An Introduction to the Book..Page 3. Story Mapping..Page 4. Comparing and Contrasting (Informational Texts)..Page 5.

Similar documents
If...Then Unit Nonfiction Book Clubs. Bend 1: Individuals Bring Their Strengths as Nonfiction Readers to Clubs

SUNDAY MORNINGS April 8, 2018, Week 2 Grade: Kinder

Reading Together Helping Your Child to Enjoy and Progress in Reading

Transcripts SECTION: Routines Section Content: What overall guidelines do you establish for IR?

Grade 2 Weather Inquiry Unit Lesson 4: Create Video Scripts that are Interesting as well as Informative. Lesson Transcript

Why do we worry? Why not just ask??? Escalating the Interview: Being Mindful of the Slippery Slope 11/2/2011

FOLLOW UP AND FOLLOW THROUGH FOR RESULTS... Did you have a good time last night? What did you like best?

LESSON INTRODUCTION. Reading Comprehension Modules Page 1. Joanne Durham, Interviewer (I); Apryl Whitman, Teacher (T)

A TEACHER S GUIDE FOR

Summary of Autism Parent Focus Group 7/15/09

Sample Student Reflections on Persuasive Piece. Writing

Purpose Week 2. Author: Chelsea Jacobs Project Supervisors Nick Diliberto and Rob Quinn Artwork: Kindred Canvas


Reader:The Iron Man. by Ted Hughes. The Iron Man. & SB Page 55. SB pages Chapter 1. LESSON 1 SB page 55. Outcomes:

ONCE UPON A TIME, there was a nice boy and his name was Gideon. He lived in a nice house, and he had nice parents and lots of toys.

Q: What was your writing process like for this book? How did your aphasia affect your ability to write and what are some ways you overcame

Handling the Pressure l Session 6

A Common Core State Standards Aligned Discussion & Activity Guide for

Lesson 2: Energy. Fascinating Education Script Introduction to Science Lessons. Slide 1: Introduction. Slide 2: How do you know to eat?

Reading Closely to Develop Themes

Raising Emotionally Intelligent Kids & Teens: Anger & How to be the Boss of Your Brain

OVERCOMING TEAM BUILDING OBJECTIONS


Elevator Music Jon Voisey

Increasing Achievement for Schools, Teachers, & Students. United Learning Center. All rights reserved.

text publishing melbourne australia

What is the Law of Attraction?

Lesson 5: What To Do When You re Sad

The REAL Thing That Happened to the Unicorns. By Haley

How to Grow A Brain. Introducing Growth vs. Fixed Mindset

Phrases for 2 nd -3 rd Grade Sight Words (9) for for him for my mom it is for it was for. (10) on on it on my way On the day I was on

While this training is meant for new foster parents, it is also a valuable learning tool for experienced foster parents who want a refresher.

FIVE SIGNS THAT A GUY LIKES YOU HARVEY GET HOOKE HIM HOOKED FREE GUIDE BY HARVEY HOOKE KEEP THIS GUIDE WITH YOU AT ALL TIMES

Expectations. About This Selection. Most students will be able to read and relate to the comic strips.

Second Grade Art Print. Christina s World - by Andrew Wyeth

graphic organizers teachers

10 Simple Success Formulas Volume 1

THE BIGGEST BIRD. BLACKPOOL Penguins arrive USA HOME NEWS SCIENCE NEWS WORLD NEWS. Look Closer. Boozy birds

Finding The Recipe For Success How failure helped me find the recipe for success in small business.

Concentration Literacy Skills / Word Recognition

Welcome! Mrs. Erlinger. Select your own seat for the time being. Journalism 1 1 st and 7 th Honors English 2 2 nd and 6 th Journalism 2/3 5 th

Date Night Questions

Dyslexia is my superpower

This is an All Ears English Podcast, Episode 54: Meeting Monday, English with Fluency MC: How to Find Love on Valentine s Day.

Read Romans 12:10 DAY 1. Thank God for the opportunity to honor others more than yourself. DAY 2. Read Romans 15:7

The Wall and the Wing by Laura Ruby. Trade ISBN: Library ISBN: Pages: 336 Ages: 10 and up

Reading at Home. Parents + Schools = Successful Children

Module 6: Coaching Them On The Decision Part 1

SUNDAY MORNINGS August 26, 2018, Week 4 Grade: 1-2

An Interview with iread

This is the Telephone Dialogue Word-for-Word Transcription. --- Begin Transcription ---

Rubber Hand. Joyce Ma. July 2006

Origin of the Nuno Sa Punso. By:Bjorn Escalona

Demonstration Lesson: Inferring Character Traits (Transcript)

On the GED essay, you ll need to write a short essay, about four

Session 3. WHOSE FUTURE GOAL 3: You will identify some of your own transition needs that are based on your preferences and interests.

