’t ever kiss a peacock!” ©TIME Inc. Reader’s Response 1 Why was the peacock able to bite the narrator’s nose? 2 How do you think the narrator (the person telling the story) felt about being bitten by a peacock? 3 If you had been at the zoo that day, what animal would you have wanted to see? Tell why. Writer’s Response 1 Who do you think the narrator is? What clues does the author give you? 2 The author tells a story, but includes facts about animals too. Does that mean this isn’t really a story? Explain your answer. When I tell a story, I have to use verbs. Verbs tell what is ACTION VERBS happening. If I can, I like to use action verbs. They tell more about what the people or animals in the story are doing. Look at my story. Words like was, were, and wanted are verbs, but they don’t have any action. Words like run, feed, walked, bit, and jumped are action verbs. They help the reader see and feel what is happening. When you write, try to use action verbs. They can help make your writing more exciting. ” Think of something ✏ silly or strange that has happened to you. Write a story telling what happened. Try to use action verbs. Where would be a ✏ fun place to have a birthday party? Why would it be fun? Write a description of your idea. Choose a zoo animal. Write a ✏ paragraph about what the animal eats. Make a class book about what zoo animals eat. Level 2 © Teacher Created Materials, Inc. Narrative 3 AHMEN KACHATURIAN FOR TIME FOR KIDS HYPERION BOOKS Narrative 3 A Cool Tale of Wonder Alaska is a playground for author Jean Craighead George. She often travels there from her home in New York. She enjoys watching the wolves and whales there. When her grandson Luke was 11, George took him with her to Alaska. She remembers their trip in her book Arctic Son. It tells the story of a ˘ boy named Luke and his adventures with the Inupiat (i-noo-pee-it) tribe and some wonderful animals. The story is full of whales, wolves, and walruses. “Animals are such fun!” says George. Level 2 ©TIME Inc. Reader’s Response 1 Why do you think Jean Craighead George likes to visit Alaska? 2 How do you think Luke felt when his grandmother took him to Alaska? Why? 3 If you went to Alaska, would you rather see a whale, a wolf, or a walrus? Tell why. Writer’s Response 1 2 Does the author think you would like to read the book Arctic Son? Why do you think so? How do you think the author knows what George said about animals? Words such as he, she, it, him, her, and their are pronouns. Pronouns PRONOUNS are very useful words. They are used in place of nouns. Look at my first paragraph. I used the author’s name, Jean Craighead George, in the first sentence. After that, I used she and her instead of repeating the author’s name every time. That would be really boring! It is important to make sure readers know what noun each pronoun is replacing. Otherwise, they might get confused. Look at the pronouns him, their, and it in my second paragraph. What nouns are those pronouns replacing? ” Find out about the ✏ author of a book you like. Write a story about the author. Tell why he or she wrote the book. Plan to interview ✏ Jean Craighead George. Write some questions you could ask her. Write the answers she might give. Write your own story about Alaska and ✏ some animals that live there. Draw a picture to go with your story. Level 2 © Teacher Created Materials, Inc. Narrative 4 PHOTO:SHUZO OGUSHI PHOTO ILLUSTRATIONS FOR TIME FOR KIDS BY DAVE COWLES Narrative 4 Poké Power There would be no Pokémon without a shy, quiet man named Satoshi Tajiri. He invented Pokémon, which means “pocket monster” in Japanese. The game first appeared in Japan in 1996. Today his creation is out of control! Tajiri got the idea for Pokémon from a bug collection he had when he was a child. Collecting is a big part of Pokémon. So are sharing and trading. Level 2 In 1991, Tajiri came across a Nintendo Game Boy. He saw that two Game Boys could be linked. “I imagined an insect moving across the cable,” he recalls. “My idea was for information to go back and forth, to be shared.” Pokémon is big now, but what will happen when the next big thing comes along? Just ask the Power Rangers! ©TIME Inc. Reader’s Response 1 What do bugs have to do with Pokémon? 2 Why do you think kids love Pokémon? In this story I used lots of verbs, or words that tell action. I had to VERB ENDINGS remember that sometimes we add endings like -ed and -ing to verbs. But those endings can be tricky! Sometimes you have to drop the final e on a verb before you add the ending. That’s what I had to do to the verbs share, trade, and move before I added the -ing ending. And sometimes you don’t change the verb at all before you add the ending. Find what happened when I added -ed to invent. Watch your spelling when you write verbs with endings! ” Writer’s Response 1 Why do you think the author wanted to write about the man who invented Pokémon? 