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McDougal Littell literature resource manager Unit 7 EVANSTON, ILLINOIS • BOSTON • DALLAS ART CREDITS Cover Sand © Image 100/PunchStock. Turtle, Map: South Africa © Jupiterimages Corporation; Obama family © John Gress/Reuters/Corbis. Warning: Permission is hereby granted to teachers to reprint or photocopy in classroom quantities the pages or sheets in this work that carry the following copyright notice: Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. These pages are designed to be reproduced by teachers for use in their classes with accompanying McDougal Littell material, provided each copy made shows the copyright notice. Such copies may not be sold, and further distribution is expressly prohibited. Except as authorized above, prior written permission must be obtained from McDougal Littell to reproduce or transmit this work or portions thereof in any other form or by any electronic or mechanical means, including any information storage or retrieval system, unless expressly permitted by federal copyright law. Address inquiries to Supervisor, Rights and Permissions, McDougal Littell, P.O. Box 1667, Evanston, IL 60204. ISBN 13: 978-0-618-94553-5 ISBN 10: 0-618-94553-9 Copyright © McDougal Littell, a division of Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 - MDO - 11 10 09 08 07 UNIT 7 CONTENTS Our Place in the World: History, Culture, and the Author Unit Planning Skills Trace 2 Skills Locator 4 Academic Vocabulary 9 Additional Academic Vocabulary 10 Grammar Focus 11 Selection Resources and Copy Masters Reader’s Workshop: History, Culture, and the Author 13 The Snapping Turtle (Short Story) 17 Out of Bounds (Short Story) 43 Pecos Bill (Tall Tale) 67 Great Reads: from The Pearl (Novella) 89 One Last Time (Memoir) 91 117 Reading for Information: from Out of Many, One (Speech) 141 Media Study: Political Cartoons (Image Collection) 159 I Want to Write/Sit-Ins (Poems) 169 Writing Workshop: Cause-and-Effect Essay 187 Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. from Dreams from My Father (Autobiography) Resource Manager Unit 7 Grade 8 1 Unit 7 Skills Trace UNIT 71 PLANNING Skills in blue are assessed on the Unit 7 Test. Reader’s Workshop: History, Culture, and the Author pp. 760–765 SKILLS STRAND Out of Bounds pp. 782–799 Pecos Bill pp. 800–809 Great Reads: from The Pearl pp. 810–815 Short Story Level: Challenging Tall Tale Level: Average Novella Level: Average Form (Novella) p. 810 Literary Analysis Influence of Writer’s Background pp. 760–761, 764–765 Historical and Cultural Influences pp. 762–765 Influence of Author’s Background pp. 767, 768, 771, 772, 774, 778, 779 Cultural Conflict pp. 783, 784, 787, 788, 791, 794, 795, 797 Tall Tale pp. 801, 802, 804, 805, 806, 807, 808, 809 Reading and Informational Texts Analyze the Literature pp. 761, 763–765 Compare and Contrast pp. 767, 770, 771, 775, 777, 779 Make Inferences pp. 783, 786, 789, 790, 791, 792, 796, 797 Visualize pp. 801, 802, 805, 808, 809 Vocabulary Academic Vocabulary p. 762 Word Acquisition pp. 767, T767, 780 Context Clues— General p. T767; Analogies p. 780 Word Acquisition pp. 783, T783, 798 Context Clues p. T783 Homographs p. 798 CompoundComplex Sentences p. 781 Colons p. 799 Discuss pp. 766, T768–T778, 779 Analyze Visuals pp. 768, 773, 776 Discuss pp. 782, T784–T796, 797 Analyze Visuals pp. 784, 793, 795 Speaking, Listening, Viewing, and Media Unit 7 Grade 8 The Snapping Turtle pp. 766–781 Short Story Level: Easy Writing, Grammar, and Style 2 Assessment-Based Planning Discuss pp. 760–763 T = Teacher’s Edition page Discuss pp. 800, T802–T808, 809 Analyze Visuals pp. 802, T807 Discuss pp. 810, T815 Resource Manager For additional lesson planning help, see Easy Planner DVD. Linked selections Media Study: Political Cartoons pp. 850–853 I Want to Write/ Sit-Ins pp. 854–859 Image Collection Poems Level: Easy from Dreams from My Father pp. 830–845 from Out of Many, One pp. 846–849 Memoir Level: Average Autobiography Level: Challenging Speech Level: Average Author’s Perspective pp. 817, 818, 821, 823, 824, 825, 827 Autobiography pp. 831, 832, 836, 838, 839, 841, 842, 844 Characteristics of a Speech pp. 847, 849 Historical Context pp. 855, 857, 858 Analyze Sensory Details pp. 817, 820, 823, 824, 825, 827 Read a Poem p. 826 Recognize Cause-and-Effect Relationships pp. 831, 835, 836, 839, 841, 842, 843, 844 Identify Treatment pp. 846, 848, 849 Compare and Contrast p. 849 Analyze Repetition pp. 855, 856, 857, 858 Read a Book Excerpt p. 859 Word Acquisition pp. 817, T817, 828 Context Clues— General p. T817; Similes p. 828 Word Acquisition pp. 831, T831, 845 Context Clues p. T831 Denotation and Connotation p. 845 Semicolons p. 829 Discuss pp. 816, T818–T826, 827 Analyze Visuals pp. 818, 822 Resource Manager Writing Workshop: Causeand-Effect Essay pp. 860–867 UNIT 71 PLANNING One Last Time pp. 816–829 Analyze a Causeand-Effect Essay pp. 861–862, 866 Write a Causeand-Effect Essay pp. 860–866 Commas After Introductory Words or Phrases p. 866 Additional Writing and Grammar Skills Discuss pp. 830, T832–T843, 844 Analyze Visuals pp. 832, 837, 840, 843 Discuss pp. 846, T847–T848, 849 Discuss pp. 850, 853 Analyze the Visual Aspects of Political Cartoons pp. 851–852 Create a Political Cartoon p. 853 Discuss pp. 854, T856–T857, 858, T859 Analyze Visuals p. 856, 857 Discuss pp. 860–862 Create a Multimedia Presentation p. 867 Unit 7 Grade 8 3 MAKERS UNIT 7 HISTORY PLANNING (CONTINUED) Unit 7 Skills Locator Skills taught in Unit 7 are listed in the first column. The selections and workshops where students learn or practice each skill appear in the middle column. The third column lists lessons from the Standards Lesson File that can be used to teach or reinforce each skill. Skills (A) = Assessed on the Unit 7 Test Selections And Workshops in the Anthology Standards Lesson File Literary Analysis Identify and analyze the influence of an author’s background (A) Reader’s Workshop 760–765 Identify and analyze historical context Reader’s Workshop 760–765 The Snapping Turtle 766–781 I Want to Write/Sit-Ins 854–859 4 Identify and analyze cultural context Reader’s Workshop 760–765 Identify and analyze cultural conflicts Out of Bounds 782–799 Identify and analyze author’s perspective (A) One Last Time 816–829 Identify, analyze and interpret an autobiography (A) Dreams from My Father 830–845 Identify and analyze characteristics of a tall tale Pecos Bill 800–809 Unit 7 Grade 8 Literature Lesson 41: Author’s Perspective Literature Lesson 41: Author’s Perspective Reading Lesson 41: Author’s Perspective Resource Manager UNIT 7 SKILLS LOCATOR (CONTINUED) Reading and Informational Text Pecos Bill 800–809 Compare and contrast (A) The Snapping Turtle 766–781 Out of Many, One 846–849 HISTORY MAKERS UNIT 7 PLANNING Visualize Reading Lesson 12: Comparing and Contrasting Compare and contrast characters The Snapping Turtle 766–781 Reading Lesson 12: Comparing and Contrasting Compare and contrast portrayals Out of Many, One 846–849 Make inferences (A) Out of Bounds 782–799 Reading Lesson 8: Making Inferences Identify and analyze cause-effect relationships (A) Dreams from My Father 830–845 Reading Lesson 7: Recognizing Cause and Effect Identify and analyze repetition I Want to Write/Sit-Ins 854–859 Literature Lesson 34: Repetition and Parallelism Identify and analyze sensory details to help understanding One Last Time 816–829 Identify treatment (purpose, tone, form) (A) Out of Many, One 846–849 Identify characteristics of a keynote speech Out of Many, One 846–849 Reading Lesson 3: Determining Author’s Purpose Vocabulary Analyze analogies to infer literal and figurative meanings of words The Snapping Turtle 766–781 Vocabulary Lesson 23: Analogies Use context clues to determine the meanings of homographs (A) Out of Bounds 782–799 Vocabulary Lesson 20: Homonyms and Homographs Use similes as context clues to determine the meanings of unfamiliar words One Last Time 816–829 Literature Lesson 29: Simile and Metaphor Distinguish between the connotative and denotative meanings of words (A) Dreams from My Father 830–845 Vocabulary Lesson 17: Denotation and Connotation Resource Manager Unit 7 Grade 8 5 UNIT 7 SKILLS LOCATOR (CONTINUED) MAKERS UNIT 7 HISTORY PLANNING (CONTINUED) Writing, Grammar, and Style Write a cause-and-effect essay Writing Workshop 860–867 (A) Writing Lesson 9: Creating Sentence Variety Writing Lesson 16: Cause-and-Effect Order Writing Lesson 21: Writing a Thesis Statement Writing Lesson 30: Cause-and-Effect Essay Writing Lesson 44: Using Precise Words Use transition words to signal causes and effects (A) Writing Workshop 860–867 Combine sentences to form one compound-complex sentence (A) The Snapping Turtle 766–781 Use colons correctly after letter greetings and before lists of items (A) Out of Bounds 782–799 Use semicolons correctly to separate parts of a series (A) One Last Time 816–829 Writing Lesson 19: Transitions TRANSPARENCIES ANSWER KEY INTERDISCIPLINARY ACTIVITIES Grammar Lesson 20: Missing or Misplaced Commas 6 Unit 7 Grade 8 Resource Manager UNIT 7 SKILLS LOCATOR (CONTINUED) Speaking, Listening, Viewing, and Media Media Study 850–853 Compare and contrast the style of illustrators Media Study 850–853 Distinguish and compare different points of view in nonprint media sources (political cartoons) Media Study 850–853 Create a political cartoon Media Study 850–853 Create and deliver a multimedia presentation Publishing with Technology 867 Resource Manager Media Lesson 19: Analyzing Visuals UNIT 7 PLANNING Identify visual aspects of illustrations (line, color, texture, and shape) Media Lesson 3: Influence of Media on Society Media Lesson 22: Creating a Power Presentation Unit 7 Grade 8 7 Name Date Unit 7 COPY MASTER Academic Vocabulary A. Listen as your teacher reads each vocabulary term. Read and discuss the examples. Then write a definition for each term. Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. Term Examples 1. author’s background Story details frequently reflect information about an author’s background. 2. historical context Understanding historical context makes it easier to appreciate the play, which is set during the 1960s. 3. cultural context Music, customs, and traditions established the c ultural context for a story about life in the Southwest. 4. author’s perspective The author’s perspective about education is different from the common way of thinking about the subject, probably because she was home-schooled. 5. cause and effect One example of cause and effect is not sleeping well (cause) and feeling tired the next day (effect). 6. treatment The film treatment of the story was not quite what its author had expected to see. Definition B. Answer each question on a separate sheet of paper. 1. Which of these is an example of cause and effect: Making a phone call to an old friend after moving to a new state or city? Or calling an old friend after receiving a letter expressing sadness that you had moved away? 2. Think about a story you read recently. What treatment of the story can you imagine? Could it be a film, a play, or something else? Explain. 3. How might an author’s perspective influence the description of a character whose background is very similar to his or her own background? 4. In a story about the childhood of an adult you know, what details could you include to show both historical and cultural context? Resource Manager Unit 7 Grade 8 9 Name Date Unit 7 COPY MASTER Additional Academic Vocabulary A. Listen as your teacher reads each vocabulary term. Read and discuss the definition. Then complete each sentence. Term Definition Complete each sentence. 1. inference a guess based on evidence It is easy to make an i nference about the coach’s mood when she the players. 2. sentence combining linking sentences, phrases, and clauses in order to make a variety of sentences Sentence combining can be used to make the sentences Rosa enjoys reading poetryand Rosa enjoys writing poetry into one sentence: . 3. compare and contrast to find the similarities and differences between two things Whenever I compare and contrast recipes, some seem very easy. Others , but they seem . all sound 4. homograph words that are spelled the same but have different meanings The homograph state has two meanings: . denotation: the basic, literal meaning of a word connotation: feelings or ideas associated with a word The denotation of nosy is “curious.” Nosy also has the connotation of .” “ B. Complete each activity. 10 1. Compare and contrast the last two movies you have seen, focusing on details of plot and character. 2. What denotation do the words ugly and hideous both have? Which of the two words has the more negative connotation? 3. Practice sentence combining by making these two sentences into one sentence: Hannah loves to swim. George prefers skiing. Unit 7 Grade 8 Resource Manager Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. 5. connotative and denotative meanings and Unit 7 Grammar Focus These charts provide two methods of incorporating grammar instruction in your literature class. You may choose one approach, or blend the two. Systematic Grammar Instruction: Verbals and Verb Phrases Introducing the Unit: Remind students that errors in the placement and punctuation of phrases are a common source of confusion in writing. Week Grammar Handbook Grammar for Writing 25 Gerunds Gerunds and Gerund Phrases, pp. R61–R62 Gerunds, p. 170 Workbook: pp. 139–141 26 Participles Participles and Participial Phrases, p. R61 Participles, pp. 172–173 Workbook: pp. 142–144 27 Infinitives Infinitives and Infinitive Phrases, p. R61 Infinitives, p. 175–176 Workbook: pp. 145–147 • Commas with Phrases Quick Reference: Comma, p. R49 Commas in Sentences, pp. 253–254 Workbook: pp. 193–195 • Hyphens, Dashes, and Parentheses Quick Reference: Dash, Parentheses, Hyphen, p. R50 Hyphens, Dashes, and Parentheses, p. 264 Workbook: pp. 205–207 Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. Related Mechanics Topics Resource Manager Unit 7 Grade 8 11 GRAMMAR FOCUS, CONTINUED Integrating Grammar, Literature, and Writing Use activities provided in the literature selections and Writing Workshop to reinforce grammar concepts in the context of writing, revision, and author’s style. You may extend or reinforce those lessons using Handbook lessons in the student edition, the Grammar for Writing text and workbook, or the Standards Lesson Files. Grammar Handbook Grammar for Writing The Snapping Turtle Form CompoundComplex Sentences Compound-Complex Sentences, p. R64 Compound-Complex Sentences, p. 198 Workbook: pp. 160–162 Out of Bounds Use Colons Correctly Quick Reference: Colon, p. R50 Colons, pp. 262–263 Workbook: pp. 202–204 One Last Time Use Semi-Colons Correctly Quick Reference: Semicolon, p. R49 Semicolons with Items in a Series, p. 262 Workbook: pp. 202–204 Writing Workshop: Cause-and-Effect Essay — Writing Lesson 30: Cause-and-Effect Essay Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. Unit 7 12 Unit 7 Grade 8 Resource Manager Lesson at a Glance READER’S WORKSHOP Reader’s Workshop History, Culture, and the Author OVERVIEW AND PURPOSE LESSON RESOURCES The following key terms and concepts are introduced in the Reader’s Workshop for Unit 7. They will be reviewed and reinforced throughout the unit, and assessed on the Unit 7 Test. Student Copy Masters These copy masters may be used to provide note-taking support for students at lower readiness levels. • Author’s Background • Note Taking, p. 15 • Historical and Cultural Influences • Note Taking, p. 16 • Author’s Perspective WORKSHOP EXCERPTS “Eating Alone” Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. poem by Li-Young Lee “Dusting” poem by Julia Alvarez “Sonny’s Blues” short story by James Baldwin “Beware of the Dog” short story by Roald Dahl “Origami” short story by Susan K. Ito Resource Manager Unit 7 Grade 8 13 Name Date READER’S WORKSHOP: PART 1 COPY MASTER Note Taking READER’S WORKSHOP A WRITER’S BACKGROUND 1. A writer’s background influences and . 2. Li-Young Lee’s Chinese heritage is shown in the poem through details that describe 3. and Lines 9–12 of the poem relate to , an important event in Lee’s life. Fill in the web diagram and complete the sentences to help you remember key ideas from the text. Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. Factors that influence a writer Resource Manager Unit 7 Grade 8 15 Name Date READER’S WORKSHOP: PART 2 COPY MASTER READER’S WORKSHOP Note Taking HISTORICAL AND CULTURAL INFLUENCES Fill in the blanks to make complete sentences that will help you remember important ideas. Historical and cultural contexts refer to the , and , that influence a writer. Fill in the chart with the appropriate information about the excerpt from “Sonny’s Blues.” “Sonny’s Blues” The setting is . . . Baldwin is able to describe this setting because ... Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. In real life, in the 20th century, this setting could be described as . . . James Baldwin uses this context for his short story because he wants to show . . . 16 Unit 7 Grade 8 Resource Manager Lesson at a Glance the sna pping turtle Joseph Bruchac Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. THE SNAPPING TURTLE WHY THIS SELECTION? LESSON RESOURCES Plan and Teach Joseph Bruchac is an important Native Lesson Plan and Resource Guide . . 18–19 American author whose writings have 20 helped spread understanding of his unique Alternative Standards Focus . . . . . cultural heritage. Additional Selection Questions . . . . 21 Ideas for Extension . . . . . . . 22–23 ABOUT THIS SELECTION Teacher Notes . . . . . . . . . . . 24 Pupil/Teacher’s Edition Pages: 766–781 Student Copy Masters Difficulty Level: Easy 25 Readability Scores: Lexile: 900; Fry: 6; Summary (English, Spanish) . . . . . 26 Summary (Haitian Creole, Vietnamese) Dale-Chall: 6.4 Literary Analysis: Influence of Author’s Summary Sonny lives with his Background . . . . . . . . . . . 27 grandparents, who teach him respect for Literary Analysis: Influence of Author’s the earth. One day, Sonny goes fishing Background (Spanish) . . . . . . . 28 and then decides to explore a reservoir. 29 Reading Skill: Compare and Contrast . There, he captures a snapping turtle, Reading Skill: Compare and Contrast which he plans to sell. He later changes (Spanish) . . . . . . . . . . . . 30 his mind when he realizes that the turtle Vocabulary Study . . . . . . . . . 31 was getting ready to lay its eggs. Sonny 32 Vocabulary Practice . . . . . . . . and his grandfather return the turtle to the Vocabulary Strategy . . . . . . . . 33 reservoir. Reading Check . . . . . . . . . . 34 Key Idea: Values Most people learn 35 Question Support . . . . . . . . . their values from family members, Grammar and Writing . . . . . . . . 36 friends, or society at large. Students Reading Fluency . . . . . . . . 37–38 reading this story will learn about the Assess narrator’s values and have the opportunity Selection Test A . . . . . . . . . 39–40 to compare them to their own. Selection Test B/C . . . . . . . . 41–42 FOCUS STANDARDS • • Influence of Author’s Background Compare and Contrast Resource Manager All lesson resources are available electronically on DVD Unit 7 Grade 8 17 Lesson Plan and Resource Guide The Snapping Turtle Short Story by Joseph Bruchac Objectives • • • • • THE SNAPPING TURTLE • • • explore the key idea of values identify and analyze the influence of the author’s background read a short story compare and contrast characters build vocabulary for reading and writing analyze analogies to infer literal and figurative meanings of words (also an EL language objective) combine sentences to form compound-complex sentences use writing to analyze literature Unless otherwise noted, all resources can be found in the Resource Manager. All materials are also available on Easy Planner DVD. Pupil’s Edition and Teacher’s Edition Additional Resources CM=Copy Master T=Transparency Focus and Motivate Question/Key Idea p. 766 Author Biography p. 767 Literature Center at ClassZone.com Teach Influence of Author’s Background p. 767 Compare and Contrast p. 767 Compare and Contrast CM—p. 29, Spanish p. 30 Vocabulary in Context p. 767 Vocabulary Study CM p. 31 Best Practices Toolkit Scaffolding Vocabulary Instruction pp. 43–46 Vocabulary Center at ClassZone.com Practice and Apply: Guided Practice Selection and Teacher Notes 18 “The Snapping Turtle,” pp. 768–778 Unit 7 Grade 8 Audio Anthology CD Summary CM—English and Spanish p. 25, Haitian Creole and Vietnamese p. 26 Reading Fluency CM pp. 37–38 Resource Manager Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. Pupil’s Edition and Teacher’s Edition Additional Resources CM=Copy Master T=Transparency Best Practices Toolkit Differentiated Instruction pp. 31–38 Scaffolding Reading Instruction pp. 43–46 Reciprocal Questioning p. A3 New Word Analysis p. E8 [T] Words with Multiple Meanings p. E31 [T] Ask the Experts p. D4 Jigsaw Reading p. A1 THE SNAPPING TURTLE Practice and Apply: After Reading Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. Selection Questions p. 779 Vocabulary Practice p. 780 Vocabulary in Writing p. 780 Vocabulary Strategy: Analogies p. 780 Reading Check CM p. 34 Influence of Author’s Background CM—p. 27, Spanish p. 28 Question Support CM p. 35 Additional Selection Questions p. 21 Alternative Standards Focus p. 20 Ideas for Extension pp. 22–23 Vocabulary Practice CM p. 32 Best Practices Toolkit Common Prefixes p. E14 [T] Common Suffixes p. E15 [T] Vocabulary Strategy CM p. 33 Writing Prompts p. 781 Grammar and Writing p. 781 Vocabulary Center at ClassZone.com Writing Center at ClassZone.com Form Compound-Complex Sentences CM p. 36 Grammar Handbook—Pupil Edition p. R64 Assess Selection Test A CM pp. 39–40 Selection Test B/C CM pp. 41–42 Test Generator CD Reteach Standards Lesson File Literature Lesson 41: Author’s Perspective Reading Lesson 12: Comparing and Contrasting Vocabulary Lesson 23: Analogies Assess and Reteach Influence of Author’s Background Compare and Contrast Analogies =Resources for Differentiation Resource Manager Unit 7 Grade 8 19 THE SNAPPING TURTLE Use as an alternative to the Alternative Standards Focus focus skills on PE page 767. The focus skills for “The Snapping Turtle” are influence of author’s background and compare and contrast. The suggestions on this page allow you to teach an alternate or additional literary analysis skill using “The Snapping Turtle.” Literary Analysis: Theme PASSAGE 1: lines 67–81 THE SNAPPING TURTLE Theme is the main idea that an author wants to communicate to a reader. It expresses an insight into life or human nature, and it can be implied or stated directly. Based on this passage, what do you think is the main theme of “The Snapping Turtle”? Is it implied or stated directly? (Students may express the theme this way: People should treat the earth and its creatures respectfully, sharing and not wasting resources. The theme is implied.) PASSAGE 2: lines 130–148 What is Sonny’s response to the spider in the culvert? How does his response develop and support the theme of the story? (Sonny apologizes for intruding, he raises his hand in response to the spider raising its leg, and he very cautiously walks around the web. His actions show that he respects the spider, is willing to share space with it, and has no desire to harm it.) PASSAGE 3: What key words and phrases in this passage give clues about the story’s theme? (Key words and phrases include “every spring,” “rescue,” “releasing them back into the wild,” “stroked them with a finger.” All these words and phrases suggest a friendly and respectful relationship with nature.) PASSAGE 4: lines 320–338 How does Sonny’s realization at the end of the story underscore the theme of the story? (He realizes that the snapping turtle, which he has until now seen only as a source of money, is a living creature like all others, and that it has a right to be free. Selling the turtle, which is ready to lay its eggs, would mean wasting resources and preventing future generations from being born.) For a lesson on theme, see Literature Lesson 13: Theme in the Standards Lesson File. 20 Unit 7 Grade 8 Resource Manager Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. lines 187–200 THE SNAPPING TURTLE Use to supplement the Additional Selection Questions questions on PE page 779. Differentiation Use these questions to provide customized practice with comprehension and critical thinking skills. Easy What does Sonny eventually realize about the snapping turtle? (He realizes that the turtle had been getting ready to lay her eggs when he caught her.) 2. Key Idea: Values Sonny is careful to get his hands wet before he touches a fish he is going to throw back. What does this action tell you about his values? (It shows that he values nature, because he is careful not to injure the fish.) 3. Recall Influence of Author’s Background In what way does Sonny’s family situation reflect the author’s own life? (Like Sonny, Bruchac was raised by his grandparents in a rural setting.) 1. Summarize THE SNAPPING TURTLE Average Sonny is on his own a lot. He says he “didn’t much miss the company of other kids” (line 67). Is he being honest when he says this? How can you tell? (He avoids the other kids, because they tease him and don’t trust him to follow their rules [lines 61–66]. He feels left out when the other kids talk about the fun they have at the reservoir [lines 162–165]. These details might make students conclude that Sonny yearns for the company of the other kids and that he is not being honest with himself. Other students may say that he really doesn’t miss it because his experiences have been so bad.) 5. Analyze Influence of Author’s Background What conclusions might you draw about the author’s own grandparents based on his portrayal of Sonny’s grandmother and grandfather? (Bruchac’s portrayal of Sonny’s grandparents suggests that he felt great affection for his own.) 6. Key Idea: Values If you were Sonny, would you have returned the turtle to the reservoir? Would you have taken the turtle from the reservoir in the first place? Explain why or why not. (Students should give reasons to support their answers.) Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. 4. Draw Conclusions Challenging Does Sonny’s decision to capture the turtle contradict his values? Explain, citing evidence. (Most students will say that he does not respect snapping turtles as he does other creatures. They are aggressive and can be dangerous—“There wasn’t much to recommend a snapping turtle as a friend” [lines 205–207]. Sonny also realizes he can make money from the turtle. This attitude seems to contradict his values.) 8. Evaluate Influence of Author’s Background Keeping in mind the author’s background, why do you think he wrote this story? (This story preserves and passes along the values of his grandparents and the lessons that they taught him. Bruchac may have written the story to convey to his readers the creed with which he was brought up—that nature must be treated with respect.) 7. Key Idea: Values Resource Manager Unit 7 Grade 8 21 THE SNAPPING TURTLE Ideas for Extension Differentiation These activities provide students with a variety of options for demonstrating understanding of lesson concepts. EXPLORATIONS AND ACTIVITIES ROLE-PLAY: EXPLORE CHARACTER THE SNAPPING TURTLE Ask students to speculate about the answers to the following questions: What do Sonny’s grandparents think about the choices he makes? What kind of person do they hope he will turn out to be? What lessons about life do they still hope to teach him? Have pairs of students role-play a dialogue between Sonny’s grandparents, in which they discuss Sonny and his future. Before they begin, have students reread the story, making notes about each character’s personality as they read. They may want to use a character map or chart to do this. Encourage them to infuse their dialogue with as much of the characters’ personalities as they can. FILM VERSION: ANALYZE ELEMENTS OF FICTION Have students work in small groups to plan a film treatment of “The Snapping Turtle.” Ask them to explore answers to the following questions: • What would be a good location for the movie? Will you need more than one location? • Would the screenplay include more dialogue than the story? • Would the narrator of the story speak in a voice-over, or might an anonymous narrator do so? Pre-AP Challenge: Encourage students to design a soundtrack for the film. Have them begin by determining the mood of each scene. They might want to choose music of various styles and genres, either with or without lyrics. ORAL PRESENTATION: UNDERSTAND AUTHOR’S BACKGROUND Tell students that members of the Abenaki people can still be found in northern New England and Canada. Have small groups analyze tribal Web sites, such as www.indians.org, to find out about Abenaki history and culture. Then have each group give a presentation covering one of the following topics: the early Abenaki; their relationship with European explorers and settlers; the struggles the Abenaki have had in the 20th century to be treated with respect, and the demands they have made; and the nature of Abenaki communities today. 