- I can determine the gist of Nasreen's Secret School. (RL.3.1, RL.3.3)
- I can identify the central message, lesson, or moral of Nasreen's Secret School. (RL.3.2)
These are the CCS Standards addressed in this lesson:
- RL.3.1: Ask and answer questions to demonstrate understanding of a text, referring explicitly to the text as the basis for the answers.
- RL.3.2: Recount stories, including fables, folktales, and myths from diverse cultures; determine the central message, lesson, or moral and explain how it is conveyed through key details in the text.
- RL.3.3: Describe characters in a story (e.g., their traits, motivations, or feelings) and explain how their actions contribute to the sequence of events.
Daily Learning Targets
Ongoing Assessment
- Reading for Gist and Recounting the Story: Nasreen's Secret School (RL.3.1, RL.3.2, RL.3.3)
Agenda
Agenda | Teaching Notes |
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1. Opening A. Reading Aloud: Nasreen's Secret School (20 minutes) B. Reviewing Learning Targets (5 minutes) 2. Work Time A. Reading for Gist and Determining the Lesson: Nasreen's Secret School (30 minutes) 3. Closing and Assessment A. Overcoming Learning Challenges (5 minutes) 4. Homework A. Accountable Research Reading. Select a prompt and respond in the front of your independent reading journal. B. For ELLs: Complete the Language Dive: Part I Practice in your Unit 1 homework. |
Purpose of lesson and alignment to standards:
How it builds on previous work:
Areas where students may need additional support:
Assessment guidance:
Down the road:
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In Advance
- Consider whether any students may be sensitive to the issues that this book raises based on cultural background and family history. Consider explaining to families that this book will be read aloud to students so that they can appropriately prepare them and discuss it afterward.
- Prepare a small label with the book title and author to attach to a pin and place on the world map. This needs to be large enough to see, but not too large to cover up too much of the map.
- Predetermine triads based on reading ability. Students read the text and complete the Reading for Gist and Recounting the Story note-catcher in these groups, so each group will need at least one skilled reader.
- Review the Think-Pair-Share protocol. (Refer to the Classroom Protocols document for the full version of the protocol.)
- Post: Learning targets, Guiding Questions anchor chart, Working to Become Ethical People anchor chart, Experiences with Overcoming Challenges anchor chart, Close Readers Do These Things anchor chart, and Overcoming Learning Challenges anchor chart.
Tech and Multimedia
- Work Time A: Students complete their note-catchers in a word-processing document, such as a Google Doc, using speech-to-text facilities activated on devices or using an app or software like Dictation.io.
Supporting English Language Learners
Supports guided in part by CA ELD Standards 3.I.B.6, 3.I.B.7
Important points in the lesson itself
- The basic design of this lesson supports ELLs with opportunities to celebrate cultural, linguistic, and educational diversity; apply strategies introduced in previous lessons to a new complex text, Nasreen's Secret School, by reading for gist using a supportive graphic organizer; experience gradual release as they determine the central message with their peers; and notice and enjoy how Jeanette Winter, the author of Nasreen's Secret School, weaves Pashto sentences and script into the story.
- ELLs may find it challenging to listen to and comprehend a story all the way through. Stop periodically to check for comprehension. Reassure students that they need not understand every word to comprehend the gist of the text. See levels of support and the Meeting Students' Needs column for additional supports.
- In Work Time A, ELLs are invited to participate in the first of a series of two connected Language Dive conversations (optional). The conversations invite students to unpack complex syntax--or "academic phrases"--as a necessary component of building both literacy and habits of mind. This first conversation guides them through the meaning of a key complex sentence from Nasreen's Secret School. It also focuses student attention on subject-predicate structure and the use of because. Students may draw on this sentence when writing about challenges later in the unit. A consistent Language Dive routine is critical in helping all students learn how to decipher complex sentences and write their own. In addition, Language Dive conversations hasten overall English language development for ELLs. Preview the Language Dive Guide and consider how to invite conversation among students to address the questions and goals suggested under each sentence strip chunk (see supporting materials). Select from the questions and goals provided to best meet your students' needs. Consider providing students with a Language Dive log inside a folder to track Language Dive sentences and structures and collate Language Dive note-catchers.
Levels of support
For lighter support:
- During Work Time A, invite students to generate their own sentence frames to use as they reflect after reading Nasreen's Secret School.
- Before providing additional support throughout the lesson, observe student interaction and allow students to grapple. Provide supportive materials and suggestions only after students have grappled with the task and with the language. Observe the areas in which they have trouble to target appropriate support in future lessons.
For heavier support:
- During Work Time B, distribute a partially filled-in copy of the Reading for Gist and Recounting the Story note-catcher. This will provide students with models for the kind of information they should enter, as well as reduce the volume of writing required.
Universal Design for Learning
- Multiple Means of Representation: To be successful during the Work Time of this lesson, students will need a strong understanding of the text, Nasreen's Secret School. Help facilitate comprehension by providing varied opportunities to engage with the text during the read-aloud. For instance, model making inferences through think-alouds. Also, strategically select sections of the text to pause and have students conduct a Think-Pair-Share to help clarify any complexities. Refer to the Meeting Students' Needs column for more strategies.