2 Why did the author tell about Tajiri’s bug collection? 3 Why did the author mention the Power Rangers in the last paragraph? What’s your favorite ✏ toy or game? Imagine the person who invented it. Write about that person. Tell how you think he or she got the idea for the toy or game. Do you like ✏ Pokémon? Write a letter to an older relative. Explain Pokémon to him or her. Tell how you feel about it. Ask kids in your class what their ✏ favorite toy or game is and why. Write a story telling what you found out about favorite toys. Level 2 © Teacher Created Materials, Inc. Narrative 5 BILL FRAKES/SPORTS ILLUSTRATED Fallon Heffernan In-line Skater Age: 12 Grade: 7th Hometown: Neptune Beach, Florida Narrative 5 Hotshot on In-line Skates Fallon Heffernan is a daredevil on in-line skates. And she has a move to prove it. Fallon likes to do the Miller Flip. She drops into the halfpipe (a track shaped like a U) and zips up the other side. She grabs the top edge of the pipe. Then she does a backflip. Finally, she lands back inside the pipe! Level 2 “The move always surprises the crowd,” says Fallon. “They don’t expect me to turn upside down.” Fallon did the Miller Flip and other wild moves at a big contest in October 1998. She won the women’s halfpipe event and came in second in another event. Fallon was the youngest skater (12 years old) in the contest. She was also the shortest (4 feet 6 inches). ©TIME Inc. Reader’s Response 1 What two words would you use to describe Fallon Heffernan? 2 What is a daredevil? Do you agree that Fallon is a daredevil? Why or why not? 3 Would you like to meet Fallon? What would you say to her if you did? Writer’s Response 1 2 In the second paragraph, the writer describes a skating move called the Miller Flip. Why does the writer do that? In the last paragraph, why does the writer tell how old and how tall Fallon is? In this article, I wanted to focus on what FOCUSING makes Fallon stand ON A MAIN IDEA out. She practices hard. She is a good skater. But what one thing is most important to her winning? I needed to point that out. What makes Fallon stand out? She is a daredevil. I decided to say this in the first sentence. I described the Miller Flip so that readers could picture Fallon making this exciting move. Then I mentioned her other wild moves because that shows that she takes chances and isn’t afraid. That’s what a daredevil does. You are getting ready to ✏ do the Miller Flip. Tell how ” you feel and what you see as you do the flip. You are interviewing ✏ Fallon. What do you want to know about her? Write your questions. You were in the audience at Fallon’s ✏ skating contest. Write a letter to a friend describing what you saw. Tell what you enjoyed most. Level 2 © Teacher Created Materials, Inc. Narrative 6 STEVEN W.JONES/FPG Narrative 6 For One or More Players My best friend Kristen moved to Oregon. You know what that means? She can’t play with me on the playground anymore. The other kids all have best friends who still live here. They can play with each other. So now during recess I make up games to play by myself. They are all for one person. One of these games is “Bouncing Beth Bumbledown.” That’s a game Level 2 where you try to jump higher than a bouncing ball. Some kids think I’m a nut. My dad says, “Without nuts we wouldn’t have Rocky Road ice cream.” Today, two girls asked me what game I was playing. Maybe tomorrow I’ll explain it to them. Then I can make up games for two or more. ©TIME Inc. Reader’s Response 1 How does the narrator (the person telling the story) feel now that Kristen has moved away? 2 Why does the narrator play games for one rather than play with the other children? 3 What might happen if the narrator starts making up games for two or more? Writer’s Response 1 Why do you think the author described one of the games the narrator made up? 2 The dad said, “Without nuts we wouldn’t have Rocky Road ice cream.” What does that mean? Why did the author put that in the story? Which of these words from the story names a PROPER person, which NOUNS names a place, and which names a thing: Kristen, Oregon, Rocky Road? Did you say that Kristen names a person, Oregon names a place, and Rocky Road names a thing? Did you notice that the words begin with capital letters? That’s because words that name a particular person (like Kristen, but not girl), a particular place (like Oregon, but not state), or a particular thing (like Rocky Road, but not ice cream) are proper nouns. They must begin with capital letters. Imagine you are the ✏ narrator. Write a postcard to Kristen. Tell her how you feel about her moving to Oregon and what you have been doing at school. Imagine you are ✏ Kristen. Write an e-mail to the narrator. Tell her how you feel about moving and living in Oregon. What is a game you like to play? Is it for ✏ one person or more? Write directions that tell how to play the game. Level 