22 Unit 7 Grade 8 Resource Manager Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. Invite group members to share and discuss their film treatments. IDEAS FOR EXTENSION, CONTINUED INQUIRY AND RESEARCH NATURAL HISTORY OF TURTLES THE SNAPPING TURTLE Tell students that turtles are some appearance. Next, instruct them create of the most ancient creatures on the posters showing what they have learned planet—large numbers of these reptiles and give a presentation to the class. existed approximately 20 million years ago. The average turtle can lay hundreds of eggs. Some sea turtles lay as many as 100 eggs at a time. Snapping turtles generally lay between 20 and 40 eggs at a time. Have students work with a partner or in small groups to do Internet and library research about different types of turtles. Ask them to gather information about food, range, reproduction, behavior, and WRITING Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. EXPLORE POINT OF VIEW: POEM Have students reread the story, focusing on the passage in which Sonny captures the snapping turtle and drags it home. Have them write a poem from the point of view of the turtle. Encourage them to use a serious tone and to incorporate sensory details from the story. Remind them that the turtle is getting ready to lay her eggs. How does she feel when she is captured? Invite volunteers to read their poems to the class. Others may illustrate their poems, which can be collected in a book. COMPARE THEMES: ESSAY Tell students that Joseph Bruchac is an extremely prolific writer. A list of his works appears on his Web site, www.josephbruchac.com. Among these are retellings of Abenaki myths and traditional stories. Assign each student two or three of these works and have them write a comparison-contrast essay, focusing on the theme of each myth or story. Have students present a summary of the themes they have identified and discuss the similarities and differences among the many myths and stories the class has read. Resource Manager Unit 7 Grade 8 23 THE SNAPPING TURTLE Teacher Notes Review and Evaluate Outcome What did I want students to know or be able to do? THE SNAPPING TURTLE How successful was the lesson? Evaluate Process What worked? • Strategies • Resources • Differentiation Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. What did not work? Why not? Reflect The next time I teach “The Snapping Turtle,” what will I do differently? Why? Plan Ahead What must I do next? 24 Unit 7 Grade 8 Resource Manager THE SNAPPING TURTLE Summary THE SNAPPING TURTLE Joseph Bruchac Setting: Adirondack Mountains, New York, 1950s THE SNAPPING TURTLE The narrator is a ten-year-old boy who lives with his grandparents in a rural area of New York state. Grandpa, who is part Native American, lives by traditional Abenaki values of respect for living things. One morning the narrator goes fishing. Using the methods he leaned from his grandfather, he soon catches enough trout for dinner. Later he watches some other boys and learns that a man in town will pay ten dollars for a snapping turtle. The boys soon abandon their efforts to catch a turtle. But the narrator knows how to do it, and he soon grabs a good sized turtle by the tail. He hauls it home, and his grandfather drives him to town. The man in town offers three dollars for the turtle. The narrator refuses. Grandpa asks the narrator to think about why the turtle came to shore. Suddenly the boy realizes that the turtle was ready to lay her eggs. He asks his grandfather to drive back to the reservoir so he can return the turtle to her home. LA TORTUGA MORDEDORA Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. Joseph Bruchac Escenario: las montañas de Adirondack, Nueva York; los años cincuenta El narrador es un niño de diez años que vive con sus abuelos en un área rural del estado de Nueva York. El abuelo, que es en parte indígena americano, vive según los valores tradicionales de los Abenaki de respeto por las cosas vivas.Una mañana el narrador va de pesca. Usando los métodos que aprendió de su abuelo, pronto atrapa suficientes truchas para cenar. Más tarde ve a otros niños y se entera que un hombre en el pueblo va a pagar diez dólares por una tortuga mordedora. Los niños pronto abandonan pronto sus esfuerzos por atrapar una tortuga. Pero el narrador sabe cómo hacerlo y pronto atrapa por la cola a una tortuga de buen tamaño. La arrastra hasta su casa y su abuelo lo lleva hasta el pueblo. El hombre del pueblo le ofrece tres dólares por la tortuga. El narrador se rehúsa. El abuelo le pide al narrador que piense por qué la tortuga se acercó a la orilla. De repente, el niño se da cuenta de que la tortuga estaba lista para poner huevos. Le pide a su abuelo que maneje de regreso a la reserva para regresar a la tortuga a su casa. Resource Manager Unit 7 Grade 8 25 THE SNAPPING TURTLE Summary TÒTI KI GEN FÒM SÈPAN Joseph Bruchac Espas ak tan: Montay Adiwondak, Nouyòk, ane 1950 yo Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. THE SNAPPING TURTLE Naratè a se yon ti gason dizan k ap viv avèk granparan li nan yon zòn riral leta Nouyòk. Granpapa a, ki fè pati Amerendyen, ap viv dapre valè tradisyonèl Abenaki ki montre respè pou tout kreyati vivan. Yon maten, naratè a al peche pwason. Avèk metòd granpapa li te aprann li, li kenbe ase pwason twit pou dine. Pita, li wè kèk lòt ti gason epi li vin konnen gen yon mesye ki nan vil la k ap peye li dis (10) dola si yo fè l jwenn yon tòti ki konn kache anba karapas yo. Ti mesye yo kite sa paske yo pa reyisi kenbe tòti a. Men naratè a konnen kouman pou li fè sa, epi san pèdi tan li kenbe yon bon tòti bèl gwosè nan ke. Li pote li lakay li, epi granpapa li kondi li nan vil la. Mesye lavil la ofri twa (3) dola pou tòti a, Naratè a refize. Granpapa a mande naratè a pou li reflechi sou rezon ki fè tòti a te vini nan rivaj la. Toudenkou, ti gason an reyalize tòti a te pare pou ponn ze li. Li mande granpapa a pou li mennen li retounen nan rezèvwa a pou li ka retounen mete tòti a kote l te pran l lan. 26 Unit 7 Grade 8 Resource Manager Name Date THE SNAPPING TURTLE COPY MASTER Literary Analysis INFLUENCE OF AUTHOR’S BACKGROUND An author’s background, including life experiences and cultural heritage, shapes his or her way of looking at the world and often affects what he or she writes. For example, Joseph Bruchac was raised by his grandparents, one of whom was Native American. Many of his stories, in turn, have Native-American characters and reflect Native-American values. Directions: In the graphic, give examples from the story that show how Bruchac’s characters reflect his own cultural beliefs and values. THE SNAPPING TURTLE Abenaki Values Respect the Earth Share with Others Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. Honor Elders Resource Manager Unit 7 Grade 8 27 Name Date LA TORTUGA MORDEDORA COPY MASTER Literary Analysis INFLUENCE OF AUTHOR’S BACKGROUND La formación del autor, incluyendo sus experiencias de vida y su herencia cultural, moldea su manera de ver el mundo y con frecuencia afecta lo que escribe. Por ejemplo, Joseph Bruchac creció con sus abuelos, uno de los cuales era indígena americano. Varias de sus historias, a su vez, tienen personajes indígena-americanos y reflejan valores indígena-americanos. Instrucciones: En la gráfica, escribe ejemplos del relato que muestren cómo reflejan los personajes de Bruchac sus creencias y valores culturales. SPANISH Valores Abenaki Respeto a la Tierra Compartir con los demás Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. Honrar a los ancianos 28 Unit 7 Grade 8 Resource Manager Name Date THE SNAPPING TURTLE COPY MASTER Reading Skill COMPARE AND CONTRAST When you compare two or more things, you identify ways in which they are alike. When you contrast them, you find ways in which they are different. Directions: In one Venn diagram, compare and contrast the narrator and other boys. In the other diagram compare and contrast the narrator’s grandmother and grandfather. Other Boys Grandmother Grandfather Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. THE SNAPPING TURTLE Narrator Resource Manager Unit 7 Grade 8 29 Name Date LA TORTUGA MORDEDORA COPY MASTER Reading Skill COMPARE AND CONTRAST Cuando comparas dos o más cosas, identificas maneras en las que se parecen. Cuando las contrastas, encuentras maneras en las que son diferentes. Instrucciones: En un diagrama de Venn, compara y contrasta al narrador y a los otros niños. En el otro diagrama, compara y contrasta a la abuela y al abuelo del narrador. Otros niños Abuela Abuelo Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. SPANISH Narrador 30 Unit 7 Grade 8 Resource Manager Name Date THE SNAPPING TURTLE COPY MASTER Vocabulary Study CLASSIFYING WORDS A. Directions: As your teacher reads each sentence, listen for the boldfaced word 2. Sonny cached his fishing gear in a spot where he knew he could find it later. 3. Sonny learned craftiness by having to avoid uncomfortable situations. He thought of clever ways to hide. 4. Sonny’s grandmother believed that sharing could bring a kind of immortality—the things one shares might live forever. 5. The shells of most turtles are impregnable. They provide a defense against predators, which are unable to get past the stiff barrier. 6. Unlike other boys, Sonny did not have the inclination to be loud and disruptive. He preferred to be patient and quiet when he explored the natural world. 7. Paying attention to the migration routes of turtles gave Sonny and his grandparents an appreciation for the patterns of nature. Every spring, the turtles returned to the same place. 8. Sonny’s grandmother’s philosophy of life related to the way she thought about the natural world and how it affected her actions. 9. Sonny traipsed along the edge of the creek, walking nearly half a mile. 10. THE SNAPPING TURTLE Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. and clues to its meaning. Together discuss possible meanings of the word. 1. Basking in the hot sun, not moving a muscle, Sonny watched and waited. Others might have been frightened and given up, but Sonny was undaunted when the snapping turtle put up a fight. It was hard work, but he managed to drag it all the way home. B. Directions: Use the boldfaced words from Part A to answer each question. Be prepared to give reasons for your answers. 11. Which words could be used to describe an action? 12. Which words contain prefixes that mean “not”? 13. Which words could apply to beliefs or preferences? 14. Which words are related to hiding? Resource Manager Unit 7 Grade 8 31 Name Date THE SNAPPING TURTLE COPY MASTER Vocabulary Practice basking craftiness impregnable migration traipse cache immortality inclination philosophy undaunted THE SNAPPING TURTLE A. Directions: Fill in each set of blanks with the correct word from the box 1. Mom told us not to through her flower garden. 2. Emma has to 3. Mark’s 4. The magician was noted for her 5. Although he had never had a hit off this pitcher, Tim was her diary so her brothers do not read it. when shopping is to wait until an item is put on sale. and clever tricks. about the chances of getting one today. 6. The troops agreed that the enemy’s fort was well guarded and 7. Marta’s 8. For Eva, a perfect day consisted of 9. Grandma thinks that young people have a sense of for test preparation was to study early and often. in the sun. and would be better off behaving more carefully. Fall and spring are seasons for birds. B. Directions: Circle True if the underlined word’s meaning makes sense in the sentence; circle False if it does not. 1. Jake was undaunted by the bully who was always trying to pick a fight. T F 32 T F 2. Pedro wanted to cache the pizza so that everyone could have a slice. T F 3. Debra’s craftiness came in handy when it was time to decorate the house. T F 4. The impregnable teacher was happy to spend extra time with a student. T F 5. Mrs. Evans saw the dog traipse through her yard. T F 6. Paul likes to watch the migration patterns of his new fish. T F 7. While Dad was basking the potatoes, Mom was frosting the cake. T F 8. Max was winning the race until he got to the inclination of the hill. Unit 7 Grade 8 Resource Manager Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. 10. Name Date THE SNAPPING TURTLE COPY MASTER Vocabulary Strategy ANALOGIES An analogy compares similar aspects of two or more different things. Analyzing an analogy is one way of figuring out the meanings of unfamiliar words in context. For example, you can determine the meaning of the word generations from the thing it is compared to in this passage Only ripples on the water, widening circles rolling on toward other shores like generations following each other . . . (lines 334–336) THE SNAPPING TURTLE Directions: Use the comparison in each sentence to help you determine the meaning of the boldfaced word. Write the meaning in the space provided 1. After the winning basket, the clamor from the crowd was as loud as the uproar of a thunderstorm meaning: 2. Like an artist twisting and coiling clay, the yoga instructor was able to convolute her body into many different shapes meaning: 3. The aroma of the bakery reminded me of the smell of my grandmother’s cakes meaning: Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. 4. With lightning quick speed the expeditious waiter brought tea and juice to the table meaning: 5. The other team’s unfriendly players treated us with a hostility normally reserved for sworn enemies meaning: 6. Marie analyzed the math formulas with as much concentration as a scientist studies the stars meaning: 7. Most people would find eating a rat as abhorrent as eating a disgusting spider meaning: 8. The arduous task of walking back to camp with buckets of water proved to be as difficult as Michael thought it would be meaning: Resource Manager Unit 7 Grade 8 33 Name Date THE SNAPPING TURTLE COPY MASTER Reading Check 34 2. Why does the narrator hide in a tree? 3. What is the narrator’s plan for the snapping turtle? 4. What do the narrator’s grandparents do when the narrator brings home the turtle? 5. What does the narrator decide to do with the turtle at the end of the story? Unit 7 Grade 8 Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. THE SNAPPING TURTLE Directions: Recall the events in Joseph Bruchac’s short story. Then answer the questions in phrases or sentences. 1. What are the narrator and his grandmother doing on the morning of the story? Resource Manager Name Date THE SNAPPING TURTLE COPY MASTER Question Support LITERARY ANALYSIS For questions 1–3, see page 779 of the Pupil Edition. Directions: Answer each question on a separate sheet of paper. 4. Visualize. Descriptive passages help you visualize characters, events, and settings in a story. Underline the words that help you form an image of this scene from “The Snapping Turtle.” Use a separate sheet of paper if needed. THE SNAPPING TURTLE From grapevine tangles up the bank, I’d watched as Pauly Roffmeier, Ricky Holstead, and Will Backus rolled up to the creek, making more noise than a herd of hippos, to plunk their own lines in. Both times, they caught nothing. It wasn’t surprising, since they were talking like jaybirds, scaring away whatever fish might have been within half a mile. (lines 100–104) Circle the words that describe the relationship between the narrator and his grandparents. 5. Make Inferences About Relationships a. loving b. lonely c. respectful d. fearful e. selfish f. happy Underline one word in parentheses and then complete the sentence that follows. Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. I think the relationship of the other boys in the story with the adults in their lives would be (similar, different) because Compare and contrast Grama and Grampa. Think about their backgrounds, values and traits. How are they alike and different? 6. Compare and Contrast Characters Similarities: Differences: 7. Analyze Influence of Author’s Background Complete the following sentences. The story shows the Abenaki value of honoring elders because The story shows the Abenaki value of respect for the earth because A theme is a message about life or human nature that the writer shares with the reader. Complete the following sentence. 8. Evaluate the Ending The last paragraph summarizes the theme because Resource Manager Unit 7 Grade 8 35 Name Date THE SNAPPING TURTLE COPY MASTER Grammar and Writing FORM COMPOUND-COMPLEX SENTENCES THE SNAPPING TURTLE A compound-complex sentence contains two or more independent clauses and one or more dependent clauses. (Recall that a dependent clause cannot stand alone as a sentence and is introduced by words such as after, because, if, and though.) Compound-complex sentences can help add variety to writing by allowing short, related sentences to be combined. Original: I did something wrong. You were ready to help. You made me feel safe. Revised: Though I did something wrong, you were ready to help, and you made me feel safe. 36 2. I didn’t have much courage. I would stay away from other kids. They were too aggressive. (so, who) 3. We’d catch a fish. We would always thank the fish. We’d throw the smaller ones back. (and, after) 4. I was in the woods. I’d be quiet. The other boys would be very loud. (but, when) 5. I caught the turtle. I returned her to the resevoir. She was pregnant. (but, because) Unit 7 Grade 8 Resource Manager Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. Directions: In each item, combine the sentences to form one compound-complex sentence. Use the first word in parentheses to join two independent clauses. Use the second word to change one sentence to a dependent clause. Write the combined sentence on the lines. 1. Grandpa and I knew how act around animals. They wouldn’t get scared. We would creep up on them. (so, when) Name Date THE SNAPPING TURTLE COPY MASTER Reading Fluency TRACKING SILENT READING RATE AND ACCURACY Directions: Use the passage about snapping turtles with the activity on page 38. Follow the directions on that page. Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. THE SNAPPING TURTLE Snapping turtles on average weigh about 30 to 45 pounds and are about 18 inches long. Some even grow to twice that size. They eat a wide variety of food. They are happy to chow down on water plants, fish, frogs, insects, mice, snakes, worms, and baby ducks. They may even dine on each other from time to time. Snapping turtles have no teeth, but they don’t need them. Instead, they snap up food with their jaws. Their jaws are so strong that they can easily snap off a person’s finger or toe with a single bite. Snapping turtles have also been known to bite through broomsticks when people try to drive them off. Luckily, snapping turtles rarely bite or attack when they are in the water. They prefer to swim along the bottom of lakes and ponds and keep to themselves. It is when snapping turtles venture onto land—as they do to lay their eggs—that they feel unprotected and bite at people or animals who come near them. Despite these dangers, many people keep snapping turtles as pets. One reason is that snapping turtles live a long time. It is not unusual for snapping turtles to live for 30 years. Some have even been known to live for 80 years. Another reason is that turtles can show affection. They can differentiate among humans and seek out the people that they want to spend time with. Still, it seems unlikely that the snapping turtle will replace the dog as “man’s best friend” any time soon. (257 words) Resource Manager Unit 7 Grade 8 37 Name Date THE SNAPPING TURTLE COPY MASTER Reading Fluency TRACKING SILENT READING RATE AND ACCURACY THE SNAPPING TURTLE When you read, you are actively reading to understand the meaning from the text. To do this, you need to move quickly through the passage, identify familiar words and phrases, and find the author’s message. You can improve your speed and understanding of the text with practice. Directions: Read the passage on page 37 silently. Have your partner time you. Your goal is to read at least 257 words correctly per minute. Record your time on the chart. Then answer questions 1–4. Repeat these steps two times. Try to increase your speed and understanding with each reading. Finally, answer questions 5 and 6. Reading 1 2 3 Total Reading Time 1. What do snapping turtles eat? 2. Where do snapping turtles lay their eggs? 3. Why are snapping turtles more dangerous on land than in the water? 4. Name two reasons why some people like to have snapping turtles as pets? Evaluate Your Fluency 38 5. How did repeated reading affect your speed? 6. Summarize the effect of repeated readings on your understanding of the passage. Unit 7 Grade 8 Resource Manager Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. Check Your Understanding Name Date THE SNAPPING TURTLE Selection Test A Comprehension Read each of the following questions. Then choose the letter of the best answer. (6 points each) 1. The narrator’s grandmother always warns the narrator about the danger of 4. other boys B. the state road C. snapping turtles D. fishing in The Rez A. You can see the influence of the author’s Native American background when the narrator sits by himself on the school bus B. promises to stay off the state road C. uses a Swiss Army knife to clean fish D. tries to make friends with crows and jays A. 3. gets a big washtub B. shrugs his shoulders C. asks the boy questions D. drives the boy to the reservoir A. 5. THE SNAPPING TURTLE 2. What does the narrator’s grandfather do to help the narrator understand what he should do with the snapping turtle? The narrator finally realizes that the snapping turtle was heading toward the sandbank to lay its eggs B. attack ducks C. scare swimmers D. migrate to a new place A. In contrast to the other boys’ plan to get the snapping turtle by spearing it, what does the narrator plan to do with the turtle? hit it with a small log B. trap it in his fishing creel C. catch it with his bare hands D. lure it ashore with trout entrails Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. A. Resource Manager Unit 7 Grade 8 39 Name Date SELECTION TEST A, CONTINUED Vocabulary Choose the answer that best explains the meaning of each underlined word. (6 points each) 6. To traipse means to 9. capture in a cage B. crush or damage C. run away from D. walk around fishing for dinner B. hiding in the weeds C. floating quietly in water D. warming oneself in sunlight A. THE SNAPPING TURTLE 7. What does craftiness mean? bravery B. trickery C. quickness D. meanness A. 8. What does basking mean? A. 10. Someone who is undaunted is courageous B. confused C. famous D. guilty A. A migration is a sneaky plan to catch a wild animal B. a collection of animals kept in cages C. the act of changing location seasonally D. the feeling that people get while in nature A. Short Response On a separate sheet of paper, answer the following questions based on your knowledge of the story. (10 points each) 11. What is one reason for the narrator’s playing alone? 12. What are two ways in which the snapping turtle differs from the other turtles that the narrator knows about? Extended Response Answer the following question based on your knowledge of the story. Write one or two paragraphs on a separate sheet of paper. (20 points) 13. How does the narrator show that he has become more courageous by the end of the story? Use two details from the story to support your response. 40 Unit 7 Grade 8 Resource Manager Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. Written Response Name Date THE SNAPPING TURTLE Selection Test B/C Comprehension Read each of the following questions. Then choose the letter of the best answer. (6 points each) 1. Other local boys do not play with the narrator because he 4. is smaller than other boys his age B. spends most of his time doing chores C. is a “Grama’s boy” who would tell on them D. lives on the other side of a dangerous highway letting it grab a stick and then pulling it ashore B. wading into the water and grabbing its tail C. hooking it by using trout entrails as bait D. dropping a big washtub over it A. What does the narrator do that shows a Native American influence on the author’s background? wets his hands before handling small fish B. arrives home wet, scratched, and muddy C. admits that he had been to the reservoir D. catches turtles so he can buy squirrels A. Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. 3. A. 5. The most important factor in leading to the narrator’s final decision about the snapping turtle is the small sum Jack offers for the turtle B. trout supper that is waiting at home C. advice the grandfather gives to the narrator D. reason for the turtle’s going to the sandbank A. In contrast to the other boys, the narrator is patient and waits for the turtle B. curious and plays in the woods alone C. brave and goes to the reservoir to fish D. excited at the idea of earning ten dollars A. Resource Manager Unit 7 Grade 8 41 THE SNAPPING TURTLE 2. The narrator is able to capture the snapping turtle by Name Date SELECTION TEST B/C, CONTINUED Vocabulary Choose the answer that best explains the meaning of each underlined word. (6 points each) 6. A philosophy is 9. the study of civilizations B. the love of oneself C. a system of beliefs D. a healthful habit store in a hiding place B. grab with one’s hands C. save for later use D. catch to sell A. THE SNAPPING TURTLE 7. What does immortality mean? the condition of having endless life B. a great wickedness or wrongdoing C. a state of having little or no money D. the freedom from responsibility A. 8. To cache means to A. 10. What does impregnable mean? very large in size or weight B. impossible to enter by force C. difficult to understand D. unable to be moved A. Having an inclination means having a lack of patience with other people B. belief that your own ideas are best C. theory that cannot be put into practice D. tendency to prefer one thing over another A. Short Response On a separate sheet of paper, answer the following questions based on your knowledge of the story. (10 points each) 11. What are two reasons that the state road makes the narrator nervous? 12. Why does the narrator believe that he is getting the “best education a ten-year-old boy could have”? Extended Response Answer one of the following questions based on your knowledge of the story. Write one or two paragraphs on a separate sheet of paper. (20 points) 13. How do the narrator’s grandmother and grandfather use the episode with the snapping turtle as a teaching experience? Use details from the story to support your response. 14. 42 Challenge How do you think the narrator would have reacted had Jack offered the money that the narrator expected for the turtle? Use details from the story to support your response. Unit 7 Grade 8 Resource Manager Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. Written Response Lesson at a Glance Beverley Naidoo WHY THIS SELECTION? “Out of Bounds” tells the story of two South African boys who bridge the gulf—geographical, cultural, and economic—that lies between them. Lesson Plan and Resource Guide Alternative Standards Focus . . Additional Selection Questions . Ideas for Extension . . . . . Teacher Notes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 44–45 . . 46 . . 47 . 48–49 . . 50 Pupil/Teacher’s Edition Pages: 782–799 Student Copy Masters Difficulty Level: Challenging Readability Scores: Lexile: 790; Fry: 5; Summary (English, Spanish) . . . . . Summary (Haitian Creole, Vietnamese) Dale-Chall: 6.6 Literary Analysis: Cultural Conflict . . Summary Squatters displaced by Literary Analysis: Cultural Conflict flooding have built a camp below Rohan’s (Spanish) . . . . . . . . . . . . hilltop house. After some robberies, the Reading Skill: Make Inferences . . . house owners decide to stop sharing water Reading Skill: Make Inferences (Spanish) so that the squatters will leave. One day, Vocabulary Study . . . . . . . . . Solani, a boy from the camp, comes to Vocabulary Practice . . . . . . . . the door asking for water. Rohan helps Solani carry the water to the camp, where Vocabulary Strategy . . . . . . . . Solani’s mother is giving birth. The boys Reading Check . . . . . . . . . . Question Support . . . . . . . . . form a connection, and Rohan learns to Grammar and Writing . . . . . . . . see the squatters differently. Key Idea: Right In literature, as in 51 52 53 OUT OF BOUNDS Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. ABOUT THIS SELECTION LESSON RESOURCES Plan and Teach 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 Assess Selection Test A . . . . . . . . . life, characters sometimes have to make Selection Test B/C . . . . . . . . difficult decisions based on what they think is right. As they read the story, All lesson resources are available students will observe the main character’s electronically on DVD struggle to make the right choice. 63–64 65–66 FOCUS STANDARDS • • Cultural Conflict Make Inferences Resource Manager Unit 7 Grade 8 43 Lesson Plan and Resource Guide Out of Bounds Short Story by Beverley Naidoo Objectives • • • • • • • • explore the key idea of telling right from wrong identify and analyze cultural conflicts read a short story make inferences build vocabulary for reading and writing use context to determine the meaning of homographs (also an EL language objective) use colons correctly use writing to analyze literature Unless otherwise noted, all resources can be found in the Resource Manager. All materials are also available on Easy Planner DVD. Pupil’s Edition and Teacher’s Edition Additional Resources CM=Copy Master T=Transparency Question/Key Idea p. 782 Author Biography and Background Information p. 783 Literature Center at ClassZone.com Teach Cultural Conflict p. 783 Make Inferences p. 783 Make Inferences CM—p. 55, Spanish p. 56 Vocabulary in Context p. 783 Vocabulary Study CM p. 57 Best Practices Toolkit Scaffolding Vocabulary Instruction pp. 43–46 Vocabulary Center at ClassZone.com Practice and Apply: Guided Practice Selection and Teacher Notes 44 “Out of Bounds,” pp. 784–796 Unit 7 Grade 8 Audio Anthology CD Summary CM—English and Spanish p. 51, Haitian Creole and Vietnamese p. 52 Resource Manager Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. OUT OF BOUNDS Focus and Motivate Pupil’s Edition and Teacher’s Edition Additional Resources CM=Copy Master T=Transparency Best Practices Toolkit Differentiated Instruction pp. 31–38 Scaffolding Reading Instruction pp. 43–46 Word Questioning p. E9 [T] Open Mind p. D11 [T] Common Suffixes p. E15 [T] Character Map p. D8 [T] Selection Questions p. 797 Reading Check CM p. 60 Cultural Conflict CM—p. 53, Spanish p. 54 Question Support CM p. 61 Additional Selection Questions p. 47 Alternative Standards Focus p. 46 Ideas for Extension pp. 48–49 Vocabulary Practice p. 798 Vocabulary in Writing p. 798 Vocabulary Strategy: Homographs p. 798 Vocabulary Practice CM p. 58 Vocabulary Strategy CM p. 59 Vocabulary Center at ClassZone.com Writing Prompts p. 799 Grammar and Writing p. 799 Writing Center at ClassZone.com Use Colons Correctly CM p. 62 Grammar Handbook—Pupil Edition p. R50 Assess Selection Test A CM pp. 63–64 Selection Test B/C CM pp. 65–66 Test Generator CD Reteach Standards Lesson File Literature Lesson 9: Setting and Its Roles Reading Lesson 8: Making Inferences Vocabulary Lesson 20: Homonyms and Homographs OUT OF BOUNDS Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. Practice and Apply: After Reading Assess and Reteach Make Inferences Homographs =Resources for Differentiation Resource Manager Unit 7 Grade 8 45 OUT OF BOUNDS Use as an alternative to the Alternative Standards Focus focus skills on PE page 783. The focus skills for “Out of Bounds” are cultural conflict and make inferences. The suggestions on this page allow you to teach an alternate or additional literary analysis skill using “Out of Bounds.” Literary Analysis: Plot Stages PASSAGE 1: lines 1–16 The five stages of plot are exposition (introduces the setting and the important characters), rising action (develops the conflict), climax (the point of maximum interest or tension), falling action (shows the results of the climax), and resolution (reveals the final outcome). What information does this part of the exposition reveal? (It describes the setting, which is a South African town and a squatters’ camp, introduces the main character, Rohan, and gives some information about the conflict between the squatters and the homeowners on the hill.) PASSAGE 2: lines 71–119 What complications arise for Rohan during the plot’s rising action? Give examples from this passage. (Rohan is intrigued by the boy who pushes the wire car, and he is torn between his father’s contempt toward the squatters and his mother’s concern.) PASSAGE 3: Is this passage the climax of the story, or another complication? (This is the climax of the story. Rohan has a new perspective—literally. In the squatters’ camp he feels nervous and uncomfortable, which is much the same way the squatters probably have felt when they have approached the home owners for water.) PASSAGE 4: lines 374–390 What two events in the story’s resolution mirror earlier events? During what stage of the plot did those events occur? In what way do the events reveal how Rohan has changed? (The events are watching a television news story about the rescue of the Mozambicans, and Rohan looking out his window toward the squatters’ camp. Both events occurred during the rising action of the story. At the end, Rohan observes the rescued mother more closely. He wonders about her pain in giving birth and whether anyone helped her. The second time he looks out his window toward the squatters’ camp, he thinks he sees a light in Solani’s house, and he prays that the squatters will be safe from the cyclone. The squatters are real people to him now.) For a lesson on plot, see Literature Lesson 5: Elements of Plot in the Standards Lesson File. 46 Unit 7 Grade 8 Resource Manager Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. OUT OF BOUNDS lines 301–332 OUT OF BOUNDS Use to supplement the Additional Selection Questions questions on PE page 797. Differentiation Use these questions to provide customized practice with comprehension and critical thinking skills. Easy Where could Solani make more money from his wire cars? Why is he unable to do so? (He could sell them at the mall, but the guards won’t let him into the shops.) 2. Key Idea: Right How did the home owners help the squatters? Why have they stopped helping them? (They used to give them access to their water but became nervous after some thefts in the neighborhood.) 3. Describe Cultural Conflict How does Rohan treat Solani when he gives him the water? How does Solani respond? (Rohan is bossy and arrogant. Solani responds with a quiet “thank you.”) 1. Explain Average Rohan’s father calls the squatters “tough as ticks.” Why does he make this comparison? To what might the squatters compare the home owners? (Ticks burrow under skin and can be very difficult to remove. Rohan’s father is saying that once the squatters dig in, it will be very difficult to get them out. Accept any reasonable comparisons that could be made by the squatters describing the home owners.) 5. Key Idea: Right If she were home, do you think Rohan’s mother would have opened the gate to let Solani fill his buckets? Cite evidence to support your answer. (Students who believe she would not open the gate should refer to the fact that she once allowed squatters access to water but stopped when neighbors were robbed. Students who believe she would have opened the gate should refer to her compassionate responses to the Mozambican woman and her occasional generosity to the children at the mall.) OUT OF BOUNDS Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. 4. Analyze Cultural Conflict Challenging Rohan has several chances to leave Solani and return home. Why does he continue to walk with Solani to the camp? (He is making the choice as much out of fear as a sense of what is right, as he is nervous about returning home by himself.) 