My growth mindset interactive journal

20 QUESTIONS TO HELP YOU DISCOVER WHAT YOU LOVE ABOUT YOURSELF

Lesson Transcript. T = Teacher (Apryl Whitman, Meadowfield Elementary School, Columbia, SC), S = Students

Author. I m an Author! Are you? Maybe you enjoy writing down your feelings, or describing things you notice about your world.

Summer Writing. Carry your writer s notebook with you! Here are some places you can bring your writer s notebook:

SAMPLE SCRIPTS FOR INVITING

TABLE OF CONTENTS TOPIC AND THEME RESEARCHING THESIS CRAFTING AND ANALYSIS SHOW WHAT YOU KNOW FINAL TIPS

Sunday, August 28, things over the next four years that it s difficult to think now about how much you ll change. Let me

Interview with Trespassers

Building Blocks of STEAM. Science Technology Engineering the Arts Mathematics. Building Blocks of STEAM

ì<(sk$m)=bdebic< +^-Ä-U-Ä-U

6NAVY LANGUAGE ARTS Expectations & Guidelines for

Gratitude Speaks Thanks

If You Want To Achieve Your Goals, Don t Focus On Them by Reggie Rivers (Transcript)

THE BEST FRIEND CAPSULE MEETING GOTTFRIED

THE INTERVIEW PITCH Techniques that Win

by Damon Johnson illustrated by Nan Brooks

GREETINGS, INTRODUCTIONS, AND SMALL TALK DAY 1

GREETINGS, INTRODUCTIONS, AND SMALL TALK DAY 2

Table of Contents CHOOSE PREPARE SHARE WRITE

THE BURNING. By Robert Lewis

476 April 2015 teaching children mathematics Vol. 21, No. 8

UIC and ARCd. kdhglaksdh

New Vocabulary List BLM 1

Sensing the World Around Us. Exploring Foundational Biology Concepts through Robotics & Programming

12 Things. You Should Be Able to Say About Yourself. Parnell Intermediary Services, Inc. Guide to Productive Living. Volume 4 NO V4

A Simple Guide To Practicing English With Native Speakers

Anne Reckling: Thank you so much for much taking the time today. Now how old were you when you were diagnosed?

Ed Emberley's Drawing Book Of Animals Free Pdf Books

The Nature of Science Investigating Key Ideas Related to NOS

English as a Second Language Podcast ESL Podcast 200 Meeting a Deadline

I think I ve mentioned before that I don t dream,

All songs written by Carmen Underwater except Self Control written by Giancarlo Bigazzi, Raffaele Riefoli & Steve Piccolo

Actor s ashes to be scattered in space

NS2-45 Skip Counting Pages 1-8

Digital 5 A Day Simple steps to a balanced digital diet and better wellbeing

English as a Second Language Podcast ESL Podcast 198 Starting a Band

BONUS - Money Attraction Accelerator Audio

WITH BETHANEY LONG. EPIC: Empower your Perfect Customer to Invest in Your Coaching. Start selling your packages immediately, without a website!

THE AHA MOMENT: HELPING CLIENTS DEVELOP INSIGHT INTO PROBLEMS. James F. Whittenberg, PhD, LPC-S, CSC Eunice Lerma, PhD, LPC-S, CSC

Before you read this non-fiction article, think about these questions:

The Jet Engine Inventions that Shook the World Series

The Language of Instruction in the Writing Workshop: Some possibilities organized by teaching methods


Transcription:

A Classroom Guide

About This Guide Feel free to adapt the examples in the guide to meet the needs of specific classrooms. Copies may be made for educational use; however, it is not be sold without express written consent. Title: The Diamond and the Boy Author: Hannah Holt Illustrator: Jay Fleck Ages: 4-8 Publisher: Balzer+Bray (October 2, 2018) ISBN: 978-0062659033 Table of Contents An Introduction to the Book..Page 3 English Language Arts Science Story Mapping..Page 4 Comparing and Contrasting (Informational Texts)..Page 5 Vocabulary Page 6 Comprehension.Page 8 Writing...Page 8 Chemistry.Page 12 The Rock Cycle Page 13 The Scientific Method..Page 15 Social Studies..Page 17 Page 2