2 © Teacher Created Materials, Inc. Narrative 7 DAN LAMONT Sam Girouard looks for fossils. Narrative 7 The Fossil Finder When Sam Girouard was 8 years old, he visited his grandmother in Alabama. They explored an old mine. What they found changed Sam’s life forever. “It was just packed with fossils,” says Sam. Sam has been hunting fossils ever since. The 16-year-old is now a real fossil scientist. He helped dig up a Level 2 T. rex skeleton! He also found a bone of a mastodon, which was like an elephant. It was 41/2 million years old! Sam doesn’t tell other scientists his age right away. “I’m afraid that if people first knew I was a kid, my work wouldn’t be taken seriously,” he says. ©TIME Inc. Reader’s Response 1 How long has Sam been a fossil hunter? 2 Why might Sam’s age bother some scientists? 3 Do you think fossil hunting sounds like fun? Why or why not? Writer’s Response 1 2 The writer ended two sentences in the second paragraph with exclamation points. Why do you think she did that? Why did the writer tell you how Sam got started hunting fossils? Sometimes when I write a story, I have to EXPLAINING WHAT WORDS use a word I’m not MEAN sure my readers will understand. I can try to use another easier word, but sometimes that just doesn’t work. In this story, I needed to use the word mastodon. It’s the name of the animal whose bone Sam found. There is no other word for that name, but I knew some kids wouldn’t know what a mastodon is. So I said that it was like an elephant. This gives readers a clue about what mastodon means. Write a story about ✏ Sam and a dinosaur fossil he ” found. Tell what happened. Make sure your story has a beginning, a middle, and an end. Write a letter to Sam. ✏ Ask him questions about his job as a fossil hunter. Tell him what job you would like to have. Pretend you are Sam. Write a journal ✏ entry about the day you found the fossils in the old mine. Tell how you feel about that day. Level 2 © Teacher Created Materials, Inc. Narrative 8 JAMES S.KEYSER FOR TIMES Hannah uses a special “high-back” swing that helps her sit up. Narrative 8 A Dream Come True When Hannah Kristan was in elementary school, she did not like recess. “I never got to do anything except sit there,” she recalls. Hannah, 12, was born with a disease that kept the bones in her back from growing the way most people’s do. She uses a wheelchair. Kids in wheelchairs can’t use the Level 2 swings and slides on playgrounds. Then Hannah heard about special playgrounds for disabled kids. She helped raise money for one in her town. Hannah says, “Disabled people are just like anybody else. We want to be able to play with our friends.” ©TIME Inc. Reader’s Response 1 Why is it surprising that Hannah doesn’t like recess? 2 What did Hannah do to get a playground she could use? 3 How would you describe Hannah? Write two words and explain why you chose them. Writer’s Response 1 2 The author tells you right away that Hannah did not like recess but doesn’t explain why. Why did the author wait to explain? The author uses some of the exact words Hannah said. How does that help readers? Compound words are words made up of USING two smaller words. COMPOUND I used three WORDS compounds in this story. Look in the first paragraph for one of them. Did you find the word anything? What are its two parts? You’re right if you said any and thing. When you write anything, you write it as one word with no space between any and thing. I used the compounds wheelchair and playground in the second paragraph. What are the two parts in them? The two parts can help you understand what the compound word means. Hannah worked to ✏ change something she didn’t ” like. Write a story about someone else you know of who did that. Tell what the person changed and how. If you could meet ✏ Hannah, what would you ask her? Write your questions and what you think she might answer. Think of an invention that could help a ✏ disabled person. Draw a picture of your invention and write about how it works. Level 2 © Teacher Created Materials, Inc. Narrative 9 AL GRILLO/AP Doug Swingley hugs his sled dogs Cola and Elmer. Narrative 9 The Iditarod’s Top Dogs Doug Swingley raced to the finish line of the Iditarod Trail Sled Dog Race. Cheering fans lined the streets of Nome, Alaska. It was 1:31 in the morning and very cold. Swingley broke two sleds along the way. But that did not stop him. He reached the finish line 9 hours before the next racer. Level 2 This is the second time Swingley has won the race. He won $69,000 and a new pickup truck. He and his 11 dogs raced the 1,100 miles from Anchorage to Nome in 9 days, 14 hours, 31 minutes, and 7 seconds. “I’ve got to take a long rest,” said Swingley at the finish line. And so did his dogs! ©TIME Inc. Reader’s Response 1 How can you tell that the Iditarod is a very popular race in Alaska? 