7. Evaluate Cultural Conflict Two women give birth in this story—one gives birth during a flood in Mozambique, and another gives birth in a squatters’ camp. Why do you think the author included these two events in the story? Are they an effective illustration of the cultural differences between Rohan and Solani? (Both events show the vulnerability of people in dire circumstances. The story of the Mozambican woman is referred to in the early part of the story and also at the end; it is compared at the end to the birth of Solani’s sister. Most students will say that it is an effective illustration of how difficult Solani’s life is, in comparison to Rohan’s.) 6. Key Idea: Right Resource Manager Unit 7 Grade 8 47 OUT OF BOUNDS Ideas for Extension Differentiation These activities provide students with a variety of options for demonstrating understanding of lesson concepts. EXPLORATIONS AND ACTIVITIES ROLE-PLAY: EXPLORE CHARACTER Assign partners one of these two role-play activities: • conversation between Rohan and his parents, in which he justifies his journey to the squatters’ camp • conversation between Solani and his parents, in which he justifies asking Rohan for water and bringing Rohan into the camp For each scenario, suggest that the students playing the parents draw on information in the story about the words, actions, and attitudes of the people in each community. In response, have the students role-playing Rohan and Solani vigorously defend their actions, drawing on details in the story to support their choices. When students have completed their role plays, lead a discussion about what all of the characters have in common. In the role plays, were Rohan’s and Solani’s arguments able to convince their parents that they made the right choice? OUT OF BOUNDS Briefly review the concept of apartheid with the class. Tell students that the system of apartheid ended in response to two major pressures: explosive protests in the townships and sanctions by the international community. Divide students into two groups, and ask each one to research one of the above pressures. They should gather information to, on a separate sheet of paper, answer the following questions: • What were living conditions like in the townships? Who led the protests in the townships? In what parts of the country did these protests occur, and for how long? How did the government respond? • What kinds of sanctions did countries and other groups adopt against South Africa? What economic interests, both within and outside of South Africa, were threatened by the system of apartheid? Have each group appoint three representatives to present a panel discussion about the end of apartheid in South Africa. Encourage members of the audience to ask questions based on what they have learned through their research. ILLUSTRATE ROHAN’S JOURNEY: EXAMINE SETTING AND CHARACTER Review the details of setting and character in the story. Then ask students to paint or draw scenes that take place in Rohan’s house, his conversation with his father in the car, and his journey to the squatters’ camp and back. Encourage them to use details from the text in order to make their illustrations as close to the story’s descriptions as possible. Students may also want to use comic-strip panels to illustrate several stages 48 Unit 7 Grade 8 Resource Manager Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. PANEL DISCUSSION ON APARTHEID: EXAMINE HISTORICAL CONTEXT IDEAS FOR EXTENSION, CONTINUED of Rohan’s journey. Have students evaluate each other’s illustrations and discuss what details from the selection led them to picture the setting and the characters in that way. READ EXCERPTS: EVALUATE CULTURAL CONFLICTS Provide students with copies of excerpts from Naidoo’s books Journey to Jo’burg and Chain of Fire. Once they have read the excerpts, have them meet in small groups to discuss their impressions. Students should identify which work they felt was more effective at describing the cultural conflicts in apartheid-era South Africa, and why. Pre-AP Challenge: On her Web site (www.beverleynaidoo.com), the author discusses why she thinks her book Journey to Jo’burg was banned. In part, she says, it is likely that “the apartheid government thought it would encourage readers to ask challenging questions—especially young white South Africans who were being brought up to think that racism and discrimination were normal.” Have students discuss whether or not they believe that certain books can challenge the authority of a government or an oppressive system. INQUIRY AND RESEARCH Have students work with a partner to do library and Internet research about South Africa’s history. In addition to gathering information about important events, have them obtain visuals to illustrate those events. Students should compile the information and images they find to create timelines of key events in South Africa’s history. Have them give presentations to the class, explaining the various events. Tell them be prepared to answer questions from the class about these events. OUT OF BOUNDS Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. HISTORY OF SOUTH AFRICA WRITING SUMMARIZE MAIN IDEAS: NEWSPAPER FEATURE Have students write a newspaper feature about the circumstances in the story from the point of view of a reporter from another country who has come to Rohan’s town to do his or her research on South Africa’s culture. Suggest that students outline the article before they begin. Remind them to incorporate quotes from people mentioned in the story and to make their observations as objective as possible. Have students exchange their features with a partner and discuss whether they have thoroughly covered the key points. Resource Manager Unit 7 Grade 8 49 OUT OF BOUNDS Teacher Notes Review and Evaluate Outcome What did I want students to know or be able to do? How successful was the lesson? Evaluate Process What worked? • Strategies • Resources OUT OF BOUNDS • Differentiation Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. What did not work? Why not? Reflect The next time I teach “Out of Bounds,” what will I do differently? Why? Plan Ahead What must I do next? 50 Unit 7 Grade 8 Resource Manager OUT OF BOUNDS Summary OUT OF BOUNDS Beverly Naidoo Setting: South Africa, recent times Rohan is a young, Indian boy living with his parents in a segregated part of South Africa. The community Rohan and his neighbors live in is surrounded by a brick wall with barbed wire on top. This wall keeps them separated from the poor Africans who live down the hill from his family. The Africans live in shacks made from wood and metal scraps. They have no running water. One of the Africans is a boy named Solani. Solani earns money by making cars out of wire. Rohan wants to buy one of the cars, but his father thinks this is a bad idea. His father wants the people to leave the area, not encourage them to stay. One day, Rohan is home alone when Solani rings the bell to the front gate. He asks Rohan if he can fill the buckets he is carrying with water. He needs the water because his mother is having a baby. Rohan hesitates before letting him fill the buckets. He knows his parents would not approve. Rohan realizes that the water is too heavy for Solani to carry alone so he offers to help him. Rohan hasn’t walked down the hill since the shacks were built. He is worried about what might happen. FUERA DE LÍMITES Rohan es un niño indígena que vive con sus padres en una parte segregada de Sudáfrica. La comunidad Rohan y sus vecinos viven rodeados por un muro de ladrillos con alambre de púas en la parte de arriba. Este muro los mantiene separados de los africanos pobres que viven colina abajo. Los africanos viven en chozas hechas de madera y desechos de metal. No tienen agua corriente. Uno de los africanos es un niño llamado Solani. Solani gana dinero haciendo coches de alambre. Rohan quiere comprar uno de los coches, pero su padre piensa que no es una buena idea. Su padre quiere que esa gente se vaya del área y no desea alentarlos a que se queden. Un día, Rohan está sólo en casa cuando Solani toca el timbre de la puerta principal. Le pregunta a Rohan si puede llenar con agua las cubetas que está cargando. Necesita el agua porque su madre va a tener un bebé. Rohan duda antes de dejarlo llenar las cubetas. Sabe que sus padres no lo aprobarían. Rohan se da cuenta que el agua es muy pesada para que Solani la cargue sólo y se ofrece a ayudarlo. Rohan no ha bajado por la colina desde que construyeron las chozas. Está preocupado por lo que pueda pasar. Resource Manager OUT OF BOUNDS Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. Beverly Naidoo Escenario: Sudáfrica, época actual Unit 7 Grade 8 51 OUT OF BOUNDS Summary DEPASMAN LIMIT Beverly Naidoo Espas ak tan: Afrik-di-Sid, tan kounye a Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. OUT OF BOUNDS Rohan se yon jenn gason endyen k ap viv avèk paran li nan yon pati Afrik-di-Sid kote gen pwoblèm rasis. Kote kominote Rohan ak vwazen li yo ap viv la antoure avèk miray an brik ki gen fil fè anlè. Miray sa a separe yo avèk Afriken pòv k ap viv anba mòn nan, toupre fanmi li. Afriken yo ap vin nan joupa ki fèt avèk bwa ansanm ak lòt mòso metal. Yo pa gen dlo tiyo. Youn nan Afriken yo se yon ti gason ki rele Solani. Solani konn fè ti lajan nan fè machin avèk fil fè. Rohan vle achte youn nan machin yo, men papa li panse se pa yon bon lide. Papa li vle pou moun yo kite zòn nan, li pa ankouraje yo pou yo rete. Yon jou, Rohan poukont li nan kay la pandan Solani sonnen sonèt ki nan baryè devan an. Li mande Rohan si li ka plen plizyè bokit li te pote avèk dlo. Li bezwen dlo a paske manman li ap akouche yon tibebe. Rohan ezite anvan li kite Solani plen bokit yo. Li konnen paran li yo pa ta dakò sa. Rohan reyalize dlo a twò lou pou Solani pote poukont li, kidonk li ofri pou ede li. Rohan pa t janm ale anba mòn nan depi lè yo fin bati joupa yo. Li santi l enkyete pou sa ki kapab pase. 52 Unit 7 Grade 8 Resource Manager Name Date OUT OF BOUNDS COPY MASTER Literary Analysis CULTURAL CONFLICT When you read a story set in another country, knowing about the area’s history and culture can be important background. It can help you to understand the cultural conflicts that unfold. For example, the background information on page 783 will help you to understand the tensions that existed between different groups of people in South Africa where “Out of Bounds” takes place. Directions: In the diagram, write the causes that result in discrimination against the squatters by the residents of Mount View. Cause Effect discrimination against squatters OUT OF BOUNDS Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. Cause Cause Resource Manager Unit 7 Grade 8 53 Name Date FUERA DE LÍMITES COPY MASTER Literary Analysis CULTURAL CONFLICT Cuando lees un relato que sucede en otro país, es útil conocer la historia y la cultura del área. Esto puede ayudarte a entender los conflictos culturales que se desarrollan. Por ejemplo, la información básica de la página 783 te ayudará a comprender las tensiones que existían entre los diferentes grupos de personas en Sudáfrica, donde se lleva a cabo “Fuera de límites”. Instrucciones: En el diagrama, escribe las causas de la discriminación contra los ocupantes ilegales por los residentes de Mount View. Causa Efecto discriminación contra los ocupantes ilegales Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. SPANISH Causa Causa 54 Unit 7 Grade 8 Resource Manager Name Date OUT OF BOUNDS COPY MASTER Reading Skill MAKE INFERENCES Fiction writers do not always make direct statements about characters or the cultures in which they live. Instead, writers provide certain details and expect readers to combine these details with their own knowledge to “read between the lines” of a story. This process of forming logical guesses is called making inferences. Directions: In the chart, record your inferences about the characters in “Out of Bounds” and their culture. Evidence from Story My Knowledge Inference Father tops wall with wire Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. OUT OF BOUNDS Resource Manager Unit 7 Grade 8 55 Name Date FUERA DE LÍMITES COPY MASTER Reading Skill MAKE INFERENCES Los escritores de literatura de ficción no siempre hacen afirmaciones directas sobre sus personajes o las culturas donde viven. En cambio, los escritores proporcionan ciertos detalles y esperan que los lectores combinen estos detalles con sus propios conocimientos para “leer entre líneas” un relato. A este proceso de formar conjeturas lógicas se le llama hacer inferencias. Instrucciones: En la tabla, anota tus inferencias sobre los personajes de “Fuera de límites” y su cultura. Evidencia de la historia Mi conocimiento Inferencia Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. SPANISH El padre coloca alambre en la parte superior del muro. 56 Unit 7 Grade 8 Resource Manager Name Date OUT OF BOUNDS COPY MASTER Vocabulary Study A. Directions: Cover up or fold under the right-hand column. As your teacher reads each sentence, listen for the boldfaced word. Discuss possible meanings for the word. Then check your answers by reading the definition in the right-hand column. How It Is Used Definition 1. bound Laughing, we watched the huge dog b ound joyfully out the door—and land on Dad. leap forward 2. engrossed Maria was so eager to engross herself in what she was reading that she hardly minded the long car ride. to occupy one completely 3. glimmer Just before sunrise, Jan saw a slight glimmer of light on the horizon. A faint sign 4. hampered Mr. Binewski knew his broken leg would hamper him on his vacation to Peru. He wouldn’t be able to mountain-climb, as he had planned. prevent the free movement of 5. maroon As Lisa waited for her ride, she began to worry. “Surely Mom wouldn’t maroon me at the library,” she thought. to leave behind in a place from which there is little hope of escape 6. sect Emiliano resigned from the church he had grown up in and joined a small religious sect. a religious group 7. straggled If you straggle behind the leader on this hike, you run the risk of being left behind when she moves ahead! to spread out in a scattered group 8. vigorously After the holidays, Carl committed to exercising vigorously to get rid of the extra pounds he had put on. He knew he would have to work really hard to lose the weight. energetically OUT OF BOUNDS Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. Word B. Directions: On a separate sheet of paper, write a sentence for each word. If possible, have your sentences tell a story. Resource Manager Unit 7 Grade 8 57 Name Date OUT OF BOUNDS COPY MASTER Vocabulary Practice bound glimmer maroon straggle engross hamper sect vigorously A. Fill in each set of blanks with the correct word from the word list. Then use the boxed letters to complete the sentence below. 1. Jeff had to down the stairs to catch the bus in time. 2. The forecast gave only a 3. Julia watched the ducklings 4. The witness of hope that it would not rain. behind their mother. defended the suspect and helped convince the jury that the police had arrested the wrong man. 5. Toni knew that the heavy backpack would her on the bike ride back to her home. 6. them on The theft of the family’s boat would temporarily the island until another way home could be secured. OUT OF BOUNDS 7. Darryl promised Eric that the book would totally him and 8. The investigation began when members of the were spotted soliciting donations and handing out propaganda. B. Choose the word in each group that is closest in meaning to the boldfaced word. 1. bound confer spring 2. restore upgrade engross persuade disgust 58 3. Unit 7 Grade 8 hint emphasis 4. limit captivate glimmer distinction figment hamper shield permit impede buttress Resource Manager Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. that he would not be able to set it down. Name Date OUT OF BOUNDS COPY MASTER Vocabulary Strategy HOMOGRAPHS Many English words have more than one meaning. For example, in the phrase “out of bounds,” bounds means “boundaries.” However, in the sentence “Solani bounds up the hill,” bounds means “springs forward.” Words such as these that have different dictionary entries and different origins are called homographs. If a familiar word does not make sense to you, look at the words around it for context clues to other possible meanings. For further help, check a dictionary. 2. After school, Tom has a job working in the produce section of the supermarket. 3. Marcus warned his brother not to associate with the new neighbors down the street. 4. Eva can’t take the humanities course because it conflicts with her chemistry lab. 5. The candidate stayed after his speech to field questions from the audience. 6. Emma’s horse was winning the race until it pulled up lame on the last lap. 7. It’s a great neighborhood to skateboard in except for the steep incline at Market Street. 8. During the early morning, city workers drive around and pick up neighborhood refuse. 9. Rhonda had to climb out on the limb of the tree to untangle her kite. Resource Manager OUT OF BOUNDS Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. Directions: Use context clues to define the boldfaced words. Then check your definitions in a dictionary. 1. The director told Dana to stand at the back of the theater and project her lines. Unit 7 Grade 8 59 Name Date OUT OF BOUNDS COPY MASTER Reading Check 60 2. Why does Rohan admire Solani’s wire cars? 3. Why does Solani come to Rohan’s house with buckets? 4. How is Rohan’s home different from Solani’s home? 5. What do Rohan and Solani do that might get them into trouble at the end of the story? Unit 7 Grade 8 Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. OUT OF BOUNDS Directions: Recall the events in Beverley Naidoo’s short story. Then answer the questions in phrases or sentences. 1. Why do many people to come to Rohan’s area to live? Resource Manager Name Date OUT OF BOUNDS COPY MASTER Question Support LITERARY ANALYSIS For questions 1–3, see page 797 of the Pupil Edition. Directions: Answer each question. 4. Make Inferences About Characters Circle the reasons that might explain why Rohan decides to help Solani. Rohan and Solani played together. b. Rohan and Solani are the same age. c. Rohan sees Solani often. a. Rohan and Solani go to the same school. e. Solani really seems to need help. f. Rohan admires Solani’s wire cars. d. Think about the history and culture of South Africa. Give two reasons why the house owners might mistrust the squatters. 5. Analyze Cultural Conflict Think about how Rohan’s parents feel about the Africans and Rohan’s experience at the squatter’s camp. Complete the following sentences. 6. Evaluate Attitudes OUT OF BOUNDS Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. Rohan’s mother and father show prejudice against Africans because The Africans at the squatters camp show prejudice against Rohan because Underline one name in parentheses and then complete the following sentence. 7. Make Judgments I think (Rohan/Solani) took the greater risk by going out of bounds because 8. Predict Circle one choice in parentheses and then complete the following sentence. I think Rohan and Solani (will/will not) be able to maintain their friendship because Resource Manager Unit 7 Grade 8 61 Name OUT OF BOUNDS Date COPY MASTER Grammar and Writing USE COLONS CORRECTLY A colon should be placed after a formal greeting in a business letter (To Whom It May Concern:) and before a list of items (I had the following foods for breakfast: eggs, toast, and cereal). When using a colon to introduce a list, avoid placing it directly after a verb or a preposition. Instead, insert the colon after a noun or after the words the following. Original: The squatters suffer from: poverty, homelessness, and a lack of water. Revised: The squatters suffer from the following: poverty, homelessness, and a lack of water. (Inserting the following after the preposition from makes use of the colon correct.) Directions: Correct the colon errors in the following passage. Rewrite the sentences that contain errors. Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. OUT OF BOUNDS To construct their hideouts, the kids had dragged up: planks, pipes, and sheets of metal and plastic. The area was now used by the squatters, who had been forced from their homes. Not everyone was happy about the squatters’ presence. Squatters were accused of: thefts, carjackings and break-ins. Nonetheless, Rohan found it difficult to deny the squatter boy help when he needed it. Rohan helped the boy carry water back to his house, which was made out of: iron, wood, and plastic. 62 Unit 7 Grade 8 Resource Manager Name Date OUT OF BOUNDS Selection Test A Comprehension Read each of the following questions. Then choose the letter of the best answer. (6 points each) 1. What does Rohan’s father do when squatters first move near the house? 4. ignores the squatter children B. carries water to Solani’s house C. begs to be allowed to stay home D. keeps the wire car from his parents A. builds up the garden wall B. sends Rohan to a new school C. puts stronger locks on the doors D. invites the squatters to use his water tap A. 5. 2. Rohan’s father compares the squatters to ticks. This comment illustrates the conflict between the squatters and government officials in Rohan’s country B. young people from the village C. people from their old country D. homeowners living on the hill A. 3. What does Rohan do to help Solani? The squatters are like the homeowners on the hill because both feel wary of strangers near their homes B. come from an unsafe country C. have equal access to medical help D. want the government to help the squatters A. OUT OF BOUNDS You can infer that the rescue of the mother and baby affects Rohan’s mother emotionally because she tells Rohan to keep the door closed to strangers B. suggests that the government help the people C. tries to get Rohan to visit his married sister D. leaves Rohan alone for an entire evening Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. A. Resource Manager Unit 7 Grade 8 63 Name Date SELECTION TEST A, CONTINUED Vocabulary Choose the answer that best explains the meaning of each underlined word. (6 points each) 6. To straggle means to 9. speak in a halting way B. make a home C. spread out in a scattered group D. fight with an enemy shout joyously B. spread throughout C. leap forward D. twist forcefully A. 7. What does vigorously mean? foolishly B. energetically C. secretly D. gracefully A. 8. To bound means to A. 10. To hamper people means to prevent their free movement B. coordinate their efforts C. lead them through a difficult time D. criticize their attempts A. What is a glimmer? the small mark on tools B. a smooth, shiny surface C. an unusual signal D. a faint sign OUT OF BOUNDS A. Short Response On a separate sheet of paper, answer the following questions based on your knowledge of the story. (10 points each) 11. What two pieces of evidence show that Solani and his brother are unable to make much money from selling their wire cars? 12. Briefly describe the construction of Solani’s home. Extended Response Answer the following question based on your knowledge of the story. Write one or two paragraphs on a separate sheet of paper. (20 points) 13. How do you think Rohan’s parents would respond if he told them about helping Solani? Use two details from the story to support your response. 64 Unit 7 Grade 8 Resource Manager Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. Written Response Name Date OUT OF BOUNDS Selection Test B/C Comprehension Read each of the following questions. Then choose the letter of the best answer. (6 points each) 1. The homeowners on the hill at first help the squatters. What happens to change their attitudes? 4. Thefts and break-ins occur. B. Cyclone Gloria threatens to flood the area. C. Squatters tear down their children’s hideouts. D. Squatters attend school at Mount View Primary. The news reports large fights between groups. B. Rohan’s mother wants him to visit his sister. C. Rohan’s mother wants the government to help. D. Some of the squatters taunt Rohan in the village. A. 2. Rohan’s guilt about imagining drowning people like ticks motivates him to Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. 3. You can infer that guards keep squatter children from entering the mall because they think the children A. 5. Why does Rohan hide his visit to Solani’s home from his parents? He believes that keeping secrets from everyone will be fun. B. He is worried that his parents will be angry with him for visiting the squatters. C. His parents have already yelled at him a few times that day. D. He knows that both parents refuse to help the squatters. A. OUT OF BOUNDS open the gate to give water to the boy he saw with wire cars B. beg his mother to stay home from his sister’s house C. start on his homework before going outside to play D. wonder whether Solani and he would be friends at school A. How do you know that a cultural conflict exists between the squatters and the people in Rohan’s community? should be attending school B. want to find jobs at the mall C. might bother shoppers or steal D. would want to live close to the mall A. Resource Manager Unit 7 Grade 8 65 Name Date SELECTION TEST B/C, CONTINUED Vocabulary Choose the answer that best explains the meaning of each underlined word. (6 points each) 6. To straggle means to 9. overcome a difficulty with great effort B. aid others who live nearby C. try to make a good deal D. spread out in a scattered group argue loudly B. insult continually C. occupy completely D. believe entirely A. 7. To maroon people means to leave them in a place with little hope of escape B. make a false accusation against them C. expose them to dangerous situations D. follow a winding course to them A. 8. To engross means to A. 10. To hamper means to limit free movement B. reduce in size C. muffle sound D. walk slowly A. What is a sect? an unwanted piece of land B. a religious group C. a secret hiding place D. an unknown person Written Response Short Response On a separate sheet of paper, answer the following questions based on your knowledge of the story. (10 points each) 11. What are two details that indicate Rohan’s father’s distrust of the squatters? 12. How do most people in the squatters’ camp react to Rohan’s presence? Support your response with a detail from the story. Extended Response Answer one of the following questions based on your knowledge of the story. Write one or two paragraphs on a separate sheet of paper. (20 points) 13. How are the homeowners who live on the hill and the squatters who live in the camp similar and different? Support your response with specific details from the story. 14. 66 Challenge Has Rohan lost or gained more from the time the squatters first came? Support your response with details from the story. Unit 7 Grade 8 Resource Manager Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. OUT OF BOUNDS A. Lesson at a Glance retold by mary pope osborne WHY THIS SELECTION? Folk tales, most of which have been passed down via oral tradition, preserve history and culture. “Pecos Bill” is an excellent example of the larger-than-life folk hero tales that were popular in 19th century rural America. ABOUT THIS SELECTION Pupil/Teacher’s Edition Pages: 800–809 Difficulty Level: Average Readability Scores: Lexile: 950; Fry: 6.5; Dale-Chall: 6.2 coyotes in Texas until, at age 17, he joins human society to become the greatest cowboy ever. Bill becomes the leader of the Hell’s Gate Gang and controls the entire Southwest. During a drought he ropes a cyclone and wrings water from it. Later, he marries a tough cowgirl, Slue-foot Sue, who is bucked into the sky by Bill’s horse. Bill tries to get her back with his lasso but is pulled up into the sky too. They both end up on the moon, where they now live with their family. Key Idea: Folk Hero Throughout the selection, students will explore the question, “What makes a folk hero?” The character of Pecos Bill exemplifies the uniquely American folk hero, a character with extraordinary qualities who masters Resource Manager FOCUS STANDARDS • • Tall Tale Visualize LESSON RESOURCES Plan and Teach Lesson Plan and Resource Guide Alternative Standards Focus . . Additional Selection Questions . Ideas for Extension . . . . . Teacher Notes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 68–69 . . 70 . . 71 . 72–73 . . 74 Student Copy Masters Summary (English, Spanish) . . . . . 75 76 Summary (Haitian Creole, Vietnamese) Literary Analysis: Tall Tale . . . . . 77 Literary Analysis: Tall Tale (Spanish) . 78 79 Reading Strategy: Visualize . . . . . Reading Strategy: Visualize (Spanish) . 80 Reading Check . . . . . . . . . . 81 82 Question Support . . . . . . . . . Reading Fluency . . . . . . . . 83–84 Assess Selection Test A . . . . . . . . . Selection Test B/C . . . . . . . . PECOS BILL Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. Summary Bill is reared by a pack of his environment in ways both outlandish and humorous. 85–86 87–88 All lesson resources are available electronically on DVD Unit 7 Grade 8 67 Lesson Plan and Resource Guide Pecos Bill Tall Tale Retold by Mary Pope Osborne Objectives explore the key idea of folk heroes • identify and analyze characteristics of a tall tale • read a tall tale • visualize • Unless otherwise noted, all resources can be found in the Resource Manager. All materials are also available on Easy Planner DVD. Pupil’s Edition and Teacher’s Edition Additional Resources CM=Copy Master T=Transparency Focus and Motivate Question/Key Idea p. 800 Author Biography and Background Information p. 801 Literature Center at ClassZone.com Teach Tall Tale p. 801 Visualize p. 801 Visualize CM—p. 79, Spanish p. 80 Practice and Apply: Guided Practice Selection and Teacher Notes “Pecos Bill,” pp. 802–808 Audio Anthology CD Summary CM—English and Spanish p. 75, Haitian Creole and Vietnamese p. 76 Reading Fluency CM pp. 83–84 PECOS BILL Best Practices Toolkit Differentiated Instruction pp. 31–38 Scaffolding Reading Instruction pp. 43–46 New Word Analysis p. E8 [T] T Chart p. A25 [T] Practice and Apply: After Reading 68 Selection Questions p. 809 Unit 7 Grade 8 Reading Check CM p. 81 Tall Tale CM—p. 77, Spanish p. 78 Question Support CM p. 82 Additional Selection Questions p. 71 Alternative Standards Focus p. 70 Resource Manager Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. Pupil’s Edition and Teacher’s Edition Additional Resources CM=Copy Master T=Transparency Ideas for Extension pp. 72–73 Assess Selection Test A CM pp. 85–86 Selection Test B/C CM pp. 87–88 Test Generator CD Reteach Standards Lesson File Literature Lesson 1: Types of Characters and Character Traits Assess and Reteach Tall Tale PECOS BILL Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. =Resources for Differentiation Resource Manager Unit 7 Grade 8 69 PECOS BILL Use as an alternative to the Alternative Standards Focus focus skills on PE page 801. The focus skills for “Pecos Bill” are tall tale and visualize. The suggestions on this page allow you to teach an alternate or additional literary analysis skill using this selection. Literary Analysis: Style PASSAGE 1: lines 1–24 Based on these first paragraphs of “Pecos Bill,” how would you describe the author’s style? Cite evidence from the text to support your answer. (The author’s style is informal and conversational. Examples that support this include talking directly to the reader [“If you didn’t know already”], the use of Texas slang and dialect [“his pappy,”], and informal language [“movin’,” “gettin’”].) PASSAGE 2: lines 110–139 How does the author’s style reflect the historical time period in which the story is set? (The author’s use of Texas dialect, her use of cowboy slang, and her references to real places, such as the Rio Grande and Death Valley, and natural disasters, such as drought and cyclones, reflect the time period and add a sense of realism to an otherwise over-the-top tale.) PASSAGE 3: The use of figurative language, including similes, is one element of an author’s style. Identify three similes in this passage. Which one do you think is the most effective? Why? (Examples of similes include “rivers turned as powdery as biscuit flour” [lines 117–118], “horses and cows were starting to dry up and blow away like balls of tumbleweed” [lines 122–123], and “a young colt that was as tough as a tiger and as crazy as a streak of lightning” [lines 143–144]. Students’ choices for most effective simile will vary, but some may choose the last example because the comparison paints a vivid picture of how wild Widow Maker is.) PASSAGE 4: entire tale PECOS BILL How does the author’s style and use of figurative language affect your understanding and appreciation of the story? (The author’s use of figurative language creates a series of vivid mental images that help readers to visualize the characters and actions. Figurative language adds to readers’ appreciation of the story because many of the author’s choices are as funny as Bill’s exploits. Students will probably say that the informal style gives them a clear and vivid sense of the characters and their world.) For a lesson on style, see Literature Lesson 38: Style in the Standards Lesson File. 70 Unit 7 Grade 8 Resource Manager Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. lines 116–142 PECOS BILL Use to supplement the Additional Selection Questions questions on PE page 808. Differentiation Use these questions to provide customized practice with comprehension and critical thinking skills. Easy Reread the opening lines of the tale. How does the author use exaggeration to create humor in this passage? (Bill’s father claims that the neighbors living 50 miles away would crowd them, creating a humorous impression of an eccentric family.) 