An Introduction to the Book The Cover Look at the illustrations: What do you see? What is the boy holding? What is in his pocket? What do you think this boy likes? Read the title: What is this book about? What do you think the boy on the cover is going to do? Who is the author? Hannah Holt. As a child, Hannah loved building towers and staring at the night sky. When she wasn t stargazing or constructing elaborate block cities, she frequently had her nose in a book. She grew up to earn a degree in civil engineering. Now she writes picture books. She lives in Oregon with her husband, four children, and a pet cat. This book is about her grandfather, H. Tracy Hall. It is her first book. Who is the illustrator? Jay Fleck. As a child, Jay drew a lot, but grew up to earn a degree in computer engineering. While living in Chicago, the art and culture inspired him to turn to illustrating. He has several other picture books out, including Tilly & Tank and Black Belt Bunny. He lives in Illinois with his wife, two children, and a dog. Page 3

One book, two stories Open to the first page of the story. [A rock named graphite,] [A boy named Tracy,] Explain that The Diamond and the Boy is a work of non-fiction. It tells two true stories side-by-side: The natural process of turning graphite into diamond is told on left-hand pages. The life of H. Tracy Hall is on right-hand pages. Tracy grew up to build a diamond-making machine. Before you read the book, encourage children to listen for words used on both sides of the story. English Language Arts Mapping the Story After reading the story have students complete the following chart with words or pictures: In the beginning, the stone Beginning In the beginning, Tracy. The stone changed because Middle Tracy changed because. The stone became a End Tracy became a... Page 4

Comparing and Contrasting Why do you think the author chose to tell these two stories side-by-side? How were the two stories alike? How were they different? Consider using the following chart to help students sort the key elements of each text. THE DIAMOND SHARED THE BOY Alive Faced Pressure Has been in a volcano Not alive Lived in a tent Can move by himself Waited Faced Heat Found under ground Can read Has something to do with DIAMONDS! Page 5

Vocabulary Help children make a create a word diary by completing the following table and cutting and pasting each word into the pages of a mini-book (words continue to the next page). The word: Draw a picture: Write a definition in your own words: A BOY A ROCK HEAT PRESSURE AN ERUPTION AN INTERRUPTION Page 6

THE CHANGE WAITING MACHINE BOOM DIAMOND Three 8x11 pages cut in half and stapled will make two mini-books: This text has other words that might be new for children words like: meager, centuries, and magma. Ask children to raise their hands if they come across any words they don t understand while you are reading. Search out the meaning of these words by: Looking for clues in the surrounding text Looking for clues in the surrounding illustrations Using a dictionary Having a class discussion Page 7

Comprehension Discussion Questions Consider cutting the following questions into strips. Bury them in a bucket filled with dried beans or other fake dirt. Have children take turns digging for a group discussion question: Where is graphite in the beginning of this book? Where did Tracy Hall live as a child? How does graphite turn into diamond? Why did Tracy hide in the walls of his school? How does the stone move from deep in the earth to closer to the surface? What community building did Tracy visit often as a child? Once a diamond is closer to the surface, how do people get it out? How did Tracy pay for college? How is the rock different in the beginning vs the end? When Tracy s boss wouldn t help him build his machine, what did Tracy do? Writing Possible activity: digging for questions The following three pages present writing prompts for children. Using the book, The Diamond and the Boy as the subject have students try: Informational paragraph writing Opinion paragraph writing Creative writing: The Machine That I Would Build Page 8

I can write an informational paragraph. Name: Choose to write about how diamonds are made in the earth or made in the laboratory. Introduction: Fact 1 Fact 2 Fact 3 Conclusion: Page 9

In my opinion... Name: I like the (Rock / Boy) side of the story best because Reason 1 Reason 2 Reason 3 Conclusion: Page 10

The Machine That I Would Build Name: In The Diamond & the Boy, Tracy s machine turns graphite into diamond. If you could build a machine that turned something into anything else, what would it be? Draw your machine My machine turns into. Describe your machine: Page 11

Science Chemistry Attention getting activity: Build two LEGO structures with similar pieces. Have one of the cubes connected in all directions, like this: Have the second LEGO cube only connected in one direction, like this: Have a student point to the strongest cube (the one connected in all directions). Ask them why they made that choice. (Maybe have them handle the cubes if they aren t sure.) Explain that just like the two LEGO structures were made of the same thing, graphite and diamond are made of the same thing but have different connections. Graphite and diamond are both made of carbon. Carbon is an atom (one of the basic building blocks of the world and the universe). Atoms are so small that you can t see them with your eyes, but graphite is carbon atoms in thin loose honeycomb sheets. Like this: Page 12