2 Why would Swingley need a long rest after this race? 3 Look at the picture. How does Swingley feel about his sled dogs? Writer’s Response 1 Why did the writer tell you it was 1:31 in the morning when Swingley crossed the finish line? 2 Why did the writer tell you that Swingley broke two sleds during the race? I like to use numbers when I write a story like this one. The NUMBERS numbers here are very important. They tell my readers exactly when Doug Swingley got to the finish line. They also tell exactly how long it took him to get there. And numbers tell them exactly how much money he won! It’s important to use numbers when you want your readers to understand exactly how many or how much. Sometimes that helps them get a better picture of what you’re writing about. Using numbers doesn’t work with every story I write. But it does in this one. Have you ever won a ✏ race, game, or contest? Have ” you ever wanted to? Write a story about it. Tell how it began and how it ended. Try to use numbers in your story. Write a story about ✏ the sled dogs, Cola and Elmer, who are shown in the picture. Tell what the Iditarod was like for them. What do you think Swingley and his ✏ dogs did after they won the race? Write two more paragraphs to add to the story. Level 2 © Teacher Created Materials, Inc. Narrative 10 Narrative RON CHAPPLE/FPG 10 My Trip on a Plane I took a plane trip by myself. Mom said, “You’re old enough to visit Aunt Rena on your own.” Mom took me to the airport. I was a little scared. I didn’t even care when she gave me a goodbye kiss. Stanley, the flight attendant, showed me my seat on the plane. I was so excited I couldn’t sit still. The man in front of me said, “Please stop kicking my seat.” The plane’s engines roared. Before I knew it, we were flying. Stanley gave me a book of puzzles. The fluffy clouds below us looked like marshmallows. The plane landed in Cleveland. Stanley took me off the plane. Aunt Rena was waiting for me. I was excited to see her. I didn’t even care when she gave me a hello kiss. Level 2 ©TIME Inc. Reader’s Response 1 How do you think the narrator (the person telling the story) felt before the flight? During the flight? After the flight? 2 What did the narrator do before the plane took off because she was so excited? How do you know this happened? 3 Do you think the narrator will want to fly on a plane again? Why or why not? Writer’s Response 1 What are some words the author uses to show how the narrator was feeling? 2 What two things does the author compare in this sentence: “The fluffy clouds below us looked like marshmallows”? Why did the author compare those two things? What is a contraction? A contraction is two words put together CONTRACTIONS to make one word. One or more letters are left out, and an apostrophe (’) is used in their place. In the contraction you’re, the words you and are are put together. The letter a is left out. An apostrophe takes its place. What words are used to make didn’t and couldn’t? What letters are left out? When we speak, we often use contractions. So when I write what someone is thinking or saying, I use contractions. Write a story about a ✏ trip you have taken or would ” like to take. Tell where you went, how you felt, and what you did. Try to use a contraction. Read your story to a friend. Find out three ✏ interesting facts about Cleveland or another city in which you’re interested. Write the facts and share them with the class. Write some sentences that compare ✏ two things. Use this sentence form to help you: A _______ is like a __________. Level 2 © Teacher Created Materials, Inc. Narrative 11 Hooked on Harry J. K. Rowling says her books are “fun to write.” Narrative 11 MURDO MACLEOD Can you hear the magic spell spreading through the air? The spell has been cast by J. K. Rowling, whose magic wand is a pen. Rowling is the British author of the Harry Potter books. Harry finds out that his parents were a witch and a wizard. He’s a wizard too! He goes to Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry. Level 2 The idea for Harry just “strolled into my head,” says Joanne Rowling. “I still don’t know where he came from!” Kids sure are glad he’s here. Rowling plans to write one book for each year Harry is at Hogwarts. How will it all end? All she will say is the last word of the last book is “scar.” ©TIME Inc. Reader’s Response 1 What is unusual about Harry Potter? 2 Is it interesting to find out about the author of the Harry Potter books? Why or why not? 3 Why do you think the Harry Potter books are so popular? Writer’s Response 1 Why does the writer use the words magic, spell, cast, and wand in the first paragraph? 