- Multiple Means of Action and Expression: The focus of this lesson is to support students' comprehension of a new text, Nasreen's Secret School. For students who may need additional support with comprehension skills: Consider ways to support them as they grapple with this new text. Example: Provide prewritten sticky notes with various options of the gist that they can match on the Reading for Gist and Recounting the Story note-catcher.
- Multiple Means of Engagement: Build student excitement about the new text by introducing information from multiple media sources about Afghanistan. This can include representations of culture such as art, music, dance, or literature. This will help build engagement so that students are invested in tackling a challenging text. Furthermore, it will provide another means of representation to build background knowledge and facilitate greater comprehension.
Vocabulary
N/A
Materials
- Guiding Questions anchor chart (begun in Lesson 1)
- Working to Become Ethical People anchor chart (begun in Lesson 2; added to during Opening A)
- Working to Become Ethical People anchor chart (example, for teacher reference)
- Nasreen's Secret School (book; one per student)
- World map (from Lesson 3; one to display)
- Labeled pin (one to display)
- Compass points (from Lesson 3; one to display)
- Experiences with Overcoming Challenges anchor chart (begun in Lesson 3; added to during Opening A)
- Close Readers Do These Things anchor chart (from Lesson 3)
- Reading for Gist and Recounting the Story: Nasreen's Secret School (one per student and one to display)
- Reading for Gist and Recounting the Story: Nasreen's Secret School (example, for teacher reference)
- Equity sticks (class set; one per student)
- Language Dive Guide I: Nasreen's Secret School (optional; for ELLs; for teacher reference)
- Language Dive Sentence strip chunks I and II: Nasreen's Secret School (optional; for ELLs; one to display)
- Online paper or translation dictionary (one per student in home language)
- Vocabulary logs (from Lesson 5; one per student)
- Language Dive Note-catcher I and II: Nasreen's Secret School (optional; for ELLs; one per student and one to display)
- Blue and red markers (optional; for ELLs; one of each per student)
- Overcoming Learning Challenges anchor chart (begun in Lesson 3; added to during Closing and Assessment A)
- Overcoming Learning Challenges anchor chart (example, for teacher reference)
Materials from Previous Lessons
New Materials
Assessment
Each unit in the 3-5 Language Arts Curriculum has two standards-based assessments built in, one mid-unit assessment and one end of unit assessment. The module concludes with a performance task at the end of Unit 3 to synthesize their understanding of what they accomplished through supported, standards-based writing.
Opening
Opening | Meeting Students' Needs |
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A. Reading Aloud: Nasreen's Secret School (20 minutes)
"When someone is upset about something, how does it make you feel? What can you do to help that person work through it?" (show empathy and compassion)
"Can you give an example?"
"In your own words, what does empathy mean?" (to try to understand how others feel) "When someone shows empathy, what does it look like? What will you see?" (Responses will vary.) "When someone shows empathy, what does it sound like? What will you hear?" (Responses will vary.)
"In your own words, what does compassion mean?" (to notice when someone is upset and try to help him or her) "When someone shows compassion, what does it look like? What will you see?" (Responses will vary.) "When someone shows compassion, what does it sound like? What will you hear?" (Responses will vary.)
"Where is Afghanistan located on the map?" (Responses will vary.)
"Which continent do we live on?" (Responses will vary.) "Where are we in relation to Afghanistan?" (Responses will vary, but students should use the compass points.) "Has anyone had any experience with Afghanistan that they would like to share?" (Afghanistan or neighboring countries may be the country of origin for some students. Because Afghanistan is in the news a lot in the United States, it may be helpful to process students' feelings about it before reading the text.)
"What did this story make you think about?"
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B. Reviewing Learning Targets (5 minutes)
"I can determine the gist of Nasreen's Secret School." "I can identify the central message, lesson, or moral of Nasreen's Secret School."
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Work Time
Work Time | Meeting Students' Needs |
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A. Reading for Gist and Determining the Lesson: Nasreen's Secret School (30 minutes)
"Use your note-catcher to think about what happened in this story. What message or lesson relevant to the real world outside of the story do you think the author wants you to learn and take away from this story? What details make you think that?" (Responses will vary, but may include: Some people will take dangerous risks to go to school because learning is very important to them.)
"Can you say more about that?" (Responses will vary.)
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Closing & Assessments
Closing | Meeting Students' Needs |
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A. Overcoming Learning Challenges (5 minutes)
"What challenge did Nasreen face?" (not allowed to go to school; not allowed to go outside; lost her father and mother; lives in a scary place with a lot of unfair laws and rules) "How was the challenge overcome?" (Nasreen and her grandmother went to a secret school.)
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Homework
Homework | Meeting Students' Needs |
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A. Accountable Research Reading. Select a prompt and respond in the front of your independent reading journal. B. For ELLs: Complete the Language Dive: Part I Practice in your Unit 1 homework. |
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