2. Identify Tall Tale Reread the list of common tall tale characteristics on page 801. Based on this list, does “Pecos Bill” qualify as a tall tale? Explain. (Yes. “Pecos Bill” includes all three qualities listed. The character of Pecos Bill is larger than life, all his problems are solved in humorous ways, and the author uses hyperbole throughout to add humor to the tale.) 1. Clarify Average Why do you think Bill names his colt Widow Maker? (The colt is so wild and fierce that people who ride him are risking their lives. If a man tries to ride the colt, he will most likely be killed, leaving his wife a widow.) 4. Key Idea: Folk Hero What does the character of Pecos Bill reveal about the qualities admired in the culture of the West at this time? (Pecos Bill is strong and brave. He is able to solve problems, rope and ride anything, and run a ranch. All of these are qualities that would have helped the cowboys, ranchers, and settlers in the West find success.) 3. Make Inferences Think about another literary genre with which you are familiar, such as myths. Identify one way characters in tall tales are similar to those in myths. In what ways are they different? (In both mythology and tall tales, the main character possesses superhuman qualities. However, many characters in myths are not human, while the characters in tall tales are.) 6. Evaluate In order to visualize effectively, readers rely on the author to provide sensory details, especially those that appeal to their senses of sight, sound, and touch. Do you think the author provided enough of these images? Explain. (Since the author packs the selection with details that appeal to her readers’ senses, such as “scuttling about naked and dirty” and “none of them seemed to smell quite as bad as he did,” most students will respond that the author provided more than enough sensory details.) 7. Key Idea: Folk Hero One disadvantage of certain genres, including fairy tales and folk tales, is that the characters are not fully developed. Do you think the same is true about the character of Pecos Bill? Why or why not? (Pecos Bill is not fully developed. Readers learn very little about him beyond his appearance and extraordinary qualities. Readers do not understand his motivations and he doesn’t change or grow the way more fully developed characters do.) 5. Compare Genres Resource Manager PECOS BILL Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. Challenging Unit 7 Grade 8 71 PECOS BILL Ideas for Extension Differentiation These activities provide students with a variety of options for demonstrating understanding of lesson concepts. EXPLORATIONS AND ACTIVITIES CREATE POSTER: ANALYZE STYLE One of the highlights of “Pecos Bill” is the over-the-top main character’s qualities and adventures, all of which are described in vivid, imagery-laden language by the author. Invite students to create a book poster, sharing what they enjoyed the most about the language of “Pecos Bill.” Have students begin by choosing four passages that they believe best represent the author’s use of language to add humor to the story. Then have students divide a large piece of paper into four equal parts. Direct students to copy one passage on to each selection and then illustrate the passage. Encourage students to share their posters with the class and explain why they chose each passage. PERFORM MONOLOGUE: EXPLORE POINT OF VIEW Explain that in the oral tradition, stories are typically told from the third-person point of view, with the storyteller as the narrator. In contrast, a monologue is told using a first-person point of view. Monologues can be addressed to other characters or to the audience, or they may involve a character talking to him- or herself. Invite students to select an episode in the story and tell it from the first-person point of view of either Pecos Bill or Slue-foot Sue. Remind students to choose words carefully to be consistent with how their characters would speak. Invite students to perform their monologues for the class. Pecos Bill includes numerous references to specific places in the American southwest, including states, rivers, and landmarks. Have students work in pairs to create maps based on these references. First, have pairs skim the tale to create a list of place to include in their maps. Then have them use an atlas to draw their maps. Once students have labeled all necessary places, challenge them to indicate on their map Bill’s adventures across the American Southwest. Remind students to include a legend to help others read their maps. INQUIRY AND RESEARCH THE WORLD OF PECOS BILL: REALITY VS. FANTASY PECOS BILL While many folk tales are based on real people, including Davy Crockett and John Henry, “Pecos Bill” is based on a fictional character. Yet despite the absurdities of Bill’s adventures, real places and events are sprinkled through the tale. Have students research at least two of the following questions to see which details from the story are fact and which are fantasy: • Was there a terrible drought in 19th century Texas? • How long is the equator? 72 Unit 7 Grade 8 Resource Manager Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. CREATE MAP: IDENTIFY SETTING IDEAS FOR EXTENSION, CONTINUED Do cyclones sound like a “terrible roar,” cause the sky to turn purple, or make cattle stampede? • How much distance can a cyclone cover? • How was Death Valley created? • Is there a Pecos River? If so, where is it located? • Have students share their findings with the class. After students have presented their information, discuss what they uncovered about the realistic details in the story. Ask students if they were surprised by any of the findings and why. WRITING ANALYZE SETTING: PECOS BILL ADAPTATION Tall tales such as “Pecos Bill” combine realistic historical details with wildly preposterous, imaginative, and comical fantasies. Often the setting itself is quite realistic. Pecos Bill lives and travels in real American places, yet his adventures and qualities are anything but realistic. Ask students how important they think elements of setting are in tall tales. Challenge them to find out by rewriting “Pecos Bill” in a contemporary setting. For example, students might set the events of the story in a large American city in either the present or future. Encourage them to rethink descriptions that link the story to 19th century Texas. Ask students to consider how they might convey Bill’s exploits and character traits in a context other than that of cowboys in the American Southwest. Have students take an event from their daily lives or from recent history and rewrite it in the form of a tall tale. To help students organize their writing, suggest they incorporate into their stories three or more elements from the chart shown below. Common Elements of Tall Tales How I Will Use in My Tale Main character with extraordinary qualities Outlandish event(s) Informal language Humor Exaggeration PECOS BILL Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. EXPLORE GENRE: ORIGINAL TALL TALE Slang After writing, students can reflect on the activity by responding to the following questions in their journals: • Why did I choose the event I used? • Which elements of a tall tale did I find easiest to incorporate into my story? Resource Manager Unit 7 Grade 8 73 PECOS BILL Teacher Notes Review and Evaluate Outcome What did I want students to know or be able to do? How successful was the lesson? Evaluate Process What worked? • Strategies • Resources • Differentiation Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. What did not work? Why not? Reflect PECOS BILL The next time I teach “Pecos Bill,” what will I do differently? Why? Plan Ahead What must I do next? 74 Unit 7 Grade 8 Resource Manager PECOS BILL Summary PECOS BILL retold By Mary Pope Osborne Setting: Western Texas, the 1800s “Pecos Bill” is a tall tale, a story that uses exaggeration to tell about a superhuman character. In the story, Bill is raised by a pack of coyotes in Texas. At age 17, he becomes the leader of the Hell’s Gate Gang and controls the entire Southwest region of the United States. During a drought, he ropes a cyclone and wrings water from it. Later, he marries Slue-foot Sue who is bucked into the sky by Bill’s horse. He tries to get her back with his lasso. Instead he, too, is pulled up to the sky. PECOS BILL Vuelto a contar por Mary Pope Osborne Escenario: Oeste de Texas, 1800 PECOS BILL Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. “Pecos Bill” es una leyenda fantástica, un relato que usa la exageración para hablar de un personaje sobrehumano. En el relato, a Bill lo cría una jauría de coyotes en Texas. A los 17 años, se convierte en el líder de la Pandilla de la Entrada del Infierno y controla toda la región del suroeste de los Estados Unidos. Durante una sequía, él ata con una cuerda un ciclón y le exprime el agua. Posteriormente, se casa con Slue-foot Sue, que es lanzada al cielo por el caballo de Bill. Él trata de atraparla con su lazo, pero él también es jalado hacia el cielo. Resource Manager Unit 7 Grade 8 75 PECOS BILL Summary PECOS BILL Se Mary Pope Osborne ki re-rakonte li Espas ak tan: Lwès Tegzas, ane 1800 yo PECOS BILL Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. “Pecos Bill” se yon gwo lejann, yon istwa ki gen egzajerasyon ladan. ki pale osijè yon pèsonaj ki gen pi fò pase tout moun. Nan istwa a, se yon gwoup koyòt ki fè edikasyon Bill nan Tegzas. Lè li gen 17 tan, li vin lidè Hell’s Gate Gang epi li kontwole tout rejyon Sidwès Etazini. Pandan yon peryòd sechrès, li mare yon siklòn epi li pran dlo ladan. Pita, li marye avèk Slue-foot Sue ki twouve l anpetre nan syèl la ak cheval Bill la. Bil eseye fè li retounen avèk laso li. Olye sa, li limenm tou chwal la rale l monte nan syèl. 76 Unit 7 Grade 8 Resource Manager Name Date PECOS BILL COPY MASTER Literary Analysis TALL TALE Folk heroes often appear in tall tales, which are humorous stories about impossible events. Many of these stories were originally passed down from generation to generation by being told out loud. Tall tales have these characteristics: • The hero or heroine is often larger than life—bigger, louder, stronger, and stranger than any real person could be. • Problems are solved in humorous ways. • Hyperbole, or exaggeration, is used to emphasize the main character’s qualities and create humor. Directions: In the chart, record examples of each element of a tall tale from “Pecos Bill.” Element of a Tall Tale Example Problems solved in a humorous way Hyperbole PECOS BILL Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. Larger-than-life hero or heroine Resource Manager Unit 7 Grade 8 77 Name Date PECOS BILL COPY MASTER Literary Analysis TALL TALE Los héroes populares aparecen con frecuencia en las leyendas fantásticas, que son historias humorísticas sobre sucesos imposibles. Varias de estas historias se pasaron de generación en generación, narradas de viva voz. Las leyendas fantásticas tienen las siguientes características. • El héroe o heroína supera la realidad: es más grande, más ruidoso, más fuerte y más raro que cualquier otra persona real pudiera ser. • Los problemas se resuelven de una manera humorística. • La hipérbole, o exageración, se usa para enfatizar las cualidades del personaje principal y crear el humor. Instrucciones: En la tabla, anota ejemplos de cada elemento de una leyenda fantástica de “Pecos Bill” Elemento de una leyenda fantástica Ejemplo Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. Héroe o heroína que supera la realidad Problemas resueltos de una manera humorística. SPANISH Hipérbole 78 Unit 7 Grade 8 Resource Manager Name Date PECOS BILL COPY MASTER Reading Strategy VISUALIZE To enjoy tall tales fully, it helps to visualize, or picture in your mind, the incredible events in the story. To visualize, focus on descriptions that appeal to your senses, especially those of sight, sound, and touch. Use these sensory details to form a mental picture of the characters and action. Directions: In the chart, note descriptive words and phrases that help you visualize the characters and events of the tall tale. An example has been done for you. Character or Event “sat there in the dirt” “rattle off in a cloud of dust” PECOS BILL Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. Little Bill falls out of the wagon Descriptive Words or Phrases Resource Manager Unit 7 Grade 8 79 Name Date PECOS BILL COPY MASTER Reading Strategy VISUALIZE Para disfrutar por completo las leyendas fantásticas, es útil visualizar, o formar una imagen en tu mente de los sucesos increíbles del relato. Para visualizar, enfócate en las descripciones que atraen tus sentidos, especialmente los de la vista, el sonido y el tacto. Usa estos detalles sensoriales para formarte una imagen mental de los personajes y la acción. Instrucciones: En la tabla, anota palabras descriptivas y frases que te ayuden a visualizar a los personajes y sucesos de una leyenda fantástica. Sigue el ejemplo. Personaje o suceso “sat there in the dirt” “rattle off in a cloud of dust” Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. El pequeño Bill se cae del vagón. Palabras o frases descriptivas SPANISH . 80 Unit 7 Grade 8 Resource Manager Name Date PECOS BILL COPY MASTER Reading Check 2. What is the reputation of the Hell’s Gate Gang? 3. What does Pecos Bill do when a cyclone threatens his ranch? 4. Why does Pecos Bill want to stop Slue-foot Sue from riding his horse? 5. Where do people say that Slue-foot Sue and Pecos Bill live at the end of the story? PECOS BILL Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. Directions: Recall the events in the tall tale that Mary Pope Osborne retells. Then answer the questions in phrases or sentences. 1. How does Pecos Bill meet the coyote that raises him? Resource Manager Unit 7 Grade 8 81 Name Date PECOS BILL COPY MASTER Question Support LITERARY ANALYSIS For questions 1–3, see page 809 of the Pupil Edition. Directions: Answer each question. 4. Examine a Tall Tale Complete the following sentence. Pecos Bill is larger than life because 5. Visualize Underline one event in parentheses, and then complete the sentence. The event I pictured most clearly was (Bill’s trip to Hell’s Gate Canyon/Bill’s wedding day) because In the chart, tell what you learn about Bill through each method of characterization. 6. Analyze Characterization Appearance Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. Bill’s Words, Thoughts, and Actions Comments of Others Narrator’s Comments PECOS BILL 7. Draw Conclusions Complete the sentence that follows. I think Bill became a folk hero in American culture because 82 Unit 7 Grade 8 Resource Manager Name Date PECOS BILL COPY MASTER Reading Fluency TRACKING ORAL READING RATE AND ACCURACY Directions: Use this passage about the legendary Davy Crockett, with the activity on page 84. Follow the directions on that page. In some American tall tales the heroes sprung from the imaginations of storytellers. Other tales were about real people. These heroes inspired larger than life stories, sometimes while they were still alive. One such character was Davy Crockett. Popular legends about Davy Crockett said that he was born on a mountaintop in Tennessee and killed a bear when he was three years old. In fact, he was born in a small log cabin on the banks of the Nolichucky River in Tennessee. While he did not kill a bear at age three, he was an expert marksman and won many shooting as David Crockett. The nickname “Davy” actually came from a misreading of the letters of his signature. Crockett was a natural storyteller who loved to exaggerate his exploits as a hunter and frontiersman. He was known for his quick wit and sense of fairness. Crockett’s popularity won him two terms in the Tennessee state legislature and three terms in the PECOS BILL Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. contests as a young man. Also, during his lifetime he was known United States Congress. When he failed to win reelection for a fourth term, Crockett moved to Texas where he joined in the struggle to win independence from Mexico. He died in the Battle of the Alamo on March 6, 1836. (213 words) Resource Manager Unit 7 Grade 8 83 Name Date PECOS BILL COPY MASTER Reading Fluency TRACKING ORAL READING RATE AND ACCURACY When you read aloud, your goal is to help the listener understand the text. To do this, read the words accurately and with expression. Use a normal speaking rate. Try not to read too quickly or too slowly. Directions to the Reader: 1. Read the passage on page 83 aloud to your checker for one minute. Have your checker tell you when to start and stop. Your goal is to read at least 140–180 words correctly per minute. 2. Look at the marks your checker made. Color the chart to show the number of words you read correctly 3. Repeat steps 1 and 2 three times. Try to increase your speed each time, while still reading each word correctly 4. Then answer the questions below the chart to evaluate your progress Directions to the Checker: 1. Tell your partner when to begin reading. Lightly underline each word your partner skips or mispronounces. Jot down words he or she adds 2. After one minute, say “stop” and circle the last word your partner read 3. Share the marks you made with your reader. Then erase the marks Timed-Reading Fluency Chart Reading 4 Reading 2 PECOS BILL 84 210–219 200–209 190–199 180–189 170–179 160–169 150–159 140–149 130–139 120–129 110–119 100–109 90–99 80–89 Number of Words Read Correctly Per Minute 1–79 Reading 1 1. How did reading the passage several times affect your speed and accuracy? 2. Summarize the effect of repeated readings on your understanding of the passage. Unit 7 Grade 8 Resource Manager Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. Reading 3 Name Date PECOS BILL Selection Test A Comprehension Read each of the following questions. Then choose the letter of the best answer. (6 points each) 1. Why does Pecos Bill’s father move his family from eastern Texas? His family has grown to 15 children. B. Grizzly bears have been playing with the baby. C. Some neighbors have moved in 50 miles away. D. The weather in eastern Texas has become too hot. 5. takes over the gang B. faces down a cyclone C. refuses to comb his hair D. invents tarantulas and scorpions A. 2. A. 6. putting on an elegant buckskin suit B. howling at the moon like a coyote C. letting her ride his favorite horse D. riding a cyclone until it is tame A. 7. What does this description of Pecos Bill help you visualize? “He’d just throw some water on his face in the morning and go around the rest of the day looking like a wet dog.” his appearance B. the feel of his hair C. his love of swimming D. the smell of a wet dog One way in which Slue-foot Sue is a larger-than-life character in this tall tale is that she loves Bill more than he loves her B. decides to ride Bill’s wild horse C. war-whoops when she rides D. has a bit of coyote in her A. A. 8. After flying off the back of Widow Maker, Slue-foot Sue bounces inside a moon crater over her own cabin C. on her steel bustle D. into Death Valley A. B. 4. Pecos Bill wants to find the Hell’s Gate Gang because he wants to join the gang B. fight the gang C. scare the gang D. catch the gang A. Resource Manager PECOS BILL Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. 3. Pecos Bill wins the love of Slue-foot Sue by A. Pecos Bill realizes that he is human when it is pointed out that he howls at the moon B. lacks a tail C. smells bad D. has fleas Pecos Bill shows an odd sense of humor when he Unit 7 Grade 8 85 Name Date SELECTION TEST A, CONTINUED 9. What does this list of places help you visualize? “She flew over plains and mesas, over canyons, deserts, and prairies.” how high and far Sue flies B. how much Sue misses Earth C. the colors of the Earth below D. the excitement Sue feels when flying A. 10. What does this tall tale say causes the sound of rolling thunder? Slue-foot Sue’s bouncing bustle B. Widow Maker’s wild bucking C. Pecos Bill’s family’s laughter D. Pecos Bill’s lariat whirling A. Written Response Short Response On a separate sheet of paper, answer the following questions based on your knowledge of the tall tale. (10 points each) 11. Why is the Hell’s Gate Gang afraid of Pecos Bill at first? 12. How does Slue-foot Sue’s wedding dress save her life? PECOS BILL Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. Extended Response Answer the following question based on your knowledge of the tall tale. Write one or two paragraphs on a separate sheet of paper. (20 points) 13. How is Pecos Bill more like an animal than a human? Use three details from the tall tale to support your response. 86 Unit 7 Grade 8 Resource Manager Name Date PECOS BILL Selection Test B/C Comprehension Read each of the following questions. Then choose the letter of the best answer. (6 points each) 1. Pecos Bill gets left behind as a baby because 5. his brothers and sisters are too busy fighting B. it is too hot out for anyone to notice him C. coyotes chase his family’s wagon away D. his family cannot find him in the crowd A. 2. What does Pecos Bill refuse to do when he becomes a cowboy? what the river sand felt like B. the light color of the rivers C. what river flour tasted like D. how the river sounded as it flowed A. 6. One of Pecos Bill’s larger-than-life accomplishments in this tall tale is lassos water B. rides a cyclone C. invents tarantulas D. creates Death Valley 7. licking his dinner plate clean B. refusing to shave or comb his hair C. crawling around on all fours in the dirt D. lassoing water from the Gulf of Mexico A. 8. What does Slue-foot Sue do that shows bravery? rides a giant catfish B. flies up to the moon C. raises children on the moon D. insists on riding Widow Maker A. The description of their faces helps you understand why they do not have tans. B. The gang members’ actions help you visualize their fear of Pecos Bill. C. That they drop their dinner plates helps you know how hungry they are. D. That their knees knock and their guns shake helps you visualize how excited they are. A. Resource Manager PECOS BILL Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. How does this description of the Hell’s Gate Gang help you visualize what is happening? “They dropped their dinner plates, and their faces turned as white as bleached desert bones. Their knees knocked and their six-guns shook.” One unrealistic detail of this tall tale is the fact that Pecos Bill feeds his horse a diet of tarantulas and scorpions B. flint rock and catfish bait C. barbed wire and dynamite D. parched grass and tumbleweed A. 4. Pecos Bill displays courage in this tale when he A. walk on two legs B. use his human voice C. wear the right clothing D. shave or comb his hair A. 3. What does the description “all the rivers turned as powdery as biscuit flour” help you visualize? Unit 7 Grade 8 87 Name Date SELECTION TEST B/C, CONTINUED 9. Why does Pecos Bill end up in the sky with Slue-foot Sue? Sue yanks him up when she bounces. B. He rides Widow Maker up to the moon. C. He grabs a shooting star as it passes by. D. Sue insists that they raise coyotes on the moon. A. 10. According to this tall tale, Texans say that a strange “ah-hooing” sound at night is the sound of a pack of wild coyotes howling at the moon B. Slue-foot Sue riding on a shooting star C. Pecos Bill’s family laughing loudly D. Pecos Bill howling on the moon A. Written Response Short Response On a separate sheet of paper, answer the following questions based on your knowledge of the tall tale. (10 points each) 11. Why does Pecos Bill’s father move his family away from eastern Texas? 12. What is one thing that Pecos Bill loves about Slue-foot Sue? Extended Response Answer one of the following questions based on your Challenge The exploration and development of the western United States is frequently described as “the taming of the Wild West.” How does the tale of Pecos Bill illustrate of the taming of the Wild West? Use details from the tale to support your response. PECOS BILL 14. 88 Unit 7 Grade 8 Resource Manager Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. knowledge of the tall tale. Write one or two paragraphs on a separate sheet of paper. (20 points) 13. After reading this tall tale, do you agree or disagree that Pecos Bill is a hero of the American West? Support your response with details from the tale. Name Date from THE PEARL COPY MASTER Literary Analysis from THE PEARL IDENTIFY GENRE FEATURES A novella is a work of fiction that is longer than a short story but shorter than a novel. A novella differs from a novel in that a novella • ranges from 50 to 100 pages in length • focuses on a particular situation or conflict • has fewer characters than a novel • is often meant to teach a lesson Directions: In the chart make notes on the features of this excerpt from The Pearl. Feature Example Main characters Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. Situation or conflict Lesson Resource Manager Unit 7 Grade 8 89 Lesson at a Glance One Last Time g a ry soto FOCUS STANDARDS In this memoir from his childhood, Gary Soto reflects on his life and his family through the fields of grapes and cotton they have been hired to harvest. Through Soto’s rich sensory details, students will realize that the work is both backbreaking and painfully tedious and that the pay often falls far short of what the workers have actually earned. As always, the acclaimed writer explores what it means to be a Mexican American in this country. • • ONE LAST TIME WHY THIS SELECTION? Author’s Perspective Analyze Sensory Details LESSON RESOURCES Plan and Teach Lesson Plan and Resource Guide Alternative Standards Focus . . Additional Selection Questions . Ideas for Extension . . . . . Teacher Notes . . . . . . . . . . . . . Student Copy Masters ABOUT THIS SELECTION Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. . 92–93 . . 94 . . 95 . 96–97 . . 98 Summary (English, Spanish) . . . . . Pupil/Teacher’s Edition Pages: 816–829 Summary (Haitian Creole, Vietnamese) Difficulty Level: Average Literary Analysis: Author’s Perspective Readability Scores: Lexile: 1140; Fry: Literary Analysis (Spanish) . . . . . 8; Dale-Chall: 6.20 Reading Strategy: Analyze Sensory Details . . . . . . . . . . . . . Summary In this memoir, Gary Soto Reading Strategy (Spanish) . . . . . recalls the tedious field work he did as Vocabulary Study . . . . . . . . . a teenager. At first he is excited about picking grapes, but he soon realizes it is Vocabulary Practice . . . . . . . . backbreaking work for very little money. Vocabulary Strategy . . . . . . . . His next job is chopping cotton, which he Reading Check . . . . . . . . . . prefers because he earns more and feels Question Support . . . . . . . . . “tough.” The next fall, however, when Grammar and Writing . . . . . . . . there is no money for school clothes, Soto Reading Fluency . . . . . . . . . returns to the grape fields “one last time.” Assess Selection Test A . . . . . . . . lessons that can be learned from having a Selection Test B/C . . . . . . . job and the way that jobs can help them All lesson resources are available electronically on DVD define their goals for the future. Key Idea: Jobs Students explore the Resource Manager 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 111 113–114 115–116 Unit 7 Grade 8 91 Lesson Plan and Resource Guide One Last Time Memoir by Gary Soto Objectives • • • • • ONE LAST TIME • • • explore the key idea of jobs identify and analyze author’s perspective read a memoir and a poem analyze sensory details build vocabulary for reading and writing use similes as context to determine meanings of unfamiliar words (also an EL language objective) use semicolons correctly to separate parts of a series use writing to analyze literature Unless otherwise noted, all resources can be found in the Resource Manager. All materials are also available on Easy Planner DVD. Pupil’s Edition and Teacher’s Edition Additional Resources CM=Copy Master T=Transparency Focus and Motivate Question/Key Idea p. 816 Author Biography p. 817 Literature Center at ClassZone.com Author’s Perspective p. 817 Analyze Sensory Details p. 817 Analyze Sensory Details CM—p. 103, Spanish p. 104 Vocabulary in Context p. 817 Vocabulary Study CM p. 105 Best Practices Toolkit Scaffolding Vocabulary Instruction pp. 43–46 Vocabulary Center at ClassZone.com Practice and Apply: Guided Practice Selection and Teacher Notes “One Last Time,” pp. 818–825 “How Things Work,” p. 826 Audio Anthology CD Summary CM—English and Spanish p. 99, Haitian Creole and Vietnamese p. 100 Reading Fluency CM p. 111 92 Unit 7 Grade 8 Best Practices Toolkit Resource Manager Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. Teach Pupil’s Edition and Teacher’s Edition Additional Resources CM=Copy Master T=Transparency Differentiated Instruction pp. 31–38 Scaffolding Reading Instruction pp. 43–46 Word Questioning p. E9 [T] Venn Diagram p. A26 [T] Practice and Apply: After Reading Selection Questions p. 827 Reading Check CM p. 108 Author’s Perspective CM—p. 101, Spanish p. 102 Question Support CM p. 109 Additional Selection Questions p. 95 Alternative Standards Focus p. 94 Ideas for Extension pp. 96–97 Vocabulary Practice CM p. 106 Vocabulary Strategy CM p. 107 Vocabulary Center at ClassZone.com Best Practices Toolkit Writing Template: Compare and Contrast pp. C16, C26 [T] Writing Template: Persuasive Writing pp. C16, C35 [T] Writing Center at ClassZone.com Use Semicolons Correctly CM p. 110 Grammar Handbook—Pupil Edition p. R49 Assess Selection Test A CM pp. 113–114 Selection Test B/C CM pp. 115–116 Test Generator CD Reteach Vocabulary Practice p. 828 Vocabulary in Writing p. 828 Vocabulary Strategy: Similes p. 828 Writing Prompts p. 829 Grammar and Writing p. 829 ONE LAST TIME Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. Assess and Reteach Author’s Perspective Standards Lesson File Literature Lesson 29: Simile and Metaphor Literature Lesson 41: Author’s Perspective Vocabulary Lesson 14: Context Clues =Resources for Differentiation Resource Manager Unit 7 Grade 8 93 ONE LAST TIME Use as an alternative to the Alternative Standards Focus focus skills on PE page 817. The focus skills for “One Last Time” are author’s perspective and analyze sensory details. The suggestions on this page allow you to teach an alternate or additional literary analysis skill using “One Last Time.” Literary Analysis: Setting in Nonfiction PASSAGE 1: lines 37–42 ONE LAST TIME Which details of the setting in this passage made a lasting impression on the author? Explain how you know. (The actual action of picking grapes seems to have made a lasting impression, Many years later, when Soto wrote the memoir, he remembered minute details such as the snap and whip of the grapevines [lines 37], the pan brimming with bunches of grapes [line 38], and the sight of the grapes rolling onto the paper tray [lines 39–41].) PASSAGE 2: lines 109–113 What details in these lines help to make the setting seem more realistic? (Details include the downtown mall [line109], fancy windows [line 110], the names of actual stores [line 111], and a tier of outdoor fountains [line 111].) PASSAGE 3: lines 136–141 PASSAGE 4: lines 210–215 Reread this passage. In what ways does the setting help the author clear his mind? (Soto is able to focus on the sun and clouds in the sky [lines 210–211], the breeze and dust [lines 212–213], and the workers in the field [lines 213–215].) For a lesson on setting, see Literature Lesson 9: Setting and Its Roles in the Standards Lesson File. 94 Unit 7 Grade 8 Resource Manager Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. How would you describe the setting in these lines? (The area around the buses is noisy [lines 140–141] and teeming with people [lines 139–140].) ONE LAST TIME Use to supplement the Additional Selection Questions questions on PE page 827. Differentiation Use these questions to provide customized practice with comprehension and critical thinking skills. Easy Why did the author begin working in the fields? (He saw it as a way to help out his family, and he wanted to earn enough money to buy his mother a teapot and get himself school clothes.) 2. Identify Sensory Details To which senses does Soto most often appeal in his descriptions of the fields? (Soto most often appeals to the senses of sight and touch. Often, he describes the look of the fields and the sky and the feel of sweat and dust.) 3. Analyze Author’s Perspective What values demonstrated by the author’s relatives may have shaped the author’s perspective in writing about field work? (His family’s commitment to work and “paying their own way” may have shaped his perspective.) 