2 Why does the writer tell you that J. K. Rowling already knows the last word of her last Harry Potter book? Every time I write a story for a magazine, I go PROOFREADING back and read it FOR again after it’s done. PUNCTUATION I check it over to make sure everything is okay. One thing I check is the punctuation at the ends of sentences. Most sentences end with a period. Those sentences just tell something. Some sentences end with a question mark. Those sentences ask questions. But some sentences need an exclamation mark. Those sentences tell something surprising or exciting. Can you find all three kinds of punctuation in my story? Ask kids in your class ✏ what they think about the ” Harry Potter books. Write a story telling the good and bad things they say about the books. What is your favorite ✏ book? Find out about the author. Write a story about the book and the author. Some people do not like the Harry ✏ Potter books because they have magic in them. Write an essay telling what you think. Level 2 © Teacher Created Materials, Inc. Narrative 12 NINA BERMAN/SIPA Larry knew how to stop the school bus. A Lucky Brake Narrative 12 Kids can be real heroes. Larry Champagne, 10, is one. He saved a whole school bus full of kids. The bus driver passed out on the way to school. The bus started to bang into fences along the road. Kids screamed. But Larry ran to the front and stopped the bus. How did he do it? He pushed hard on the brake! Larry knows about brakes because he helps his grandfather work on his truck. “And my grandmother always tells me to do what’s right,” says Larry. Larry’s act made news all over the country. He was even on TV. His school gave him a medal. But the kids on that bus already knew he was a real hero. Level 2 ©TIME Inc. Reader’s Response 1 Do you think Larry is a hero? Why or why not? 2 What would you have done if you were on that bus? 3 What people do you think are heroes? Why do you think so? Are any of them kids? I began this story by saying Larry was a hero because he TELLING saved a school bus THINGS IN ORDER full of kids. But I knew readers would want to know exactly how that happened. I had to tell what happened first, what happened next, and what happened after that. 1. The bus driver passed out. 2. The bus banged into the fences. That made the kids scream. 3. Larry ran up and stopped the bus. I had to tell how he did that. Telling things in the proper order helps readers keep up with what is happening. ” Writer’s Response 1 Why do you think the author wrote this story? 2 Why did the author tell you about Larry’s grandfather and grandmother? Write a story about a ✏ hero and what the hero did. Your hero can be real or make-believe. Tell things in time order. Pretend you are ✏ Larry. Write about what happened the day you stopped the bus. Remember to use “I.” The principal made a speech when the ✏ school gave Larry his medal. What did the principal say? Write the speech. Level 2 © Teacher Created Materials, Inc. Narrative 13 RYAN SHECKLER/SPORTS ILLUSTRATED Narrative 13 Hotshot on a Skateboard Ryan Sheckler knows what he wants to be when he grows up. He decided that at his sixth birthday party. Ryan had asked Tony Hawk to his party. Hawk is a skateboard champ. Tony showed up after Ryan promised him a piece of chocolate cake. After meeting Tony, Ryan knew he wanted to be a skateboarder. “I want to be on posters,” says Ryan. Ryan may get his wish. He won a statewide contest in California. Ryan did a tricky move called the Wave Gap. Ryan zoomed off a 14-foot-high ramp. He sailed through the air. Then he landed on a wooden hill six feet away. Watch out for Ryan Sheckler. You might see him on a poster someday! Level 2 Ryan Sheckler Skateboarder Age: 8 Grade: 3rd Hometown: San Clemente, California ©TIME Inc. Reader’s Response 1 Ryan knows what he wants to be when he grows up. Tell about what you want to be when you grow up. 2 Tony Hawk came to Ryan’s birthday party. Was this a nice thing to do? Why or why not? 3 Ryan wears a helmet when he skateboards. What else should skateboarders do to be safe? I was going to write about MAKING A kids who play TOPIC sports. But I found JUST THE out kids play lots of RIGHT SIZE sports. That topic was too big for one article. So I made my topic smaller. I looked for kids who were champions in their sports. Even that topic was too big! I couldn’t write about all the champions! So I wrote about one champion—Ryan. He is interesting because he is so young to be a champion. And I had just enough information about him to write the article. When you write, you have to decide if your topic is too big, too small, or just right. Pretend you saw Ryan ✏ win the contest. Write an Writer’s Response 1 2 Why did the writer tell about Ryan winning the contest? How is that important to the story? Ryan asked a champion skateboarder to his birthday party. Why did the writer tell about that? Level 2 ” article that tells who was there, where the contest took place, and what happened. Imagine Ryan is ✏ coming to your class to talk about kids’ sports. Write a script of what he might say to kids about sports. Ryan will appear at a local kids’ sports ✏ meet. Make a poster advertising the meet. Where and