- I can determine two or more central ideas in "The 'Lost Girls' of Sudan" article and analyze their development over the course of the text. (RI.7.2)
- I can write an objective summary of "The 'Lost Girls' of Sudan" article. (RI.7.2)
Focus Standards: These are the standards the instruction addresses.
- RI.7.2
Supporting Standards: These are the standards that are incidental—no direct instruction in this lesson, but practice of these standards occurs as a result of addressing the focus standards.
- RI.7.1, RI.7.4, RI.7.10, L.7.4, L.7.6
Daily Learning Targets
Ongoing Assessment
- Opening A: Entrance Ticket: Unit 2, Lesson 1 (RI.7.1)
- Work Time A: Close Read: "The 'Lost Girls' of Sudan" note-catcher (RI.7.1, RI.7.2)
Agenda
Agenda | Teaching Notes |
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1. Opening A. Engage the Learner (5 minutes) 2. Work Time A. Close Read: "The 'Lost Girls' of Sudan" - RI.7.2 (25 minutes) B. Language Dive: "The 'Lost Girls' of Sudan," Paragraph 10 - RI.7.2 (10 minutes) 3. Closing and Assessment A. Make Connections - RL.7.9 (5 minutes) 4. Homework A. Selected Response Questions: Students complete Homework: Main Idea and Details: "The 'Lost Girls' of Sudan" to scaffold their understanding about main ideas and details and to prepare for similar questions on the mid-unit assessment. B. Preread Anchor Text: Students should preread chapter 13 of A Long Walk to Water in preparation for studying the chapter in the next lesson. |
Alignment to Assessment Standards and Purpose of Lesson
Opportunities to Extend Learning
How It Builds on Previous Work
Support All Students
Assessment Guidance
Down the Road
|
In Advance
- Ensure there is a copy of Entrance Ticket: Unit 2, Lesson 1 at each student's workspace.
- Strategically group students into pairs or triads for the work in this lesson, with at least one strong reader per group.
- Preview the Close Reading Guide: "The 'Lost Girls' of Sudan" and Close Read: "The 'Lost Girls' of Sudan" note-catcher to be familiar with what will be required of students.
- Post the learning targets and applicable anchor charts (see Materials list).
Tech and Multimedia
- Continue to use the technology tools recommended throughout previous modules to create anchor charts to share with families; to record students as they participate in discussions and protocols to review with students later and to share with families; and for students to listen to and annotate text, record ideas on note-catchers, and word-process writing.
Supporting English Language Learners
Supports guided in part by CA ELD Standards 7.I.B.6, 7.I.B.7, and 7.I.B.8.
Important Points in the Lesson Itself
- To support ELLs, this lesson explicitly teaches students how to recognize and interpret the central idea in an informational text. Explicit instruction in locating a central idea helps ELLs become more adept at navigating academic language and complex content in informational texts.
- ELLs may find the opening discussion of the distinction between locating central ideas in fictional and informational text challenging because it involves a lot of abstract language. Therefore, additional supports such as the ones listed below may be useful.
