response to literature what was the selection really about? copying permitted
Post on 01-Jan-2016
214 Views
Preview:
TRANSCRIPT
Responding to Literature
• Continually respond and predict as you read
• Take notes• Think about patterns—especially literary elements
Copying permitted
Ask yourself
• What was the text really about?
• How did the author ensure the reader got that message?
Copying permitted
Middle
Describe the event or aspect of the selection. Try to describe how the author
told this part of the story.
Copying permitted
Invitation to Read
• Look at the following response to literature
• Find how the beginning, middle, and end of the response include the criteria listed in the last slide.
Copying permitted
Copying permitted
“A Friendship Fort”
The most important event in Katherine Paterson’s Bridge to Terabithia is when Jess and Leslie build their fort. Jess is a shy boy who wants to be an artist, and Leslie is the new girl in the neighborhood. They don’t fit in with the other kids, but they get along with each other. Together, Jess and Leslie create Terabithia, a secret meeting place in the woods. (cont.)
Copying permitted
“A Friendship Fort”
To get there, they must cross a creek by swinging on an old rope. Jess and Leslie build a wooden fort in Terabithia and spend a lot of time there. Their little wooden fort takes them to a thousand places. The day Jess and Leslie create Terabithia is the day they began to build their friendship.
(Write Source Grade 6, page 284)
Invitation to Write
• Read a short story or chapter from a novel.• Take notes as you read, thinking about patterns
—like the literary elements.• Focus on one event or aspect that you feel is
important. • Write a paragraph or so detailing your thoughts,
remembering what goes in the beginning, middle, and end.
Copying permitted
top related