when will it take place? How much will tickets cost? © Teacher Created Materials, Inc. Narrative 14 NUMBER 20,1949 (ENAMEL ON PAPER LAID DOWN ON MASONITE BY JACKSON POLLACK (1912-56) PRIVATE COLLECTION/JAMES GOODMAN GALLERY,NEW YORK,USA/BRIDGEMAN ART LIBRARY Narrative 14 Squiggle Art My class went to the art museum. We looked at a painting by a famous artist named Jackson Pollock. It had squiggles of paint running all over it. It made me smile. “Anyone could make that painting,” my friend Susie said. Susie always says stuff like that. I didn’t think it would be that easy. Then I saw a piece of gum stuck to Level 2 the painting. I reached out to peel it off. Beep! Beep! An alarm went off. A guard rushed over. I put up my hands. I shouted, “I’m just trying to clean up the painting!” The guard smiled. He said, “It’s okay. The gum is part of the painting.” ©TIME Inc. Reader’s Response 1 Did the narrator (the person telling the story) think gum belonged on a painting? How can you tell? 2 What made the alarm go off and the guard come over? 3 Do you think it is easy or hard to make a good painting? Why do you think as you do? Writer’s Response 1 2 At the end of the first paragraph, how does the author let readers know how the narrator felt about the painting? In the fourth paragraph, what words for sound does the author use? Why does the author do that? If I want to show that someone is QUOTATION speaking, I must MARKS use quotation marks (“ ”). I put these marks at the beginning and the end of what the person says. In my story, Susie talks. Can you find what she says? A quick way to find her words is to look for the quotation marks. Susie says, “Anyone could make that painting.” Look through the rest of the story. Who else speaks? What does each person say? How can you tell? Write a story about a ✏ class trip. Tell what people ” said on the trip. Use quotation marks to show their words. Look through a book ✏ that has paintings by famous artists. Choose a picture you like. Write a description of it and tell why you like it. Find out about Jackson Pollock or ✏ another artist. Write a paragraph that tells about his or her life and work as an artist. Level 2 © Teacher Created Materials, Inc. Narrative 15 OSAMU HONDA/AP MARK LENNIHAN/AP Serena has been playing since she was 5. Narrative Two sisters are new U.S. tennis champs. Serena Williams, 17, beat last year’s U.S. Open champion in a very hard contest. She won over Martina Hingis. Serena’s sister Venus, 19, lost to Martina last year. Then Serena and Venus played together as teammates in what is called a “doubles” contest. They won. So Serena is the new “singles” champion, and the two sisters together are the new “doubles” champions! Level 2 Yes! Serena won almost $1 million at the Open. They are very tough athletes. But Serena says, “Tennis is a game. It’s not your life. We really believe in family.” KATHY WILLENS/AP 15 New Champs Take the Court Venus is on the left and Serena on the right. ©TIME Inc. Reader’s Response 1 Which sister is a champion twice? 2 Do you think it is unusual for sisters to win these contests? Why or why not? 3 Do you think Serena and Venus play tennis a lot? Why do you think so? Writer’s Response 1 2 Why do you think the author told you that Venus had lost to Martina Hingis? Why do you think the author told what Serena said about family? I always ask someone else to read my first WORKING draft. I read it over WITH myself first, of A PARTNER course. But I don’t always catch my own mistakes. And sometimes another person has a good idea for making my work better. In my first draft, I didn’t tell that Serena and Venus were sisters until the second paragraph. But my writing partner said readers would want to know that right away. So I put that information in my first sentence. Use a partner to help you revise your first draft. Partners often have good ideas! Think about an exciting ✏ game you have seen. Write ” about what happened. Be sure to tell who won and what the score was. What’s your favorite ✏ sport or game? Do you like to play or watch? Write about the game. Tell why you like it. Write some questions you want to ask ✏ Serena and Venus. Write the answers you think they would give. Level 2 © Teacher Created Materials, Inc. Narrative 16 TED THAI FOR TIME FOR KIDS Claudia Fleming at work. Shown are some of her desserts. Narrative 16 She Takes the Cake! Mmmmm . . . Claudia Fleming has a sweet life. At the end of her day at work, she is covered with sugar and dotted with chocolate. She is a pastry chef at a restaurant in New York City. All day long she makes desserts! “It’s like putting on a play,” she says. “You get ready all morning. And the curtain goes up for lunch and dinner. It’s time for the show!” Level 2 Claudia started by being a helper. She watched her boss very carefully. Soon she was the boss herself. She says that kids who want to be chefs should read cookbooks. “Cook at home,” she says. “Work any job in a restaurant.” The best part of her job? “Making something,” she says, “and then making someone happy with it.” ©TIME Inc. Reader’s Response 1 What are two ways Claudia Fleming might have “a sweet life”? 