The Talking Eggs –
4th Grade
Objective:
Students will listen to the story The Talking Eggs by
Robert D. San Souci and will identify
and list characteristics of one of
the main characters in the story. Students will use the text to find the words
in the story that “show”, or support, each of the character traits listed.
Students will collaborate and present their character trait analysis in a
visual format to the rest of the class.
Procedure:
Students will listen to the teacher read The Talking Eggs
aloud two times. The first time,
students will listen to the story and will choose a character to look at a
little closer. During the second read aloud, students will identify and list
character traits of their character.
After the second read aloud, students will use the text to
find words or actions in the story that support each character trait listed.
Finally, students will join with a partner or small group
who chose the same character to collaborate with and create a visual
representation of their character and character traits analysis. Each group will present to the rest of the
class.
Differentiation:
This format of whole group, individual, partner/small group
work lends itself nicely to all levels of learners in the classroom. It provides struggling or reluctant learners
an atmosphere in which they are held accountable for their own learning, but
are also supported by others. High
achievers could complete a character analysis of two or more of the characters
in the story.
Adapting:
This lesson could be adapted to any grade level. It could be used with novels for older
students where students analyze a character from beginning to end. A whole class could analyze character traits
of one of the main characters in a novel and look for new character traits that
may evolve as the plot develops. It
could be used to compare and contrast two or more characters. It provides a basic foundation for character
analysis.
Amy, this is a great lesson that I will probably try in my third grade classroom when we get back from spring break.
ReplyDeleteI also really like this lesson and will save it in my files for my future classroom. Thanks!
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