Friday, July 27, 2012

More Fairy Tales, Folk Tales and Fables

Fairy Tale Bulletin Board

Take Home Mini Books
 Partner Reading
 "Buttering-Up" Popcorn Words
 Reading To Self
Little Red Riding Hood
  • Map a map to grandma’s house and write directions
  • Teach the difference between fruits and vegetables (that she carries in her basket), make a list of fruits and a list of vegetables
  • Create a list of singular fruits/vegetables, then make plural

Cinderella 
The Princess and the Pea
  • Practice addition: Prince/Princess ______ had _____ peas under his/her mattress. The Queen put ____ more peas under his/her mattress. How many peas were there in all?  _____ + _____ = ______
    • Have students illustrate by using brown construction paper strips for the bed frame, round green paper for the peas, and colored paper strips for mattresses

 Rumpelstilskin

  • Have students count letters in their name, graph letters in name
  • Practice addition: (Mrs. McClure) spun ________ pieces of straw into gold. Then she spun ______ more. How many pieces of gold were there in all?        _______ + _______ = ________
    • Have students illustrate by gluing brown construction paper for straw and yellow circled construction paper for gold. 

Jack and The Bean Stock
  • Write our own version – what would our magic beans grow into?
  • Measure selves using beans: ___________ is _________ beans tall.
  • Plant our own seeds, measure their growth
  • Keep a Growing Journal to document the growth of our plants

Henny Penny
  • Retell story using puppets, make puppets using different feather dusters for characters and a red sock for Foxy Loxy
Folk Tales / Fables
 Lessons Learned:
Why Mosquitos Buzz in People's Ear 
Retelling pieces (teacher created)
One Fine Day
Retelling pieces (teacher created)
The Three Billy-Goats Gruff
 Retelling 
 Problem / Solution Chart
Writing: Classbook 'We Are Brave'

End of the Unit Writing: What is your favorite story? Why?
Graphing our Favorite Stories

FOR ANY FAIRY TALE
  • Create Story Map, Sequencing Chart, Problem/Solution Chart, Venn Diagram (different versions of story)
  • Draw setting of story
  • Give students a house that opens – use to create inside of house
  • Create head pieces for retelling
  • Allow students to create their own fairy tales using a story map: characters, setting, beg, mid, end
  • Read story aloud without showing pictures, have students visualize then draw a scene from the story, compare student illustrations to illustrations in the book
  • Discuss fact vs fantasy, list clues for being fantasy
  • Make Story Writing Dice for writing station: setting, character, problem
  • For Fables – list the lesson that was taught in the story

Gingerbread Stories

Fairy Tale Unit: Gingerbread stories
  • Read many versions of Gingerbread
  • Chart the characters from each version and what the character’s saying is (Run run as fast as you can, you can’t catch me, I’m the Gingerbread Man, … with a leap and a twirl, you can’t catch me, I’m the      Gingerbread Girl, etc) and if the character got tricked by the fox or not
  • Create our own Gingerbread character
  • Write our own Gingerbread story
  • Use gingerbreads to create addition and subtraction stories


Story Charts
 

 Graphing: Did The Gingerbread Character Get Eaten?

 Venn Diagram: 
The Gingerbread Man / The Musubi Man (Hawaiian Gingerbread Man)  

 Students created their own Gingerbread character
Gingerbread Cheerleader
Gingerbread Farmer
Gingerbread Baseball Player
Gingerbread Football Player

 Gingerbread Math Problems

 Word Families

Gingerbread Bulletin Board