2 Is being a pastry chef hard work? Why do you think so? 3 The word pastry means “dessert.” How did you figure that out? Writers are always looking for ideas. I KEEPING carry a small A JOURNAL notebook. I write down interesting things I see or hear. Often I find story ideas in my journal. I talked with Claudia Fleming when my family went to her restaurant. I loved what she said about her work being like putting on a play. And then she told my son Patrick he should cook at home if he wants to be a chef. I wrote her words in my journal. She had such interesting things to say I knew you would want to read about her! Do you know someone ✏ who has an interesting job? Writer’s Response 1 2 Why did the writer tell that Claudia Fleming said making desserts is like putting on a play? What clues did the author give you in the title and the first sentence about the subject of the story? Level 2 ” Talk to that person. Write about the job and what the person says about it. Draw and write a ✏ poster or ad for Claudia Fleming’s restaurant. Make people want to have her desserts. Describe your favorite dessert. Tell ✏ what it’s made of. Draw a picture to go with your description. © Teacher Created Materials, Inc. Narrative 17 On April 18, 1999, the greatest hockey player of all time played his final game. After the game, Wayne Gretzky stepped into the spotlight to say goodbye. In 20 seasons, Gretzky, 38, skated his way to 61 National Hockey League (NHL) records. He was named an AllStar 18 times. He is hockey’s all-time leading scorer. He had 2,857 total points, including 894 goals and 1,963 assists. “Everything I have in my life, I owe to hockey,” said the nine-time Most Valuable Player. The NHL has decided to retire the number 99 to honor “the Great One.” Narrative 17 Goodbye, Gretzky BARTON SILVERMAN/NEW YORK TIMES PICTURES Level 2 ©TIME Inc. Reader’s Response 1 Why is Wayne Gretzky called “the Great One”? 2 What does “retire the number 99” mean? 3 Why do you suppose Wayne Gretzky decided not to play hockey any more? Writer’s Response 1 2 Why do you think the author chose this photograph to go with his story about Wayne Gretzky? What does the author do to show you what a great hockey player Gretzky was? When you’re writing about someone as special as Wayne Gretzky, USING you can’t just say DETAILS over and over how great he is. You really have to give your readers the details that show it. So I spent some time finding information about his records. I knew that you would want to read those interesting facts about what he did during his career as a hockey player. And it’s those details that prove what an amazing hockey player he was. Remember that for your own writing, too. Give your readers interesting details. They give your writing zing! ” Who is your favorite ✏ sports hero? Write about that person. Explain why the person is special. Write a postcard or ✏ letter to Wayne Gretzky. Ask him questions. Tell him what you know about hockey and skating. Would you like to play professional ✏ hockey like Wayne Gretzky? Write a paragraph telling why or why not. Level 2 © Teacher Created Materials, Inc. Narrative 18 BILL LOSH/FPG Narrative 18 Working with Mom I went to work with my mom yesterday. She is an accountant. That’s a person who works with lots of numbers. Mom’s office is on the 53rd floor. Her desk is next to the window. I asked if she was scared she would fall out. She laughed. “I can see our house from here,” I said. My mom didn’t believe me. The phone rang about twelve times every minute. People ran in Level 2 and out of her office. They carried papers and asked her questions. We went to five meetings. They were not very interesting to me. But my mom seemed to like them a lot. The office was very noisy. How did she get anything done? Mom smiled. “Work can sometimes be the hardest place to get work done.” ©TIME Inc. Reader’s Response 1 Why do you think the narrator (the person telling the story) went to work with her mother? 2 Why do you think the child didn’t find her mom’s meetings interesting? 