1. Key Idea: Jobs ONE LAST TIME Average In your opinion, what is the most important lesson Soto learned from working in the fields? Why? (Answers will vary. Soto learned what manual labor is, which gave him an appreciation for people who perform that kind of work; that earning one’s own money is rewarding, which provided him with an incentive to work; that his mother worked very hard to provide for her family, which probably caused him to respect his mother more.) 5. Analyze Sensory Details In what ways does the author use sensory details to create a sense of reality in the fields? (Soto describes the way things looked, from the way his mother’s shoes sank into the loose dirt of the field to the beauty of the horizon. He also describes the way things felt, from the dust in his eyes to the pain in his feet.) Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. 4. Key Idea: Jobs Challenging Based on the story, what do you think Soto’s mother learned from her jobs in the fields? (Answers will vary. Soto’s mother learned to keep track of the amount of work she did so that she would be properly compensated for it, to do what the foreman expected workers to do, and not to set unrealistic goals for herself.) 7. Examine Author’s Perspective What attitude does Soto express toward his teenage self, describing his reactions to chopping cotton? Explain why he might have come to feel this way. (Soto describes wanting to laugh with embarrassment and awkwardness at being on “this” bus. An older Soto seems to disapprove of this attitude, maybe because he now knows how hard those people really worked.) 6. Key Idea: Jobs Resource Manager Unit 7 Grade 8 95 ONE LAST TIME Ideas for Extension Differentiation These activities provide students with a variety of options for demonstrating understanding of lesson concepts. EXPLORATIONS AND ACTIVITIES MURAL: VISUALIZE SENSORY DETAILS ONE LAST TIME Have students sketch an image that captures the essence of the field work described in the selection. Divide the class into two or three groups. Have each group design a mural, incorporating all of the group members’ images. Students may choose one group member to be the artist or may take turns drawing. Provide groups with sheets of paper for their murals and have them place their art on the classroom walls. When the murals are complete, group members can explain their images and why they chose them. JOB INTERVIEW: EXPLORE KEY CONCEPT As a class, make a list of the skills, attitudes, and physical requirements necessary to do the kind of work described in the selection. Explain to students that they will be conducting “job interviews” in front of the class with volunteer students. Have students compile a list of relevant interview questions based on the class list of requirements. Then ask for volunteers to be interviewed. Encourage interviewees to ask questions about the job as well. At the end of the interview, the interviewer must decide whether the candidate is suitable for the job and, if so, the interviewee must accept or turn down the position. In his writing, Soto often hints about people who said that he would never amount to anything. Have students write the speech that the adult Soto might give as he looks back at his childhood and adolescence. Encourage students to identify the main idea that they want to communicate and to develop it with specific details. They might want to incorporate details from the selection and author biography in the textbook. Pre-AP Challenge: Ask students to reread lines 203–209. Have students write an anecdote about a prediction others had for Soto and the way his life actually turned out. Students should think of this as something to be included in Soto’s speech. PHOTO COLLAGES: EXPRESS THEME Discuss possible themes that might be taken from “One Last Time” and record them on the board. Ask students to choose one of the themes and create a photo collage that illustrates that message. Students may choose to use copies of photographs from their own family collections, or they might find images from magazines or the Internet that express their ideas. Encourage students to use some graphics to unify their collages. Invite students to present their collages to the class and explain the meaning behind the images they chose. 96 Unit 7 Grade 8 Resource Manager Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. SPEECH: ANALYZE AUTHOR’S BACKGROUND IDEAS FOR EXTENSION, CONTINUED INQUIRY AND RESEARCH MEXICAN-AMERICAN HISTORY WEEK Have students prepare for a celebration of “Mexican-American History Week.” Encourage students to research one of the following topics or a topic of their choice and to create a display that features their findings. Allow students time to present and explain their displays, as well as answer questions about them. • famous or successful Mexican Americans • the Bracero program of 1942–1964 • Mexican immigration to the United States • influence of the Spanish language on English • Mexican-American contributions to an aspect of American society ONE LAST TIME Encourage students to gather information from a variety of resources and to include visual aids in their presentations. WRITING EXPLORE GENRE: ORIGINAL POEM Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. Have students write a poem about how some daily phenomenon works. Encourage students to reread “How Things Work” and review the kinds of details that Soto uses to help explain the circulation of money. Rather than focusing on an actual object, suggest that students focus on topics such as democracy, education, or friendship. Have them brainstorm and collect details in a graphic organizer. Suggest that they decide on their approach to the poem before writing it. Remind them to use the arrangement of lines and line breaks to help communicate meaning. EXTEND THEME: MEMOIR Encourage students to think about a lesson or lessons they learned from something they experienced as a younger person. Have students write a brief memoir describing the incident. Encourage them to use sensory details and even drawings or photographs to help readers understand the experience. Resource Manager Unit 7 Grade 8 97 ONE LAST TIME Teacher Notes Review and Evaluate Outcome What did I want students to know or be able to do? How successful was the lesson? ONE LAST TIME Evaluate Process What worked? • Strategies • Resources • Differentiation Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. What did not work? Why not? Reflect The next time I teach “One Last Time,” what will I do differently? Why? Plan Ahead What must I do next? 98 Unit 7 Grade 8 Resource Manager ONE LAST TIME Summary ONE LAST TIME Gary Soto Setting: Southern California, the 1970s ONE LAST TIME The speaker is a young man growing up in Southern California. He comes from a family of Mexican-American field workers. The field workers spend long days in the sun gathering fruit or cotton. The pay is very low. He remembers a time when he went with his mother to cut grapes from vines. At first, he is excited by the things he can buy with the money he will make. His mother wishes his sister and brother had come to work, also. Now they will not have money for new clothes when school starts. The speaker earns fifty-three dollars for thirteen days of work. When he is fifteen he decides that he would rather wear old clothes than work in the fields. When he is sixteen he cuts cotton with his brother. At the end of the day they are sore and tired. However, they earn good money and are pleased with the hard work they have done. UNA ÚLTIMA VEZ Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. Gary Soto Escenario: California del Sur, los años setenta El hablante es un joven que crece en el sur de California. Él viene de una familia de trabajadores del campo mexico-americanos. Los trabajadores del campo pasan largos días bajo el sol recolectando fruta o algodón. El sueldo es muy bajo. Él recuerda una vez que fue con su madre a cortar uvas de los viñedos. Al principio se emociona pensando en las cosas que podrá comprar con el dinero ganará. Su madre desea que su hermana y su hermano también hubieran ido a trabajar. Ahora no tendrán dinero para ropa nueva cuando empiece la escuela. El hablante gana cincuenta y tres dólares por trece días de trabajo. Al cumplir quince años decide que prefiere usar ropa vieja que trabajar en el campo. Al cumplir dieciséis corta algodón con su hermano. Al final del día ellos están adoloridos y cansados. Sin embargo, ganaron buen dinero y están contentos con el trabajo que hicieron. Resource Manager Unit 7 Grade 8 99 ONE LAST TIME Summary YON DÈNYE FWA Gary Soto Espas ak tan: Sid Kalifòni, ane 1970 yo. Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. ONE LAST TIME Oratè a se yon jenn gason k ap grandi nan Sid Kalifòni. Li sòti nan yon fanmi travayè agrikòl meksiken-ameriken. Travayè agrikòl yo pase anpil jou nan solèy la ap ranmase fwi ak koton. Lajan yo touche a pa anpil ditou. Li sonje yon tan lè li te vini avèk manman li pou koupe rezen nan viy yo. Okòmansman, li kontan pou bagay li kapab achte avèk lajan l ap fè a. Manman li swete pou sè li ak frè li te vin travay tou. Kounye a yo p ap gen lajan pou achte rad nèf lè lekòl kòmanse. Oratè a touche senkann twa dola pou trèz jou travay. Lè li gen kenzan, li deside li pito mete ansyen rad olye pou li kontinye travay nan chan yo. Lè li gen sèzan, li koupe koton avèk frè li. Nan fen jounen an, yo vekse epi yo fatige. Men, yo touche bon lajan e sa fè yo kontan avèk travay di yo fè a. 100 Unit 7 Grade 8 Resource Manager Name Date ONE LAST TIME COPY MASTER Literary Analysis AUTHOR’S PERSPECTIVE An author’s perspective, or the way a writer looks at a topic, is shaped by his or her experiences, environment, and values. As you read the memoir, note how Soto’s family history and daily reality affect his perspective on his work. Directions: Track the author’s attitude toward his jobs on the time line. An example has been done for you. Positive Feelings Negative Feelings Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. ONE LAST TIME Enthusiastic about job and making money Resource Manager Unit 7 Grade 8 101 Name Date UNA ÚLTIMA VEZ COPY MASTER Literary Analysis AUTHOR’S PERSPECTIVE La perspectiva de un autor, o la manera en que un escritor mira un tema, se forja a través de sus experiencias, su entorno y sus valores. Mientras lees las memorias, nota cómo la historia y la realidad diaria de la familia Soto afectan la perspectiva de su trabajo. Instrucciones: En la línea de tiempo, rastrea de la actitud del autor hacia sus trabajos. Sigue el ejemplo. Sentimientos positivos Sentimientos negativos Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. SPANISH Entusiasta sobre el trabajo y hacer dinero 102 Unit 7 Grade 8 Resource Manager Name Date ONE LAST TIME COPY MASTER Reading Strategy ANALYZE SENSORY DETAILS Sensory details are words and phrases that appeal to a reader’s five senses. By using such details, a writer helps the reader to create vivid mental pictures of settings, people, and events. Directions: As you read, look for two or three details that appeal to each sense and record them in the web. An example has been done for you. Taste Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. Sight ONE LAST TIME “started off in slow chugs” Hearing Sensory Details Smell Touch Resource Manager Unit 7 Grade 8 103 Name Date UNA ÚLTIMA VEZ COPY MASTER Reading Strategy ANALYZE SENSORY DETAILS Los detalles sensoriales son palabras y frases que son atractivas para los cinco sentidos del lector. Cuando el escritor usa esos detalles, ayuda al lector a crear imágenes mentales vívidas de escenarios, gente y sucesos. Instrucciones: Mientras lees, busca dos o tres detalles que atraen a cada sentido y anótalos en la red. Sigue el ejemplo. SPANISH “started off in slow chugs” Gusto Detalles sensoriales Olfato Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. Vista Oído Tacto 104 Unit 7 Grade 8 Resource Manager Name Date ONE LAST TIME COPY MASTER Vocabulary Study CLASSIFYING WORDS A. Directions: As your teacher reads each item, listen for the boldfaced word and clues to its meaning. Together discuss possible meanings of the word. 1. Mr. and Mrs. Ortiz hired a contractor to install new electrical wiring and plumbing in their older home. Carmen’s feeble reply could barely be heard by anyone in the room. 3. The foreman walked among the workers, making sure they were doing their jobs correctly. 4. He stopped abruptly, and began to grope around in the dark for a doorknob. 5. The customer became irate when she had to wait an hour for her meal. 6. Unfortunately, the lost hikers’ predicament worsened when they ran out of water. 7. Tyra would ramble on and on all day, if her mother didn’t remind her to stop and think about what she was saying. 8. Lance had to stoop to pick up his keys on the floor. ONE LAST TIME 2. B. Directions: Use the boldfaced words from Part A to answer each question. Be Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. prepared to give reasons for your answers. 9. Which words are associated with work? 10. Which words are related to action? 11. Which words are associated with conflict? 12. Which word is associated with a physical state? Resource Manager Unit 7 Grade 8 105 Name Date ONE LAST TIME COPY MASTER Vocabulary Practice contractor foreman irate ramble feeble grope predicament stoop ONE LAST TIME A. Directions: Fill in each blank with the correct word from the word list. 1. The customers became when the lines grew long. 2. Dave was promoted to be the 3. Julian disliked soccer and made only a 4. Just before the race, we saw Julio 5. The speaker gave an interesting presentation, though she did of the construction crew. attempt to improve. down to tie his shoe. a bit toward the end. 6. The concert promoters needed a that could supply the lighting. 7. Jenna had to in the dark for a flashlight. 8. Leah found herself in a when she realized she had made B. Directions: Circle the word in each group that is similar in meaning to the boldfaced word. 1. grope listen search 2. Unit 7 Grade 8 6. worried smart predicament reward discussion builder driver weak effective irate angry scared 5. feeble sick distinct 106 behave reject foreman leader worker 3. 4. wage problem ramble chatter wonder encourage dance Resource Manager Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. two sets of plans for Saturday evening. Name Date ONE LAST TIME COPY MASTER Vocabulary Strategy SIMILES Writers sometimes use similes, or figures of speech that compare two unlike things using the words like or as. In “One Last Time,” the author says that the dust and sand flying into their moving bus was “whipping around like irate wasps.” This simile helps readers imagine what it would feel like to be riding in the bus. Similes can also provide context clues to help you figure out unfamiliar word meanings. If you know that “whipping around” implies fast, curving motion and that wasps move more quickly when they’re angered, then you can figure out that irate means “very angry.” ONE LAST TIME Directions: Use the simile in each sentence as a context clue to help you define the boldfaced word. 1. The immense bruise on Jen’s knee was as big as a grapefruit. meaning: 2. The hirsute weight-lifter was as hairy as a bear. meaning: 3. Jeremy, the new student in school is as astute as the smartest teachers. meaning: Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. 4. The bland soup was like a tasteless bowl of hot water. meaning: 5. The diminutive gymnast was so tiny she looked like a doll. meaning: 6. Like a ravenous bear that had been sleeping all winter, Eric was very hungry. meaning: 7. My sprained ankle was tumescent, like a tomato sitting swollen from the sun. meaning: 8. Like an abruptly shifting storm, the tide of the ocean quickly changed directions. meaning: 9. Abe’s frigid room was as biting as a cold winter wind. meaning: Resource Manager Unit 7 Grade 8 107 Name Date ONE LAST TIME COPY MASTER Reading Check 108 2. Why did Soto decide to go with his brother to chop cotton? 3. What future does Soto say that people told him he would have? 4. Why were Soto and his brother proud of themselves at the end of their day of chopping cotton? 5. What promise does Soto say he broke at the end of the story? Unit 7 Grade 8 Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. ONE LAST TIME Directions: Recall the events in Gary Soto’s memoir. Then answer the questions in phrases or sentences. 1. Where did Soto and his mother work when he was a young man? Resource Manager Name Date ONE LAST TIME COPY MASTER Question Support LITERARY ANALYSIS For questions 1–3, see page 827 of the Pupil Edition. Directions: Answer each question. 4. Make Inferences Complete the following sentences. Soto’s family history affected his thoughts about working in the fields because 5. Analyze Sensory Details Complete the following sentences. The sensory detail that best helped me to understand what it was like to work in the fields ONE LAST TIME was It helped me because Name two similarities and two differences between picking grapes and chopping cotton. 6. Compare and Contrast Similarities: Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. Differences: Which job does Soto prefer? Why? How does the author feel about working at the beginning of the selection? Do his feelings change? 7. Examine Author’s Perspective 8. Compare Literary Works Complete the following sentence. Soto’s childhood experiences working in the fields are reflected in “How Things Work” because Resource Manager Unit 7 Grade 8 109 Name Date ONE LAST TIME COPY MASTER Grammar and Writing USE SEMICOLONS CORRECTLY When there are commas within parts of a series, you must use a semicolon to separate the parts. Original: Some children need to earn money to buy bus tokens, clothing, and school supplies, such as pencils, paper, and notebooks. Revised: Some children need to earn money to buy bus tokens; clothing; and school supplies, such as pencils, paper, and notebooks. (Because one part of the series contains commas, a semicolon should separate the parts.) 110 2. Soto groped, cut, and tugged at the grapes, emptied out his pan, and returned to the vine for more. 3. He was unhappy about the early start time, his sore ankles, arms, and neck, and the low pay he received. 4. Soto’s mother came home dusty, tired, and aching, rested on the porch, and then made dinner. Unit 7 Grade 8 Resource Manager Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. ONE LAST TIME Directions: Rewrite the following sentences, inserting semicolons as needed. 1. Soto’s grandmother picked grapes, oranges, plums, peaches, and cotton, worked in the packing houses, and had many children. Name Date ONE LAST TIME COPY MASTER Reading Fluency Good readers read smoothly, accurately, and with expression. Use this rubric to evaluate your reading and to help you become a better reader. Average Weak • reads smoothly, with expression • reads in meaningful phrases • reads words correctly, with few errors or additions • expresses the writer’s meaning through changes in pitch and volume, and through meaningful pauses • reads at an appropriate rate, neither too fast nor too slow • reads mostly in small phrases, focusing on saying the words correctly • reads words correctly most of the time, with some errors or additions • reads with little expression • mostly reads at an appropriate rate, or speed • reads in very small phrases, or reads word by word • often repeats words before reading on • some word groups, or chunks, are awkward or don’t make sense • reads with many errors or additions • reads with little or no expression, in a monotone voice • reads too slowly or too fast ONE LAST TIME Strong Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. Directions: Choose a passage from “One Last Time” (pages 818–825 in the anthology). Read the passage once or twice for practice. Then read it to your partner. Together, use the rubric to evaluate your reading. Talk about ways you can improve. On the lines below, list two goals for improving your reading and one way you will achieve each goal. How I Plan to Improve My Fluency Goal 1: What I will do to reach this goal: Goal 2: What I will do to reach this goal: Resource Manager Unit 7 Grade 8 111 Name Date ONE LAST TIME Selection Test A Comprehension Read each of the following questions. Then choose the letter of the best answer. (6 points each) 1. Soto showed thoughtfulness toward others when he 4. spit on a grape before eating it B. handed the first sandwich to his mother C. lists what he wants to buy with his wages D. arranges his wardrobe to make it look larger A. What did Soto buy with the money he earned in the fields? a transistor radio B. clothing for school C. food for his family D. a present for his mother A. 3. how his hair looked how gnats sound C. how leaves feel D. how dust tastes A. B. 5. Soto decided to pick grapes “one last time” because the pay was better than cutting cotton B. he wanted to show that he was tough C. his mother asked him to work D. he had not found another job A. From the author’s perspective, one advantage of chopping cotton was that he worked with Tejanos B. rode to work in a bus C. earned money by the hour D. got to sing to himself in the field Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. A. Resource Manager Unit 7 Grade 8 113 ONE LAST TIME 2. What do the sensory details in this excerpt tell you about Soto’s brother? “His eyes were meshed red and his long hippie hair was flecked with dust and gnats and bits of leaves.” Name Date SELECTION TEST A, CONTINUED Vocabulary Choose the answer that best explains the meaning of each underlined word. (6 points each) 6. To ramble means to 9. talk aimlessly B. take a great risk C. complain angrily D. fail to act quickly sore B. poor C. tired D. weak A. 7. What is a foreman? someone who works in a store B. the leader of a work crew C. a company owner D. a bus driver ONE LAST TIME A. 8. What does feeble mean? A. 10. Someone who is irate is too loud B. a little late C. very angry D. partly sorry A. To grope means to store away for future use B. track materials with a list C. separate into numbered bins D. reach about with uncertainty A. Short Response On a separate sheet of paper, answer the following questions based on your knowledge of the memoir. (10 points each) 11. According to this memoir, how are people who pick grapes paid differently from people who chop cotton? 12. How did Soto’s mother instruct her sons to chop cotton? Extended Response Answer the following question based on your knowledge of the memoir. Write one or two paragraphs on a separate sheet of paper. (20 points) 13. How important were clothes to Soto as a young man? Use two details from Soto’s memoir to support your response. 114 Unit 7 Grade 8 Resource Manager Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. Written Response Name Date ONE LAST TIME Selection Test B/C Comprehension Read each of the following questions. Then choose the letter of the best answer. (6 points each) 1. Soto’s first experience working in the fields involved 4. chopping cotton B. picking cotton C. picking grapes D. boxing raisins how his clothes looked B. what swimming felt like C. how popcorn tasted at the mall D. what his brother’s car sounded like A. You can tell that Soto at first had a positive perspective about work when he says that he would end the family’s misery with his wages B. cut more grapes than anyone else in the field C. eat grapes in the field as if they were popcorn D. have a hard time listening to his mother’s stories A. Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. 3. A. 5. Soto decided that chopping cotton was “too good” because he ONE LAST TIME 2. What sensory details does Soto use to describe his poverty as a young man? found that the cotton fields were less dusty and dirty than the grape fields B. felt less sore after chopping cotton than he felt after picking grapes C. made more money in a day than he had ever made before D. found that he was able to daydream more when he chopped cotton than when he picked grapes A. What did Soto do that shows you that he began to realize the price of things? took a bus with his brother to the cotton field B. felt embarrassed by his socks and underwear C. daydreamed in the field and sang to himself D. stopped imagining a new copper teapot A. Resource Manager Unit 7 Grade 8 115 Name Date SELECTION TEST B/C, CONTINUED Vocabulary Choose the answer that best explains the meaning of each underlined word. (6 points each) 6. To ramble means to 9. complain about work B. strut about and show off C. make a deep, heavy sound D. talk aimlessly and at length someone who works long hours outside for very little pay B. someone who provides services for an agreed price C. a person who specializes in tearing down buildings D. a person who imagines spending wages before earning them A. 7. A. When you grope, you reach about with uncertainty B. gather together to work faster C. move slowly because of soreness D. hope for something good to happen ONE LAST TIME A. 8. To stoop means to carry tools on your back B. gather up a crop, such as grain C. walk slowly to avoid finishing a task D. bend forward and down from the waist A. What is a contractor? 10. A predicament is a partial payment of what is owed B. a temporary agreement between opponents C. an unpleasant situation that is difficult to leave D. something that exists only in one’s imagination A. Short Response On a separate sheet of paper, answer the following questions based on your knowledge of the memoir. (10 points each) 11. How did Soto wear his clothes in a manner that fooled his friends? 12. What did Soto think life would be like for him as a grown-up? Use two details from the memoir to support your response. Extended Response Answer one of the following questions based on your knowledge of the memoir. Write one or two paragraphs on a separate sheet of paper. (20 points) 13. Was working in the fields a “good deal” or a “bad deal” for the young Soto? Use details from the memoir to support your response. 14. 116 Challenge Soto’s entire family worked in the fields harvesting crops. After reading this memoir, do you think that Soto’s perspective on his family’s work is one of pride or embarrassment? Use details from the memoir to support your response. Unit 7 Grade 8 Resource Manager Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. Written Response Lesson at a Glance Dreams from MyFather WHY THIS SELECTION? FOCUS STANDARDS Senator Barack Obama’s keynote speech at the 2004 Democratic Convention won him national acclaim. As a 10-year-old, however, Obama was not so well accepted. This excerpt from his autobiography describes his entry into an elite private school in Hawaii, where he was subjected to the cruel remarks and prejudiced attitudes of his classmates. • ABOUT THIS SELECTION • Autobiography Recognize Cause-and-Effect Relationships LESSON RESOURCES Plan and Teach Lesson Plan and Resource Guide Alternative Standards Focus . . Additional Selection Questions . Ideas for Extension . . . . . Teacher Notes . . . . . . . . . 118–119 . . . 120 . . . 121 . 122–123 . . . 124 FROM DREAMS FROM MY FATHER Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. barack obama Pupil/Teacher’s Edition Pages: 830–845 Student Copy Masters Difficulty Level: Average Readability Scores: Lexile: 1060; Fry: Summary (English, Spanish) . . . . . 125 Summary (Haitian Creole, Vietnamese) 126 10; Dale-Chall: 6.6 Literary Analysis: Autobiography . . . 127 Summary Ten-year-old Barack Obama Literary Analysis (Spanish) . . . . . 128 is one of only two African-American Reading Skill: Recognize Cause-and-Effect children in his grade at an elite private Relationships . . . . . . . . . . . 129 school in Hawaii. Obama struggles with Reading Skill (Spanish) . . . . . . . 130 feeling different from his classmates. His Vocabulary Study . . . . . . . . . 131 fear and isolation lead him to spend much Vocabulary Practice . . . . . . . . 132 of his spare time watching television with his grandparents, until a month-long Vocabulary Strategy . . . . . . . . 133 visit from his Kenyan father changes his Reading Check . . . . . . . . . . 134 perspective and helps him see the value of Question Support . . . . . . . . . 135 Reading Fluency . . . . . . . . . 136 hard work and his cultural heritage. Key Idea: Pride Students will explore the key idea of pride through the eyes of Barack Obama as he learns to be proud of his heritage. Assess Selection Test A . . . . . . . . Selection Test B/C . . . . . . . 137–138 139–140 All lesson resources are available electronically on DVD Resource Manager Unit 7 Grade 8 117 Lesson Plan and Resource Guide from Dreams from My Father Autobiography by Barack Obama Objectives • • • • • • explore the key idea of what makes you proud identify, analyze, and interpret an autobiography read an autobiography identify and analyze cause-and-effect relationships build vocabulary for reading and writing distinguish between connotative and denotative meanings of words (also an EL language objective) Unless otherwise noted, all resources can be found in the Resource Manager. All materials are also available on Easy Planner DVD. Pupil’s Edition and Teacher’s Edition Additional Resources CM=Copy Master T=Transparency from DREAMS FROM MY FATHER Focus and Motivate Question/Key Idea p. 830 Author Biography p. 831 Literature Center at ClassZone.com Autobiography p. 831 Recognize Cause-and-Effect Relationships p. 831 Recognize Cause-and-Effect Relationships CM—p. 129, Spanish p. 130 Vocabulary in Context p. 831 Vocabulary Study CM p. 131 Best Practices Toolkit Scaffolding Vocabulary Instruction pp. 43–46 Vocabulary Center at ClassZone.com Practice and Apply: Guided Practice Selection and Teacher Notes from Dreams from My Father, pp. 832–843 Audio Anthology CD Summary CM—English and Spanish p. 125, Haitian Creole and Vietnamese p. 126 Reading Fluency CM p. 136 118 Unit 7 Grade 8 Best Practices Toolkit Differentiated Instruction pp. 31–38 Scaffolding Reading Instruction pp. 43–46 Resource Manager Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. Teach Pupil’s Edition and Teacher’s Edition Additional Resources CM=Copy Master T=Transparency Word Questioning p. E9 [T] Read-and-Say-Something p. D3 Spider Map p. B22 [T] Practice and Apply: After Reading Selection Questions p. 844 Reading Check CM p. 134 Autobiography CM—p. 127, Spanish p. 128 Question Support CM p. 135 Additional Selection Questions p. 121 Alternative Standards Focus p. 120 Ideas for Extension pp. 122–123 Power Thinking at ClassZone.com Vocabulary Practice p. 845 Vocabulary in Writing p. 845 Vocabulary Strategy: Denotation and Connotation p. 845 Vocabulary Practice CM p. 132 Vocabulary Strategy CM p. 133 Vocabulary Center at ClassZone.com Assess Selection Test A CM pp. 137–138 Selection Test B/C CM pp. 139–140 Test Generator CD Reteach Standards Lesson File Reading Lesson 7: Recognizing Cause and Effect Vocabulary Lesson 17: Denotation and Connotation Recognize Cause-and-Effect Relationships Denotation and Connotation from DREAMS FROM MY FATHER Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. Assess and Reteach =Resources for Differentiation Resource Manager Unit 7 Grade 8 119 from DREAMS FROM MY FATHER Use as an alternative to the Alternative Standards Focus focus skills on PE page 831. The focus skills for from Dreams from My Father are autobiography and recognize cause-and-effect relationships. The suggestions on this page allow you to teach an alternate or additional literary analysis skill using the selection. Literary Analysis: Characterzation PASSAGE 1: lines 40–59 What do you learn about Obama from his actions on the first day of school? (Obama has probably never been belittled by his peers before and does not handle it well [lines 54 and 59].) PASSAGE 2: lines 79–104 from DREAMS FROM MY FATHER What do you learn about Obama from the incident with Coretta on the playground? What do you learn about Coretta? (Obama is more worried about what his classmates think of him than about Coretta’s feelings [line 91–93]. Later he realizes that he does not have the courage or strength of character to stand up to his classmates’ teasing or to defend his friendship with Coretta [lines 101–102]. Coretta is hurt and disappointed by Obama’s treatment [lines 93–94] but is strong enough to endure it and does not expect an apology [lines 103–104].) PASSAGE 3: What details does Obama use to characterize his father in this passage? (Obama uses his father’s appearance, mannerisms, and the way others react to his father to characterize him.) PASSAGE 4: lines 310–329 What do you learn about Obama’s classmates in this passage that might have helped Obama, had he known it earlier? (Obama’s classmates are impressed by the sincerity and pride displayed by Obama’s father and probably would have accepted Obama from the first day, had he had the strength of character to come across as such a person.) For a lesson on characterization, see Literature Lesson 3: Characterization in the Standards Lesson File. 120 Unit 7 Grade 8 Resource Manager Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. lines 211–242 from DREAMS FROM MY FATHER Use to supplement the Additional Selection Questions questions on PE page 844. Differentiation Use these questions to provide customized practice with comprehension and critical thinking skills. Easy Why are Gramps and Toot proud of the fact that Obama has been admitted to Punahou? (Punahou is an elite school that does not accept just anyone, so the fact that Obama has been admitted makes him special and someone his grandparents can be proud of.) 2. Understand Autobiography What is Obama’s relationship with his grandparents like? Explain how you know. (Obama is close to his grandparents, but sometimes they embarrass him. He calls them affectionate nicknames and feels safe in their house.) 