- I can describe how pages 4-22 of Esperanza Rising contribute to the overall structure of the story. (RL.5.1, RL.5.5)
- I can describe the historical setting of Esperanza Rising. (RI.5.1, RI.5.7, W.5.7)
These are the CCS Standards addressed in this lesson:
- RL.5.1: Quote accurately from a text when explaining what the text says explicitly and when drawing inferences from the text.
- RL.5.5: Explain how a series of chapters, scenes, or stanzas fits together to provide the overall structure of a particular story, drama, or poem.
- RI.5.1: Quote accurately from a text when explaining what the text says explicitly and when drawing inferences from the text.
- RI.5.7: Draw on information from multiple print or digital sources, demonstrating the ability to locate an answer to a question quickly or to solve a problem efficiently.
- W.5.7: Conduct short research projects that use several sources to build knowledge through investigation of different aspects of a topic.
Daily Learning Targets
Ongoing Assessment
- Structure of Esperanza Rising anchor chart (RL.5.1, RL.5.5)
- Building Background Knowledge about Mexico anchor chart (RI.5.1, RI.5.7, W.5.7)
- Exit Ticket: A Connection to Esperanza Rising (RL.5.1, RI.5.1)
Agenda
Agenda | Teaching Notes |
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1. Opening A. Reviewing Learning Targets (5 minutes) 2. Work Time A. Engaging the Reader: Reading "Las Uvas" of Esperanza Rising (20 minutes) 3. Closing and Assessment A. Exit Ticket (5 minutes) 4. Homework A. Reread "Las Uvas" on pages 4-22 and complete Esperanza Rising: Questions about "Las Uvas" in your Unit 1 Homework. B. Accountable Research Reading. Select a prompt and respond in the front of your independent reading journal. |
Purpose of lesson and alignment to standards:
"I'll give you time to think and write or sketch." "I'll give you time to discuss this with a partner."
"Can you say more about that?" "Sure. I think that _____." "Can you give an example?" "OK. One example is _____." "So, do you mean _____?" "You've got it./No, sorry, that's not what I mean. I mean _____."
How it builds on previous work:
Areas in which students may need additional support:
Assessment guidance:
Down the road:
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In Advance
- Strategically group students into triads with at least one strong reader per triad. Allocate topics for understanding the historical setting to each triad in advance to ensure equal numbers of groups per topic.
- Prepare:
- Building Background Knowledge about Mexico anchor charts (see supporting materials).
- Domain-Specific Word Wall, with blank word cards and markers located close by. This is an area of the classroom where academic words will be added throughout the year.
- Review the Red Light, Green Light protocol (see Classroom Protocols).
- Post: Learning targets, Spanish/English Dictionary anchor chart, Working to Become Ethical People anchor chart, Structure of Esperanza Rising anchor chart, and Discussion Norms anchor chart.
Tech and Multimedia
- Closing and Assessment A: Students complete their exit ticket online--for example, using Google Forms--or they complete it in a word-processing document, such as a Google Doc, using Speech to Text facilities activated on devices or using an app or software such as Dictation.io.
Supporting English Language Learners
Supports guided in part by CA ELD Standards 5.I.B.6, 5.I.B.8, and 5.II.A.1
Important points in the lesson itself
- The basic design of this lesson supports ELLs by providing a safe space with time to reflect on the sensitive events in Esperanza Rising. Students also investigate the historical setting of Esperanza Rising, giving them necessary background to connect more fully with the story and then demonstrate their understanding.
- ELLs may find it challenging to determine the gist and the deeper context of both pages 4-22 of Esperanza Rising and the three research texts because of the volume of potentially unfamiliar new language. Remind them of the strategies from Lesson 1 for approaching unfamiliar texts and consider providing time for students to discuss the meaning of the texts in home language groups. Invite them to pat themselves on the back for what they do understand (see the Meeting Students' Needs column).
- Explain the purpose and goals of Conversation Cues to students. Tell them to listen closely for the cues, as they will respond to them throughout this curriculum as a way of learning English.
Levels of support
For lighter support:
- Invite a student to paraphrase the events of Esperanza Rising and the key points of the research texts in more comprehensible language for students who need heavier support.
- In Work Time A, challenge students to generate questions about the sentence in Esperanza Rising before asking the prepared questions. (Example: "What questions can we ask about this sentence? Let's see if we can answer them together.")
- Encourage students to add to the graphic organizer they began in Lesson 2 to chart (and illustrate) the main events in pages 4-22 of Esperanza Rising against the structure of the story. Ask them how they might incorporate the research texts from this lesson. Invite them to explain this graphic organizer to students who need heavier support.
For heavier support:
- During the reading for gist of Esperanza Rising and the research texts, stop often to check for comprehension. Dictate key sentences for students to recite so that they practice using verbal language. Encourage them to act out and sketch key sentences.
- Show a series of brief videos or photographs to set the stage for the research texts. (Example: Display photos of Porfirio Diaz and the rural workers and peasants in arms and discuss the events in simple sentences.)
- Consider modifying the activity in Work Time B by providing the research texts as well as one- or two-sentence synopses of each text on strips of paper. Scramble the texts and the synopsis strips and invite students to match them before completing the anchor chart.
- Consider distributing partially filled-in copies of the Building Background Knowledge about Mexico anchor charts. This provides students with models for the kind of information they should enter and reduces the volume of writing required.