3 What does the mother mean when she says, “Work can sometimes be the hardest place to get work done”? Writer’s Response 1 2 How does the author help you know the meaning of the word accountant? Why is this important? In the third paragraph, the author contrasts how the narrator and the mother viewed meetings. How does the author do that? Level 2 I could have written a story that gave just the facts. I went to USING HUMOR work with Mom. She sat at her desk. She talked on the phone. And so on. But that wouldn’t have been very interesting. So I used humor to make my story more entertaining. I put in a couple of funny things I said to Mom, one about falling out the window and the other about seeing our house. I joked about how often the phone rang. It didn’t really ring twelve times a minute, but that sounds funnier than saying, ‘The phone rang a lot,’ don’t you think? Write notes about one ✏ day at school. Then write a ” story that tells about that day. Remember to use “I.” Interview a parent or ✏ another adult. Ask questions about his or her job. Write a story about what a work day is like. Invite a parent or another adult to come ✏ to school for a day. Write an invitation to give to the person. Tell why you would like him or her to come. © Teacher Created Materials, Inc. Narrative 19 ROBERT SEAY/MACON TELEGRAPH Officer Sinclair talks with some of his 33 kids. Narrative 19 Police Officer Next Door Ellis Sinclair has 33 kids. Sort of. He is a police officer. The police in his city wanted to help kids with problems. They decided to have Officer Sinclair move into a house in the kids’ tough neighborhood. He meets with the kids and the principal of their school. He listens to the kids whenever they want to Level 2 talk. It’s working. Before he moved in, most of the kids had been in trouble with the law. Now only a few have. But Sinclair thinks his work is more than a job. He wants “his” 33 kids to have a better life. He says, “They’re my family.” He really lives his job! ©TIME Inc. Reader’s Response 1 Why do you think it helps the kids to have a police officer live in their neighborhood? 2 Why does Officer Sinclair call the 33 kids his family? 3 How do you think the kids feel about having him there? Why? Writer’s Response 1 2 Why did the writer say in the first sentence that “Ellis Sinclair has 33 kids”? How does the writer let you know how Officer Sinclair feels about his kids? Writers don’t want to bore their readers. So CHANGING they’ll do anything to LENGTHS OF keep their writing SENTENCES interesting. For example, if all the sentences in a story are about the same length, readers may start to fall asleep! So writers make their sentences different lengths. They mix together short sentences, medium sentences, and long sentences. Look at the second paragraph in my story. I wrote two long sentences, then a short one, then one long sentence, then a short one. That makes my writing more interesting and keeps my readers interested. Have you ever met a ✏ police officer? Write about ” what it was like to meet him or her. Tell how a real police officer is different from the ones you see on TV. You are one of Officer ✏ Sinclair’s 33 kids. Write a letter to a friend telling him or her what it’s like to have a police officer to talk to every day. How does Officer Sinclair feel about his ✏ job? Write a paragraph about him. Tell what he likes about his job. Tell what he doesn’t like. Level 2 © Teacher Created Materials, Inc. Narrative 20 KIMBERLY BUTLER FOR PEOPLE WEEKLY Narrative 20 Time Traveler’s Tales Mary Pope Osborne likes to go places. She once traveled to 16 countries in an old van! Now she uses her imagination to go back in time to places like ancient Greece and Egypt. She is the writer of the Magic Tree House books. “Kids give me lots of good ideas,” she says. The kids she meets on school visits often pick the places Level 2 she sends her main characters, Jack and Annie. For example, the idea to put the time travelers on the doomed ship Titanic came from kids. “Tonight on the Titanic is a little different from my other books,” Osborne says. “I wanted kids to know it was sad and not just a fun adventure.” ©TIME Inc. Reader’s Response 1 What’s the difference between Mary Pope Osborne’s trip to 16 countries and the trips she takes now? 2 How does Osborne travel back in time? 3 What was the Titanic? Why is its story sad? Writer’s Response I write many different kinds of things for THINKING many different ABOUT YOUR kinds of magazines. AUDIENCE I write books, too. But no matter what I’m writing, I always think carefully about my readers. Who is going to read what I’m writing? What are those people interested in? What do they want to know? Thinking about your readers can help you decide what to write about. I knew kids your age were my audience for this article. So I chose to write about a person who writes books kids like to read. I figured they would like to know more about her. Where do you think ✏ Osborne should send Jack ” 1 Why did the author tell you that Osborne gets many ideas from kids? and Annie in her next book? Write about one place and why you chose it. 2 Does the author think Osborne is an interesting person? How do you know? Titanic. Tell about the author, the book, and why readers should read the book. Write a review of ✏ Osborne’s book Tonight on the Write your own adventure story about ✏ two characters who travel in time. Make it exciting for your audience. Level 2 © Teacher Created Materials, Inc.