3. Recall Cause-and-Effect Relationships What is the effect of the telegram from Obama’s father on Obama and his grandparents? (The telegram causes Obama to emerge from his long period of inactivity. It also causes mild shock in Obama and his grandparents.) 1. Key Idea: Pride Average Reread lines 97–104. What can you learn about Obama from reading this passage that you could not find in a biography, or account written by someone other than Obama? (You learn that Obama feels terrible about hurting Coretta’s feelings and admires her for how she reacts, even though it means that she begins to ignore him.) 5. Analyze Cause-and-Effect Relationships What effect does the argument between Obama’s father and the other adults have on Obama? (Obama resents his father for trying to assert his authority and causing him to lose faith in people’s goodwill. He also feels as if things that have thus far remained unsaid during his father’s visit are suddenly out in the open.) from DREAMS FROM MY FATHER Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. 4. Analyze Autobiography Challenging Which aspects of his father is Obama proud of? (Answers will vary. Obama is proud of his father’s ability to bring out the best in people, for his ease in relating to people, and for taking pride in his own heritage.) 7. Evaluate Cause-and-Effect Relationships What do you think were the most powerful effects Obama’s father had on his life, based on what you now know about Obama? (Answers will vary. Obama’s father’s pride in his heritage must have made a lasting effect on Obama, as shown by his later realization that he often rejected his heritage as a child. Obama’s father’s attitude toward education may also have stayed with Obama.) 6. Key Idea: Pride Additional challenging questions for this selection can be found online at Power Thinking at ClassZone.com. Resource Manager Unit 7 Grade 8 121 from DREAMS FROM MY FATHER Ideas for Extension Differentiation These activities provide students with a variety of options for demonstrating understanding of lesson concepts. EXPLORATIONS AND ACTIVITIES TRAVEL BROCHURE: UNDERSTAND CULTURAL CONTEXT Suggest that students research Kenya and then design a brochure that promotes the country to tourists. Suggest to students that they focus on ways in which Kenya is unique, and use language that appeals to readers’ senses wherever possible. Students should use a word processing program or desktop publishing program to design their brochures. Display brochures in the classroom. PORTRAIT SERIES: ILLUSTRATE CHARACTER Have students create a series of portraits of Obama’s father based on the information in the selection. Each portrait should depict an important event in the story or memorable image Obama has of his father. Instruct students to design a multiple-panel display for depicting the character of the older Obama. from DREAMS FROM MY FATHER Tell students that some cultures and religions disapprove of people displaying any kind of pride, believing that pride is boastful and that one should always strive for humility. Divide students into groups and instruct them to discuss the negative view of pride as well as the more positive view conveyed in the excerpt from Dreams from My Father and, perhaps, in some of their lives. Instruct groups to decide what view they support. Then have them create aphorisms, or brief, wise sayings, that promote this view. Tell students that aphorisms say something big in a small way—they express an important idea in as few words as possible. If time permits, supply students with a brief list of aphorisms on other topics so that they understand what they are striving for. Have them make a collage of their aphorisms, accompanied by clip art or magazine illustrations and photos. Display students’ collages around the room. Pre-AP Challenge: Ask students to read Obama’s keynote speech at the 2004 Democratic Convention. Note that it was an extremely popular speech when it was delivered. Have students analyze the speech for its appeal. What ideas in the speech would have appealed to whom and why? Based on that speech, what are Obama’s political beliefs? In what way does it seem consistent with the lesson on pride that Obama describes in his autobiography? Have students present their analyses to the class, sharing with the class sections of text from the speech as support. LIVE STORY TELLING: EXPLORE FOLK TALE GENRE Explain to students that storytelling is an important part of African tradition. Remind them of the creation story Obama’s father told the class. Typically in storytelling, the teller assumes a different voice for each character and uses many gestures and facial 122 Unit 7 Grade 8 Resource Manager Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. CREATE APHORISMS: ANALYZE KEY CONCEPT IDEAS FOR EXTENSION, CONTINUED expressions to relate the story. Challenge students to locate folk tales and myths of Africa and, depending on length, to present one or more stories to the class. INQUIRY AND RESEARCH Provide opportunities for independent learning on the life and activities of Barack Obama. Have individual students or groups choose one of the following topics to research: • • • • • • his work as a community organizer in Chicago his years at Harvard Law School his career as a civil rights lawyer his entrance into politics his achievements as an Illinois senator his family life During their research, students should look for evidence of the effects Obama’s father, mother, and grandparents have had on his life. Students may present their findings using their choice of media. from DREAMS FROM MY FATHER WRITING Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. SUPPORT PERSONAL OPINIONS: ESSAY Have students write an opinion paper on what kind of leader Obama is, based on what they now know of him. Does he seem like a fair leader? Is he a decisive one? In what ways might his childhood experiences make him a better leader? Suggest that they follow the typical five-paragraph essay formula: an introduction that includes an attention-grabber and the thesis statement, three paragraphs of support, and a conclusion that restates the thesis statement and leaves readers pondering the writer’s ideas. EXPLORE POINT OF VIEW: BIOGRAPHICAL EXCERPT Tell students to think about how the events described in the excerpt from Dreams from My Father might be different if told from another point of view. Have students rewrite lines 73–104 of the selection from Coretta’s perspective or lines 245–284 from Obama’s father’s perspective. Students should share their interpretations with one another and discuss their different approaches. Resource Manager Unit 7 Grade 8 123 from DREAMS FROM MY FATHER Teacher Notes Review and Evaluate Outcome What did I want students to know or be able to do? How successful was the lesson? Evaluate Process What worked? • Strategies from DREAMS FROM MY FATHER • Resources • Differentiation Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. What did not work? Why not? Reflect The next time I teach Dreams from My Father, what will I do differently? Why? Plan Ahead What must I do next? 124 Unit 7 Grade 8 Resource Manager from DREAMS FROM MY FATHER Summary FROM DREAMS FROM MY FATHER Barack Obama Setting: Hawaii, the 1970s When Barack Obama was a young boy, his parents divorced. His mother sent him to Hawaii to live with his grandparents. He had been accepted into a private school which was difficult to get into. On the first day of class, he worries that he does not fit in. Some of the students laugh when the teacher pronounces his name. Others make fun of his father for being from Kenya. When Barack finds out his father is coming to visit, he lies by telling some of the boys in his class that his father is a prince in Kenya. The visit does not go smoothly. His father is much stricter than his grandparents. He thinks Barack should be studying instead of watching so much television. Soon all of the adults in the house are arguing. Barack counts the days until his father leaves. When his mother tells him that his father has been invited to speak to Barack’s class, he can’t imagine worse news. When the day finally arrives, Barack is worried that his lie will be discovered. TOMADO DE SUEÑOS DE MI PADRE Cuando Barack Obama era niño, sus padres se divorciaron. Su madre lo envió a Hawai a vivir con sus abuelos. Lo aceptaron en una escuela privada a la cual era difícil entrar. Durante el primer día de clases, se preocupa porque no se adapta. Algunos de los estudiantes se ríen cuando el maestro pronuncia su nombre. Otros se burlan de su padre por ser de Kenia. Cuando Barack se entera que va a venir su padre a visitarlo, le miente a algunos niños de su clase diciéndoles que su padre es un príncipe en Kenia. La visita no pasa sin dificultades. Su padre es más estricto que sus abuelos. Él piensa que Barack debería estudiar en vez de ver tanta televisión. Pronto, todos los adultos de la casa empiezan a discutir. Barack cuenta los días para que se vaya su padre. Cuando su madre le informa que invitaron a su padre a hablar en el salón de Barack, no puede imaginarse una peor noticia. Cuando finalmente llega el día, Barack tiene miedo de que su mentira se descubra. Resource Manager from DREAMS FROM MY FATHER Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. Barack Obama Escenario: Hawai, los años setenta Unit 7 Grade 8 125 from DREAMS FROM MY FATHER Summary DAPRE RÈV PAPA MWEN Barack Obama Espas ak tan: Hawayi, ane 1970 yo. Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. from DREAMS FROM MY FATHER Lè Barack Obama te yon jenn gason, paran li yo te divòse. Manman li te voye li Hawayi pou l al viv avèk granparan li. Li te aksepte antre yon lekòl prive ki te difisil pou antre. Nan premye jou klas la, li te enkyè pou li pa t reyisi adapte li. Kèk elèv t ap ri lè pwofesè a pwononse non li. Lòt yo pran plezi sou papa li paske li sòti nan Kenya. Lè Barack vin konnen papa li ap vin vizite li, li bay kèk nan ti mesye yo manti paske li di yo li papa li se yon prens nan Kenya. Vizit la pa t pi dous pase sa. Papa li pi sevè pase granparan li yo. Li panse Barack ta dwe etidye olye li gade televizyon twòp. Yon ti tan apre tout granmoun nan kay la ap fè diskisyon. Barack konte jou jouk papa li ale. Lè manman li di li papa li jwenn envitasyon pou li vin pale nan klas Barack la, li pa ka imajine nouvèl ki pi grav pase sa. Lè jou a vin rive, Barack pè pou yo pa dekouvri manti li te bay la. 126 Unit 7 Grade 8 Resource Manager Name Date from DREAMS FROM MY FATHER COPY MASTER Literary Analysis AUTOBIOGRAPHY An autobiography is the true story of a person’s life, told by that person. Autobiographies share the following characteristics: • They are told from the first-person point of view. • They focus on significant people and events in the writer’s life. • They express the ways those people and events affected the writer. Directions: Use the chart to write notes about the relationship between Obama and his father over the course of their month-long visit. Before his father arrives The day his father arrives from DREAMS FROM MY FATHER Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. First two weeks of his father’s visit The day his father speaks to Obama’s class Final days of his father’s visit Resource Manager Unit 7 Grade 8 127 Name Date tomado de SUEÑOS DE MI PADRE COPY MASTER Literary Analysis AUTOBIOGRAPHY Una autobiografía es la historia verdadera de la vida de una persona, narrada por esa persona. Las autobiografías comparten las siguientes características: • son narradas desde el punto de vista de la primera persona. • se enfocan en gente importante y en sucesos de la vida del escritor. • expresan las maneras en que esas personas y sucesos afectaron al escritor. Instrucciones: Use la tabla para escribir notas sobre la relación entre Obama y su padre durante el transcurso de su larga visita de un mes. antes de que su padre llegara el día que llega su padre Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. SPANISH las primeras dos semanas de la visita de su padre el día que su padre habla en la clase de Obama. últimos días de la visita de su padre 128 Unit 7 Grade 8 Resource Manager Name Date from DREAMS FROM MY FATHER COPY MASTER Reading Skill RECOGNIZE CAUSE-AND-EFFECT RELATIONSHIPS Understanding cause-and-effect relationships between actions, events, and feelings can give you greater insight into the people you read about. Sometimes cause-and-effect relationships are stated directly. More often you will have to look deeper to notice when one or more things are responsible for causing another. Directions: Complete this chart to identify important cause-and-effect relationships in the autobiography. One example has been done for you. Cause Obama feels isolated at school. Effect He spends most of his time watching TV with his grandfather. Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. from DREAMS FROM MY FATHER Resource Manager Unit 7 Grade 8 129 Name Date tomado de SUEÑOS DE MI PADRE COPY MASTER Reading Skill RECOGNIZE CAUSE-AND-EFFECT RELATIONSHIPS Comprender las relaciones de causa y efecto entre las acciones, sucesos y los sentimientos puede darte una comprensión mayor de la gente sobre la que lees. Algunas veces las relaciones de causa y efecto se presentan directamente. Con frecuencia deberás observar con mayor profundidad para darte cuenta cuando una o más cosas son responsables de causar otra. Instrucciones: Completa esta tabla para identificar las relaciones de causa y efecto en la autobiografía. Sigue el ejemplo. Causa Se pasa la mayor parte del tiempo viendo la televisión con su abuelo. Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. SPANISH Obama se siente aislado en la escuela. Efecto 130 Unit 7 Grade 8 Resource Manager Name Date from DREAMS FROM MY FATHER COPY MASTER Vocabulary Study WORDS IN CONTEXT A. Directions: As your teacher reads each item, listen for the boldfaced word. Discuss the possible meaning of the word, and write on the chart what you think the word means. After reading the selection from Dreams from My Father, confirm or adjust your definitions. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. Daphne’s dress looked dowdy compared to the youthful, flattering styles the other girls wore. Pierce saw the dark storm clouds and knew that rain was inevitable. I gave Louis a second chance, but when I found out he’d copied my paper again, my trust in him was irretrievably lost. The novelty of the video game soon wore off, and the girls became bored with it. “The appeal of hard rock music is opaque to me,” Mr. Hamir said. “I’ll never understand it.” After the car accident, Larissa needed a week of recuperation before returning to work. The toddler found refuge in her father’s arms whenever she was afraid. People never knew what mood Cooper would be in because he had such a volatile personality. Predicted Meaning Meaning in Selection from DREAMS FROM MY FATHER Vocabulary Word dowdy inevitable Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. irretrievably novelty opaque recuperation refuge volatile Resource Manager Unit 7 Grade 8 131 Name Date from DREAMS FROM MY FATHER COPY MASTER Vocabulary Practice dowdy irretrievably opaque refuge inevitable novelty recuperation volatile A. Directions: Fill in each set of blanks with the correct word from the word list. Then use the boxed letters to complete the sentence below. 1. The keys would be if they fell in the elevator shaft. 2. Jenna could not believe the 3. The speaker’s reasoning was so clothes her mother had chosen. that most of the audience was confused. of Janet’s new hairstyle wore off after a few days. 4. The 5. André approached the dog carefully, knowing that strays can be from DREAMS FROM MY FATHER and unpredictable. went well. 6. After her surgery, Emma’s 7. Having not studied for the test, Fred knew that a low grade was . When the storm hit, Maya watched two birds take from the rain under a bush near her window. B. Directions: Circle True if the underlined word’s meaning makes sense in the sentence; circle False if it does not. 1. A vote is irretrievably set once you put it in the ballot box; you cannot T F get it back. T F 2. Jackie was the most volatile member of the team and also very sweet and nice. T F 3. The dress was rather dowdy and made my mother look older than her true age. T F 4. The new restaurant will be popular because it is inevitable and delicious. T F 5. The book’s themes were opaque and very difficult to understand. T F 6. Marla knew that winning a scholarship would take novelty and dedication. 132 Unit 7 Grade 8 Resource Manager Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. 8. Name Date from DREAMS FROM MY FATHER COPY MASTER Vocabulary Strategy DENOTATION AND CONNOTATION A word’s denotation is its dictionary definition. But many words have additional ideas and feelings associated with them. These associations, or shades of meaning, are called connotations. Connotations can be positive or negative, and they can give words with similar denotations very different impacts. For example, the phrases “clever salesperson” and “conniving salesperson” have different connotations. Clever describes someone who is creative and smart, while conniving implies the person is manipulative and dishonest. To fully understand what you read, it is important to recognize word connotations. 2. surprised/amazed 3. embarrassed/humiliated 4. nervous/worried 5. problem/disaster 6. cold/freezing Resource Manager from DREAMS FROM MY FATHER Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. Directions: Each pair of words has similar meanings but different connotations. Use each word in a sentence that reflects its connotation. 1. small/puny Unit 7 Grade 8 133 Name from DREAMS FROM MY FATHER Date COPY MASTER Reading Check 134 2. Who does Obama say came to visit him at Christmas? 3. What argument does Obama describe as happening right before his Christmas vacation? 4. Why did Obama’s father come to Obama’s school? 5. What musical gift did Obama’s father give him? Unit 7 Grade 8 Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. from DREAMS FROM MY FATHER Directions: Recall the events in Barack Obama’s autobiography. Then answer the questions in phrases or sentences. 1. According to the autobiography, why were Obama and his grandfather excited on Obama’s first day of school? Resource Manager Name Date from DREAMS FROM MY FATHER COPY MASTER Question Support LITERARY ANALYSIS For questions 1–3, see page 844 of the Pupil Edition. Directions: Answer each question. 4. Identify Cultural Values Circle the activities that Obama liked best as a child. a. watching TV b. playing in Little League c. reading comics d. swimming e. going to live concerts f. listening to popular music Underline one word in parentheses and then complete the following sentence. I think the adult Obama (approves/disapproves) of the way he spent his leisure time as a child because Underline one choice in parentheses and then complete the following sentence. 5. Interpret Autobiography I think Obama (did/did not) grow close to his father during their visit because What was the overall effect of from DREAMS FROM MY FATHER 6. Examine Cause-and-Effect Relationships Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. his father’s visit on the young Obama? 7. Analyze a Symbolic Event Complete the following sentence. Obama’s rejection of Coretta symbolizes 8. Draw Conclusions Tell what dreams you think Obama’s father inspired in his son. Resource Manager Unit 7 Grade 8 135 Name Date from DREAMS FROM MY FATHER COPY MASTER Reading Fluency READING WITH EXPRESSION To make any piece of literature come alive for your listeners, you must read with expression. To read with expression means to read with feeling and emotion. Here are some tips for making your reading more expressive. • Read at a natural pace, or speed. Speed up or slow down as necessary. • Raise the volume of your voice to signal that a word or idea is important. • Vary the rise and fall of your voice to avoid sounding dull. • Group words into meaningful phrases. Directions: Follow along as your teacher reads an excerpt from the speech “Out of Many, One.” Then use these marks to prepare your own reading of the passage: L = louder S = softer n = raise pitch p = lower pitch / = pause or stop underscore = add stress I stand here knowing that my story is part of the larger American from DREAMS FROM MY FATHER story, that I owe a debt to all of those who came before me, and that, in no other country on Earth, is my story even possible. Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. Tonight, we gather to affirm the greatness of our nation—not because of the height of our skyscrapers, or the power of our military, or the size of our economy. Our pride is based on a very simple premise, summed up in a declaration made over two hundred years ago: “We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal. That they are endowed by their Creator with certain inalienable rights. That among these are life, liberty, and the pursuit if happiness.” That is the true genius of America—a faith in simple dreams, an insistence on small miracles . . . —Barack Obama, from “Out of Many, One” 136 Unit 7 Grade 8 Resource Manager Name Date from DREAMS FROM MY FATHER Selection Test A Comprehension Read each of the following questions. Then choose the letter of the best answer. (6 points each) 1. Obama comes back to the United States to live with his grandparents because he 4. dislikes his parents B. wants to live in Hawaii C. has been accepted to a good school D. wants to be with his grandparents A. 2. What causes Obama’s embarrassment on his first day of school? Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. 3. an argument about watching television B. a car accident that injures his father C. his father’s visit to Obama’s school D. lies that he tells about his father A. 5. When Obama watches his father dance to African music, you can tell Obama feels connected because he accepts the records that his father gives him B. fails to understand his father’s gestures C. shifts uncomfortably while listening D. dances with his father A. from DREAMS FROM MY FATHER his classmates’ questions about his father B. Miss Hefty’s questions about life in Kenya C. Gramps’s insistence that they arrive early D. his betrayal of Coretta on the playground A. A significant event in Obama’s autobiography occurs when his family’s reunion is marred because of Which statement is a lie that Obama tells to several of his classmates? He and his mother once lived in Indonesia. B. His grandfather is a chief of his tribe in Kenya. C. His father has six children living in Kenya. D. He watches television all evening long. A. Resource Manager Unit 7 Grade 8 137 Name Date SELECTION TEST A, CONTINUED Vocabulary Choose the answer that best explains the meaning of each underlined word. (6 points each) 6. What does novelty mean? 9. the state of being imaginary B. the quality of being new C. deep embarrassment D. excellent manners recovery B. reflection C. realization D. recognition A. 7. What does dowdy mean? unhealthy B. comical C. shabby D. clumsy A. 8. A recuperation is a A. 10. What does opaque mean? difficult B. normal C. hidden D. expected A. A refuge is a source of comfort in times of trouble B. memory of an event in the past C. pile of trash on the street D. journey to visit family from DREAMS FROM MY FATHER A. Short Response On a separate sheet of paper, answer the following questions based on your knowledge of the autobiography. (10 points each) 11. Briefly describe Obama’s family situation in Hawaii. 12. How do teachers and students at Obama’s school react to his father’s visit and talk? Include two details from the autobiography in your response. Extended Response Answer the following question based on your knowledge of the autobiography. Write one or two paragraphs on a separate sheet of paper. (20 points) 13. How do you know that Obama’s transition to his new school is difficult for him? Support your response with two details from the autobiography. 138 Unit 7 Grade 8 Resource Manager Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. Written Response Name Date from DREAMS FROM MY FATHER Selection Test B/C Comprehension Read each of the following questions. Then choose the letter of the best answer. (6 points each) 1. The main reason that Obama looks forward to starting school at Punahou Academy is that 4. encourages them to learn more about African tribes and customs B. brings traditional African music and dances to it in the classroom C. tells interesting stories and answers their questions seriously D. informs them of Obama's family history in Kenya A. he wants to find companions his own age B. his new teacher had once lived in Kenya C. his father attended the same school D. he will be able to play soccer A. 2. What is the effect of Miss Hefty’s questions about Kenya as she talks with Obama in class? Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. 3. 5. A key event in Obama’s autobiography that brings him closer to his father occurs when his father gives him a basketball for Christmas insists that Obama begin to study harder C. takes him to a Dave Brubeck concert D. shows him how to dance to African music A. B. from DREAMS FROM MY FATHER The class applauds heartily and accepts him. B. Obama becomes speechless with embarrassment. C. Obama eagerly explains the customs of his tribe. D. Coretta watches with a look of satisfaction. A. Obama’s classmates are impressed with Obama’s father because he Obama’s relations with his classmates improve slightly after they learn that his father was injured B. Obama publicly rejects Coretta C. he tells them that his father is a prince D. they find out that he lives with his grandparents A. Resource Manager Unit 7 Grade 8 139 Name Date SELECTION TEST B/C, CONTINUED Vocabulary Choose the answer that best explains the meaning of each underlined word. (6 points each) 6. What does volatile mean? 9. easy to complete B. difficult to define C. determined to succeed D. concerned with electricity a great, unknown danger B. something that cannot be seen C. that which cannot be prevented D. a strong force that you oppose A. 7. What is recuperation? a payment for work or services B. a return to one’s home country C. an agreement to work together D. a return to health or strength A. 8. What does inevitable mean? A. 10. Something opaque is different from others B. out of date C. difficult to understand D. out of control A. Irretrievably means permanently B. unnaturally C. secretly D. rapidly from DREAMS FROM MY FATHER A. Short Response On a separate sheet of paper, answer the following questions based on your knowledge of the autobiography. (10 points each) 11. What is one thing that Obama and Coretta have in common? 12. What lies does Obama tell his classmates before his father arrives for a visit? Include two details from the autobiography in your response. Extended Response Answer one of the following questions based on your knowledge of the autobiography. Write one or two paragraphs on a separate sheet of paper. (20 points) 13. Did Obama enjoy his time with his father, or was it too uncomfortable for him to enjoy it? Support your response with details from the autobiography. 14. 140 Challenge Who is right in the serious argument that the adults have when Obama watches a holiday television program? Support your opinion with details from the autobiography. Unit 7 Grade 8 Resource Manager Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. Written Response Lesson at a Glance Out of Many, One WHY THIS SELECTION? FOCUS STANDARDS In Dreams from My Father, Barack Obama presents a candid look at his mother, father, and grandparents. In “Out of Many, One,” the keynote speech at the 2004 Democratic Convention, Obama uses the lives of those same family members to inspire the Democratic Party to maintain the magic of America: that is, to continue to ensure that people are allowed to reach their potential here if they are willing to work hard. • Identify Treatment LESSON RESOURCES Plan and Teach Lesson Plan and Resource Guide . 142–143 Additional Selection Questions . . . . 144 Teacher Notes . . . . . . . . . . . 145 Student Copy Masters Summary (English, Spanish) . . . . . 147 Summary (Haitian Creole, Vietnamese) 148 Skill Focus: Identify Treatment . . . . 149 ABOUT THIS SELECTION Pupil/Teacher’s Edition Pages: 846–849 Read for Information: Compare and Contrast . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 150 Difficulty Level: Average Readability Scores: Lexile: 1110; Fry: Skill Focus: Identify Treatment (Spanish) . . . . . . . . . . . . 151 7; Dale-Chall: 6.6 Read for Information: Compare and Contrast Summary In “Out of Many, One,” (Spanish) . . . . . . . . . . . . 152 Senator Barack Obama’s keynote Reading Check . . . . . . . . . . 153 speech at the 2004 Democratic National Question Support . . . . . . . . . 154 Convention, Obama relates information Assess about many of the family members Selection Test A . . . . . . . . 155–156 featured in his autobiography Dreams Selection Test B/C . . . . . . . 157–158 from My Father. In his speech, Obama uses the history of his family to convey the idea that all things are possible for all All lesson resources are available electronically on DVD people in America. Resource Manager Unit 7 Grade 8 FROM OUT OF MANY, ONE Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. Reading for Information 141 Lesson Plan and Resource Guide from Out of Many, One Speech by Barack Obama Objectives identify treatment, including form, purpose, and tone • compare and contrast portrayals • identify characteristics of a keynote speech • read a speech • Unless otherwise noted, all resources can be found in the Resource Manager. All materials are also available on Easy Planner DVD. Pupil’s Edition and Teacher’s Edition Additional Resources CM=Copy Master T=Transparency Focus and Motivate What’s the Connection? p. 846 Best Practices Toolkit Anticipation Guide p. A14 [T] Teach Identify Treatment p. 846 Identify Treatment CM—p. 149, Spanish p. 151 Audio Anthology CD Summary CM—English and Spanish p. 147, Haitian Creole and Vietnamese p. 148 Reading Check CM p. 153 Question Support CM p. 154 Additional Selection Questions p. 144 Assess Selection Test A CM pp. 155–156 Selection Test B/C CM pp. 157–158 Test Generator CD Reteach Standards Lesson File Reading Lesson 3: Author’s Purpose Practice and Apply: Guided Practice Selection and Teacher Notes “Out of Many, One,” pp. 847–848 Practice and Apply: After Reading Selection Questions p. 849 Read for Information: Compare and Contrast p. 849 from OUT OF MANY, ONE Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. Assess and Reteach Identify Treatment =Resources for Differentiation Resource Manager Unit 7 Grade 8 143 from OUT OF MANY, ONE Use to supplement the Additional Selection Questions questions on PE page 849. Differentiation Use these questions to provide customized practice with comprehension and critical thinking skills. Easy Where were Obama’s parents from? (Obama’s mother was from Kansas, and his father was from Kenya.) 2. Clarify How did Obama’s parents meet? (They met when Obama’s father was a foreign student in the United States.) 3. Identify Treatment Describe Obama’s treatment of his childhood and his parents’ experiences in this speech. (Obama treats the experiences seriously; he makes his parents’ lives seem very noble.) 1. Recall Average What is the purpose of Obama’s keynote speech? (The purpose is to reflect the key points of the Democratic Party’s ideas and policies.) 5. Analyze Treatment What is Obama’s attitude toward his family in his speech? In what way do you feel this affects his treatment of the subject? (Obama speaks of his family with admiration for what they accomplished and love for the dreams they had for him. It probably contributes to the serious yet optimistic treatment of the speech.) 