- I can compare and contrast a written story to the audio version of the story and analyze the effect of the techniques. (RL.7.1, RL.7.7)
Focus Standards: These are the standards the instruction addresses.
- RL.7.7
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.
- RL.7.1, RL.7.4, RL.7.10, L.7.4, L.7.6
Daily Learning Targets
Ongoing Assessment
- Opening A: Entrance Ticket: Unit 3, Lesson 2 (RL.7.7)
- Work Time B: Compare Audio to Text: A Long Walk to Water, Chapter 17 note-catcher (RL.7.1, RL.7.7)
Agenda
Agenda | Teaching Notes |
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1. Opening A. Engage the Learner - RL.7.7 (5 minutes) 2. Work Time A. Read A Long Walk to Water, Chapter 17 - SL.7.1 (15 minutes) B. Compare Audio to Text - RL.7.7 (15 minutes) 3. Closing and Assessment A. Language Dive: A Long Walk to Water, Page 103 - RL.7.4 (10 minutes) 4. Homework A. Independent Research Reading: Students read for at least 20 minutes in their independent research reading text. Then they select a prompt and write a response in their independent reading journal. |
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
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In Advance
- Ensure there is a copy of Entrance Ticket: Unit 3, Lesson 2 at each student's workspace.
- Preview the Language Dive Guide, and consider how to invite conversation among students to address the language goals suggested under each sentence strip chunk. Select from the questions and goals provided to best meet the students' needs.
- Post the learning target and applicable anchor charts (see Materials list).
Tech and Multimedia
- Work Time B: Audiobook version of A Long Walk to Water, from 2:15:30 to 2:17:04, and device with which to play it
Supporting English Language Learners
Supports guided in part by CA ELD Standard 7.I.B.6.
Important Points in the Lesson Itself
- To support ELLs, this lesson extends the opportunities to compare and contrast written and audio text begun in the previous lesson, providing the chance for ELLs to further hone their capacity to understand spoken English and recognize its relationship to written English.
- ELLs may find comparing and contrasting the audiobook and the novel challenging because of the demands of juggling the relationship between audio and text in a new language. Therefore, additional supports such as the ones listed below, which were also used in Lesson 1, may be useful.
Vocabulary
- widened (A)
- mood (DS)
Key
(A): Academic Vocabulary
(DS): Domain-Specific Vocabulary
Materials from Previous Lessons
Teacher
Student
- Domain-specific word wall (one for display; from Unit 1, Lesson 1, Work Time B)
- Academic word wall (one for display; from Unit 1, Lesson 1, Opening A)
- Text Guide: A Long Walk to Water (for teacher reference) (from Unit 1, Lesson 2, Work Time A)
- Work to Become Ethical People anchor chart (one for display; 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)
- Questions about A Long Walk to Water anchor chart (example for teacher reference) (from Unit 1, Lesson 2, Work Time A)
- A Long Walk to Water (text; one per student; from Unit 1, Lesson 1, Work Time C)
- Vocabulary log (one per student; from Unit 1, Lesson 2, Opening A)
New Materials
Teacher
Student
- Entrance Ticket: Unit 3, Lesson 2 (answers for teacher reference)
- Compare Audio to Text: A Long Walk to Water, Chapter 17 note-catcher (example for teacher reference)
- Audiobook version of A Long Walk to Water (2:15.30-2:17:04)
- Device to play audiobook
- Language Dive Guide: A Long Walk to Water, Page 103 (for teacher reference)
- Language Dive: A Long Walk to Water, Page 103 note-catcher (for teacher reference)
- Entrance Ticket: Unit 3, Lesson 2 (one per student)
- Synopsis: A Long Walk to Water, Chapter 17 (one per student)
- Sticky notes (one of each gist color per student)
- Compare Audio to Text: A Long Walk to Water, Chapter 17 note-catcher (one per student and one for display)
- Compare Audio to Text: A Long Walk to Water, Chapter 17 note-catcher ▲
- Language Dive: A Long Walk to Water, Page 103 sentence chunk strips (one per pair of students and one for display)
- Language Dive: A Long Walk to Water, Page 103 note-catcher (one per student and one for display)
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 |
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A. Engage the Learner - RL.7.7 (5 minutes)
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Work Time
Work Time | Levels of Support |
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A. Read A Long Walk to Water, Chapter 17 - SL.7.1 (15 minutes)
"Which habits of character did you see in this chapter? Who demonstrated them? What did they look or sound like?" (Responses will vary. Possible response: Nya's father demonstrates compassion for the children by building them a school. Salva demonstrates perseverance as he turns his idea into a reality, respect for his father as he comforts him, and responsibility as he speaks to audiences.) |
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B. Compare Audio to Text – RL.7.7 (15 minutes)
“I can compare and contrast a written story to the audio version of the story and analyze the effect of the techniques.”
“What are you going to record in this first column? How does that information connect to the information in the next few columns?” (Possible response: All of the columns relate to the same kind of effect, so the effect must show up in the text and in the audio, and have an example that is about both the text and the audio. Each item in each row relates to the next.)
“What have you learned so far from comparing the text and audio versions of A Long Walk to Water that will help you write your own texts that are meant to be read aloud?” (We’ve learned about how readers say words that are in italics or followed by exclamation points differently from other words. We’ve also learned that readers say dialogue in different ways to make the story clearer.)
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For Lighter Support
For Heavier Support
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Closing & Assessments
Closing | Levels of Support |
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A. Language Dive: A Long Walk to Water, Page 103 - RL.7.4 (10 minutes)
"When at last she was able to speak, it was only in a whisper."
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For Lighter Support
For Heavier Support
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Homework
Homework |
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A. Independent Research Reading
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