Diamond is stronger than graphite because it has strong bonds in three directions instead of just two. Bonus activity: You can make the basic molecular shapes of graphite and diamond with play dough balls and cut straws. Graphite Diamond The Rock Cycle In this story, graphite turns into diamond with heat and pressure. Pressure Heat Graphite Diamond But is that the end of the story? Are diamonds really forever? No. Even though diamond is stronger than graphite, graphite is the more (chemically) stable form of carbon. Over billions of years, diamonds will eventually change back into graphite. Page 13

MYTH: A diamond is forever. FACT: Diamonds last a really, really, really long time. Billions of years pass... Diamond Graphite Bonus information for advanced students: Sometimes a diamond doesn t make it billions of years. It s possible to destroy diamonds as well as create them. The carbon in the destroyed diamond can be used by plants and turned back into diamond. See the graphic for more information. Diamonds can burn, turning into carbon dioxide Heat carbon diamond with welding torch Add oxygen Diamond (pure carbon) Diamond turns into carbon-dioxide gas: CO 2 Burn the plant Plants use carbon-dioxide The plant turns into ash (carbon) to make food for themselves (Photosynthesis) Fun fact: Scientists have turned peanut butter into diamond! Anything carbon-based (plant or animal) can be turned into a diamond with heat and pressure! Page 14

Diamonds are a beautiful and useful part of the graphite/carbon rock cycle they aren t indestructible but they are a nearly-forever stone. The Scientific Method The scientific method is a way scientists (and anyone!) can test new ideas. Here are the steps: 1. Observe (Look around and find something interesting) 2. Ask a question about the thing that interests you. 3. Make a guess about what will happen (Form a hypothesis) 4. Experiment or test your guess 5. Check and record your results 6. Come to a conclusion. Was your guess right? 7. (Optional) Change something and try again! What are some questions Tracy wanted answered in this story? Do you think he used the scientific method to answer them? Why or why not? What are some questions you have? How could you use the scientific method to answer them? Consider filling out the following questions as a class after discussing the chemistry and rock cycle sections of this guide above: 1. What did Tracy observe about graphite and diamond: (Sample answer: They were made of the same stuff carbon.) 2. What question do you think he had about this observation: (Sample answer: Can graphite be turned into diamond?) 3. From this question, can you from a hypothesis or guess for Tracy: (A: Graphite can be turned into diamond if you mimic the conditions it s formed in the earth.) 4. How did Tracy experiment on or test his guess? (A: He built machines to apply heat and pressure like might be found in an underground volcano.) Page 15

5. How do you think Tracy recorded his results? (A: He recorded results in his scientific journal. The following picture from one of his science notebooks) 6. Was Tracy s guess correct? What was the conclusion? (Yes! He did turn graphite into diamond!) Bonus activity: Consider watching the YouTube video Hannah Holt created about testing the Scientific Method and her cat: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uulbcvled2i Page 16

Social Studies Developing resilience Tracy had many problems outside his control: His family didn t have much money. He had more questions than the adults in his life could answer. He felt unsafe at his school. When he grew up, his boss didn t initially believe in Tracy s idea. Did Tracy give up when things were hard? (No!) Encourage children to think about a struggle they face. Have children write or draw a problem/solution statement. (For young children, you might have them to choose from a list of solutions like sharing, make a deal, talking it out, walking away, etc.) I get frustrated when One way I can tackle this problem is to... Bullying As a child, Tracy had a problem with bullying. Tracy lived in a time when bullying wasn t well understood or even recognized. Emphasize to children that if they experience physical or emotional threats or abuse, they should contact a trusted adult. Building resilience doesn t mean you have to suffer alone. Have children draw or write someone they would tell if they feel unsafe. An adult I trust is Page 17

Bonus activity: Building gumdrop resistance towers. Explain to students that Tracy had to become resilient like a diamond to overcome his challenges. One way to become more resilient is to try new things. Try making a structure out of something new. Supplies needed: gumdrop candies toothpicks Have children try to build a tower first by just stacking one gum drop on top of the other like this Ask how high they can build this way? (Hint, not very high) Now, let them build as high as they can by building a wider base in more directions like the picture above. How high can they build this way? (Hint, much higher) Explain that like the towers, the more directions tried and the more connections made, the stronger the solution usually is. By trying new things and asking other people for help, students can become stronger, more resilient, and stretch further than before just like a diamond! Page 18