6. Make Inferences Why might Obama have used a quotation from the Declaration of Independence (lines 38–41) for his speech? (The quotation would have reminded the audience that the values of the Democratic Party are the same ones promoted by the founding fathers and would have inspired the audience to continue to uphold these values, since they are what the country is built on.) Challenging “Through hard work and perseverance my father got a scholarship to study in a magical place, America, that shone as a beacon of freedom and opportunity to so many who had come before.” How is this image of America in keeping with Obama’s tone? (This image conveys the idea that America is a unique place with limitless opportunities, which would inspire listeners to feel great love for the country.) 8. Compare Genres How does a speech differ from other types of primary sources? (The genre of a speech is an oral one. It is meant to be heard by a select audience and is enhanced by the speaker’s gestures, inflections, and facial expressions.) 9. Examine Treatment What is the overall tone of Obama’s speech? In what ways might the tone have contributed to the popularity of the speech? (Obama’s tone is inspirational. The tone contributed to the popularity of the speech because it inspired his listeners to feel pride in America and to continue to uphold the values and commitments of the nation.) from OUT OF MANY, ONE 7. Identify Treatment 144 Unit 7 Grade 8 Resource Manager Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. 4. Analyze Speech from OUT OF MANY, ONE Teacher Notes Review and Evaluate Outcome What did I want students to know or be able to do? How successful was the lesson? Evaluate Process What worked? • Strategies • Resources • Differentiation Reflect The next time I teach “Out of Many, One,” what will I do differently? Why? from OUT OF MANY, ONE Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. What did not work? Why not? Plan Ahead What must I do next? Resource Manager Unit 7 Grade 8 145 from OUT OF MANY, ONE Summary from OUT OF MANY, ONE Speech Setting: Democratic National Convention, Boston, Massacusetts; 2004 In this speech given at the 2004 Democratic National Convention, Barack Obama tells how unlikely it is for him to even give the speech. However, the dreams his grandparents had for his parents and the dreams his parents had for him ultimately made it possible. Those dreams gave him and his parents opportunities in America. Obama believes that in America, one doesn’t have to be rich to achieve one’s full potential. He also believes that America is a great country, but not because of its military power or the size of its buildings. He believes that America is a great country because its forefathers proclaimed that all people are created equal and have certain rights. de ENTRE MUCHOS, UNO En este discurso presentado en la Convención Nacional Demócrata, Barack Obama menciona lo inverosímil que es para él dar el discurso. Sin embargo, los sueños que sus abuelos tenían para sus padres y los sueños que sus padres tuvieron para él finalmente lo hicieron posible. Esos sueños le dieron a él y a sus padres oportunidades en América. Obama piensa que en América uno no tiene que ser rico para alcanzar todo su potencial. También cree que América es un gran país, pero no por su poderío militar o el tamaño de sus edificios. Él considera que América es un gran país porque sus antepasados proclamaron que todas las personas fueron creadas iguales y tienen ciertos derechos. from OUT OF MANY, ONE Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. Discurso Escenario: la Convención Nacional Demócrata, Boston, Massachussets, 2004 Resource Manager Unit 7 Grade 8 147 from OUT OF MANY, ONE Summary YOUN SOU PLIZYÈ Diskou Espas ak tan: Konvansyon Nasyonal Demokratik, Boston, Massachusetts, 2004 from OUT OF MANY, ONE Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. Nan diskou sa a ki fèt nan Konvansyon Nasyonal Demokratik 2004 la, Barack Obama rakonte kouman li pa t atann pou limenm ta bay yon diskou. Men, rèv granparan li te genyen pou paran li ak rèv paran li te genyen pou li te finalman fè sa vin posib. Rèv sa yo te bay limenm ak paran li opòtinite nan Lamerik. Obama kwè nan Lamerik, yon moun pa oblije vin rich pou li reyalize tout talan li. Li kwè tou Lamerik se yon gwo peyi, men se pa akòz puisans militè li oswa gwosè bilding li. Li kwè Lamerik se yon gwo peyi paske zansèt li yo te pwoklame tout moun te kreye egal-ego epi yo gen sèten dwa. 148 Unit 7 Grade 8 Resource Manager Name Date from OUT OF MANY, ONE COPY MASTER Skill Focus IDENTIFY TREATMENT Writers can handle the same subject matter in different ways. The way a writer chooses to handle a topic is called its treatment. The writer’s purpose, or reason for writing, helps determine a work’s treatment. So does the form the writing takes and the tone, or attitude the writer expresses about the topic. In order to identify a writer’s treatment, ask yourself the following questions: • What form does the writing take? For example, is it a newspaper column, personal letter, or a business memo? • For what purpose(s) is the selection written? Is it written to entertain, to express ideas and feelings, to inform, or to inspire? • What is the writer’s tone, or attitude toward the subject? For example, the tone of a selection might be described as mocking, optimistic, or serious. Directions: In the excerpt of “Out of Many, One,” Obama’s topic is his family background. As you read, identify Obama’s treatment this topic by completing the following chart. “Out of Many, One” speech For what purpose(s) is the selection written? What is the writer’s primary purpose? from OUT OF MANY, ONE Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. W hat form does the writing take? What is the writer’s tone, or attitude toward the subject? Resource Manager Unit 7 Grade 8 149 Name Date from OUT OF MANY, ONE COPY MASTER Read for Information COMPARE AND CONTRAST Follow these steps to compare and contrast Barack Obama’s portrayal of his family in the speech with the portrayal in his autobiography: 1. Review each selection and note the main points and most important details Obama includes about each family member. 2. Identify the similarities and differences between the way the family members are portrayed in the speech and autobiography. 3. In a sentence, make a general statement about the similarities and differences in the accounts. Support your statement with specific examples. From Speech • Mother From Autobiography • Mother • Father • Father • Mom’s Parents • Mom’s Parents • Dad’s Parents • Dad’s Parents Similarities • Differences • • • • • Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. from OUT OF MANY, ONE Directions: Use the diagram to make notes about the family members and the similarities and differences in their portrayals. General Statement 150 Unit 7 Grade 8 Resource Manager Name Date DE ENTRE MUCHOS, UNO COPY MASTER Skill Focus IDENTIFY TREATMENT Los escritores pueden ocuparse del mismo tema de diversas formas. La forma en la que un escritor decide ocuparse de un tema se llama tratamiento. El propósito del escritor, o su razón por escribir, ayuda a determinar el tratamiento de la obra. Lo mismo sucede con la forma que toma el escrito y el tono, o la actitud que expresa el escritor sobre el tema. Para identificar el tratamiento del escritor, te debes hacer las siguientes preguntas: • ¿Qué forma toma el escrito? Por ejemplo ¿es una columna de periódico, una carta personal o un memorando de negocios? • ¿Con qué propósito(s) se escribe la selección? ¿ Se escribe para entretener o para expresar ideas y sentimientos, para informar o para inspirar? • ¿Cuál es el tono del escritor, o su actitud hacia el tema? Por ejemplo, el tono de una selección puede describirse como burlón,optimista o serio Instrucciones: En el extracto de “De entre muchos, uno”, el tema de Obama es la experiencia de su familia. Mientras lees, identifica el tratamiento de su tema completando la siguiente tabla. “De entre muchos, uno” discurso ¿Con qué propósito(s) se escribe la selección? ¿Cuál es el propósito primario del escritor? ¿Cuál es el tono del escritor, o su actitud hacia el tema? Resource Manager SPANISH Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. ¿Qué forma toma el escrito? Unit 7 Grade 8 151 Name Date DE ENTRE MUCHOS, UNO COPY MASTER Read for Information COMPARE AND CONTRAST Sigue estos pasos para comparar y contrastar la descripción de la familia de Barack Obama en su discurso, con la descripción de su autobiografía: 1. Revisa cada selección y anota los puntos principales y los detalles más importantes. Obama incluye a casi todos los miembros de la familia. 2. Identifica las similitudes y las diferencias entre la manera en que se describe a los miembros de la familia en el discurso y en la autobiografía. 3. En una oración, haz una declaración general sobre las similitudes y las diferencias en las narraciones. Apoya tus declaraciones con ejemplos específicos. Del discurso • Madre De la autobiografía • Madre • Padre • Padre • Padres de la madre • Padres de la madre • Padres del padre • Padres del padre Similitudes • Diferencias • • • • • Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. SPANISH Instrucciones: Usa el diagrama para hacer notas sobre los miembros de la familia y las similitudes y diferencias en sus descripciones. Declaración General 152 Unit 7 Grade 8 Resource Manager Name Date from OUT OF MANY, ONE COPY MASTER Reading Check 2. Why does Obama say that he has a diverse heritage? 3. What dream does Obama say that his mother and father had for him? 4. What does Obama say is the reason that Americans should be proud of their country? 5. What does Obama say that people must do during the election? from OUT OF MANY, ONE Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. Directions: Recall the information in Barack Obama’s speech. Then answer the questions in phrases or sentences. 1. How does Obama describe his grandfather and father’s idea of the United States? Resource Manager Unit 7 Grade 8 153 Name Date from OUT OF MANY, ONE COPY MASTER Question Support CRITICAL ANALYSIS For questions 1–2, see page 849 of the Pupil Edition. Directions: Answer the questions. 3. Identify Treatment The way a topic is handled is called its treatment. Review the chart you completed as you read the speech. Then describe Obama’s treatment of his family in the speech. 4. Identify Repetition Complete the sentences. One word, phrase or idea that Obama repeats in the speech is This repeated word or idea helps to emphasize Do you think it was a good idea for Obama to tell listeners so much about his family background in his speech to the Democratic National Convention? Why or why not? from OUT OF MANY, ONE Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. 5. Evaluate a Speech 154 Unit 7 Grade 8 Resource Manager Name Date from OUT OF MANY, ONE Selection Test A Comprehension Read each of the following questions. Then choose the letter of the best answer. (8 points each) 1. What similar dream do Obama’s grandparents share? 4. better lives for their children B. marrying and raising children C. better jobs in the United States D. chances for education for themselves A. 2. Besides a deep love for each other, Obama says his parents shared the need to do better than their parents had B. the fear of punishment in other countries C. a desire to open their own business D. a faith in the nation’s possibilities A. 3. According to Obama’s parents, in the United States wealth is unnecessary in order to achieve your potential B. start your own business C. keep your children safe D. buy a house and live there A. 5. Which word best expresses Obama’s tone toward his diverse heritage in this treatment? tolerant B. comical C. proud D. generous A. What does Obama say the pride of the United States is based on? power of the military B. the idea that all people are equal C. the size of the economy D. height of the city skyscrapers from OUT OF MANY, ONE Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. A. Resource Manager Unit 7 Grade 8 155 Name Date SELECTION TEST A, CONTINUED Written Response Short Response On a separate sheet of paper, answer the following questions based on your knowledge of the speech. (10 points each) 6. What are two details that indicate that Obama’s father and grandfather were poor in Africa? 7. What is one negative aspect of U.S. society or history to which Obama refers in his speech? 8. Why did Obama’s parents name him “Barack”? Support your response with a detail from the speech. 9. Why does Obama say that he and his audience gather together on this night? Extended Response Answer the following question based on your knowledge of from OUT OF MANY, ONE Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. the speech. Write one or two paragraphs on a separate sheet of paper. (20 points) 10. In his next-to-last paragraph, Obama lists four examples of the “simple dreams” that America offers. Choose two of the dreams and discuss how Obama or his family has realized this dream. Support each choice with a detail from the speech. 156 Unit 7 Grade 8 Resource Manager Name Date from OUT OF MANY, ONE Selection Test B/C Comprehension Read each of the following questions. Then choose the letter of the best answer. (8 points each) 1. How did Obama’s father come to study in the United States? His father paid for an expensive school. B. He won a scholarship through hard work. C. His grandfather paid a bribe to get him in. D. He worked at the school and went to class, too. 4. Obama says that the “true genius of America” is faith in simple dreams B. greatness of military power C. diversity of heritage D. excellence in education A. A. 5. Which excerpt shows Obama’s proud tone toward his family in this treatment? “we are called to reaffirm our values” B. “A common dream, born of two continents” C. “I owe a debt to all of those that came before” D. “we gather to affirm the greatness of our nation” A. 2. Which statement best expresses Obama’s view of his own life story? You can always say what you think. B. Few U.S. citizens are as lucky as he is. C. It is a unique story that can never be repeated. D. Only in the United States is his story possible. A. According to Obama, his parents’ dreams live on in Obama’s two daughters B. the larger story of the United States C. the political process of the United States D. a promise that future generations will be better A. from OUT OF MANY, ONE Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. 3. Resource Manager Unit 7 Grade 8 157 Name Date SELECTION TEST B/C, CONTINUED Written Response Short Response On a separate sheet of paper, answer the following questions based on your knowledge of the speech. (10 points each) 6. How did Obama’s mother and father meet? 7. Briefly describe the history of Obama’s American grandparents. 8. According to Obama, what did his parents believe you could achieve in the United States, even if you had little money? 9. Name two of the “small miracles” that Obama says are the “true genius of America.” Extended Response Answer one of the following questions based on your knowledge of the speech. Write one or two paragraphs on a separate sheet of paper. (20 points) 10. How does Obama show a balanced tone in his treatment of U.S. history in his speech? Use specific details from the speech to support your response. Challenge What does Obama use more effectively to show the greatness of the United States: references to U.S. history or references to his personal history? Support your response with specific details from the speech. from OUT OF MANY, ONE Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. 11. 158 Unit 7 Grade 8 Resource Manager Lesson at a Glance MEDIA STUDY: POLITICAL CARTOONS Media Study Political Cartoons WHAT’S THE CONNECTION? This Media Study reinforces the unit focus on the role of art and literature in history and culture. The political cartoon has been an important and influential tool throughout history—using images and text to communicate ideas on politics and society. Students learn how political cartoonists combine art elements, such as color, line, shape, and texture, to express ideas. ABOUT THE MEDIA STUDY LESSON RESOURCES Plan and Teach Lesson Plan and Resource Guide . . . Ideas for Extension . . . . . . . . Teacher Notes . . . . . . . . . . . 160 161 162 Student Copy Masters Summary (English, Spanish) . . . . . Summary (Haitian Creole, Vietnamese) Viewing Guide . . . . . . . . . . Close Viewing . . . . . . . . . . Media Activity . . . . . . . . . . Produce Your Own Media . . . . . . 163 164 165 166 167 168 Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. Pupil/Teacher’s Edition Pages: 850–853 Summary The 1984 cartoon “Acid Rain” comments on the harmful effects of acid rain. Uncle Sam reaches out to catch a drop of rain, only to have it burn a hole through his hand. The 1890 cartoon “The Silver Sun of Prosperity” provides a positive view of the Sherman Silver Purchase Act. Uncle Sam is shown proudly holding an enormous silver dollar. Key Idea: Statement Throughout the Media Study, students explore the key concept of how cartoonists use art elements to make a statement about political and societal issues and events. Resource Manager Unit 7 Grade 8 159 MEDIA STUDY: POLITICAL CARTOONS Lesson Plan and Resource Guide Media Study: Political Cartoons Image Collection Objectives • • • • • explore the key idea of how cartoons can make political statements identify visual aspects of cartoons compare and contrast cartoonists’ styles compare different points of view in nonprint media sources create a political cartoon Unless otherwise noted, all resources can be found in the Resource Manager. All materials are also available on Easy Planner DVD. Pupil’s Edition and Teacher’s Edition Additional Resources CM=Copy Master T=Transparency Focus and Motivate Question/Key Idea p. 850 Summary CM—English and Spanish, p. 163, Haitian Creole and Vietnamese p. 164 MediaSmart DVD Introduction, Media Lessons Teach Media Literacy: Messages in Political Cartoons p. 851 Viewing Guide and Teacher Notes p. 852 Viewing Guide CM p. 165 Close Viewing CM p. 166 Media Activity CM p. 167 MediaSmart DVD Guided Analysis Ideas for Extension p. 161 Assess and Reteach Assess Write or Discuss p. 853 Produce Your Own Media p. 853 Reteach Best Practices Toolkit Venn Diagram p. A26 [T] Produce Your Own Media CM p. 168 MediaSmart DVD Media Center at ClassZone.com Messages in Political Cartoons Standards Lesson File Media Lessons 3 & 19 =Resources for Differentiation 160 Unit 7 Grade 8 Resource Manager Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. Practice and Apply: Guided Practice MEDIA STUDY: POLITICAL CARTOONS MEDIA STUDY: POLITICAL CARTOONS Ideas for Extension Differentiation These activities provide students with a variety of options for demonstrating understanding of lesson concepts. EXPLORATIONS AND ACTIVITIES ILLUSTRATION: CREATE SYMBOL Remind students that images of Uncle Sam have been used to represent the United States for close to two hundred years. His look, though generally consistent, changes to reflect whatever message he is communicating. Have students work individually or in pairs to create their own artistic representations of important people, places, and ideas. Their representations should reflect how they feel about their subjects. For example, students might design their own symbol of the United States of America, while others might create a symbol of a more general idea, organization, or concept. To get started, students should brainstorm what opinion they want to express through their symbol. Remind them to experiment with some of the artistic elements introduced in the lesson, such as color, exaggerated shapes, and different types of lines. Have students share their designs with the rest of the class and analyze the meaning of each image shown. INQUIRY AND RESEARCH Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. CARTOONS OF THE PAST Tell students that it can be interesting to look back on early political cartoons to learn how the genre has both changed and stayed the same. Have students work individually or in pairs to learn more about political cartoons of the past. Students should locate books, newspaper archives, and Web sites that feature political cartoons from the 1800s into the 20th century. If possible, have them make copies of their favorite examples and share them with the class. Pre-AP Challenge: Ask students to find out more about some of the best-known political cartoonists throughout history. Have them compare and contrast the work of two or more cartoonists—from the same era or from different historical periods—in an essay or presentation. You might suggest the following names: Thomas Nast, Joseph Keppler, Carl Schurz, Jeff MacNelly, Jim Borgman, Mike Luckovich, Michael Ramirez, Dick Locher, Jim Morin, and Mike Peters. WRITING ANALYZE CARTOON: ESSAY Ask students to write an essay in which they use terminology introduced in the lesson to analyze a political cartoon. Assign students a current or historical political cartoon or ask them to locate one in a newspaper, magazine, or online. Then have them study the cartoon closely and write about the effect of color, shapes, lines, and texture on the cartoon’s message. Students should analyze the message of the cartoon and describe how it gets that message across to readers. Resource Manager Unit 7 Grade 8 161 MEDIA STUDY: POLITICAL CARTOONS MEDIA STUDY: POLITICAL CARTOONS Teacher Notes Review and Evaluate Outcome What did I want students to know or be able to do? Which Teaching Option did I use? Teaching Option 1: The Basics (1–2 days) Teaching Option 2: In-Depth Study (2–3 days) How successful was the lesson? Evaluate Process What worked? • Strategies Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. • Resources What did not work? Why not? Reflect The next time I teach this Media Study, what will I do differently? Why? Plan Ahead What must I do next? 162 Unit 7 Grade 8 Resource Manager MEDIA STUDY: POLITICAL CARTOONS MEDIA STUDY: POLITICAL CARTOONS Summary “ACID RAIN” This cartoon about acid rain by Frank Evers features a confused Uncle Sam. A drop of acid rain has burned through his hand. The cartoon first appeared in the New York Daily News. “THE SILVER SUN OF PROSPERITY” Bernard Gillam drew this cartoon in reaction to the Sherman Silver Purchase Act of 1890. In it, Uncle Sam holds a large silver dollar over a busy Washington scene. “LLUVIA ÁCIDA”” Esta caricatura sobre lluvia ácida por Frank Evers presenta un Tío Sam confundido. Una gota de lluvia ácida quemó su mano atravesándola de un lado a otro. La caricatura apareció originalmente en el New York Daily News. “EL SOL DE PLATA DE LA PROSPERIDAD” Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. Bernard Gillam dibujó su caricatura en reacción a la Ley Sherman de Plata de 1890. En la caricatura, el Tío Sam está sosteniendo un dólar de plata grande sobre una escena muy agitada de la ciudad de Washington. Resource Manager Unit 7 Grade 8 163 Summary “LAPLI ASID” Karikati sou lapli asid, Frank Evers la, prezante yon Tonton Sam ki gen konfizyon. Yon gout laplis asid boule nan men li. Karikati a te parèt dabò nan New York Daily News. “THE SILVER SUN OF PROSPERITY” Bernard Gillam te desine karikati sa a akòz Sherman Silver Purchase Act nan ane 1890. Ladan li, Tonton Sam kenbe yon gwo dola ann ajan sou yon sèn Wachintonn ki gen anpil moun. Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. MEDIA STUDY: POLITICAL CARTOONS MEDIA STUDY: POLITICAL CARTOONS 164 Unit 7 Grade 8 Resource Manager Name Date MEDIA STUDY: POLITICAL CARTOONS COPY MASTER MEDIA STUDY: POLITICAL CARTOONS Media Literacy: Messages in Political Cartoons VIEWING GUIDE A political cartoon is a humorous drawing that comments on a political issue or event. In every cartoon, a cartoonist includes images and details that help the viewer figure out his or her message. Directions: View both political cartoons. Then, analyze each cartoon by answering the questions in the first column of the chart. Strategies for Analyzing Political Cartoons “Acid Rain” “The Silver Sun of Prosperity” What is the subject of the cartoon? What symbols are used in the cartoon? Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. What words or phrases are used to identify objects? What details are unusual or exaggerated? Are the characters or settings portrayed positively or negatively? Resource Manager Unit 7 Grade 8 165 Name Date MEDIA STUDY: POLITICAL CARTOONS MEDIA STUDY: POLITICAL CARTOONS COPY MASTER Media Literacy: Messages in Political Cartoons CLOSE VIEWING You can analyze the message in a political cartoon. Directions: Analyze the political cartoon “The Silver Sun of Prosperity.” Rate the effectiveness of its message based on the criteria in the first column of the chart. In the second column, explain your rating and include specific examples from the cartoon to support your opinions. Rate the effectiveness of the cartoon on a scale of 1 to 5. Explain your rating. Symbolism Rating: 1 = not at all effective 5 = extremely effective Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. Art Elements (color, line, shape, size) Rating: 1 = not at all effective 5 = extremely effective Text Rating: 1 = not at all effective 5 = extremely effective 166 Unit 7 Grade 8 Resource Manager Name Date MEDIA STUDY: POLITICAL CARTOONS COPY MASTER MEDIA STUDY: POLITICAL CARTOONS Media Literacy: Messages in Political Cartoons MEDIA ACTIVITY You can compare the messages in different political cartoons. Directions: Collect three political cartoons from your local newspaper or school paper. Select one of the cartoons and compare it to one of the selections from this lesson. Use the chart below to examine the similarities and differences between the two cartoons. Strategies for Analyzing Political Cartoons Title or Label: Title or Label: What is the subject of the cartoon? What symbols are used in the cartoon? Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. What words or phrases are used to identify objects? What details are unusual or exaggerated? Are the characters portrayed positively or negatively? Resource Manager Unit 7 Grade 8 167 Name Date COPY MASTER Media Literacy: Messages in Political Cartoons PRODUCE YOUR OWN MEDIA You can create a political cartoon. Directions: Choose an issue that you think would make a good subject for your own political cartoon. This issue may be something that affects your school, your neighborhood, or the entire nation. Think about: • What symbols and details you could use to represent the issue • What you could exaggerate in the image to highlight your point • How you will use art elements to draw attention to the most important part of your image • How you will draw or label objects so that they’re easy to recognize Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. MEDIA STUDY: POLITICAL CARTOONS MEDIA STUDY: POLITICAL CARTOONS 168 Unit 7 Grade 8 Resource Manager Lesson at a Glance ant to rite it-Ins Margaret Walker Margaret Walker Margaret Walker writes skillfully and passionately about the African-American experience and the civil rights movement. Students at every reading level will get a better appreciation of the events and people she describes in “I Want to Write” and “Sit-Ins.” I WANT TO WRITE / SIT-INS WHY THESE SELECTIONS? poems were written and the changes in society’s attitude towards injustice. FOCUS STANDARDS • • Historical Context Analyze Repetition LESSON RESOURCES Plan and Teach Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. ABOUT THESE SELECTIONS Lesson Plan and Resource Guide . 170–171 Pupil/Teacher’s Edition Pages: 854–859 Alternative Standards Focus . . . . . 172 Difficulty Level: Easy Additional Selection Questions . . . . 173 Ideas for Extension . . . . . . 174–175 Summaries In “I Want to Write,” the speaker describes her longing to capture Teacher Notes . . . . . . . . . . . 176 the songs of her people: their stories, their Student Copy Masters Literary Analysis: Historical Context . 177 pain, and their beauty. In “Sit-Ins,” the speaker addresses the first students who Literary Analysis: Historical Context participated in a sit-in at a Woolworth’s (Spanish) . . . . . . . . . . . . 178 department store in 1960. The poem Reading Skill: Analyze Repetition . . 179 celebrates the students’ “courage and Reading Skill: Analyze Repetition faith, convictions, and intelligence,” as (Spanish) . . . . . . . . . . . . 180 well as their efforts to achieve justice and Question Support . . . . . . . . . 181 awaken the consciences of the people who Reading Fluency . . . . . . . . . 182 make and enforce unjust laws. Assess Key Idea: Injustice As students work through the two poems, they will explore the key idea of injustice and how to not only combat it, as in “Sit-Ins,” but also how to rise above it. The poems span thirty years, allowing students to reflect on the historical context in which the Resource Manager Selection Test A . . . . . . . . Selection Test B/C . . . . . . . 183–184 185–186 All lesson resources are available electronically on DVD Unit 7 Grade 8 169 Lesson Plan and Resource Guide I Want to Write / Sit-Ins Poems by Margaret Walker Objectives explore the key idea of injustice • identify and analyze historical context • read poetry and a book excerpt • identify and analyze repetition • I WANT TO WRITE / SIT-INS Unless otherwise noted, all resources can be found in the Resource Manager. All materials are also available on Easy Planner DVD. Pupil’s Edition and Teacher’s Edition Additional Resources CM=Copy Master T=Transparency Focus and Motivate Question/Key Idea p. 854 Author Biography and Background Information p. 855 Literature Center at ClassZone.com Historical Context p. 855 Analyze Repetition p. 855 Analyze Repetition CM—p. 179, Spanish p. 180 Audio Anthology CD Reading Fluency CM p. 182 Best Practices Toolkit Differentiated Instruction pp. 31–38 Think-Pair-Share p. A18 [T] Historical Context CM—p. 177, Spanish p. 178 Question Support CM p. 181 Additional Selection Questions p. 173 Alternative Standards Focus p. 172 Ideas for Extension pp. 174–175 Practice and Apply: Guided Practice Selection and Teacher Notes “I Want to Write,” p. 856 “Sit-Ins,” p. 857 from A Dream of Freedom, p. 859 Practice and Apply: After Reading 170 Selection Questions p. 858 Unit 7 Grade 8 Resource Manager Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. Teach Pupil’s Edition and Teacher’s Edition Additional Resources CM=Copy Master T=Transparency Assess and Reteach Selection Test A CM pp. 183–184 Selection Test B/C CM pp. 185–186 Test Generator CD Reteach Standards Lesson File Literature Lesson 34: Repetition and Parallelism Literature Lesson 41: Author’s Perspective Analyze Repetition Historical Context I WANT TO WRITE / SIT-INS Assess Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. =Resources for Differentiation Resource Manager Unit 7 Grade 8 171 I WANT TO WRITE / SIT-INS Use as an alternative to the Alternative Standards Focus focus skills on PE page 855. The focus skills for “Why I Write”/ “Sit-Ins” are historical context and analyze repetition. The suggestions on this page allow you to teach an alternate or additional literary analysis skill using these selections. Literary Analysis: Imagery PASSAGE 1: lines 3–6 (“I Want to Write”) I WANT TO WRITE / SIT-INS What feelings do the images in lines 3–6 convey? (The images are of someone taking hold of things—songs, dreams, souls—that are hard to catch. They convey the speaker’s longing to capture in words the African-American experience.) PASSAGE 2: line 8 (“Sit-Ins”) Poets use imagery to help readers visualize key ideas in their poetry. What mental picture does line 8 bring to mind? (The image suggests a bolt of fire streaking across the sky like lightning, but brighter and even more powerful.) PASSAGE 3: How does Walker’s use of imagery affect your ability to understand the historical context in which the poem is set? List some examples of imagery describing the students and their opponents. (Her use of imagery draws readers into the event and helps readers better appreciate the extreme courage of these “first brave ones.” Some examples of imagery include “bright young” [line 5], “fling your names across pages” [line 5], and “stony ones” [line 10].) PASSAGE 4: “I Want to Write,” “Sit-Ins” In your opinion, which of the two poems uses imagery more effectively? Why? (Some students may say “I Want to Write” because the senses of sight, hearing, and touch are addressed, whereas some may say that “Sit-Ins” includes vivid imagery in the descriptions of the students’ qualities, such as courage and intelligence.) For a lesson on imagery, see Literature Lesson 28: Imagery in the Standards Lesson File. 172 Unit 7 Grade 8 Resource Manager Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. lines 1–12 (“Sit-Ins”) I WANT TO WRITE / SIT-INS Use to supplement the Additional Selection Questions questions on PE page 858. Differentiation Use these questions to provide customized practice with comprehension and critical thinking skills. Easy In “Sit-Ins,” whom is the speaker addressing? How do you know? (The speaker is talking to the first students to participate in a sit-in. The speaker makes this clear by beginning the poem with “You were our first brave ones.” “You” refers to the students.) 