Universal Design for Learning
- Multiple Means of Representation (MMR): In this lesson, students identify the historical setting of Esperanza Rising. Both the place and the historical time period are integral for comprehension. Support students' understanding of historical setting by providing authentic examples of other familiar texts that take place during a specific time period. In addition, use a parallel questioning structure by asking students about the historical setting during the Opening and Closing of the lesson. This way, students can build on their initial understandings based on their learning during the lesson.
- Multiple Means of Action and Expression (MMAE): Because each lesson builds on comprehension that is established in previous lessons, provide opportunities for students who need additional support with memory to engage with the text in multiple ways. Consider having students summarize with a partner the reading from the previous lesson. Also consider having scaffolded questions prepared to review the rising action already covered in the text.
- Multiple Means of Engagement (MME): Throughout this unit, students reflect and evaluate their own progress toward their learning goals. This is an important practice for students to monitor their own learning. However, some may feel threatened by the public nature of this evaluation in this lesson. Consider offering choice about how students report their progress, including a non-public method that is only for the teacher (see the Meeting Students' Needs column).
Vocabulary
Key: Lesson-Specific Vocabulary (L); Text-Specific Vocabulary (T); Vocabulary Used in Writing (W)
- historical setting (L)
- government, revolution (T)
- Research Text: Government and Revolution: dictator, rural, resigned, constitution (T)
- Research Text: Neighbor to the North: treaty, borders, territory, captured, relations (T)
- Research Text: Rich versus Poor: demands, scarce, profits (T)
Materials
- Esperanza Rising (from Lesson 2; one per student)
- Spanish/English Dictionary anchor chart (begun in Lesson 2)
- Working to Become Ethical People anchor chart (begun in Lesson 2)
- Experiences with Threats against Human Rights anchor chart (new; co-created with students during Work Time A)
- Structure of Esperanza Rising anchor chart (begun in Lesson 2)
- Structure of Esperanza Rising anchor chart (example, for teacher reference)
- Red, yellow, and green objects (one of each per student)
- Domain-Specific Word Wall (new; teacher-created; see Teaching Notes)
- Building Background Knowledge about Mexico Example anchor charts: 1, 2, and 3 (new; teacher-created; see supporting materials)
- Building Background Knowledge about Mexico anchor charts (example, for teacher reference)
- Research texts:
- Research Text: Government and Revolution (one per student researching this topic)
- Research Text: Neighbor to the North (one per student researching this topic)
- Research Text: Rich versus Poor (one per student researching this topic)
- Markers (one per triad)
- Discussion Norms anchor chart (begun in Lesson 2)
- Exit Ticket: Connection to Esperanza Rising (one per student and one to display)
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. Reviewing Learning Targets (5 minutes)
"I can describe how pages 4-22 of Esperanza Rising contribute to the overall structure of the story." "I can describe the historical setting of Esperanza Rising."
"What is the setting?" (usually the place) "What does historical mean?" (about things in the past) "So what is the historical setting?" (the place in the past)
"So what do you think you will be doing in this lesson?" (reading new pages of Esperanza Rising and learning about the historical setting of the book) |
Meeting Students' Needs
"Can you guess the historical setting of Esperanza Rising based on what you have read so far? Do you think the historical setting is a war in Mexico or no food in Canada? What, in the text, makes you think so?" (MMR, MME)
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Work Time
Work Time | Meeting Students' Needs |
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A. Engaging the Reader: Reading "Las Uvas" of Esperanza Rising (20 minutes)
"What does 'Las Uvas' mean in English? How do you know?" (grapes; it says so underneath "Las Uvas")
"What did this part of the story make you think about?"
"What is the gist of this chapter?" (Esperanza and her family wait for her father to come back, but he does not return alive.) "Looking at the key, where do you think this part of the story fits into the structure? Why?" (rising action; something big happens, and we know that the lives of Esperanza and her family will change as a result)
"I can describe how pages 4-22 of Esperanza Rising contribute to the overall structure of the story."
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"What are the series of conflicts and crises in this chapter leading toward climax? What do you think will happen next?" (Esperanza's cut thumb; Papa's disappearance; Papa's belt buckle; Papa's body) (MMR, MMAE) |
B. Expert Groups: Understanding the Historical Setting (30 minutes)
"In this chapter, Esperanza's father is killed by bandits. Why is he killed by bandits? What did they kill him for? What did they hope to achieve?" (They are angry that some people are wealthy landowners while others are forced to eat cats.)
"Can you say more about that?" (Responses will vary.)
1. Government and Revolution 2. Neighbor to the North 3. Rich versus Poor
"What does government mean?" (the people who govern a country or nation, the people who make decisions about how the country or nation is run) "What does revolution mean?" (when a government is forcibly overthrown)
"What are the key points?" (They are the most important points that answer the research question.)
"What is the text about?" (Student responses may vary but could include it's about the Mexican Revolution.)
1. Use their fingers to show the number of the topic they researched, 1-3 2. Move to form a triad with two classmates showing different numbers
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Closing & Assessments
Closing | Meeting Students' Needs |
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A. Exit Ticket (5 minutes)
"Can you say more about that?" (Responses will vary.)
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"Now what do you think is the historical setting of Esperanza Rising? Why?" (Examples: Mexican Revolution, dictatorship, Mexican-American War, wealthy landowners, bandits, poverty) (MMR)
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Homework
Homework | Meeting Students' Needs |
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A. Reread "Las Uvas" on pages 4-22 and complete Esperanza Rising: Questions about "Las Uvas" in your Unit 1 Homework. B. Accountable Research Reading. Select a prompt and respond in the front of your independent reading journal. |
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