Vocabulary
- central ideas, commodity, dominated, summarize (A)
- human rights violations (DS)
Key
(A): Academic Vocabulary
(DS): Domain-Specific Vocabulary
Materials from Previous Lessons
Teacher
Student
- Academic word wall (one for display; from Unit 1, Lesson 1, Opening A)
- Domain-specific word wall (one for display; from Unit 1, Lesson 1, Work Time B)
- Close Readers Do These Things anchor chart (one for display; from Unit 1, Lesson 4, Opening A)
- Work to Become Effective Learners anchor chart (one for display; begun in Unit 1, Lesson 5, Work Time A)
- Work to Become Effective Learners anchor chart (example for teacher reference)
- Work to Become Ethical People anchor chart (one for display; from Unit 1, Lesson 2, Opening B)
- Work to Become Ethical People anchor chart (example for teacher reference) (from Unit 1, Lesson 2, Opening B)
- Questions about A Long Walk to Water anchor chart (one for display; from Unit 1, Lesson 2, Work Time A)
- Vocabulary log (one per student; from Unit 1, Lesson 2, Opening A)
- A Long Walk to Water (text; one per student; from Unit 1, Lesson 1, Work Time C)
- Online or print dictionaries (including ELL and home language dictionaries; one per small group of students)
New Materials
Teacher
Student
Entrance Ticket: Unit 2, Lesson 1 (answers for teacher reference)
- Criteria of an Effective Informative Summary anchor chart (for teacher reference) (one for display)
- Close Reading Guide: "The 'Lost Girls' of Sudan" (for teacher reference)
- Close Read: "The 'Lost Girls' of Sudan" note-catcher (example for teacher reference)
- Language Dive Guide: "The 'Lost Girls' of Sudan," Paragraph 10 (for teacher reference)
- Language Dive: "The 'Lost Girls' of Sudan," Paragraph 10 note-catcher (for teacher reference)
- Make Connections note-catcher (example for teacher reference)
- Homework Resources (for Families) (answers for teacher reference; see unit download) (See full module or unit download for all homework materials.)
- Entrance Ticket: Unit 2, Lesson 1 (one per student)
- “The ‘Lost Girls’ of Sudan” by Ishbel Matheson (text; one per student and one for display)
- “The ‘Lost Girls’ of Sudan” by Ishbel Matheson ▲
- Close Read: “The ‘Lost Girls’ of Sudan” note-catcher (one per student and one for display)
- Close Read: “The ‘Lost Girls’ of Sudan” note-catcher ▲
- Language Dive: “The ‘Lost Girls’ of Sudan,” Paragraph 10 sentence chunk strips (one per pair of students and one for display)
- Language Dive: “The ‘Lost Girls’ of Sudan,” Paragraph 10 note-catcher (one per student and one for display)
- Make Connections note-catcher (one per student and one for display)
- Homework Resources (for Families) (one for display and one per student; see unit download)
- Homework: Main Idea and Details: “The ‘Lost Girls’ of Sudan” (one per student; see unit download). (See full module or unit download for all homework materials.)
Assessment
Each unit in the 6-8 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 students' understanding of what they accomplished through supported, standards-based writing.
Opening
Opening | Levels of Support |
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A. Engage the Learner (5 minutes)
"How are central ideas and themes the same in literary and informational texts, and how they are different?" (In literary texts, the author develops themes and central ideas through the characters, settings, description, and plot, but in informational texts, the author uses different tools, like interviews, historical information, and different kinds of evidence. But in both cases, central ideas are what the books or articles are mostly about. In literary texts, themes are also about a message or a statement the author is trying to make about the world outside the book.) |
For Lighter Support
For Heavier Support
|
Work Time
Work Time | Levels of Support |
---|---|
A. Close Read: “The ‘Lost Girls’ of Sudan” – RI.7.2 (25 minutes)
“I can determine two or more central ideas in ‘The “Lost Girls” of Sudan’ article and analyze their development over the course of the text.” “I can write an objective summary of ‘The “Lost Girls” of Sudan’ article.”
“Which habit of character did you see in this article? Who demonstrated them? What did they look or sound like?” (Possible response: The lost girls demonstrate perseverance as they work hard in a bad situation. Mr. Mable shows empathy when he says that the girls are truly lost. He understands the difficult situation the girls are in.)
|
For Lighter Support
For Heavier Support
|
B. Language Dive: “The ‘Lost Girls’ of Sudan,” Paragraph 10 – RI.7.2 (10 minutes)
“But while many of the boys—who became known as the ‘Lost Boys’—were resettled in the United States, the girls’ claim for equal treatment was overlooked.”
|
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Closing & Assessments
Closing |
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A. Make Connections - RL.7.9 (5 minutes)
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Homework
Homework |
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A. Selected Response Questions
B. Preread Anchor Text Students should preread chapter 13 of A Long Walk to Water in preparation for studying the chapter in the next lesson. |
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