2. Identify Repetition Both poems use repetition of words or phrases to help emphasize meaning. List an example of repetition in each poem. (In “I Want to Write,” the phrase I want is repeated as well as phrases beginning with to. In “Sit-Ins,” the words and phrases first and with your are repeated.) 1. Clarify I WANT TO WRITE / SIT-INS Average After reading the two poems has your initial response to the question—How can we fight injustice?—changed? Why or why not? (Some students may have different views on combating injustice, especially after reading “Sit-Ins” and hearing the speaker’s passionate thank you to the sit-in participants.) 4. Analyze Repetition What verb appears in both poems? Why do you think the poet repeatedly chose this verb instead of other similar verbs? (The verb fling is repeated in both poems. Fling conveys a much stronger action than synonyms the poet could have used in its place, such as toss or throw.) 3. Key Idea: Injustice Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. Challenging Compare the two poems. In what ways are the two speakers’ attitudes toward injustice similar? In what ways are they different? How do you think the historical time period in which the poems were written might have affected differences in these attitudes? (Both speakers have similar attitudes about injustice and share their pride in their people’s ability to rise above it. However, the speaker in “Sit-Ins” speaks more strongly against those that commit or ignore injustices. This could be related to the time period in which the poems were written. In the 1930’s, when “I Want to Write” was published, society was not as open about the injustices done to African Americans. By the 1960’s, when Walker wrote “Sit-Ins,” the civil rights movement was in full force and people were much more comfortable speaking out against injustice.) 6. Compare and Contrast Genres Compare and contrast “Sit-Ins” and the book excerpt in terms of their treatment of this historic event. Is the author’s purpose the same for both? Do they share the same tone? (The author’s purpose is similar in both pieces. Both want to inform, but the poetry is also meant to entertain. Their tones are different. The poem’s tone is admiring, while the tone of the article is serious and straightforward.) 5. Key Idea: Injustice Resource Manager Unit 7 Grade 8 173 I WANT TO WRITE / SIT-INS Ideas for Extension Differentiation These activities provide students with a variety of options for demonstrating understanding of lesson concepts. EXPLORATIONS AND ACTIVITIES MULTIMEDIA PRESENTATION: EXPLORE KEY CONCEPT I WANT TO WRITE / SIT-INS Have students work in small groups to create a multimedia presentation that represents their thoughts about injustice. Ask them to begin by brainstorming words and images that they associate with the word injustice. Have them use these words and images as the basis of their presentation. Encourage them to include music, video clips, slides, and commentary in their production. Advise students to keep their presentations between 2–5 minutes long. Invite groups to share their presentations with the class. Talk about common elements in the presentations and discuss why they might be common. The two poems in this lesson span over 30 years. Discuss with students what key historical events took place between 1930 and 1960. List their ideas on the board. Next, have students work in small groups to create illustrated timelines of American history from 1930 to 1960. Encourage groups to focus particularly on events affecting the African-American community or the civil rights movement. Tell groups that their timelines should include at least ten events. Encourage students to illustrate their timelines with photos, headlines, or other images from online sources. Challenge students to color-code their timelines to indicate which events deal with injustice. They might do this by using a different color of marker for those events. Invite groups to present their timelines to the class and use them to create a master timeline on the board, including all the events from the group timelines. Indicate which events are related to fighting injustice. Are students surprised by the number (or lack thereof) of events related to opposing injustice? Why or why not? ANTHOLOGY: EXAMINE ADDITIONAL WORKS Talk with students about the similarities between “I Want to Write” and “Sit-Ins.” Make clear that Margaret Walker often used her writing to express her thoughts about the injustice African Americans faced. Have students work in small groups to create their own anthologies of Walker’s work. To do this, they can skim though her poetry collections including For My People (1942), Prophets for a New Day (1970), October Journey (1973), For Farish Street Green (1986), and This Is My Century: New and Collected Poems (1989). Each group member should be responsible for finding at least one piece to include in their anthology. Group members should copy each poem on a sheet of notebook paper and include an illustration that represents the key message of the piece. Have groups create a cover, as well as a title, for their collection. Invite volunteers to share their choices with the rest of the class. Have presenters explain why they chose the 174 Unit 7 Grade 8 Resource Manager Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. TIMELINE: APPLY CHRONOLOGICAL ORDER IDEAS FOR EXTENSION, CONTINUED poems that they did, and what they wanted their titles and covers to communicate as well. INQUIRY AND RESEARCH SIT-INS I WANT TO WRITE / SIT-INS The excerpt from A Dream of Freedom provides a basic overview of the first sit-in during the civil rights movement. Talk with students about what they learned about the sit-in from the excerpt. Next, ask them what questions they still have about this and subsequent Sit-Ins, such as What happened to these students? Were the Sit-Ins successful? List their questions on the board. Assign one or more questions to each student to research. Have students present their findings to the class. Encourage students to gather information from several sources and include visual aids, such as photographs, in their presentations. WRITING ANALYZE STYLE: POEM Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. Margaret Walker describes her longing to write about the African-American experience in “I Want to Write.” Ask students to brainstorm topics about which they long to write. Have students choose a topic from their list of ideas and write a poem about that topic, using Margaret Walker’s poem both as inspiration and a model. Challenge them to include repetition in their poems, as well as imagery, to help their readers understand why their choice is so important to them. Pre-AP Challenge: Challenge students to base their poems on a historical event or events about which they feel strongly. Ask them to include enough clues in the form of details, figurative language, and other poetic devices so that their readers can get a sense of the historical context in which the poem is based. ANALYZE HISTORICAL CONTEXT: ESSAY Margaret Walker wrote “I Want to Write” when she was only nineteen. “Sit-Ins” was published almost 30 years later. Discuss with students how these two poems suggest a shift in African Americans’ response to racial discrimination between the 1930s and the 1960s. Remind students to consider differences in tone, language, and message, and the ways in which they relate to each poem’s overall effect. After the discussion, ask students to reflect on this shift in a brief essay. Encourage them to suggest ways in which the social and political atmosphere in the country may have affected Margaret Walker’s ideas about addressing problems publicly, through protest, instead of privately, through writing. Resource Manager Unit 7 Grade 8 175 I WANT TO WRITE / SIT-INS Teacher Notes Review and Evaluate Outcome What did I want students to know or be able to do? I WANT TO WRITE / SIT-INS How successful was the lesson? Evaluate Process What worked? • Strategies • Resources • Differentiation Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. What did not work? Why not? Reflect The next time I teach “I Want to Write” and “Sit-Ins,” and what will I do differently? Why? Plan Ahead What must I do next? 176 Unit 7 Grade 8 Resource Manager Name Date I WANT TO WRITE / SIT-INS COPY MASTER Literary Analysis HISTORICAL CONTEXT When you look at literature in its historical context, you consider what was happening in society at the time a piece of writing was created. Margaret Walker wrote “I Want to Write” in the 1930s and “Sit-Ins” in the 1960s. Directions: Read the background on page 855 and the excerpt from A Dream of Freedom on page 859. In the chart, record words or phrases from each poem that reflect ideas, values, or events from the time in which the poem was written. I WANT TO WRITE / SIT-INS Examples from Text Social Conditions of the Time Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. “I Want to Write” “Sit-Ins” Resource Manager Unit 7 Grade 8 177 Name Date QUIERO ESCRIBIR / SENTADAS DE PROTESTA COPY MASTER Literary Analysis HISTORICAL CONTEXT Cuando ves la literatura en su contexto histórico, consideras lo que estaba sucediendo en la sociedad en el momento en que se creó un escrito. Margaret Walter escribió “Quiero escribir” en los años treinta y “Sentadas de protesta” en los años sesenta. Instrucciones: Lee los antecedentes en la página 855 y el extracto de Un sueño de libertad en la página 859. En la tabla, anota palabras o frases de cada poema que reflejen ideas, valores o sucesos de la época en la que se escribió el poema. Ejemplos para texto Condiciones sociales de la época Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. SPANISH “Quiero escribir” “Sentadas de protesta” 178 Unit 7 Grade 8 Resource Manager Name Date I WANT TO WRITE / SIT-INS COPY MASTER Reading Skill ANALYZE REPETITION Sound devices add interest and appeal to all types of poems. One of the sound devices used in Margaret Walker’s poems is repetition, in which a sound, word, phrase, or line is repeated for emphasis or unity. To understand the effect of repetition in a poem, follow these steps: • Write down repeated words, phrases, or lines. • Think about what ideas these repeated elements emphasize. • Notice how the repetition relates to the poem’s overall message. I WANT TO WRITE / SIT-INS Directions: In the first column of the chart, record examples of repetition from each poem In the second column, describe the effect of each example on your understanding of Walker’s ideas. Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. “I Want to Write” Repetition Effect Repetition Effect “Sit-Ins” Resource Manager Unit 7 Grade 8 179 Name Date QUIERO ESCRIBIR/PROTESTA SENTADA COPY MASTER Reading Skill ANALYZE REPETITION Los recursos de sonido añaden interés y atractivo a todos los tipos de poemas. Uno de los recursos de sonido usado en los poemas de Margaret Walter es la repetición, en la que un sonido, una palabra, una frase o un verso se repite para dar énfasis o unidad. Para comprender el efecto de la repetición en un poema, sigue estos pasos: • escribe palabras, frases o versos repetidos. • piensa en qué ideas enfatizan estos elementos repetidos. • observa cómo la repetición se relaciona con el mensaje completo del poema. SPANISH Instrucciones: En la primera columna de la tabla, anota ejemplos de repetición para cada poema. En la segunda columna, describe el efecto de cada ejemplo en tu comprensión de las ideas de Walker. “Quiero escribir” Efecto Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. Repetición “Sentadas de protesta Repetición 180 Unit 7 Grade 8 Efecto Resource Manager Name Date I WANT TO WRITE / SIT-INS COPY MASTER Question Support LITERARY ANALYSIS For questions 1–2, see page 858 of the Pupil Edition. Directions: Answer each question. 3. Understand Imagery Imagery consists of words and phrases that appeal to readers’ senses. In the chart, write images from “I Want to Write” that appeal to each sense. Hearing Sight Touch I WANT TO WRITE / SIT-INS Think about conditions and events that affected African-Americans in the 1930s. Then complete the sentence that follows. 4. Examine Historical Context “I Want to Write” is a protest against racial injustice because Reread lines 8 –10 of “Sit-Ins.” Who are “the stony ones” the author refers to in line 10? Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. 5. Interpret a Passage The poem “Sit-Ins” and the book excerpt from A Dream of Freedomfocus on the same topic. Write P on the line next to the details that come from the poem and B next to the details that come from the book. a. date of first sit-in b. significance of the event c. names of the protesters d. character traits of the protesters 6. Compare Texts Underline one of the two poems in parentheses and then complete the following sentence. 7. Analyze Repetition The overall effect of the repetition in (“I Want to Write”/”Sit-Ins”) is to Resource Manager Unit 7 Grade 8 181 Name Date I WANT TO WRITE / SIT-INS COPY MASTER Reading Fluency ORAL RECITATION Some poems have strong messages that they convey through distinctive structure and powerful words and images. To give a memorable reading of such a poem, use the poem’s distinctive language as well as punctuation cues to guide your phrasing. Speak clearly and with expression. Use marks like these to plan your reading: n = raise pitch p = lower pitch / = pause or stop underscore = add stress Directions: Listen as your teacher reads “I Want to Write.” Then use the marks above to show how you would read the poem. When you are ready, read the poem aloud to a partner. 5 10 I want to write I want to write the songs of my people. I want to hear them singing melodies in the dark. I want to catch the last floating strains from their sob-torn throats. I want to frame their dreams into words; their souls into notes. I want to catch their sunshine laughter in a bowl; fling dark hands to a darker sky and fill them full of stars then crush and mix such lights till they become a mirrored pool of brilliance in the dawn. Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. I WANT TO WRITE / SIT-INS L = louder S = softer —Margaret Walker, “I Want to Write” 182 Unit 7 Grade 8 Resource Manager Name Date I WANT TO WRITE / SIT-INS Selection Test A Comprehension Read each of the following questions. Then choose the letter of the best answer. (6 points each) 1. In “I Want to Write,” what does the speaker want to hear in the dark? 5. melodies B. laughter C. strains D. notes the songs the sun sings in the morning B. a fresh start for African Americans C. an early morning for the speaker D. the poet’s love of daylight A. The description of throats in line 4 of “I Want to Write” refers to a historical context of A. 6. violence B. silence C. faith D. hate A. illness B. laughter C. hardship D. celebration A. 7. 3. In line 6 of “I Want to Write,” what emotion does the speaker hope to catch? justice B. youth C. silence D. names Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. 8. The first lines of “I Want to Write” emphasize the sense of hearing. What sense is emphasized in lines 9–10 of the poem? hearing B. sight C. smell D. touch A. Resource Manager According to the speaker of “Sit-Ins,” an important quality of the first ones is their A. joy B. grief C. hope D. wonder A. 4. According to the speaker of “Sit-Ins,” what do the “brave ones” defy? What does the repetition of “with” in “Sit-Ins” help emphasize? the young ones’ youth B. the stoniness of the others C. what the young ones do without D. how the young ones work together A. Unit 7 Grade 8 183 I WANT TO WRITE / SIT-INS 2. The “dawn” in line 10 of “I Want to Write” most likely refers to Name Date SELECTION TEST A, CONTINUED 9. In “Sit-Ins,” those who oppose the first ones are described as stony B. brave C. bright D. young A. 10. In both poems, the poet expresses the historical context of her times by mentioning her people’s awakening B. silence C. suffering D. laughter A. I WANT TO WRITE / SIT-INS Written Response Short Response On a separate sheet of paper, answer the following questions based on your knowledge of the poems. (10 points each) 11. In “I Want to Write,” what does the speaker want to do with stars? 12. What are two accomplishments of the “first ones” in “Sit-Ins”? Extended Response Answer the following question based on your knowledge of Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. the poems. Write one or two paragraphs on a separate sheet of paper. (20 points) 13. Do the speakers in these poems focus more on positive or negative events? Use four details from the poems to support your response. 184 Unit 7 Grade 8 Resource Manager Name Date I WANT TO WRITE / SIT-INS Selection Test B/C Comprehension Read each of the following questions. Then choose the letter of the best answer. (6 points each) 1. In “I Want to Write,” what does the speaker want to do with the people’s dreams? 5. hear them sing B. fill them with stars C. catch them in a bowl D. frame them into words explain a desire to be a writer B. analyze the movement of stars C. describe various kinds of music D. express African Americans’ feelings A. In “I Want to Write,” the speaker wants to transform stars into A. 6. songs of the people B. a bowl of sunshine C. a pool of brilliance D. floating strains A. 3. The repetition of “I” in “I Want to Write” emphasizes the speaker’s kept silent always B. wrote down history C. faced hate with nonviolence D. suffered being hit with stones 7. wish to be part of the action B. need to be the center of attention C. hopes of being remembered forever D. desire to see everything that happens Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. In “I Want to Write,” the speaker’s description of making light out of dark could refer to the historical context in which African Americans tried to destroy prejudice B. wanted to be friends with whites C. wished to write down their dreams D. hoped to help people see more stars A. Resource Manager What did the first ones mentioned in line 1 of “Sit-Ins” do that showed bravery? A. A. 4. I WANT TO WRITE / SIT-INS 2. The main intention of the speaker in “I Want to Write” is to The description “new southern history” in line 6 of “Sit-Ins” refers to the historical context of changes in the right way to read books B. African American life in the South C. writing in African Americans’ books D. the African American way to count years A. 8. By repeating the word “first,” the speaker in “Sit-Ins” is emphasizing that those involved in Sit-Ins awakened consciences B. defied their followers C. showed intelligence D. became leaders A. Unit 7 Grade 8 185 Name Date SELECTION TEST B/C, CONTINUED 9. What do Jesus and the first ones in “Sit-Ins” do that shows that they are alike? show bravery regardless of their youth B. fling their names across history C. stay silent in the face of hate D. blaze a path for justice A. 10. A common factor in the historical context of both “I Want to Write” and “Sit-Ins” is that each speaker’s people have learned bravery while in church B. endured prejudice and discrimination C. sung melodies and dreamed in the dark D. rewritten history from a new point of view A. I WANT TO WRITE / SIT-INS Written Response Short Response On a separate sheet of paper, answer the following questions based on your knowledge of the poems. (10 points each) 11. What repetition in “Sit-Ins” emphasizes what the young ones had and did not have? 12. What is one way that the speaker in “Sit-Ins” uses light to represent change? Extended Response Answer one of the following questions based on your knowledge of the poems. Write one or two paragraphs on a separate sheet of paper. (20 points) 13. Do the “first ones” in “Sit-Ins” deserve more or less honor and respect than those who followed them and took the same actions? Use details from the poem to support your response. 186 Challenge What message do these poems give about the importance of writing? Use details from the poems to support your response. Unit 7 Grade 8 Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. 14. Resource Manager Lesson at a Glance Writing Workshop Cause-and-Effect Essay WHAT’S THE CONNECTION? • Cause and Effect • Make Inferences In addition, students will have opportunities to incorporate what they have learned in the unit by creating a thesis statement that explains the connection between a cause and its effects, using transitions, following a logical order, and using precise language and varied sentence types. Finally, use of the Key Traits to develop their own cause and effect essays will help students acquire a stronger understanding of a writer’s perspective and historical and cultural context. 188–189 . . 190 . . 191 . . 192 193–194 . . 195 . . 196 . . 197 . . 198 WRITING WORKSHOP Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. By writing a cause and effect essay, students will be able to utilize many of the literary elements and techniques they have studied throughout the unit, including these: LESSON RESOURCES Plan and Teach Lesson Plan and Resource Guide . . Teacher Notes . . . . . . . . . . Student Copy Masters Prewriting . . . . . . . . . . . Drafting . . . . . . . . . . . . Revising and Editing . . . . . . . Ask a Peer Reader . . . . . . . . Rubric . . . . . . . . . . . . . Publishing With Technology . . . . Writing Support (for English learners) All lesson resources are available electronically on DVD ABOUT THE WRITING WORKSHOP Pupil/Teacher’s Edition Pages: 860–867 The Writing Workshop reinforces the unit focus of writer’s perspective and cultural or historical context by supporting students in the writing of a cause and effect essay. The workshop provides step-by-step instructions, suggestions, and models for using the writing process. Resource Manager Unit 7 Grade 8 187 Lesson Plan and Resource Guide Writing Workshop : Cause-and-Effect Essay Objectives • • • • • analyze a student model that reflects the key traits of a cause-and-effect essay use the writing process to write a cause-and-effect essay use transition words to signal causes and effect revise and edit, using a rubric create a multimedia presentation on a cause-and-effect relationship Unless otherwise noted, all resources can be found in the Resource Manager. All materials are also available on Easy Planner DVD. Pupil’s Edition and Teacher’s Edition Additional Resources CM=Copy Master T=Transparency Focus and Motivate Writer’s Road Map p. 860 Media Smart DVD Writing Center at ClassZone.com Teach Part 1: Analyze a Student Model pp. 861–862 Best Practices Toolkit Scaffolding Writing Instruction pp. 43–46 WriteSmart CD Writing Center at ClassZone.com Prewriting–Editing CM pp. 191–195 Writing Rubric CM p. 196 Writing Support CM p. 198 Best Practices Toolkit Cause-and-Effect Diagrams pp. B16, B37, B38 [T] Cluster Diagram p. B18 [T] Writing Template: Cause and Effect pp. C16, C22, C23 [T] Practice and Apply: Guided Practice Part 2: Apply the Writing Process pp. 863–865 188 Unit 7 Grade 8 WriteSmart CD Writing Center at ClassZone.com Resource Manager Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. WRITING WORKSHOP Pupil’s Edition and Teacher’s Edition Additional Resources CM=Copy Master T=Transparency Assess and Reteach Standards Lesson File Writing Lesson 9: Creating Sentence Variety Writing Lesson 16: Cause-and-Effect Order Writing Lesson 19: Transitions Writing Lesson 21: Writing a Thesis Statement Writing Lesson 30: Cause-and-Effect Essay Writing Lesson 40: Elaborate with Facts and Statistics Writing Lesson 44: Using Precise Words Grammar Lesson 20: Missing or Misplaced Commas Preparing to Publish Preparing to Publish p. 866 WriteSmart CD Writing Center at ClassZone.com Publishing with Technology CM p. 197 Best Practices Toolkit Storyboard p. C11 [T] Publish with Technology Creating a Multimedia Presentation p. 867 Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. WRITING WORKSHOP Standards Lesson File Media Lesson 22: Creating a Power Presentation =Resources for Differentiation Resource Manager Unit 7 Grade 8 189 WRITING WORKSHOP Teacher Notes Review and Evaluate Outcome What did I want students to learn about writing a cause-and-effect essay? How successful was the lesson? Evaluate Process What worked? • Strategies • Resources WRITING WORKSHOP • Writing Prompts Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. • Speaking and Listening: Create a Multimedia Presentation What did not work? Why not? Reflect The next time I teach this Writing Workshop, what will I do differently? Why? Plan Ahead What must I do next? 190 Unit 7 Grade 8 Resource Manager Name Date WRITING WORKSHOP COPY MASTER Cause-and-Effect Essay PREWRITING A flow chart can help you explore an event’s causes and effects. Directions: Use the flow chart below to list your event’s causes and effect. If you find that a cause has more than one effect, be sure to show the additional effect(s). Causes Effect Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. WRITING WORKSHOP Resource Manager Unit 7 Grade 8 191 Name WRITING WORKSHOP Date COPY MASTER Cause-and-Effect Essay DRAFTING Create an informal outline to organize your thoughts. You can then use this information to help structure your essay. Directions: Use the following outline to plan your introduction, causes, effect, and conclusion. You may also create a different type of outline in which you present the effect(s) first and then the causes. Introduction: Most important cause: Second most important cause: WRITING WORKSHOP Third most important cause: Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. Most important effect: Conclusion: 192 Unit 7 Grade 8 Resource Manager Name Date WRITING WORKSHOP COPY MASTER Cause-and-Effect Essay REVISING AND EDITING 1 Directions: Use the following suggestions to revise and edit the excerpt. Mark your changes on this page. Then copy your corrected draft on a separate sheet of paper. • Use transitions to show the relationship between causes and effects. • Avoid run-on sentences. • Use correct spelling. The “Good Sports” Rule Takes Effect Our town has an amazing soccer league, but, in many years of play, we had never won a trophy. Then the league passed a new rule: parents of players had to be “good sports,” just as the players did. “Bad sports” could be banned. Our league finally won its first silver cup. The teams instituted this rule because some parents had been behaving badly at games. They screamed insults at players and WRITING WORKSHOP Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. referees it seemed as if they might actually start a fight at times. This was not wholesome, friendly competision. The “good sports” rule was passed. At first, the games grew really quiet. People seemed afraid to say anything at all. Then, after a few games, they started shouting again, but this time they yelled encouragement instead of criticism. The air was filled with positive feedback, some of the more timid players started playing more. Instead of hanging back, they would go after the ball. Some mediocer players became good players, and some weak players got better. Resource Manager Unit 7 Grade 8 193 Name Date WRITING WORKSHOP COPY MASTER Cause-and-Effect Essay REVISING AND EDITING 2 Some tests may ask you to identify errors in grammar and to improve paragraphs. Directions: Select one underlined part that must be changed to make the following sentence correct. There is no more than one error in the sentence. If the sentence is correct as written, select answer choice E. 1. A parent who thinks their child is not getting enough playing time may become angry at the coach. A. who B. their C. getting D. time E. No error. Directions: Determine whether the underlined section of the following sentence needs improvement. If it does, select the best change presented in the five choices below the sentence. If you think the original phrasing produces a better sentence than any of the other choices, select choice A. Parents who behave inappropriately at games not only upset their kids and the other players as well. A. B. C. WRITING WORKSHOP D. E. not only upset their kids and the other players as well not only upset their kids and also the other players not only upset their kids other players are upset too upset not only their own kids but also the other players upsetting their own kids and the other players as well Directions: Select the best answer to the question that follows the passage. (1) Some parents behaved inappropriately at games. (2) These parents got so wrapped up in winning or losing that they forgot that one of the goals of school sports is to teach good sportsmanship. (3) Our soccer league passed a new rule. (4) The rule was to ensure parents’ good behavior at games. 3. Which of the following is the best way to combine sentence 3 and sentence 4? A. B. C. D. E. 194 Unit 7 Grade 8 Our soccer league passed a new rule, it ensured parents’ good behavior at games. Our soccer league passed a new rule and to ensure parents’ good behavior at games. Our soccer league passed a new rule to ensure parents’ good behavior at games. Our soccer league passed a new rule about parents, they had to behave at games. Our soccer league passed a new rule, parents had to stop behaving badly at games. Resource Manager Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. 2. Name Date WRITING WORKSHOP COPY MASTER Cause-and-Effect Essay ASK A PEER READER To see whether your essay clearly describes a cause-effect relationship, ask a peer reviewer to read it. 2. Which causes or effects need more explanation? 3. Which point that I made was most interesting, surprising, or disturbing? Why? 4. Where should I improve my explanations or support? 5. Other suggestions for revision: Resource Manager WRITING WORKSHOP Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. Directions: Give your peer reader this sheet. Have him or her record answers to the following questions and then give you suggestions for revision. 1. How can I improve my introduction? Unit 7 Grade 8 195 Name Date WRITING WORKSHOP COPY MASTER Cause-and-Effect Essay RUBRIC FOR EVALUATION Other rubrics are available on the WriteSmart CD-ROM and in the Writing Center at ClassZone.com. Key Traits Ideas Strong Average Weak • Identifies a true cause-and-effect relationship • Presents a thesis statement that explains the connection between causes and effects • Uses facts, examples, and other details to support each cause and effect Organization • Presents causes and effects in a sensible order • Uses transitions to show the relationship between effects and causes 196 Voice • Uses a tone that is appropriate for the audience and purpose Word Choice • Uses precise language to explain each cause and effect Sentence Fluency • Uses a variety of sentence types (statements, questions, and exclamations) Conventions • Uses correct grammar, spelling, and punctuation Unit 7 Grade 8 Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. WRITING WORKSHOP • Has an attention-getting introduction and a conclusion that summarizes the cause-and-effect relationship Resource Manager Name Date WRITING WORKSHOP COPY MASTER Cause-and-Effect Essay PUBLISHING WITH TECHNOLOGY Create a multimedia presentation that showcases your cause-and-effect essay. Directions: To help plan your presentation, use the following boxes to create a storyboard. Make simple sketches that show what the audience will see. Then use the lines below the boxes to briefly tell what the audience will hear, such as what the voiceover will say, what music will play, or what sound effects will be used. Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. WRITING WORKSHOP Resource Manager Unit 7 Grade 8 197 Name Date WRITING WORKSHOP COPY MASTER Writing Support USE TRANSITIONS TO SHOW CONNECTIONS IN YOUR CAUSE-AND-EFFECT ESSAY Transitions are used to show how ideas or details are connected. In your cause-and-effect essay, you may use some transitional words and phrases to identify which events lead to others. You may also use some words or phrases to show the order of importance of your ideas. Cause Effect Order of Importance because if provided that since due to consequently as a result so therefore then most important first second third strongest best another Write about a cause-and-effect relationship that interests you. I am going to write about Causes Effect Copyright © McDougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin Company. WRITING WORKSHOP In the chart, write some of the causes and one or more effects. Use your chart to write sentences for your essay. 198 Unit 7 Grade 8 Resource Manager